 You're not going to see one. I'll see you later. No, no. First time. William, how long have you been here? Wait, just a minute. I'm going to be staying first right now about one hour. Oh, I think we're going to be late. What? Right. I'll be there. I'll be there. I'll be there. Next time. Next time. Next time. I'll be there. Next time. I'll be there. Next time. Next time. We have found the thing of a higher sphere. Yes, we found that there's a kind of a dense button that there was going to be a loss out there. Well, I appreciate very much this opportunity of coming in here. I appreciate also the chance to thank you for your support in 1981. What we were trying to do, I think we'll have a continued report that I recognize. Speak. What? Second, let me give you a... Oh, you give me one. She's busy again. Okay, set it up. Action. Greetings to all of you attending the National Association of Plumbing, Heating and Cooling Contractors, Convention in Las Vegas. And congratulations to you on your 100th anniversary. It must be a special source of pride to you that your association is the oldest and largest in the construction industry. Since this convention is celebrating 100 years of history, you might be interested in a little White House history. President Andrew Jackson had the first running water piped into the White House in 1833. And about 20 years later, I'm told Mrs. Millard Fillmore, in the face of great criticism, installed the first running water bathtub. President Franklin Roosevelt put air conditioning window units in the residence, but it wasn't until the Truman renovation that central air was installed. As for heating, well, around the White House there's usually enough hot air to keep things warm. At the association's bicentennial convention a century from now, it will probably be a world we cannot even imagine today. I hope at that convention some future president will be speaking to your successors telling them he's working to keep the economy strong and the nation's liberty secure. And I hope if they refer to these times, they'll say of us that we didn't fail. That we work together to bring America through difficult times. And as people like those of you today who will make sure America remains healthy and free by doing what you've done for 100 years. Building businesses that are the base of our economy. Businesses that provide jobs and opportunities to our citizens. So again, let me congratulate you on your 100 years and thank you for what you've done to build America. Cut. What? Oh. 30 years before his father's death. Gets clean. Gets clean. Gets clean. Gets clean. Gets clean. Gets clean. Gets clean. Pull this. This is amazing. It was very funny. You remember the lunch for the financial people from Wells Creek Journal and the Baron. And you said something like, you're the only woman in my life who has no Karen in my life. And I didn't want to explain to her what I thought about it. I didn't know. I didn't know if there's somebody who told me I said that. said that, but I have to tell you that in Daniel on the phone called her Gloria, and I didn't even know. So I wrote her notes and said, I know your name is Toria. People call me that support thanks for this very strange name. I'll be done in a minute. Five. Okay. Okay. All right. I've written that's good. There was a line in there about underdeveloped countries and I thought that was kind of, how do we come to die on longer? I hope that doesn't happen in a speech there when that one sheet goes flipping off the image there and fortunately the other one's coming right up. You can't read that. Can't you read that? No, there was a little separation there and a couple of the pages. Yeah. I want to see that heather in there. He crossed the United States and he said forgive me. He complains about the dinner. Could you tell us the emotion you felt on the inauguration evening when Jimmy Stewart and General Omar Bradley saluted you first time as Commander-in-Chief? Well that was quite an evening of emotions for me as you can imagine. To have that, well two Gallup men, two generals, General Jimmy Stewart, United States Air Force Reserve and then the Soldiers General, everyone from World War II who was in the service then had to love General Bradley. They had them saluting me. I knew that the regulations don't permit returning a salute in civilian clothes but I guess that was about the proudest salute I'd ever given. Could you tell me your feelings about Jimmy Stewart as a Patriot? Oh, Jimmy Stewart, you'll remember, maybe you're too young to remember that back before World War II we had the first peacetime draft in our history. And Jimmy Stewart, big star in Hollywood, his number came up and off marched Jimmy, but private and ended up in that war as an officer flying a B-17 on the Hamburg run over Germany in combat and he is now General in the Air Force Reserve. But that was just completely natural for him to do. He wouldn't have thought there was anything other than he should have done. Mr. President, do you have a favorite story about Jimmy in the old Hollywood days? Well it isn't exactly in the old Hollywood days but yes I do. Jimmy is a great friend and he's of everyone in Hollywood. I don't know of anyone that doesn't like and respect Jimmy Stewart. He's always been the same but it was out in the campaign trail in 1976 and Jimmy went along and introduced me. I mean the campaign trail is hard enough for the candidate but at least the candidate's up there taking a few cheers and applause and so forth but Jimmy was going through all of that day after day just to help and invariably the master of ceremonies or the toast master at the dinner the banquet would introduce Jimmy as a great Hollywood motion picture star and so forth maybe mention a picture or two and then Jimmy would introduce me and I would get up and variably I would also turn to the toast master and say if you'll forgive me in Hollywood we're very proud of Jimmy not only for his profession and what he's done but he is Brigadier General I said Major General Jimmy Stewart in the United States Air Force he flew as I said the Hamburg Run World War II and there'd be great applause and so forth well one night at a banquet the master of ceremonies now wait a minute I'm lousin' up the story here let me start again why don't you ask the question did I say Major General? yes you did you started bringing it here I corrected myself Major General Jimmy Stewart ask the question take it from the start Mr. President do you have a favorite story about Jimmy Stewart? oh yes in 76 he was out on the campaign trail with me and the campaign trail is tough enough for the candidate but at least he's getting cheered and applauded now and then but Jimmy was there to help and he'd usually introduce me and in the various banquets or dinners the toast master would introduce Jimmy Stewart as a great Hollywood star and name some of his pictures and I would inevitably get up and apologize to the master of ceremonies and say may I add that Jimmy Stewart is respected and loved in Hollywood for more than his profession is acting Jimmy Stewart flew a B-17 on the Hamburg run in World War II Jimmy Stewart is a Major General in the United States Air Force Reserve well it'd be great applause at that but one night we got to a banquet and the toast master got up and not only talked about his motion picture career but then said he was a Brigadier General in the United States Air Force Reserve so I got up and again apologized to the toast master and said if you'll forgive me it's Major General Jimmy Stewart and again great applause when we got back to the hotel that night Jimmy said Ron that fella tonight was right it is Brigadier General I just hadn't corrected you before because it sounded so nice Thank you Mr. President Thank you very much Thank you Mr. River Mr. River Mr. River could just eat his heart out Mr. River could just eat his heart out Better, alright That's it, that's all That's it, that's all That's it, that's all That's it, that's all Alright You want me to all make you cry telling about Jimmy and his son and all Oh I remember him one night at a Hollywood premiere What was the picture about Ramo, General Ramo and he was coming out of the theater this isn't what I was going to tell you Jimmy was coming out of the theater and just very quietly said isn't it a little soon to be making them heroes But the story I was going to tell you was a man in Hollywood went to the same church that I did whose son was overseas in World War II and he sat down and wrote a poem I still have a copy of the poem most beautiful poem wrote about when you were a little boy and you hurt yourself or bumped your knee or something it was your mother that comforted you because men aren't supposed to embrace she hugged you and so forth and he went on with it and all in poem, a very nice poem in this and the last line of the poem was I'm sure my son if you were here today we would embrace and he mailed it and the mail boxed down at the corner and as he got back to his front porch the telegraph boy was there and the telegram that said his son had been killed in action I can't tell it without I'm willing to and we just, you know, you think of that all the years he'd waited and finally decided the best way he could tell it