 Nice to see you. This is Mr. Rick Berger. Yeah. Nice to see you. Good to see you. Senator. Well. Good to see you. Thank you a lot. Last night was in this morning. That's my brother-in-law. Take your pass. Robert Rowan from the Young Office of Los Angeles. He lives in Pasadena. You're sweet. You're sweet. Let's get in. Let's get in. Oh, right here. Okay. Great. Let's go. Here we go. I didn't hear. Great. Everybody's looking here, sir. Look right here. Ma'am, look right here. Great. Thank you. All right. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. Great to see you. Let's see. I'm glad to see you. Come over here. Come over here. Thank you a lot. I'm glad to see you. I'm glad to see you. I'm glad to see you. I'm glad to see you. I'm glad to see you. There's some souvenirs. Oh, sir. Thank you. Hang on. What's that? Is that a boy? Yeah. Go around. Yeah. These are just key. Next one is the souvenir. Oh, wonderful. Oh, thank you. Thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you, sir. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. You're so good. Thank you. And there. I'd like to give you something. Oh. As an ambassador for the world's greatest example of Lord Jesus Christ, we had this made up this morning. And I hope that it will grace your library and we have something here. This is Steps to Christ, which is a world's best seller. And please get us to Nancy Reagan. I sure will. And I appreciate your opportunity to shake your hand. You've been the best president you've had in many years. Thank you, sir. Thank you, sir. Thank you. Senator John Sherman Cooper, former Senator John Sherman Cooper of Kentucky. Thank you. No. No. Secret, sir. Haunting yourself and Bob. So there's a total of 32 guests coming in. We'll do individuals on the side and then a big group photo back here. Pete's got to get a light in here quickly so we can do this and make it look good. But they're in town for agricultural briefings. They're on the hill. You know, they're heading up the agriculture industry. But all from county. Mr. President. Nice to see you. I'd like you to meet him as well. I do. Very good. Thank you. And Tim's going to introduce the head of this group and he's going to introduce them as they come through. Thirty great Californians. Very good. Thank you. Mr. Tom Peck, this is through a box. Mark. I call it after your two. I miss it. I miss it. Big La Rosa. I miss it. Terrell. I miss it. I miss it. I miss it. Terrell Storm from Derechico. This is Mark Kettleman, Mr. President from Steven City. This is Ray Johnson. I'm near the Mexican border. And this is Allen Reynolds. I'd also present to you Ms. Mona Panky from Bakersfield, Mr. Jim Allen from Kalinka, and this is Barbara Buck from Irvine. Also, this is Brian Archelian from the Fresno area. Introduce Mr. Joe Martinez and this is Mr. Steve Knox from the Sierra Valley. Introduce the foundation, some produce produced in commodities by our individual growers and individual producers of this organization who'd like to present this basket to you. Thank you very much. I'm very pleased to have this. Thank you. I'm going to shove in a little bit. This is a perpetual state of homesickness. I've been making that in trouble for a long time. As a matter of fact, he now uses what the road to hell was like. He said it was about just in one mile to a building with a big dome on it. But I've got to have it lately. I know they want me to get a group picture. Where did you want me to sit? Right behind the chair there, I think. Okay, everybody look up here. Big smiles. Thank you, Mr. President. I was just going to tell you, jokes with me anymore. I can't tell you how many jokes now. But I found out I've got a new hobby. And that's collecting jokes that I can actually prove were established. Our total Russian people among themselves. And you discover they've got quite a sense of humor in them. At the same time, they've got a little simple attitude about their system. So I've been collecting those and trying to find something I could tell Mr. Gorbit. Something I can't tell. Like the man that was walking down the street at night in Moscow. A soldier yelled a halt. The man started a run. The soldier shot him. And another Russian said to the soldier, why'd you do that? And the soldier said, but he said it isn't curfew yet. He says, I know he's a friend of mine. I know where he lives. He couldn't have made it. I'm excited that would be the one to tell him. The one I did tell him was that they issued an order. You know, most of the automobiles in Russia are driven by a bureaucrats. They have the ones with the cars and drivers and so on. So in order to find out if anyone cost-speaking, no matter who it might be, he had to take Gorbachev to the United States one morning. He knew he was late getting to the Kremlin. He told his tribe to get a vaccine when he tried. And down the road he passed two motorcycle police. One of them took out after him. A few minutes he's back with his buddy. And the other one said, did you give him a ticket? He said, no. Well, he said, why not? We're supposed to give him anything. But he said, oh, no, no. This one, he was too important. And he said, well, who was it? He said, I couldn't recognize him. But his driver was Gorbachev. He was about to go to an American and Russian argument about yesterday. He said, Mr. President, I will fly away. You're running our country. I don't know why she said I couldn't do that. There was a little change. Yes. I can go into the Kremlin, into the General Secretary's office. I can come to my desk and say, Mr. General Secretary, I don't like the way President Reagan is running his country. I'm going to see you all. Thank you. OK. It was very good. Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you. Thank you again. Appreciate the honor, sir. Thank you so much. It was great. Thank you so much. It's a real honor. I'm glad you're here. Good to see you, sir. It's a pleasure. This is Ambassador Arred. It was a very festive day for us. We would be happy to have you here. Hi, my name is Alex Brown. I'm a former Secretary of the United States. I'm the new Secretary of the United States. Thank you. Good to see you again sir, good to see you all. I'll bring them in now. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. We'll have to wait a moment for the press to get in here. We'll see you in a minute. We take great pride in the signing of this memorandum agreement today, the 40th anniversary of Israel and the heads. This agreement formalizes our relationship with strategic cooperation. It reflects the enduring U.S. commitment to Israel's security. We know well that a strong Israel is necessary, that peace is to be possible, and we also know that Israel can never be truly secure without peace and commitment to another flag. I've asked George Schultz to continue his efforts and we remain convinced that our initiative is balanced and offered to only realistic basis on which to make progress. This is the time to say yes to peace. So I'll go talking and start writing. John, I'll see you sir. Thank you very much. I'm going to introduce you to him one at a time. And I just want to know that I've already told him what I'm going to tell you. We talked about we're really going to diminish the tensions while we sit down and tell us what we don't like about each other. So these 17 people represent everybody in radio print publishing. I think for the introductions, we better stand over here with those people there. Oh excuse me, I work the other way. This is a hell of a delegation, Mr. President. Mr. Pauline. Hello. Nice to meet you. Nice to see you. I wish you a very successful and pleasant trip to Moscow. Well, thank you very much. I'm looking forward to seeing you. Thank you. Mr. Chuck Berikoff. The Sharjah here at the Soviet Embassy. Nice to see you. Mr. Shishkin, the first deputy director of Tash. Mr. President. I'm very glad to see you again. Thank you very much. Mr. Chesburs, Deputy Secretary of the Gospel Radio. Mr. Green Banga, first deputy minister of the Ministry of Culture. Mr. Monlief from Gospels. They're their book. Mr. Medvedev from Gospels. That's our film business. And the famous Grasimov. Hello there. Nice to see you. And Mr. Medvedev, the Central Committee. How do you do? Mr. Dibbalkovsky, the internal international department of the Central Committee. Mr. Grigoryev, Deputy Editor-in-Chief, Pravda. Mr. Akhmakyevich, Ukrainian SSR. Mr. Kylawilis, the Lithuanian SSR. Mr. Breitans, Editor-in-Chief of the Soviet, I mean of Latvian newspaper. Mr. Lato, Editor-in-Chief of the Estonian newspaper. Mr. Podzina Kov from Novosti. Nice to see you. And this is the young Mr. Somov. They're his servicers. All right. I'm going to introduce you now. Well, there's an issue. I just want to see all of you here. I remember some media. I think the more we can open the channels of communication and talk to each other, communicate with each other, the quicker we will eliminate some of the problems between our two countries. We only get in trouble when we're talking about each other instead of to each other. We only get in trouble when we're talking about each other instead of to each other. At your meetings here with the information agency and Director Wick, you've been fruitful. I hope that your meetings here with the citizens of the U.S. and us today will become more important. And now I think I've got to tell you the mind of this person. You know you're leaving here. Mr. President, this is one of the things we're doing is we also have a large number of private sectors. We're going to have to ask every meeting here so we can get into a little bit of what they're going to mean. Your assistant is out of the usual. What's your name? What's your assistant? Is this going to work? Where's your shipments? Thank you very much Mr. President. Well listen, thank all of you. We won't take time checking in. Mr. Shetzen, you've been getting me out of town. Okay, we're all going back to the rows about row now. So we just wanted to resume. Oh, I'm looking forward to it.