 Well I know everyone here must have been bathed in nostalgia in this film that we've just taken and so magnificently narrated by David. I did say to him after the film went off that there were a couple of times there when I thought he could have sloughed over the word Republican better than he did. Gathered here as we are for a special occasion, I have to use a term right now that is reminiscent of a period really that had to do with that occasion and use a statement we interrupt the regularly scheduled program for a special bulletin. I won't say news flash because I'm sure that you've all heard the good news already but I would like to comment earlier this morning the Italian police rescued Brigadier General James Dozier. They rescued him from the terrorist hideaway in Padua where he had been held captive His 42-day-long ordeal has come to a happy ending and the prayers of millions of Americans have been answered. I've spoken with the general by telephone and I'm happy to relay his report that he's in fine shape and I can tell you that just hearing him, I told Nancy he sounded as if he'd just gone down to the corner for five minutes. The same courage and resolve that James Dozier demonstrated on the battlefield in wartime have seen him through this new test with flying colors. His country and our allies can be very proud of this gallant man. I've also talked with President Pratini of Italy and expressed America's appreciation for the dedicated and effective work of the Italian authorities in tracking down General Dozier's kidnappers and saving his life. They too have acquitted themselves with honor. This rescue is welcome news for all those who believe in the rule of law and the defense of our free institutions. We all share in the joy of his family at the return to freedom of a courageous soldier whose life has been dedicated to the defense of liberty. And now back to the regularly scheduled program. It's a pleasure to greet such a distinguished company in the White House on this very special occasion. For most of you, I know this is a return visit, the most recent of many. Each of your lives was intertwined with one of the most famous residents of this house. You too are a part of its history. So as the latest tenants in the people's house, Nancy and I welcome you back. We're all here today that mark the centennial of one of history's truly monumental figures, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. We instill debate that he tales of his intentions, his policies and their impact. But all agree that like the founding fathers before him, FDR was an American giant, a leader who shaped, inspired and led our people through perilous times. He meant many different things to many different people. He could reach out to men and women of diverse races and backgrounds and inspire them with new hope and new confidence in war and peace. Franklin Roosevelt was the first president I ever saw. I remember the moment vividly. It was in 1936, a campaign parade into Moyne, Iowa. What a wave of affection and pride swept through that crowd as he passed by in an open car, which we haven't seen a president able to do for a long time. A familiar smile on his lips, jaunty and confident. Drawing from us reservoirs of confidence and enthusiasm some of us had forgotten we had during those hard years. Maybe that was FDR's greatest gift to us. He really did convince us that the only thing we had to fear was fear itself. One of our guests today, Senator Jennings Randolph, who served in the Congress during the New Deal, summed it up very well in a recent interview. Senator Randolph recalled of Franklin Roosevelt, he lifted us up with a sense of joy. But I think his greatest contribution was that we discovered ourselves as individuals. I count. That was his contribution. Each of us could say, I count. Well, of course, not quite everybody agreed at the time. Now, well, I recall the criticisms from FDR's first campaign for the nomination to the end of his last term. No less appundant than Walter Lippmann wrote Franklin Roosevelt off at the starting line, dismissing him as a pleasant man who without any important qualifications for the office would very much like to be president. Forgive me, but now and then I think I've been hearing an echo. FDR was denounced by some as a traitor to his class. The people who said that missed the whole point of what he believed in and what this country is all about. There's only one class and that's we the people. Woe unto those forerunner domestic who try to divide us. They've never succeeded yet. I think there's a basic reason for this, one that Franklin Roosevelt understood as well as anyone. The overwhelming majority of Americans, he said, are possessed of two great qualities, a sense of humor and a sense of proportion. This great nation of ours is a caring, loving land. Its people have a zest for life and laughter, and Franklin Roosevelt shared those qualities. But we're also a practical people with an inbound, born sense of proportion. We sense when things have gone too far, when the time has come to make fundamental changes. Franklin Roosevelt was that kind of a person too. Every generation of Americans has faced problems and every generation has overcome them. Like Franklin Roosevelt we know that for free men, hope will always be a stronger force than fear, that we only fail when we allow ourselves to be boxed in by the limitations and errors of the past. This is not a political gathering. It's a celebration of a great man who led our nation through historic times. It's a celebration shared here today by many who knew and loved him well. Friends, colleagues, and relatives, and for my part, a young sportscaster who first felt the awe and majesty of this office when that familiar caped figure drove down the avenue in Des Moines, Iowa in 1936. The figure who proved to us all that happy days could and would come again. In that spirit I can think of no better way to conclude these brief remarks and to ask you all to join me in a toast, and I think he would join, a toast to happy days, now again and always, to happy days. I think we're going to hear it. Thank you all. Thank you very much.