 all very much for coming out here on a very nice day, but a nice warm day. I'm most grateful to you. You know, I think maybe I ought to tell you a little bit about what I'm doing traveling around right now and trips like this so that you'll understand. I think it's kind of decision time in Washington, and the decision that has to be made is how we're going to get our fiscal house in order without overburdening the people of this country with taxes. I've brought along your fine congressman, Bill Nelson, who's here with me, and who is, of course I'm taking a chance on getting him out of there when there are so many people up there on the other side. I know what side he's on, and he's on the right side with regard to taxes and what we're trying to do. Very briefly, because I know I have to move on, very briefly we think the time has come to recognize that there are some things lacking in the budget process in Washington. Over 80% of the people, if we believe the polls, believe that we should have an amendment to the Constitution that says the federal government cannot borrow money and go in debt, and so far we haven't been able to get action on that. But if you show some interest in it to the people in Washington, we can. The second thing is another one that I want to explain a little bit because I've just been told that a lot of people don't know what I'm talking about when I say that the president ought to have a line item veto. Well, a line item veto simply means that when they're passing a piece of legislation that ordinarily the president would want to sign and be able to sign, but then somebody sticks a couple of spending measures in there that have nothing to do with the original bill, the president ought to have the right to sign that bill after he has vetoed those particular spending measures and gotten them out of the bill. Well, that's what I'm going to be talking about to the other people that I'll be meeting today, but right now, once again, I just want to thank you. This is very heartwarming for this kind of welcome, and I'm most grateful. Try to be deserving of it. All right. Thank you all. All right. Goodbye, and again, thanks. God bless you. I'll be choosing a theme that we also reviewed our Automated Assembly Department, a printed circuit board. Continue to sustain our record of no increase in product costs since 1982. Klauski, the president of Dixiebone Corporation, myself, and all of our manufacturers. This is now in jeopardy. These are blooming ahead. One is the trade bill passed for the house recently. It can only be described as anti-jobs, anti-growth, and anti-consumerants, and the Senate will soon be taking up their own trade. I'd like to spin, crew, on capital happening across the right letters. You'd be surprised how important Nelson could be. But I wouldn't have heard of you wrote some letters of thank you to your congressman here, because he is doing what's right and trying to help all of you. Well, this has been to see you all here, and to see what you've been doing. To continue the record of accomplishments that you refer to, I'd like to say, however, that we've tried to provide an environment that allows those capabilities to surface and to prosper. An open, honest, help people grow, respect everyone's environment. Is this some fancy imported philosophy? No way. It's the tradition that's made in the USA values, the traditional made in the USA values that have made us successful in years past, and I assure you it works today. Each of us has signed a plaque for joining us today. The President of the United States.