 Mr. Sevinbi and Mr. President. Well, hello. Thank you. Thank you, President. Nice to see you. This is my wife. Hello there. Mr. Sevinbi. My last president. Mr. Sevinbi. I'm the sector for foreign affairs, DTG. Hello there. Hello, Mr. President. Mr. Sevinbi. Mr. Secretary of the Advisor. Mr. Sevinbi. Mr. Sevinbi. Mr. Sevinbi. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. Mr. Sevinbi. Nice to meet you. Mr. Sevinbi. Mr. Senator. Well, let us come in. Hello there. Mr. Sevinbi. Mr. Secretary of the Office of Foreign Affairs. Hello there. Mr. Sevinbi. Mr. Secretary of the Office of Foreign Affairs. Mr. Sevinbi. Mr. Secretary of the Office of Foreign Affairs. Thank you, Ed. And that's what I see. Well, this is my first opportunity to congratulate you personally for your stunning victory in the Battle for the Leningrad. Thank you, Ed. And that's just the very end. At the time I referred to you as the hero of the Lombard River. Yes, yes, it's the best. And now, thanks to the support of the U.S. Now we have spoken. Well, thank you. That's good. Well, I must say, in your public statements here, you have been very, well, you've taken a statesman-like position, which we appreciate very much. Thank you, Mr. Secretary. Thank you very much. I've often made the point that you, you don't seek to overthrow the Angola government but are calling for a democratic system. Yes, Mr. Secretary. Mr. Secretary, everybody turns to this sideway so you can turn to the closer. Yes. The sideways facing each other from this side. Fine to see you. Good to see you. Thank you, sir. Mr. President, how do you think, Jim? Mr. President, I'm going to need to have, you know, Mr. Cohen, the one that is so honest to see. I'm in. I don't know where it's limited to, uh, everybody that's, uh, spoken to everybody. Again, how are you? Congratulations to you. How are we coming in? I'm doing fine. Thank you. Governor, can you get right here today? Mr. President, you know what it's about. Taking back the new production reactors. Anxious to get it to surround a little plant. Now, save it. Of course, a few notes here. I'm going to say, first, the new production reactor is a urgent national security matter. They've produced three of them there. The highest part, so long as we've been on the new one, the longer we have new for weapons, we've got to have three of them. And that'll be after you and I along form, I expect. We've got three reactors out now, and they have been cut down to 50 percent capacity for safety reasons. So it's necessary to get this new production reactor to the other part of the moment. Now, we think the Savannah River Plant is the logical place for it. That's an aching can right on line from Georgia and South Carolina. And it's the only site with a total infrastructure already in place. For instance, they've got the field and target fabrication facilities for treating. They've got the chemical separations facilities. They've got the operation support after all that. They've saved hundreds of millions of dollars to put it there, so they're taking it somewhere else. Now, the first time they are all trained, they've got 18,000 people working in Georgia and South Carolina, and they won't have to spend time. Now, I'd say it should be moved somewhere else. A lot of these people wouldn't even go. And then they'd have to train new people all over again. That'll cost a lot of money to do that. Now, the Savannah River Plant also has the only defense waste processing facility to classify how that will remove the waste. In other words, it put this waste in glass. It's the only facility in the United States. And that's got to do with it. Great. So it's Jessica. Hello there. Nice to see you. Okay, Bobby. And Bobby? Bobby's. Good to have you here. Okay. And your mother, Kathleen. Hello there. Well, nice to see you. Nicole Revello. John Revello. Hi, to meet you. Good. Jessica? Excuse me. Jennifer. Yes, it is. Jerry Lee. Nice to have you here. Thank you. And this is Frederick Thompson. Good to see you. His father, Fred Thompson. Hello, Mr. President. Nice to see you. Susan Aiken. You sure have. Wonderful. What you're doing. Phil Hazeltine. Mr. President. Congressman Jim Zaxman. Good to see you again. Good to see you. Thank you. And Jim Johnson. Mr. President. Thank you for seeing us. Good to see everybody here. Thank you. Take care of all of the parents. And then forcing seat belts to be. Wasn't safe alive. We've got to keep going on the revolution here. When the press photography came in. There are 32 states already. That have seat belt walls. 50 and last year alone. The figure is 2450. 50 men were saved by seat belts and accidents that took place. So I'll get down here and a bunch of photographers will come in. Just a second. A resolution that has to do with seat belts or photographing a number of young people here who are here because they wore seat belts. Ever since you were governor of California you've been very supportive of seat belt use. These children are living proof of the fruits of that effort and on their behalf I'd like to present you with something you'd better need a hat and something you can use when you're out there chopping wood in California and I understand that that's a favorite color of yours. It says America Clicks and that's for the seat belt click. You put that belt on and I know you wear it and I know they wear it. Thank you very much. Particularly what Nancy has been saying and that is that this problem crosses all kinds of lines. What should those who have been, if they are women, who have used drugs? If it's just a case of using them I would like to see us do our best to get them in drug treatment organization and to accept the cure. So the policy is going to be give them a second chance. I have always said that I think that this is another indication of why compulsory drug testing is not bad. It is one of the principal answers but let the people know that we'll do our best to salvage anyone who's been addicted. Isn't it true Mr. President that it wasn't drug testing that caught these people. It was actually a tip. I'm not commenting on the investigation but there certainly wasn't drug testing. Wouldn't that mean that we should encourage whistleblowers instead of drug testing? No, I think drug testing is the best way. Are you offended that it took place in the White House? Are you upset that it was here in the White House? Well yes, of course I'm upset that it's found anywhere. Incidentally, I f*****g my test. Can Mrs. White please? Was Mrs. Reagan upset? Mrs. Reagan upset about this after discussing it? Of course you're upset about this. I'm not this kind of an idiot. But you and your wife would ever in any personal danger in the nature of their duties. There's no harm in it. Thank you. Thank you all. Thank you Mrs. Gray. The important issue is the campaign season. Peace out is becoming more and more important there. Apparently the key issue of how to deal with the country's drug problem. I think our administration has done a lot and we must not be in a steal. This is a campaign issue from us. Since I took office in 1981 creating a drug-free America has been a high priority of this administration. Some of the administration's goals were accomplished such as hiking awareness of the dangers of illegal drug use, promoting cooperation of this issue among the public and private sector efforts. Yesterday it was kind of interesting just flying out of Miami to come back here after a period of that fundraiser for Connie Mack. Our plane taxiing went by quite a collection of airplanes of various styles and types and so forth. They are all airplanes that have been seized. Those were transporting drugs. I don't know just what we're going to wind up doing with them. May 18th I announced a formation of a legislative executive task force and the urgent deliberations begin within the next week. I mean I urged that at that time. This afternoon Attorney General Meese and Dr. Ian McDonald are presenting me with some strategy proposals of the National Drug Policy Board. And just the other day I received an illuminous report from a teen headed by Lois Harrington that is going all over this country and has come back with hundreds of suggestions as to what we must do. But I want to get you here today to hear your ideas and proposals and guidelines you start off and tell me what you're hearing from here.