 We've had a wonderful couple of hours here and I'd like to, in addition to having had the presentation of the plaque, we have a couple of other small mementos here that I'd like to present you at this time. Well, thank you very much. I'll ask Jim Gibbons to come over. Okay. This is, as you can see, a replica of our administration building. Yes. The golden dome. And we'd like to give this to you at this time and I hope you will keep it. Well, thank you. I will keep it. I will treasure it. Thank you very much. And this is not available just anywhere. We don't even carry it in the Notre Dame bookstore. On the number one, that seems appropriate. And the giver. Thank you very much for all of this and of course the day itself has been a red letter day that I've been looking forward to for a long time. I was just saying in the other room to some of your people there that football was always a major part of my life. And then I wound up sports announcing. And as I said in my remarks, once I became the sports announcer at the station and there was an open date, I found that I was the one that could tell in the game we ought to cover. And so I would, every season, manage to get to South Bend almost and do a Notre Dame game or two. And so all the legends and everything and some of the things that I mentioned there in the, in my remarks were all, all true. And as I say to the younger people here, if only you could understand what a national figure rock was and how many millions of people just identified with him. And today they could tell you where they were the day they learned the twos of the terrible tragedy as I could. I was in a fraternity house at Eureka College over in Illinois and heard it. It was, it was a great tragedy for all. But it just, it was something, a legend that I think planted football so firmly. And rock, many times things have never been told about him. I believe that football was a really typical American sport and something that was peculiar to us in the whole action and everything of the game. And that you got more than just a game out of it by, by playing it. I know I should stand here and get talking to you again. You've heard me long enough for today. But if someone had one question or so that has been bothering them, they said to themselves, if I ever had a chance to ask him. Fire away. Fire away. I would like to add a few remarks in there about getting to play the part of the gibber. There was quite an experience there under contract of the studio and all. And as I did say in, in there, I had made a mistake. I just thought as long as I was under contract of the studio and had this good idea of what should be a picture that I ought to get it down on paper. And I asked people for help and questions and so forth. And as I say, all of a sudden found out it was a good idea when I read it in the papers that Warner Brothers are going to make the picture. And when I announced what all I had ever wanted was to play the gibber. And incidentally, I learned a great many stories about the gibber. The things that he did and some of them are probably not epic and shouldn't be told, but he always, he always came through. And that first scene, becoming acquainted with Rock, that was the scene that they used for the screen test. And Patrick Ryan very graciously, usually stars didn't participate in screen tests. They let somebody else just do that, read the lines with you. But he did the script with me knowing how much I felt about that. And I was told then a true story of when what happened then, you know, was that the gibber did take the ball and ran about 65 yards for a touchdown through the varsity playing for the scrubs. And the players up there in the line that were supposed to be the Notre Dame first and second team were a whole bunch of football players from USC and UCLA. And I was an actor in their eyes. And so when I went into the line that called for me, he's faking out here a little bit, cutting back in through the line and then reversing the field. And as I got to the line, suddenly I'm flat on my face. And someone didn't tackle me, knew he couldn't get away with that. But boom, you know, like on an ankle and so forth and down I went. Well, I came back and I lined up again thinking it was an accident and same thing happened down again. Now the director begins scolding me about, can't I stay on my feet? The bit player who's playing an assistant coach back there where I was was the great Jim Thorpe. And as I came back again and now I'm boiling. And he says, it looks like some of the boys are having a little fun. And I was boiling mad and I said, yes, and I'm going to have a little fun. And they snapped the ball and I went out and I had picked the man that was doing it. And I didn't attempt to go past him at all. I just ran over him. When I came back, old Jim said, you look like old Jim there. But also that I was told a Ropney thing that when that actually happened in the true Gip story, his first time in running the ball through the varsity. And he came back with the ball and handed the ball to Ropney. And he said, I guess the boys are just tired. Well, I won't bore you with any more. It's nice to see you all. Thank you very much. All of a sudden the ball came down right between us.