 25th, 1985, interview with Hugh, Siding, Oval Office, Close, Widmer on Camera, Marbury on Sound, 4C, July 26, 1985, Staff Time, Residence, Close Coverage, Cocklin' on Camera, Marbury Sound, 4C. Anything else? You're waiting for me there, do they? No, my schedule says residents were almost... Did you feel to see that Life Magazine, the whole double section of pages of photos of people with me? Ah, fly over, I'm ready for camp date. Right. Yes. Good morning. How do you do? You know we're having... Have I seen anything up here also? Yep. I saw everything with residents. I bring you greetings for Margaret Thatcher and all kinds of foreign leaders. I don't know whether she's stuck her head in here or not, but I saw her last night. I thought I was supposed to meet her once she's here. No, that was never... You were going to meet at a round table in the East Room at 11 o'clock. Today? You were. Yeah. And that was scratched at the time that we cleared your schedule. Oh, did you? Not everything. What did you do to her? I was just handling it for you. Yeah, they're all going to be there. She's having it, though, in the Roosevelt Room this morning. Then we take them over to lunch. She got off the plane last night. I was there at the dinner. And it's supposed to be two addresses. I took one look at her tour about half of what I had to say. She had just gotten off the plane. It was about two o'clock in the morning in UK time. It was a very tough day at the parliament. Her own people getting on her. And she did very well to short-talk 12 minutes or something. But she sends her loving a thing. All day we've had, I had lunch with four like blaze of Grenada and Eugenia Charles who loves you dearly. July 26, 1985. National Security Brief. Residents. The most cocky on camera Marbury Salem. On the way out, the old secretary said, the plan is all about it. You don't have anything to show me. You're just talking. And then she said, I don't want to talk to the president. So the old said, well, you can go out the back door if you want. He's on the ground level. So there was a little walkway out there. So the parent who was the newspaper reporter started, they followed the parent out of the hedge and wall saying, what do you think of the oil import tax? Well, the president knew it so well. Well, I started walking down the wall to try to find the steps to get the hell out because there's a wall for it. As you go down the hill of Capitol Hill and get steeper edge you go, there were no steps. So all reporters there, photographers and everything else, I just took a leap right over the head down the wall laying on the sidewalk and got into my car. Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha. NSC meeting residents closed July 26, 1985 cocking on a camera Marbury Sound 4C. It's a little bit serious and fast, you know. I don't even know what to do with the dish. We've got to stay in place. And then there's a fence over there. He's up cutting a part out of the top of the barn. And then he says, well, look, the mule's ears are too long. Trying to get it so the mule's ears from the mule keep going. I said, why don't you just take a little out of the dirt, a little dirt out of the bottom then? He says, it's not, no you don't get it. He says it's ears too long, not his legs. Ha, ha, ha, ha. The situation in South Africa and Southern Africa more generally, the headlines have made it clear. 26 July 1985, President Reagan departing for Camp David via Marine 1. Fitzpatrick on camera cocking on Sound, open coverage camera 4C.