 I'm going to spread out a bit and move back a little ahead and out. Mr. President, Kameyue. Well, Kameyue, welcome to meet you. And I understand it is my pleasure and privilege, the little citation to you to present this award on behalf of the National Geographic Society. I'd like to present the John Oliver Lagourse Medal. Medal to Mr. Kameyue, Kameyue Kameyue. Thank you. For his remarkable fossil discoveries and for advancing science and international understanding. Yes. It's a pleasure today to honor this man whose energy, wisdom and dedication have helped to open so many doors in the study of mankind. Thank you. And I'm very pleased to do this. Thank you very much. I have a minimum of thanks for sending me a hand gun for this. Well, I'm very honored to do it. Thank you. Okay. Thanks to one of the people over there. I have had a copy of the magazine, The National Geographic, in which your most recent deeds were all outlined. And I read it for great fascination. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you a bit. Thank you. It was a pleasure. Thank you. Thank you. Fuck. Well... Thank you, sir, for doing this. Well... You're the 6th American President of the United States. Thank you. Thank you. Very honored of him. I asked the question again that I asked him last night. Were these people here? These are our own now. This is my life. Me. You remember Dr. Walker? Yes, I do. Mr. Baster? Oh, nice. Go ahead. So you and Dr. McNeu? Yes. Hello. Hello. Hello. And... Will McGarran? Hello. Hello. We will be put up at the Star Wars Grandals. Yes. Hello. Frank, did everybody? Hello. Plant those wildflower seeds. Did you ever plant those wildflower seeds? You had them there, too. Aha. Ah-ha. Did you think that issue of the National Geographic was just terrific? You said after the luncheon last year with Alan and Richard and Gil and Bill, you are an expert on it. Can I ask a question? I'm going to have to find the answer very quickly. I just was telling a little story about you earlier today. Senator Lacksall was just coming back from doing a mission for me with President Marcos in the Philippines. And I remember when I first visited there, I was Governor of California and President Mason asked us to do a mission for him with Eric in the Philippines. In my life, they were shopping and they did not know that even then there was unrest in the Philippines. So there they were, sitting in the back of the car, accompanied by some secret service from the Philippines. They were looking at the things they bought and talking and they never knew they got back to America. And I told them that the car got caught in traffic jam. It was all jammed in among a lot of other automobiles, a big crowd on the street. And they never knew that all the time they were sitting there. There were four Philippine secret service men standing behind their car with drawing weapons. Oh, my God. I was afraid to tell them till we got back. I promise me that you would show her the sounds because they're so fantastic. Well, there are some that are there. Oh, yeah. But these are so remarkable. And here, this is a water enabler that has blown those to us. This artist in bronze, starting with about a 1504 Spanish saddle, has done in bronze the history of the development of the Western saddle, the American Western saddle. And these are all the various ones with the era and so forth and what they were used for and named as they evolved. You know, the only thing I'm really going to hate about leaving here is that I'll have to give them back the water. So, as a matter of fact, I know that much more recently in the history, down in the border, cattle in Europe, you know, were hurting with whips. And the lariat was an American invention where we didn't have fences over here on the plains. They just ran around the moat. And the saddle that was customarily used was a Spanish war saddle in which a kind of Moroccan really, in which there was a big knob like that in the front of the saddle. For the first few times that a fellow lass who had a steer and then found himself leaving the saddle there first, they with their knives cut a notch around that big knob at home. And that's what made them more than they could them. That had snubbed the road up around the saddle. Any other good years went on about such things. That just was that far in history. Thank you. I was fascinated. Thank you, sir. Thank you. Since the American president, the most important to give this medal. In great place since 1909. Well, I'm honored to do that. And again, congratulations. Thank you, sir. Thanks. Good to see you all. I hope you still come to Kenya one day. Oh. I'm already. You won't throw one of those out exactly. I promise. But I know some people who like to throw them out. I send you a supply. If you got any. Throw it away. You'll pick you up. Thanks. Thank you. Thanks. Thank you.