 the crew in two sections, right? The cabinet affairs that first, Mr. President, this is going to get out of the way. Don Clary. Hi, how are you? Hey, Ed Stuckey. And Rick Davis. Hi, how are you? Nice to see you. Mr. President, how are you, sir? All right. Let's go over here. Ken Wenzel. Hello there. Nice to meet you. Dawn Murray. How are you? Is he going with us? Just fine. Mary? This is Nancy Finnegan. Please come with me. How nice of you to be here. Just to see you. Jennifer Brandeberry. Just doing this. Just couldn't reach you. Patsy Farrow, you know? Yes, I do. Hi, how are you? Can you take the camera? Yes, you can. Mr. President, this is Ralph Blitzel. Who's the executive secretary of the People of Holy Option? Ralph, why don't you have this old chair for me? Mary Beth Reardon, Mr. President. Hi, Mary. Nice to meet you. This is Fran Seidel. Mr. President. Hello. Mary Segoulis. Mary's been here a long time. Nice to meet you. And Bob Sweetman, Mr. President, Mr. President. Hi, how are you? Nice to see you. This is Eugene McAllister. He's the executive secretary of the Economic Coalition. It's an old heritage. Gene, would you step out here and introduce the rest of you? This is Sean McCaffrey. I think they're good ones. Can you step back? This is Penny Wise, Mr. President. Hello there. This is Dina Cruz. Nice to meet you. This is Jen Houser, Mr. President. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. Well, now, I understand we have two group voters. Right in there. Mr. President, you're going to do your photo here and then we'll move the second group photo when she's finished here. Now, if everybody's going to squeeze in, it's highly as possible. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. Please. So it was a very interesting thing when they first began running cattle over here in the Europe running cattle, I did a little whip, and they found here they didn't have the fences and so forth. The whip wasn't over here. It was uninvented. It was American. And then the saddle they were using was kind of a Spanish saddle left over from the conquistadors, which had sort of a big rounded dome in the front of the saddle. It was hilarious. The first time somebody put the calf or the steering wheel there was hilarious. But then found himself sailing through the hole. They figured that they would whip it. And then they ran it up in the notch. And around that dome they could quickly dowry the rope and then use what they had to the horn when it was in the saddle. All right. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much. See you. Thank you very much, Mr. President. Thank you. Is there any place else to go? I need to sit here again. No, sit down. Right in front of me. I'm just teed. Well, hello. Hello, hello. I'm Senator Murr-Zomer. Well, I want to tell you the Vice President to make that speech as an easier one. I'm President Donald Kennedy. I see you're pretty patient to whip this long. 1983 is my pleasure. We have some citations for you. Yes, sir. Mr. President, the first citation is for the Honorable Barry Goldwater, who we all know is not only a great pilot, but a great guy. The citation is as follows. This award, the Harmon International Aviation Shopping for Aviator, was presented to Senator Barry for flying over 200 aircraft types during an aviation career lasting 57 years. His flights in such airplanes as the hypersonic Lockheed SR-71, the world's fastest aircraft, the British-French Concorde, SST, and the Bell helicopter XV-15 tilt rotor, have acted to advance aviation knowledge imaginably. Well, I thought I knew everything about you, but all the stuff that you told me about the airplanes in 57, you weren't a kid either. Yeah, I flew with it. Thank you very much. Well, this is a great pleasure. Mr. President, we have one other, this one is awarded to aviator, Norman P. Kent, senior experimental test pilot for the Bell Helicopter Tech-Tron, pilot and command or co-pilot on all major flights of the XV-15 tilt motor research aircraft since 77. The tilt motor combines the vertical takeoff and landing capabilities of the helicopter with cruising speed and efficiency of a turboprop aircraft. Mr. President. Well, I'm very pleased and proud to be able to present this test to you, as I say to your patient, because I know when this was awarded quite a while ago. Mr. President, I appreciate it very much. But tomorrow, I'm sorry, thank you very much. And the second lieutenant, of course, candidate of the year. I didn't say that. Thank you. Well, I'm going to keep that fan. I wanted to just say one word. Thank you very much. I will not say my love. We're sorry to call it a thank you. You're going to want to put it in. Thank you. This is Joey McCormick. There you go. Let's get to see you. Good to see you. Hello. Hi. How are you? Good to see you. Good to see you again. Thank you. This is Nehorm. This is Jen. Hi. This is her son, Steve. Steve. Nice to see you. Yes. I'm going to turn you around here. I think you have a gift for the president, don't you? Well, yes. In fact, we have something for you. Because we want you to be the first to receive this show. And I want you to be the first here to receive this. For what I can help me here. November 1st is the kickoff for Up Up in a Way. It's an Arthritis Foundation. It's such a benefit of Rosamira. And they're going to release balloons. So, what are we giving you? Well, I'm very pleased and proud to receive these. Wait a minute. I think we should try it over here. Is that good? Can you see? That's right. So, you don't have to subscribe. But I will. And I told her apparently. I'm very pleased. So very pleased. Isn't he a fine young man? Yes. He has his own computer and he's a very bright young fellow. Thank you. You're being a big help to 40 million people. Thank you. Mr. President, I wonder if I could... Thank you. ...separate shot with John and one with Victor and one with Peter and Nathan. Yeah, I'd really appreciate it. Let me just get Joey here with me. Let's take those. Just get one. You come here with me. I want you all to get a separate shot. Where's his mother? And that's got her brother in here, too. Get one for her, eh? Get it here, Steve. That's great. That's good looking family. Thank you. Let's get one with Victoria now. Let me take Joey. I'll move Joey. Welcome out on Victoria. Let me get one with the president. I want Peter and Nathan. I do. Once you get so much, I'm so used to it. Thank you. Mr. President, the number one advocate for arthritis in America, outside of Victoria, put some arranging. Just want him to have that picture with you. Now, just one minute. I have a few things to do with that. First of all, in here is a jar. I'm going to get that to seal it. In the center of the jar are jelly beans. Aha! Isn't that great? Mr. President, if you gave him jelly beans, he'd give me the black ones. They're under my favor. That's a little souvenir here. Thank you very much. Oh, my God. Here, over here. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you very much. You know, this year, when the police had you early, you didn't even get a souvenir because you didn't get to walk. I got one. I got one. All right. Bye. Good night. Good night. Good night. Good night. Good night. Good night. Good night. Good night. Good night. Hi, how are you? Are you? This isuy me how are you? Mr. President, we very much appreciate your opportunity. We, about a year ago, decided it would be a great thing to have to strengthen our accountability by having a survey made by an independent firm to find out if our alumni really had received the benefit from the club that we believe they did receive. Humphrey Taylor made this survey and he did a fine job independently of us and he came out with results that just made us elated. Mr. President, I think the results of this survey are almost as dramatic as your own very high ratings in our poll and in other polls. We find that the overwhelming majority of alumni say that membership of Boys Club had a strong positive impact on their lives, that it helped them to socialize and get on and work with other people. Overwhelmingly they say that it helped them to keep out of trouble with the law and that's the number one thing that's mentioned spontaneously. They say overwhelming that it helped them to avoid problems with drugs and alcohol. That their career and working prospects were enhanced and indeed we find that the two-thirds of them are in professional and white collar and skilled working jobs even though most of them came from rather poor, underprivileged homes and that clearly it had a tremendous impact on their ability to work successfully, to earn a good living, to have a full life and thereby to enrich the whole community. So it's really a remarkable set of findings. Mr. President, I congratulate you on that. I present you with this survey summary of the whole survey that Humphrey and his associates did. I find it very interesting because it has brought most acts of many, many more in fact than what has happened to our three and a half million home in our first country. Well, your goal now, the million, I certainly hope you're making it. I just wanted to put in writing my congratulations to you. We do want to have it grow and have many more thousand million, other million youngsters. I hope we can get in the next few years and that's what we want to try to do. With your encouragement, I'm sure it can be done. Well, I'll write it now since you presented me with the report. I just have a few little things here. Mr. Vone, to each of you, a pair of cuffs with the President who's sitting here. Two young men. I know you'll always go t-shirts. Ten. The young lady. Yeah, you won't mind that. Well, I'm glad to see you and I think it's just great. What you're doing. Thank you very much, sir, for this opportunity. Thank you. All right. All right. Good to see you. Right here. Good to see you. Oh, my. All right. I just thought these were all new to me. Well, thank you very much. You're welcome. Thank you very much, sir, for being ahead. Okay. You're welcome.