 Well, I'm going to turn the meeting over to you except to say that I'm delighted here and to have a report that I know you're going to present and I think we're all agreed on the improvement that has been made but the things that really remain to be done in our relationship with Japan. I think that's one of the most important partnerships we have. Well, I want to thank you very much Mr. President for taking time for your busy schedule to be with us and I want to present this report to you from the Commission. Now I would like to quickly point out that this is a joint effort the Japanese and American Continents work very closely together and the report is really an agreement between both members. As you can expect there might have been some things that would have been said if we had complete freedom to say them but I was very encouraged by the fact that the Japanese have been very forthcoming and very much interested. I think we all came out of this study with a conclusion that this is an extremely important relationship not only in the short term but in the long term. In addition to the work that we did in discussing these issues among the Commission members we had a number of studies done on various aspects of this relationship, a very good study in agricultural policy, a good study on industrial policy and we also had a study made to try and get some idea about what the options would be in the long term, what would happen if we continued a close partnership with the Japanese over the next 10 or 15 or even the next century and if we didn't and I think the conclusion we come to is that this relationship is so important that we have no option but for both of our countries to work very hard to maintain the close cooperation and I think that out of that and really in part out of some of the things that you and your associates have done here our recommendation is that this relationship will benefit from better management and I think the exercise that we went through when you presented the end dollar issue to the Prime Minister this last fall the fact that Secretary Reagan followed up on that George Bush went over it was an example I think of where some of these issues can be managed in a more effective way than simply reactionary process that has come about. Now the Japanese are presenting their report to the Prime Minister at about this time and I've had a wire here from Japanese Co-Chairman I thought I might just read that excerpt from this because he especially wanted to have you realize that the Japanese have concurred in the program and he's going to approach the meeting with the Prime Minister and our plan is to strongly underscore a major point in the report that is the importance of the US-Japan relationship and the fact that the two leaders should pay priority attention to this relationship we will obviously stress the growing importance and opportunities for cooperation of our two nations in global affairs. We will certainly point out some of the problems particularly in the management of the relationships but we will discuss them in the context of the need for a greater bilateral cooperation. Some of the problems left unresolved will undermine our capabilities to make joint contribution to the global economic and political health and advancement. We hope to encourage our Prime Minister to instruct the government officials as well as leaders in the private sector to study the report carefully and implement some of the recommendations and it is our belief that a deep mutual confidence and a strong commitment to the shared goals between your President and our Prime Minister are providing us with a golden opportunity to maximize our cooperative relationship. Public officials as well as the private sector in both countries should seek to find ways to further promote such cooperative relationships and also improve the management of some of the frictions and they are inevitable in the interdependent and close bilateral relationship. We are very pleased that the President, Secretary Schultz and other members of the cabinet, not in itself, demonstrates the importance your government leaders are attaching to our bilateral relationship. We hope that you will convey to your President a deep respect from the members of the Japanese Commission. It was our privilege to serve your President as well as our Prime Minister in this meaningful joint project. So we hope that this will provide some guidance to move ahead with what you already started here and we think you've made a very good progress so far but we also think there's a lot of opportunity to continue the work that's being done and it's been a great pleasure for us to participate in this program. But let me just conclude by saying that unless you feel otherwise we consider the work of this commission to be finished but if any of us individually can be helpful in implementing some of the recommendations that you may wish to adopt we stand ready to do so. Well, Dave, I just end all of you. I just want to give you a heartfelt thanks. I think it's magnificent what you have done and I'm glad to hear the last few words that you said because it's very possible that I might follow my thank you with occasionally saying, by the way, would you? Well, we're ready to help because we think it's an important issue and we're just delighted with the progress you've already started in this area. God bless you all. Thank you very much. It's a good report. Well, my chance to read it. I think it's also a very good process. Also a certain amount of belief. Yes. I understand. I've never been an emeritus before and I look forward to it because as I said, things if you hadn't been visible, we had wisdom growing down here as emeritus. And I'm going to keep my laboratory and stay in Washington. I see that that part's wonderful. And as I said, it's a little note to you, maybe when the shouting and the tumult dies and you are putting your feet up here in the house afterwards, we can get together and then we'll go see that movie. Yes, there's a sort of hiatus, I think. Now, where you're going. I also would like to nominate you for the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Thank you so very much. All right, please indeed, and I can't think of a nicer person. Just a little souvenir to you. Maybe in your long years, this has already happened to you, but no, this is not an arms to lock up. Thank you. Sorry about it. She's just a pin. Isn't this one of his? The one you're wearing. It's very, very exciting. I will. She's well, she should be in Michigan by now. She's true students. Sometimes I think our schedule is bad, I think yours. I think about that old cliched about politics makes change bedfellows. They kind of mess it up a couple of times. All right, well, I always remember when I first came here. Yes, because traditionally, the second day of this was 70 years of absolutely non-partisan. We've got all that commons to deal with can't take science. Unlike the candidate who will be a partisan as a dick. Well, some of them can't, we've been, you know, we don't have defense or state of the interview generally out there. We have two great supporters for this new Saturday, we're building this with Asia and Middle East and Africa, and that is Kat Weinberg and George Schultz. And I said in my speech today that that meant a tremendous amount to us to have two people who know and appreciate what this was hoping to do for the third of its countries and our understanding of their cultures and their development of self-respect and our development of understanding and respect for the future of this misogyny and to play a part in the efforts towards peace through cultural understanding. It can be done. If that's been done as part of it, it can be done. The old. Absolutely. Yes. Well said. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. And you'll be elected. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. And it's good to see you. Thank you. Thank you very much. I'm going to need to do a group. This is the 50th, forget some things. I think some have already forgotten that. We all get to fight the evil of the prior. Thank you, thank you. Thank you, sir. Well, this is very kind of a chance. I guess you probably don't know everyone when you go down stairs to go down. That was quite a group picture. I didn't know that. I think the surprise was when, what's her name? Mary Lou. Mary Lou. Jack. She was way down there. Well, this is great. So I talked with Michael and Parker. I live in Arizona and he was out in Parker without money over the first weekend of September. As a matter of fact, we thought that he was going to be the human family. We're going to be on the platform in Orange County when we opened the campaign there. And found out we lost it to a double. To a double? That's true. Worried with some idiots. It might be my first shotgun. Mr. President, excuse me, could we have another photograph of Mr. Carter? Yes. Thank you, sir. Thank you. Could we have one with Mr. President and Mr. Carter on one, too? Sure. This is great. I appreciate it. I'll put it in there. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. I couldn't imagine any of you in what you do. Mary, this is Mary and the woman, Mr. President, who have endlessly done this for the office of public liaison. It's my pleasure. My pleasure. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. President. I was just going to tell you, I know I couldn't naturalize what I have been and done for all of my life. If they say there's a mistake about it, there is. I've got some very fine pieces. Nancy once gave me great favor. I found that I didn't shoot left-handed. And that just anything, I guess I was intended to be left-handed, although I'm not. It's raised the other way. Anything that I just do naturally, I do that way. And so for years, I've shot with bold actions. That surprised me. I bought me a weathery. And she had it made for a left-handed shooter. It was the slowest shooting gun I've ever shot. Because every time I shoot, I go over here reaching and I have to go over. And that's completely backward. To put the way I should have do it. Well, thank you, Mr. President. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Coas Boys Clubs of America is charted by the Congress. And we were obliged by statute to present to you a copy of our annual report. I do so now. I urge you to get a good feel of this. Because it contains a budget which is balanced. And we haven't seen that in Washington. I know. Maybe I can learn how to do it. My second presentation is on behalf of all of the boys and girls who are members of Boys Clubs of America. It's a piece of feathered art done by one of our youngsters in our Omaha chapter. And it gives me great pleasure to give that to you, sir. And thank you for all you're doing for us. Now we're going to let the boys introduce themselves to you. Mr. President, as chairman of the Boys Clubs of America would like to have you induct the boy of the year. And he's going to hear this for the first time. So would you mind reading the letter of supply of the Boys Clubs of America 1984-1985. The National Youth of the Year. Presented to Anthony Aguilera. He finished here, chosen for more than one million members of Boys Clubs of America. In recognition of outstanding achievements in citizenship and leadership. As illustrated in a commitment of voluntary service to family, friends, and community. Thank you. On behalf of us five and all the kids across the nation, this was made by the Boys Club of America. It was made to present to you here for all you've done for us in the Boys Club of America. And we want you to know that you're welcoming the Boys Club in the time you're on. Thank you. It's the key to the Boys Club. Before doing that, I wanted the President to meet with me. Who is the runner up? It's my key. I can't believe it. I can't believe it's happening. This is nice. Alright, now balance the budget. Let's go with the debit credit. That particular desk has quite a history. That was a British warship at one time. The years ago, they were on a rescue exhibition from England's sailing ships in that time, 1855. No, it was found in 1855. It was sometime prior to that, up in the Arctic. And in 1855, an American whaling captain found this ship with all sails set, as if it had just been abandoned. And he brought it out. And we then refurbished it and dressed it all up and presented it to Queen Victoria. To England. Some years later, it was Queen Victoria who, when it came time to decommission the ship, as some of the planks carved this way, made into a desk, and it was shipped over here. It went in the haze. It was president of this country. And it's been used by presidents ever since. It turned there. The chair's mine. Brought my own. I think it's going to be smaller than they are today. We had to add this rim around the bottom. Our people did that because every time I tried to get my knees on the desk, I kept breaking my knees on the desk, because we raised the planks. Oh yes, I've been an Arkansas, but not as bad as you know. And there, as a matter of fact, you know, I was governor in California. Well, I hope that I can't write very much to convey. Well, y'all can leave now. This part is not part of the history of the book. This is a few supers of my own. Senator Howard Baker, the majority leader of the Senate, his hobby is, you rarely see it without a camera. He's a great photographer. He took this picture up at our ranch. Where does that look at in California? It's up north of Santa Barbara, up in the hills. When we ride, there are some hills there from which we can look inland for the Santa Inés Valley and look out the other way and see the Channel Islands in the ocean. Is it because you had a family ranch or did your father own it? No, no. Did you just bought it? We found it. It goes all the way back to Spanish land grants and the house, which isn't visible there, but which is over this way from where we're standing. The house was built in 1872. It's adobe, and the adobe bricks were made there of the soil right on the ranch. And still standing and we're still using it. It's a small house, but the only heat is in the fireplaces, and that's why we cut a lot of wood. That's in the yard of the ranch. That's my daughter. This is my son, Michael, and his wife. These are my grandchildren. That's my daughter, Maureen, and her husband. That's my son, Ron. What's he accepting now? What's he accepting there? Resident? All right. So I... I think we were just looking in the newspaper. He writes now for magazines. Well, yes, in a way. Maybe it'll give me a chance to reply to some rather inaccurate statements that have been made. Thank you. We're all right. Well... Thanks a lot. Thank you. That picture of George Washington, there is an image of one of the old paintings I understand you didn't have as we go. Yeah. And that was found by an American some years ago in Ireland, and he managed to buy it to bring it back and he felt that it should be back in this country. That's old George. Well, it's good to see you. Thanks a lot. It was nice meeting you. Good to see you, Mr. President. Mr. President, this is Eileen Peters. It was no one to think what would be saddening. She's only liaison with all of you first. I found the letter to George Washington. Well... This one was it? It wasn't. It's fine. It's fine. I'm glad you won the election. Well, it's nice to see you. Good to see you. Thanks a lot. Thank you.