 I think groups, solidarity, together I think we constitute a heartfelt concern with Poland. Sanctions, Marshall Law were imposed as you know, except they wanted to improve relations. They would have to lift those restrictions on their people. The law was removed in 1993 and thousands of political prisoners free through amnesty. Since September, no, the amnesty of September, no one is suggesting. We do feel that Poland still has a long way to go. Free trade unions are starting to hold independent political activity requests and genuine national reconciliation has not been achieved. Solidarity in the Polish church, however, urged us to lift the sanctions. I think that's something that we were concerned about. Even before that, the ranks of sanctions were injuring the very people we wanted to help. The people of Poland, and then their careful review and growing across section of views. Church, solidarity, allies, and Congress having conducted talks with the Polish government. I decided that those sanctions imposed on December 81 and October 82 should be rescinded. Lifting the ban on Polish eligibility for official US credit and credit guarantees. However, continuation of federal relations is possible only if respect for human rights is maintained and national reconciliation restored. We'll be watching to see the further steps that have been taken. Progress made is not reversed. Freedom is precious to us. Slogan and polition have been in this struggle the last century. When they did that, their slogan was, for you, a freedom of ours. Well, that's our slogan, too, on the progress section. Today's a new step, a big step, and I hope our relations with Poland can develop. We had along the genuine progress toward national reconciliation, and I think that's enough talking for me. The sanctions were imposed were necessary, and it's right now that the sanctions have been very much. We are concerned about the people of Poland's open play. But after this is done today, the relationship will improve. Once the situation in Poland will be such that it will be more political to the United States and all freedom of other people. So thank you again, sir. Well, I'm pleased to do it. Incidentally, I want you to have a very interesting reading, some very informative things about Poland, World War II history, and I received a gift from the former ambassador of the United States of Poland. He's here to wrap up. I'm sitting too. I was at his joint meeting when the sanctions were imposed, and rightly so, and now they are lifted, and rightly so. Well, I can thank you for your book, which you graciously sent to me, and tell all these people I have read it, and really deeply moved, and I think thoroughly in some regard the relationship with Soviet Union. I couldn't put it down. Thank you very much for getting me away from on my streets. Thank you. I'm going up to the door and take pictures. Sam, hi. How are you? Mr. President, how do you do? I'm good. Thank you very much. A photo here of everyone. All cameras. Sure. Okay. You're the view. Just some souvenirs. Go ahead. Your visit to the Oval Office. Thank you very much. Why don't you come on? This is a... I'm just giving away souvenirs. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. I'm glad you're back. I'm for the ladies. It's such an honor. Thank you. It's a pleasure. Congratulations. Thank you very much. Good work. Mary Ann wants to get one family photo here. One group photo. Okay. Everybody can move down this way. Just a little bit there. All right. We're just going to... Somebody come right over here where I am. I know. Well, like millions of others, we pray for you daily. Well, thank you. And the Lord's been good to all of us. If sometime you get busy... You also know I would do a talk. I'd like to do a letter from the president of Congress. I'd like to leave here with you. Thank you very much. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Good to see you again. Thank you. Mr. President. You're looking great. I want to feel you. I think maybe they want to... Can we get a picture of this one? I'd like to say to you on behalf of the chamber and the... I think there is a certain kinship between... This is your program and the thing that we suggested about. You've been so much help before on other things. I'm glad to have it again on this. Thank you. You just have to play the same thing. I keep America on top. Just a candidly without some suitability. Thank you very much. Appreciate it. That's right. Thank you so much. Hope to see you down. I'll be away in the blind. I think you'll find out. Great to meet you. All right. Rest in peace. I'm so good at life and I'm in secret. I'm glad to see you. You can pick me by then. Oh, that's great. That's great. Thank you very much. All right. Good to see you again. Thank you. The last two years it represents 25% of your administration and we want to be with you to make sure that you get that 100% because the country needs it. Thank you very much. We're having the 70... I just need about to sit back and relax for two years. This year will be the 75th anniversary of the year that President Taff founded you. We've invited you to speak to our annual meeting on April 27th and that's 75th the commemorative anniversary. We hope you'll be able to do that. That's the word... Tony Goyles, Mr. President. Who do they have here? And coming to the door is Gretchen Rosencrantz. Oh, well... Who picked Tony here? Did you just step over here in the room? Tony, please. Tony, just back up with the president. Yeah, right next to him. Right next to him. There you go, buddy. Well, no stare in the room. Stay in the room. The others are coming this way. The parents are coming. Well, you two are doing a very good focus. This is Tony's father, Mr. President, and his mother, Donna Boyle, and he's Mr. Tarnes. And Brian Rosencrantz, and Gretchen's mother, Paula Rosencrantz. Gretchen's sister, Shelley. Hello. Mary Greenwood, Board of Trustees. Hello. Just telling the children what a wonderful thing they're contributing to, and the good that can be done. Mr. President, there's one more person. Diane Sarator. Hello there. Nice to meet you. Thanks for your patience, ma'am. Well, now, just one minute here, there are two ambassadors, but I think maybe I'd better give these to them. These are jelly bean jars filled with jelly beans. Oh, no. Who would like that? The parents would like that. Thank you, sir. Thank you, sir. Now, there's some other souvenirs. We're just going to sit here. Thank you, sir. The old office. Thank you, sir. The ladies. The pins. And yours. Oh, yes. But also the Bill of Rights, which is in your bed. It's tied in with it. You've got 200 years. Oh, Richard, can you come in? I'm just surprised you're wonderful to see you again. But it's good to see you, Mr. President. It's a pleasure to see you. Nice to see you. It's the President. It's the President. It's the President. Yeah, oh, it's on the desk. It's on the desk here. The National Consumers Week Proclamation. And that is very dependent on the Constitution. It will begin on the 19th day of April. Here's the report. We had over 450 different individuals in the country putting on full-time, 75-year-olds, and Pat Thaley here, who had a receiving line as our national journey. We're doing our third year and doing a beautiful job. This is the poster that Sirius has had prepared for this National Consumers Week. It shows that the National Consumers Week is right. Yes. The National Consumers Celebrate the Constitution is our slogan. And that's the theme. You and your five predecessors have endorsed the Consumers Bill all right. So we sum it all together. And I'd like to say, Sirius, this is the fourth year, Mr. President, that Sirius has done this. This is how I stretch my budget. You just keep that up. We'll do it next year. This is a more complete description. Thank you very much. And Mr. Realman and the National Futures Association are partners this year. And they have given us $200,000. So we send it all to the country. Out of the budget process. That's adding my budget to that. Private sector first. Yes. Private sector first. That's very dear to my heart. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thank you very much to see you. Thank you. So we go this way. Thank you so much. It's been great. Let's go around the back. Thank you. Thank you very much. Mr. President, we have a lot of support out there. Thanks very much. I'm Mr. President, Ambassador Gillespie. It's good to see you. Nice to be up here. Well, we've been a long time after getting this picture text. It was a great thing. The rest of the letter. Bring them up here. Your letter was well received. I'm going to tell them that we just have this little chat. You would want to encourage him to keep going. He will. Yes. But also, I want to thank you because I know that's... You've got to... Look before you cross the street. There are times that and all of your personnel please tell them. They're doing a great job. You're really serving it on. Thank you very much. Just a little souvenir. Thank you so much. I know that press thing last week that took a lot of courage. They have really put themselves out in front there. A lot of brave people trying to do a tough job and they've appreciated everything you and Nancy and I have done. Last June and September are meeting in November. So I want all of you to be as careful as you possibly can. Make advantage of all the security that you've been in. Alright, nice to meet you. It's an honor to meet you. It's an honor to have you here. Thank you. Nice to see you. Friends found out we were coming here. They went into a panic and insisted that we get you to start wearing a little cleavage paraphernalia. For heaven's sakes. Thank you very much. We'll just throw that away. I'm on a mess. I'm on the sidelines before. My own. My own. We have some cleavage in our hands working around here, huh? Marking the place. Let's take it out. My money. Ex-offensive. My day, you were offense and defense. We played the whole game. As a matter of fact, in my last three years in Cali-Tai, I've been told about three minutes of every day. You can throw it back to him. I don't know if I want to throw it. Well, listen, thank you very much. I had a little fun with this. But it was good to see you. It was a right guard. One adventure that I remember and served me very well in later years was a missed block. Back in my era, when Rodney and Notre Dame had just brought about the thing of guards coming out of the line on interference. So in most of our plays, instead of hitting the man opposite way, we were all pulled around. We had one play. It was an off tackle smash, quarterback carrying the ball. And the whole key was me getting the first man in the secondary out around the hidden. And we only had about 20 seconds left to go in the game behind one point and about 65 yards to go back in our own territory. And we called instead of a pass, called that play. And, uh, our quarterback went out, cut back, reversed his field down the sideline and made the touchdown. And I never figured out how we did it because I missed the block. I didn't get the man I was supposed to get. But after I graduated, my audition led to a sports event. I owned a job in radio and mentioned sports. And he asked me about it. I was on my way out. He didn't have any job for me. And, uh, he caught up with me at the elevator. And he said, what was that you said about the sports? And I said, well, I'd like to be a sports announcer someday. And he said, what do you know about football? And I said, played it eight years. And he said, could you tell me about a game and make me see it? And I said, I think so. He took me in a studio, stood me in front of a microphone, said when the red light goes on, something sounds listening. You broadcast an imaginary football game. Oh, I think you said this at the Bob Costiston during the festival, was that it? Huh? Say, by Godly, I did tell that. You did? Yeah. Sorry. And the thing was, so what I did was take that game in the last quarter. I thought I, you know, I could remember names of the other fellows as well as our guys and wouldn't have to fish around for names of the imaginary broadcast. So I brought us all the way up to that point. And I have to tell you, this time on the replay, I got that talk you ever saw. I mean, quite a deal. Quite a deal. That's right. I'd forgotten. I did say that. I went to Miami, so I was watching that game with a little bias towards it. Yeah, I can see that. Well, by Godly, good to see you. I imagine how busy you are. I appreciate you taking time out to see this. Pleased to do it. Oh, listen. I'm not totally empty-handed either. Just a couple of little souvenirs here over the office. Oh, thank you. Oh, thank you. Hey, are you flying out this afternoon? Out to Camp David, yes. It's kind of an escape. Have a good speech this afternoon, too. Thank you. Thanks again, sir. Thank you very much. I've got to get some of the Secret Service to maybe win for a little touch football. You know, the funny thing was, I was a guard, but in practice and everything, I was the best passer. I was going to say, you had too much talent with the ball there. I should have handed off once in a while or threw it or did something. In those days, you used to come out on the field before the game early and then just break up and your team and XR are warming up throwing passes at each other and the receivers would all seek me out to pass to the pass. Is that right? I was a guard and I was throwing the pass. Must have been the best athlete on the team. I said, oh, not really. Well, if you could block and pass, that's everything with tackling and you did that, too. See, I think I had to hang onto that, hadn't I? Put it in there. Oh, I thought I might just keep it handy, but at some point I might want to throw it around. Want me to put it in the closet here where I keep the other fun things like the golf club and the ball and the veto stamp.