 States. Thank you very much here to welcome Catherine Ortega as our new United States treasurer. Also with us today are three former treasurers, Bayview Cannon, Francis Neff, and instead we're congratulating someone already on the team for moving up. Catherine Ortega has been a commissioner on the copyright royalty tribunal and a member of our advisory committee on small and minority business ownership. Must be very proud of you today. I certainly am. You prove to all of us that the American dream is alive and well. Catherine is the youngest of nine children and comes from a family whose heritage is the stuff of which novels are made. She comes after a successful career as a certified public accountant. She became the first woman bank president in Cality was born a Republican. That's better than me. I'm only a convert. Well, it's if you will oversee a budget of $340 million and supervise over 5000 employees on Ortega. So let's get on to the main event and then I understand we'll get a chance to see her put her signature to good use this obligation freely without any mental reservation or purpose of the nation and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office. Mr. Secretary distinguished guest, the number of messages I have received since my nomination for treasure of the United States from people across the country from all has extended you his hand with a prestigious position as Treasurer of the United States father as well as my mother. Thank you. Former Treasurer is the United States who are here will recognize what the Catherine Davalos Ortega is doing is putting specimens of her signature that will later be translated to separate notes with a value of about $60 billion. I want to say my friend, nice to see you again. Nice to see you, sir. Thank you, welcome. This is our minister, the ambassador. The minister. And that's our ambassador. Nice to see you. Well, thank you. Thank you. Good job there. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Well, we think we have a good package. Some flexibility and I, as I say, and I think that the build-up of the idea is reasonable and it certainly is a result of the bipartisan increase in that. And I think, as a matter of fact, that we do have the Congress pretty much now where we're trying to have them, where we want to be on this. So, the debates over the time has come to here. It's our enthusiasm about the Martin Luther King holiday film. Are you enthusiastic about the lights today? Thank you. It's a photo opportunity. No questions. Thank you. Thank you. Have a good day. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Well, you know, we've been consulting with your colleagues and some of you here about the and with the government for these past few months on the arms control matters, and the flexibility to change. At least a few of you here have heard a great deal about this. I think that we've made some decisions. And yesterday we sent Ambassador Brownie on his way with some new instructions and additional provisions to put on the table. And it's vital that we have a united front. I think it's the only way that we're going to keep the Soviets from dragging this.