 I'm glad we could get together here, and that gives me a chance to thank you for your effort up there. Bill was going to foreclose the space station on any military connections. Well, we had a really long drawn-up fight over that thing, but I think it worked out well. We appreciate your signature on the NASA authorization bill. I think we've got some very good policy statements in that bill. That does move us down the road some of the way toward where we need to be going. Thank you very much. You have some ideas? That's exactly right. As a matter of fact, I'm going to give you a little piece of paper there and so on. Mr. President, how old are you? John Kyle of Arizona, Mr. President, you don't hurt Baton? Yes. One of your anchorman on the Armed Services Committee? I appreciate you coming down and looking forward to this. Bob told me you would go on south again. Thanks to hear the report, and I know that you share my feeling about the importance of the conference remaining alive and putting factor down there. In fact, any improvement that's going to be made down there is going to be, you know, large part dependent on their presence in that country until, unless and until democracy can come. So, Robert? Well, Mr. President, first of all, a deep gratitude to you for seeing this because it's very frustrating to go down and get a hands-on feeling and be bursting to tell not only the news media who listen sometimes with a deaf ear, but to be able to tell our hero who's sending policy from the policy that we follow, and that's you. And in that last meeting where Dave is a retread because he went down again with Codelle Kyle and Duncan Utter and Howard Nielsen, grandfather of 24, and I'll introduce him as grandfather of 23. Son of a child. Right. That group, if you'll recall, we said, can we ask for short quick meetings like this with every group that goes down and you said short? And that one Codelle kind of fell through the cracks because he was very busy around there last month and we're all watching the so-called Arius Plan move along. So I'd like to start with Dan Burton, who went down with me. May I just say he flew with the Hunder and Air Force. I actually recorded it for me. A jet next to him did roles. He doesn't even have a pilot's license and he mastered jet acrobatics. And we went into the contra camps, into the hospitals. He made a stirring speech that I have on videotape about you. And then stood up on one leg, kneeed against the bed. Just as the same with Dave Dryer and Duncan Utter before crying. And I'll let Dan tell you about our trip to Nicaragua. Thank you, Bob, for that very nice introduction. I'm almost a little apprehensive to tell the president just stole a bunch of his jelly beans before he came into the ground. You're in Baton's body. You could steal in here now. Mr. President, I've been to these meetings before and many times people are reluctant to tell you exactly what they feel because they think you're the best. This is you, the former official of the president. I'm sure it's going to take a very long time. I'm sorry we can't individually read all the way here. We're all late. We have to, I think, just sit for a few minutes and smoke off because I'm going to be away from the top of person. Pressuring them just for a minute. And then we'll proceed with the line. Well, thank you, ma'am. Kennedy Senator will be a piano concert this Sunday night. Mr. Felsen, who has recently arrived, he came to our attention by way of my son, who is there on a newspaper assignment. Sometimes William would have been done to him simply because he had asked. So we put him on our list. He had his debut at the Metropolitan Opera a few days ago. The real debut was at the White House before. Well, I know. And I must say, he had everyone there with a lump in their trills when his first number was stuck. Our national anthem played beautifully. I didn't realize, I knew he was from the piano player, I didn't realize how great though, I thought he had 15 fingers. But just a little incident, I know we must get on to the meeting here. He told me, he played, he did not play our national anthem in the munch tempo that you usually hear from the bands. He told me that he had always felt that that music was meant to be played a different way than the usual march tempo that you hear. And when he had finished and he played it, keeping with the way he thought it should. And I didn't realize that he didn't know when I said to him after when he was saying this and telling me, I said, well, you don't know that the poem provides the lyrics. That music wasn't created for that. It was sent to the music of a German hymn. And, well, he was so pleased to learn that his kind of instinct about the way things actually feel was right. I understand that your December 6th demonstration is in support of our efforts on behalf of the Soviet Jewry and that would be an issue at the summit. Believe me, we'll make sure of that as we have on previous meetings. I know that Soviets would prefer that we forget all about the plight of the Jews and the Soviet Union. It's our business, yours and mine, to make sure that they're not forgotten. And that's why we've raised the issue on every conceivable occasion. You've already announced publicly that the issue of human rights will be an important part of the summit talks. Maybe we're at a historical crossroad because the Soviet economy is falling further behind each year. And their political ideology seems to have lost some of its force among their own people. And therefore, they're now seeking better relations with the West. We have an opportunity to let them know that better relations are a function of how much confidence we can have in their ability to observe agreements. In 1975, when Soviet leader Brezhnev signed the Helsinki Accords, he committed himself to the freedom of Soviet Jewry, the freedom to practice religion and the freedom to emigrate. And that turned out to be a paper promise, as we know it. We must keep the Soviets feet to the fire. This is evidenced by the... And it will, I think, is begin to bear fruit. It is evidenced by the increase in emigration. The increase in numbers is not enough. There must be an institutionalization of more liberal emigration procedures and greater fruit and freedom for Jewish religious and cultural life. I'd be interested in hearing from you on two related matters. How much progress has been made and what you think we should be demanding of the Soviets at this time. President, there were sports. Let me say that we regard this as a really stark occasion. I'll let them introduce themselves to you. Sir, you know most of them. Colonel, Chuck Krulach. I'm sure you do. Yes. Let's take a recent letter from your father. Is that right? Sir? Hi. Hi, sir. Hi. Hi. Oh, yeah. Hi, Mr. President. Mr. President. Mr. President. Mr. President. Mr. President. Mr. President. Welcome. What's up, everybody? Hi, sir. Hi,sticks. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. Let's go in there. See you. Hello. Mr. President, It's time for me how many I'm going to take for a coup on Capitol Hill. Here you are. Take set of your right for this present, please. Okay. Okay. Anything else? Thank you. Thank you, brother. Hey, I can hear that coming, right? Yeah. Okay.