 Mr. President, I'd like to present the Castellic family. Hello. Hello. Well, nice to see you. I'm Jennifer. Yes. Hello. Hi, Mr. President. So nice to meet you. Mrs. Castellic. Hi, nice to meet you. My name is Meredith. Mr. President. Angela Castellic. And I think we met at Sewell High School. And I'm the owner of this young lady. She couldn't be here when you invited her down to CS. We're very, very grateful. Thank you very much. Why don't you get in here and you and I'll flank them and we'll have a family picture. Okay. Okay. I think she's so nervous that she forgot she's got something for you, Mr. President. Thank you. Thanks, David. Let's go. Thank you. Thank you very much. Oh, thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you. Great to see you. Let's get out of the ceiling. I have a message from two of my sons. One is a graduate of the Naval Academy who's out of California and a lieutenant of Marine Corps. He says, you make sure you tell the Commander-in-Chief that we said thank you very much. He wanted me to salute you, but I says, it's been a long time since I've been a Marine Corps son. I think I forgot. Well, we're very thankful to him and all those others with him. There's nothing I'm more proud of than the young men and women who are in our military today. They're a wonderful bunch of people. I think you've had a lot to do with it. I think you instilled some patriotism and younger people that we were losing. And we're very proud of that. I'm very proud of my sons serving in the Marine Corps. I am too. They're just great. I've seen them on the demilitarized zone in Korea out there in Standing Guard. And one young man stood there saluting me and said, we're on the frontier of freedom. That was my war, Mr. President. That was my war. I was in it. I was a cavalry officer called at the duty of flying a desk for the Air Force. I never managed to best. It's good to see you. Thank you. We appreciate this very much. Thank you. You too. Thank you. Thank you. Nice to see you. Good morning. We appreciate this very much. Thank you. You too. Thank you. Best of health. Have a nice day. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Thank you. Sidney Batsman. Sorry. Why the bee? Whoops. Jack Jones. This is a great honor. My honor. Mr. Miner? Thank you, sir. Mr. President? Hello, Dave. Mr. President? Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Okay, we're ready for a couple of texts. We're here to still have a talk with the President and some of the secretaries in the hall. It's nice. That's great. Well, first of all... Thank you, sir. We appreciate it. We appreciate it. We appreciate it. Okay. You're an outstanding leadership. We present you this certificate of honor, which doesn't need to weather your love or relief in truth. You're a leadership of this fine country of ours, which is our President. Mr. President, on behalf of Frank Paul and myself, we're in Scottish Rite Mason. We're in honorary Scottish Rite Mason, and we're so proud of you. Frank Paul is with us. We are. Well, thank you very much. We have a degree from 4th to 33th, after the first three. Some 800 people in hospitals, crippled children, facilities and the other things, the private sector initiative commendation. I know that there were many among those who signed the original Constitution of the United States and 16 presidents, big nations. So, this is another Grand Master towards this private sector initiative commendation. Mr. President, thank you very much. Very proud of you. Thank you. Thank you. Same thing to you, commendation to you. Thank you, Mr. President. That's a great pleasure. Yes. No, Reagan. Thank you very much. Thank you all very much. We have everybody come back and we'll do a group photo. Right here, I think. We can do it. If we can have half of you step on the left side. On the right. I'm going to get it in the middle of your screen. Okay. Let's turn it over. That's great. Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you, sir, very much. Mr. President, thank you very much. Have I missed somebody? Right there. Mr. President, I've got three presentations for you. Okay. Here, I'll hold that. First, I've got a replica of our House of the Temple in Washington, where we've been since 1913, a book on the Constitution with a forward by Warren Berger, which you can read at your leisure. And then I had lunch with Ernie and Tova Board 9 when they were here at the White House. And Tova said you used her lotion for your face. And they said, you like Sarwood Honey. This is Sarwood Honey. That's right out of North Carolina. And this letter will tell you all about it. She has just gone into that business. You know, a certain secret from the cactus or something that's been learned about that. She made me look at Ernie Board 9. He looked pretty good. And she said, you smear this on. Thank you very much. That's right out of North Carolina. It's a great place. And I do like to believe it. Mr. President, you alluded to two of our presidents. That were Masons and doing the 200th anniversary of our Grand Lodge at District of Columbus. It's chartered in 1811. It's my pleasure to present to you this coin of two of the very famous presidents in the seal of the Grand Lodge on the other side, by the George Washington and by the Gerald Ford. Well, Jerry isn't that old. He didn't know much. They were running Masons. Well, thank you very much. Mr. President, we in the shrine know Reagan. And as you probably know, we operate 22 hospitals. Burnt and orthopedic. Our first one was in Shreveport, Louisiana, open in 1922. On that page, it was dedicated at planting three oak trees. When we built a new hospital about four years ago, I bought the trees, two of the trees that they had to cut down to put the new hospital. I had them planned and seasoned and gallows made of which there were almost 400. And they're very, very valuable because they were made from these trees on the first Shriners Hospital grounds. I'm most pleased to present you this one. Well, thank you very much. I know you have many gallows, but that one is a historic gallows. I don't have enough when you know how many people there are.