 This is a very happy moment for us in one way and the next emotions and the other the only thing I can solve my way with is that maybe the private enterprise system needs you more than we do. The President of the United States of America awards the Presidential Citizens Medal to Frank C. Carlucci. Frank C. Carlucci, a selfless, energetic statesman and patriot, has made enduring contributions to America's security and well-being. As a Foreign Service Officer and Ambassador, he has represented our nation and shaped our foreign policy on two continents. Here at home, he has served our people as Director of the Office of Economic Opportunity, Deputy Director of the Office of Management and Budget, and Under Secretary of Health, Education and Welford. His outstanding contributions to national security as Deputy Director of Central Intelligence and Deputy Secretary of Defense have increased our confidence and pride in our ability to live in peace with freedom. Mr. Carlucci's devotion to country, dedicated service, and versatile record of achievements bring honor to himself and to the United States of America. Can't see that it's gone over here since. Oh, yeah, we got it. Thank you very much. The President has known how to play cartoons on a species of corn, as it's built in jelly beans. President, when you think of the demonstrator, who do you play cartoons on? Oh, he has. Show this around here in the office. Thank you very much, Mr. President. It's a pleasure to work with you. Good luck, Mr. President. Thank you. Thank you. How are you? She's enjoying it. She's enjoying it. Thank you very much. Congratulations. Thank you very much. Thank you. Ah, we've got the, end-harm gas act is just going to get over there. Oh. We started talking minutes early where he was to mined. He was seen holding hands. Hello, Mr. President. My name is Dr. Robert. Senator, I see you. Senator, Mr. Norman. President, Norman Slaughter. Well, please welcome the President, Rabbi Landness. Welcome. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Mr. Friedrich. Hello, sir. Mr. President, we appreciate this graciousness on your part of receiving us, and we count it a pleasure and a privilege to be able to come and present to you a gold medal of the chapel for chapel. I don't know whether you're familiar with these. Yes, I am. We're celebrating 40 years of our family. When Dr. Daniel A. Cooley, the father of one of the chaplains, four chaplains, two props, one Catholic and one Jew, a Catholic priest and a Jewish grandma. And a Methodist, and I can't remember the other one. And a Dutch reformer. Dutch reformer. We formed at that time under the leadership of Dr. Cooley, the founding of the chapel of four chaplains, which is now 40 years old, and I would like to have the privilege of presenting to you with the assistance of Rabbi by placing this over your head. This is our gold medal, which is the highest award that we present to anyone. We are delighted that Mrs. Reagan is a part of our chapel, and that she's in the group of ladies of the past president of the United States. Mr. President, I'd like to add just a word from Jewish tradition, and that is that there's a special blessing recited when we see the President of the United States, blessed be he who shares of his glory with a human being. And I want you to know that we at the chapel of four chaplains feel that you are carrying on God's work through leading our great nation as you do with strength, with courage, with wisdom, and that we are very much supportive of you in all of your reference. We believe with you that there can be peace through strength and justice, and that America must lead the way. Rabbi, thank you very much, and thank you all. I'm greatly honored. I do know the story of this, and it's a very humbling experience to receive this honor. May I take this opportunity of congratulating you on your presentation last night? I thought it came across in great style. Well, thank you very much. I am enthusiastically supporting it. This has been recently published. I would be very proud to hear that. Thank you very much. I want you to know that I wear the ribbon bush. Well, thank you very much. President Reverend Polling was the Republican nominee for mayor of Philadelphia in 1951. Tell me, there's one thing with this. Was there ever many ever made, or does anyone ever know who the four men were? Oh, you see the light bill? Oh, no, no, no, no. I'm sorry. I didn't want you to finish saying that. No, is there anyone who would never know that we see the light of the darkness? No, there were several men who claimed, and we have already found and investigated, but they were proven to be false. And then Dr. Polling said, well now water, you took a light jacket. What's that, let's not try to find it. Oh, I never thought of it. Yes. Well, I'm deeply grateful. We're grateful to you that you are our president. God bless you, and we have you in our prayers at all times. I have to tell you, in particular faith, I just saw something yesterday in New York City, an evidence of courage. They have something, a group called the Crime Starters, and I was there at the present of the 30th precinct, where they were being honored, and in connection to the baby nuns, the baby was in connection with this, these are citizens who are trying to do their best to help with the crime problem. And these were all people, a cross section of Americans, like you've never seen, who have performed in Roy D. saving someone from a criminal. And among them was a rabbi. And the criminal that he took on was armed with a machete. And I have to say that anyone that walks into someone with a machete is doing above and beyond what we're doing. It's a very inspiring thing to see. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much, Mr. President. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And women in Philadelphia, we'd love to have you visit the chapel. I'd love to. Thank you. Can you just raise your hand? Okay. Thank you. Thank you. You're welcome. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thank you, Mr. President. Going to the board now. Mr President, I'm proud to present this group to you because I think they've done such a fine job of work so hard on the State of the Union. I just want you to follow the importance of what this little cartoon is. I got to split and pick up the old employment check, and make it to the university to see what's holding up in the federal education realm and pick up the food stamps, your checkup and pick up my new glasses at the health center and go to the welfare department and try to get an increase. I'll meet you later at the federal building for the demonstration against the stinker staff. Well, thank you all, thank you, thank you very much for giving us this opportunity. It's awfully hot in here. Oh, he was, he finally could have an appeal. Thank you. Oh, I know a lot of him. Yes, he was truly a character and all of them were basically true to it. I can't tell you about a year and a half. And it's so likely it's very yours, some of the things that you did. I wonder if the one's in there about, you know, he loved playing cockroaches, the world's worst cockroach. And Groucho Marx could have made a living playing gin rummy. And it was at Hillcrest Country Club, a golf match, and he wanted to play gin rummy with Groucho. Groucho told him he had a date. And Sam started, you know, he was going to adjust it. Groucho finally said, Sam, I'll play 30 minutes, win or lose. At the end of 30 minutes, I've got to go. Well, at the end of 30 minutes, Groucho's $14 ahead. And Sam says, I thought, you know, kind of, and when he got excited, his voice went higher. And he said, you're leaving with $14 of my money and you're not giving me a chance. And well, he upshot it. It was three hours later. Groucho was into it for $4,000. And now he said, I've got it. And now Sam is really screaming. And Groucho said, wait a minute. I told you, I only wanted to play 30 minutes. Now he said, forget the $4,000. Just give me the $14 I was ahead at the end of that. And Sam's voice came right back down. He says, that's fair enough. I'll play you one hand, double or nothing. There's another one in there. They wanted to clean up the studio five at one time. And so the assistant came in and said, Mr. Gold, we have to get rid of all of those boxes in the back a lot. And so I said, OK, just make a copy of everything. But oh, they're not one. I thought you liked them. It's way like reading. Oh, I look forward to this. Oh, he really, and all of those things that everyone thought couldn't be true. We're trying, Eddie Cantor, when he brought him out from Broadway, put him in a few of those musicals. And finally, Eddie said to him one day, he said, you know, Sam, this is wonderful. I love this. But he said, there's, you know, same dance jokes. He said, pretty soon the audience is going to get tired of seeing me do the same thing. He said, I need to change your face. Sam said, Eddie, don't worry about it. If they get tired of seeing you, I'll get someone else. I want to take the opportunity. I do everything I can to make sure folks understand what you're doing, both in form policy and domestically. And I would hope that some of the congressmen and the senators who are opposing what we're trying to do in Central America would understand that this is not up to Jane Fonda. And I told a friend of mine the other day, I said we should line up some of them. I'm going to mention their names. And give them what we call, like Mr. Watt got the foot. We should give them what's called a Jane Fonda, Patriot of the Year award. Because it was a great article in the Wall Street Journal this morning by Morton Condrake, he was editor of the National Aid View. And he's very local. And he came out full square, supporting what you're trying to do. And I went back over the history of when President Ford was trying to get aid on Vietnam and they knocked the dominoes, and you went down to the dominoes at a fall. And I don't think a lot of the people understand that at all. Now the Condrake article is really good. And that's about the domino theory. Yeah, it worked. And they never asked the dominoes. There's the Highway, that's your order in Thailand. Exactly. Yeah. Well, listen, you got me started on the same thing. I meant to say, I know you'll be doing some traveling and have some more planned, but I appreciate everything that you have done. I know what you're doing out there. A lot of people don't see the forest with trees a lot of times. And then our great, no offense gentlemen, the great media just doesn't... Oh, I'm sorry. They just... I get very unfaithful of the communications line. And I get very concerned about the networks. And the papers are taking our First Amendment and really just kind of abusing in terms of Westmoreland case. And it's very dangerous to me. Yes. But I don't want to take up any more of your time with this. It's good to see you. Okay. I hope you like that. Oh, I will. Okay. My pleasure. My pleasure. And I'll be talking to John. Mr. President, why don't you get John to our new edition of my staff so we can take a little picture of him. Was that the possible, the best thing about John's campaign? John is a great supporter of your campaign. I appreciate that. Now, that picture you see is going back on what a lot of people said about me and what they think about me. I've never been able to understand every time I saw him when I was in the show business for the first time, and I've never seen him before.