 How's your family? Just fine. Excellent pictures. Excellent pictures. Voilà. Mr. President, on behalf of the Federal Council and the Swiss people, I would like to extend to you, to Mrs. Reagan, as well as to the members of your delegation, a most heartily welcome. We are honoured that our country has been chosen to be the place of your meeting with Secretary-General Gorbachev. We deem it a token of trust in neutral Switzerland. It is indeed part of the historical mission of the Swiss Confederation to strive for peace and freedom and to promote better understanding between peoples and nations. This is the way we can best serve what we stand for. Geneva, the city of peace, has often in the past witnessed major international events. I have particular in mind the four power conference of July 1955, when President Eisenhower represented the United States of America. What was later known as the spirit of Geneva was born at that time. Today we hope and the whole world indeed hopes with us that this spirit will be with you and your counterpart all along the talks. In the coming days and hours, all eyes throughout the world will be watching you with trust and expectation. We are aware of the challenge you are facing, not only as a representative of your great nation, but also as a statesman with a sense of responsibility for mankind. Mr. President, once more, I would like to say how pleased we are to receive you in Switzerland. For over 200 years, our country has been linked with the United States in common endeavor through the living values of democracy. The protection of human rights is the goal we share. Mr. President, Mrs. Reagan, we welcome you with warms in our hearts. All our good wishes and indeed all our thoughts will be with you in the difficult task. You and Mr. Gorbachev are about to engage in. Thank you, Mr. President. President Fergler, I would like to extend to you and to the Swiss people my appreciation for helping to make possible the coming meetings between representatives of the United States and the Soviet Union. Nancy and I are delighted to be in this magnificent city on the shores of Lake Geneva. On behalf of the American people, thank you for your warm and friendly welcome. Mr. President, it is fitting that the meetings of the next few days should take place on Swiss soil. For Switzerland has long been a leader in the search for peace and the defense of human freedom. Again and again, you've provided your territory for international meetings and your good offices in the mediation of disputes. It was the Swiss who founded one of the great humanitarian organizations of our time, the National Red Cross. And it is Switzerland that often represents the diplomatic interests of other nations, including the United States, in lands where these nations have no formal diplomatic relations of their own. Indeed, in your unshakable commitment to independence, democratic government, and human rights, the Swiss Confederation in itself serves as an example to all the world. The motto on the great seal of the United States, Mr. President, is e pluribus unum out of many one. Well, here in Switzerland, a country of rich religious, cultural, and linguistic variety, you practice just such unity in diversity. Permit me to add that our two countries are bound together by family ties. As early as 1562, a Swiss citizen appeared in Florida. And in 1670, a Swiss settlement was established in Charleston, South Carolina. Ever since, Americans of Swiss descent have pioneered and led the development of our nation. Today, Swiss Americans number in the hundreds of thousands, and I would be remiss if I failed to express their affection for you, their Swiss cousins. Indeed, just last month, the goodwill of the American people toward the Swiss was formally expressed in a joint resolution of the Congress of the United States. And recently, Mr. President, Boston University awarded you an honorary Doctorate of Laws. In your acceptance address, you stressed the obligations incumbent upon the West to defend its values and its way of life. It is, you said, part of the definition and vocation of the human being to be free. Well, Mr. President, each in its own way, our two nations stand at the forefront of this struggle for liberty. Each stands determined to defend the freedoms of its own people and to advance the cause of freedom throughout the world. And each rests confident of the knowledge that freedom will endure and prevail. It is to make certain that this great work on behalf of human freedom can go forward in peace that I have come here today. As I stated last month I am convinced that American-Soviet relations need a fresh start, a genuine give and take on regional conflicts, on human rights, and on the reduction of arms. American and Soviet differences on these matters run deep. Mr. Gorbachev and I cannot surmount them in only two days. But I am here in the fervent hope that on behalf of all the people of the world, we can at least make a start. President Fergler, once again to you and the people of Switzerland, our friendship, and our deepest gratitude.