 So good to see you, it's good that you're here to hand it to me. Well listen, please to do it. Thank you, sir. See that that gets distribution. You betcha. Thank you very much. Before the day is out. You can't imagine how helpful it will be. You're an operating line, I understand. The voters are extraordinary. We have a popular governor, but he can't match you along the end of Saturday night. Listen, you don't have your wife with you. No, sir. Well, I was good to come. I was good to tell her, I just got a letter, a very nice letter from her mother. Yes, sir. Her mother was delivered by Nancy's father. That's right. I meant to tell you that when you came to Northern Virginia with us, and I forgot about it. It was a very lovely letter. I appreciate it. It's being answered. Very nice of you to remember it. We certainly appreciate all your help and support. The visit on October 9th was a tremendous boost, and this is going to put us in a victory comp. Very confident in the outcome. We look forward to working with you in the next four years. Well, we'll keep praying and keep our fingers crossed. All right. Can we get the troops out tomorrow night? Yeah. Don, we've got the thing that's happening right now. We've got the momentum and the excitement on our side. I walked in last night out at the airport, and our friends up here put together something they didn't tell me about. They had a pom-pom squad from Woodson High School, and about 200 people out at the airport. And I walked in the doors out of Dallas Aviation, and there was this huge rally with pom-poms. That's everything I think. And that's going to make the difference. We've got the fact that they put on a negative ad yesterday, trying to damage me by leaking me. Very formal. And last minute, you know, and that's an indication that they're worried. They've got to do something to slow us down. If they don't slow us down, we're going to beat them. Okay. All right. Thank you very much. All right. Appreciate it. Thank you. I will have voted by 6.30 in the morning. Terrific. Then I know I'll leave at least one another in there. Okay. Okay. See you later. Bye. I can't even sit down. I can't. I'll give you any charges. I'm saying one hill. Yes, you're correct. There was one. I just felt, Mr. President, that it's rather like a marital affair at last to find out about it as the husband. Seems like I can get through all these negotiations and the last person I've talked to is Ronald Reagan. And I was the husband the last week. Right. Well, I'm delighted though. Thank you so much. I kind of wish that I'd started this before because, you know, I feel the presidency is getting bigger and bigger historically speaking. And as I said in my next to Mrs. Reagan, what really got me worried was around the time the Bitberg episode. The fact that history tends to consolidate in like, sediment of journalism. And after a couple of years, that sediment becomes rock. And when future people are going to be writing about you, that's the rock they're going to go to. And those rocks are as phony as the kind we used to make in Hollywood. Exactly. The whole Bitberg thing, for example, was portrayed as some kind of an accident and misplanning in the part of our advanced people. And then it was portrayed that I was kind of a stucker, afraid that, you know, from the very first, I thought it was the right thing to do. And the only thing that had happened where I had turned something down, and that was a visit to a concentration camp. But that invitation had not come from Chancellor Cole. That had come from another political figure, another area in the camp was in his area. And since my visit in addition to the Senate was a state visit by Darren invitation, I didn't get a host while I accepted an invitation from this other fellow to do something. That is what contributed to his understanding. But Cole informed me that he had always, until he hadn't made a decision yet, which one of the various camps, thinking in terms of what would fit better with the schedule and so forth, travel time and all of that. There's that election now. We're going to go out and open mine and set it up for you. I did not do much for the gifts. How many texts were proven? Facebook picture with one like Big Leagues. Monty Straton? Monty Straton. Some stories like that. Good boy. This is the fellow that had a physical. This man had a physical and a doctor said that he was beginning to be cholesterol and maybe one day he might face right there through the heart surgery. He called the doctor back and said, well, the best possible summary, why don't we do it now? Good shape and so forth. The doctor said that's the most intelligent thing I've ever said to him. And yes, and within the year of having that surgery, he and his wife then went to Nepal and find Bob Everest at the 23 and 7th height. You know, not that last a little bit with the peak. He then started riding me on space and he said, you know, there's no one that's ever really been there that could come back and write as a writer would about such an experience and all. So I forwarded all of this from the best and told him about the guy as much as I knew and all of that. Well, he's just called from Johnson Space Center. This was just kind of a space center because the best got very enthused about the whole thing and started moving, but another thing entered in that here was a volunteer who would give them a research they could never get any other way with regard to certain levels of age in space. This week at the Kennedy Space Center went perfectly. We covered everything. I saw the launch in half an hour after the launch astronaut John Young flew me to Houston. I've been here ever since. In addition to a brief briefing of the entire program, which is ongoing, they gave me the most thorough physical I've ever had in my entire life. I came through perfectly. In addition, they gave me a high altitude test and I came through that perfectly. Then they gave me the NASA stress test and I scored 96% of perfect as a result of all that testing yesterday morning, they sent me up in an airplane into the space of an hour and subjected me to 40 aerobolic dives up, down, up, down where with each dive you achieve weightlessness. One of the astronauts said, oh, I hear you're going up in the vomit column. That's what everybody calls this airplane diet. I was on this airplane test in addition to the crew in position, nervous, and about eight other people being tested. On this one, I have no humility. Other than the crew, I was the only one who didn't get sick. He's slated general for, I think it's in January for, to go up. That's all I'm set for, I was doing all this in connection with that. I'm still here and will probably remain heroes through the end of the week. A lot of best wishes on your upcoming trip to Geneva. Done. He's older than I am. I saved that in the last. Master of the People's Republic of Congo. Mrs. Bachi. Mrs. Bachi. What do you do? I live with children coming with us. My name is Mr. Children. Hello there. Nice to see you. You're all here. This is the, this is the, this is the, this is the job. This is the job. Well, you and I, we're over in front of the fire place. We're going to exchange our papers. All right. We're going to exchange our papers. You will be the, we're looking forward to the improved and closer relations of our two countries. So that maybe private development can be of economic help to you. And welcome you to Washington. You will be the first to serve in the, in the camp. So, we welcome you to Washington. We welcome you a lot. The improvement of the mutual and the relations between us, the private sector, perhaps when it comes to the development of our economy, we welcome you a lot. We welcome you first today. Sure. Thank you, Mr. President. I thank you very much, Mr. President. Long live the President of the Republic. And we have, of my presence, the United States of America. May you be allowed, Mr. President, to renounce, in its name, the life of the generous felicitations to your reelection in the Supreme Magistrate. And you will be presented by the same occasion. It is the will, the health, the honor and the prosperity. My President has asked me to renew to you his best congratulations for your reelection in the Supreme Magistrate to present you his best wishes for a good health. Well, merci beaucoup. Don't ask me for too much more French. I can't, but there's more in French. That's what I can tell you. Well, thank you. Well, welcome to all of you. Welcome to all of you. Welcome to all of you. Welcome to all of you. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. I'm delighted to meet you. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. You and I were over in front of Fireplace for a full-time exchange of papers, and then you would come in. No, it would be a nicer picture if you were between us. I only have anniversaries any more of my 39th birthday. So So I've had 35 of those. It makes you feel better. We're going to see continued improvement.