 I'm sorry, somebody came up to me. Surprise! Even with my yen for them, it won't match what's on that table. But this is a jar with the crest on it and filled with jelly. The human institution will never be the same. Chief, I know this can make, it's going to be this much fun. I would have done this earlier. No, seriously though, I just want to say it's been a great experience. It's probably most of you know that I've been on leave for the last four or the last six years, involved in the campaign, the transition here, and it's been a great time. And it's been particularly great working for you. I've really enjoyed trying to help you achieve some of the things you're trying to do here. And I look forward to working with a lot of you in the months and years ahead because I don't really feel as if I'm leaving, I'm just sort of going to do something different for a while. Thank you. We have another gift that really is being presented from you also, besides, but this, we thought Marty, when you go back to Hoover and have all that time on your hands, that you might even take up drinking. And in case you do, we wanted you to have something to drink out of. That's a happy one. And we also had a presentation. Marty, on behalf of the Office of Policy Development, all the professional members of the staff, this is a gift from all of us to you. That's terrific. Use that for the best advantage of turning its face to the wall. It depends. All right. Well... Do you want some champagne? Thank you. This is the artist. He'd love to do this for you. Some day maybe. He's a wonderful man. He did it from a photograph and some day he'd love to do it. He captures the spirit of it. He's a wonderful man. Nice. Someone said that's not working. Thank you. Mr. President, Lieutenant Jack Cloud, the U.S. Park Police. Nice to see you. I had some jumpsuits. It's my sergeant, Bill Sampson. Nice to see you. This is Kyle Asda. Nice to meet you. Officer Wilber Land. Hello. Nice to see you. I'm Bob Hartley. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you, sir. How are you doing? I look lame and I don't. Ron Gaelic, Mr. President. I'll put you covered. Perfect. Sir, I'd like to thank you for what you've done for a year now and our own support since we've been here. Of course, I'm a TV fan of two of you. I want to turn on this. It's been an honor for us to assist in any way we can. Our security and cabinets are very happy to do it. We're most grateful. Don't find it. Nobody right now. I'm a sergeant. I've seen it. Certainly around. I'm most grateful. It seems to have been working quite well. We haven't done it as much in the past. The single service seems very happy with it and we haven't done it as much. We didn't live in a kind of world where that's necessary. I look through some of the old books up there, Stairs in the White House and see pictures of presidents that used to be able to drive down through the town and the crowds and open cars. I guess a few people allowed it. You could even walk. I remember I've been around here for quite a while. President Kennedy on Sunday mornings used to jog around the yard and he would always run out the northwest gate in a shorts and t-shirt without secret service and looked at the corner of a rug store that was there then and sat there and had his Danish and got the coffee and read the paper and the secret service caught up with him. Well, I then read about what happened when the river Harry Truman one day sneaked out and crossed Lafayette Park and went to church while by himself sat through church and won't pay any attention to it. I got back and it was hard. I have to. I've got to look around first. I have to tell you, President of California, one of my favorite stories that happened there because I was governor in the time of the riots and all the campuses and so forth. Wherever I went, I didn't ask whether there would be demonstrators. I said, which ones? One night I was going down to a little town in Modesto, California speaking to the band code there where these people in a small community had by themselves raised money, helped to build a very fine medical institution and well, circling the block in his car. So now they're waiting for him, but he doesn't come around again. So they put out an all-points bullet before he can be picked up, he's back circling the block and the next time around they stop the car, they drag him out over the hood and he knows, he understands what it's all about. But his line is what I remember. You'll have to cut this off the tape. He said, that was no, no. He says, you got me all wrong. He says, I just want to see the son of a bitch. Thank you. My pleasure. Thank you, sir. Thank you. Thank you. I got those too many. I hope you don't need us. Pleasure. Jack, pleasure.