 When you make your remarks, then it will be held a tight shot for you and the second camera will be moving around for a wide shot, so I'm not concerned with that. Take one. Second sticks, please. Second sticks, take one. Mr. President, it is a great honor and pleasure for me to be here again today. We recall presenting you with the Invest in America Eagle Award last year on the occasion of the Bicentennial of the American Eagle as our national symbol. Today, I ask you again as an honor and pleasure to present the American Eagle on Invest in America to Marvin L. Stone, the editor of U.S. News World Report, and on the occasion of their great Golden Jubilee. Well, I can't think of a better custodian of the American Eagle than you and your magazine. For the past 50 years, U.S. News and World Report has set the highest standard for journalism in Washington, throughout America, and around the world. Each week, you record the contest between instant opinion and ultimate truth, and you do so with the integrity and intelligence set forth by your founder, David Lawrence. And now, let me read the inscription, 2 million subscribers, and a lot of that news centers right here on this office. And I wonder if I could ask you to say a few words to our people who are gathering here in Washington this week to celebrate our Jubilee celebration. Well, I'd be happy to. Hello to all of you at U.S. News and World Report's 50th anniversary dinner. I want to say right at the top that I read your magazine every week, and I have an admission to make. You know how some people turn to the sports section first in the newspaper. Well, I'm on the 60s, the Watergate scandal of the 1970s, and the economic uncertainty of the early 1980s. And let me add, I'm looking forward to some intense coverage of the economic revival of the 1980s. One thing that hasn't changed during the past 50 years is the purpose of U.S. News and World Report. Yours is a news and service magazine that both reports and interprets the news and provides up-to-date help for readers in planning their lives and their businesses. For your subscription, call the number flashing on your screen. Marvin, did you write this? I'm sorry I couldn't be there this evening and enjoy this celebration. I know I've been called an optimist, but I believe the world will have a few more things to celebrate in another 50 years. I genuinely do believe there will be more prosperity and more freedom around the globe, and I know U.S. News will be there to report it. Thank you, and now enjoy yourselves. Then we'll go back to the substitute. Oh, I was going to say, well, yesterday, one thing Howard suggested that seemed to me, since evening with this, the other one at the Budget Committee, not to try and reconcile it. Oh, sure. That would be a bad result. Hey, look. Hi, how are you? How are you doing? Hi, nice to meet you. Hi, nice to meet you. Eric Whitmer. Well, we met, and I want to get a closer look at the night. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. Hello again. Hello there. Hello. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. I bet they want me to get a little closer. Well, I'm just going to, please, see some of you here at least, and I understand your needs, because you're all graduates of local high school. This year is more than 23rd year where every senior has got a college scholarship, 23rd year. And if he didn't produce such good plays, a lot of college coaches would be on the brink. Mr. President, I want to ask you a question. If we present you a book here with these two young men on the cover of it, and it's about the story. Well, hey. We're going to grant it to a champion president. Well, by and by me. And thank you very much. And for the description. Thank you for this. Will it fit in the library there? Yes, it will. And I'm very pleased and proud. And you know, I have to tell you something, a little thing that happened. The other day, when we were doing that TV thing, and because of the names, I remember the names when I did that little broadcast thing that I did. But I had those on the telecom. So I wouldn't be able to miss the names. And I started in and something went, hey, why aren't you with the telecom? I was watching with way too fast. I was wondering how you would reach out to people. I was talking like a dog. And I had finally just had to skip names and said, well, he, he, I never, that's why I never gave a name. By that time it was out of sight. Really appreciated your time. Then and now to Mr. President. Very much. Thank you, Mr. President. Nice to see you. It's a great pleasure. Certainly. Congratulations to you. Congratulations to Mr. President. That's a great record. It's a pleasure. My pleasure. Well, thank you. Oh, for a good stage, of course. Yes. Yes. My own coach was there. That's right. Yes. Well, good to see you. And again, it's not bad for me. Number one for over two seconds. God bless you, Mr. President. Thank you. Well, good to see you. Good to see you. You don't care about Campbell, of course. It's a pleasure to be here. Good to see you again. This is Roger Wall. Hello, President. Howdy, Mr. President. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. President Obama, how are you? I'm very happy to see you. I don't know where to go. Why don't we go in from the fireplace? If I can. You have them. That's great. They haven't been in there. Beating your own. I'm sure they're going to break yours. Right. I don't know what to say. I don't know what to say. I don't know what to say. I'm going to make a memorial. I don't know how to put it out there. I saw the news and saw that you did. I've always said if anyone was here before you went to the Lincoln Memorial, you guys there was a thing that was told to me the first time around in a long time and it turned out to be true. That is that you go over to one side and look at it. We look at it in profile. You see the gentleness of the man. If you go to the other side and look up, all you see is the strength. And it really isn't, it's not just, I don't know, but it is there. That's a good idea. Oh, that's how my face is like. Listen, congratulations to you. You know, Mr. President, you and I had this one thing in mind. In 1947, the President of the United States, you know what I was saying? I know he is. I remember very well. It's a very great picture, too. On the first of that, I hoped for more, too. Best days of the month. Best years of the month. Best days of the month. Yes. I was going to tell you, I wasn't going to surprise, but I think you had millions of them. Yes, we do that. I don't think we do that. Yes, for a souvenir from you. I'll just give you a pin with the presidential seal. Thank you for everything you used to tell me. You're still Mr. President. I'm very proud of you. Well, all right. It's good to see you again. We have a device pad. Which pad is going to be present? Oh, yes. It's right because tomorrow I'm on my way to California. I'm going to mention you in my speech form. I haven't read the news yet. I don't know if you're recording this. Well, of course, we have something in common, too. Radio. Radio, that's right. I think I probably had the most unusual auditions I've ever given in radio. A man had given me the best advice. I got out of school in 1932. And that was when the government was even advertising. Don't go looking for work. There is none. But I started hitchhiking around because a man had told me. He said there could be people that are going to want to hire young people in their industry. Radio was new. Finally, I told him what I'd like to do is be a sports announcer. So he told me. He said, well, just start knocking on doors. And he said, don't call the industry to ask for that. Just say you want to get a job in radio. You believe in radio. And then once you're inside, well, I tried that. Hitchhiked all the way from the Midwest. Finally, I was in this station in Devonport, Iowa. And the program director told me that he were there just to audition 90,000 and hired an announcer the day before. Well, this was the first time. And the way out the door, I said, how? And then Devonport, you get to be a sports announcer if you can't get a job in a station. And I left. And he caught up with me before I got to the elevator. And he said, what's this you said about being a sports announcer? And I said, well, that's what I'd like to do. He took me in the studio, stood me in front of a mic. And he said, well, that red light goes on. He says, you'll be in here alone. I'll be in another room. But I'll be listening. And he walked me in. In 15 minutes, I grabbed the mic. He says, that's all. He came back in. He said, be here Saturday. You're doing the Iowa Minnesota game. And I became a sports announcer. I want to tell you a couple things. I want you to start to support, as I just want to say, but I think you're doing a wonderful job with the budget country. I feel a good thing to come. Oh, thank you very much. I want to tell you that. And also, number two, I just want to say good work for folks we have. I was meeting with people. I got a vocational rehabilitation. I got a tour of the facility that they have in Columbia. It's wonderful. And they're the ones who got the lift on the van for me. And now I drive around and I do everything that I could ever want to do. That's great. Well, and I know you've done a lot of good in this field. Believe me, we are. In California, when I was governor, we had quite a record there. One of the best. We're going to do the same thing here. South Carolina has done such a good job. Of course, I'm proud of how I'm staying here. She is a fantastic university. I can see that. Yes. Well, thank you. I'll wait for tomorrow. Thank you so much. Great question. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you. Testing one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. Testing one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. Okay. Hey, Bob. Good to Bob, seven boys. Two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. One more, Bob. Was he going to attend the Sunbar meeting? Okay. The members are starting to assemble right now. We're starting to assemble right now. Thanks. Thank you. Thank you. Now the mayfinder after warm-up, the funds are in place. Well, let's put it on the board here. Thank you. Well, the President's swap was hopefully in there. Well, this is my thank you. I remember joining you this morning. I remember your schedule was a bit busy. I've been channel 10 all the time, and we were very lay on there. But, I have been urging and want to urge the Congress to join in supporting the Commission's recommendations to pursue arms control agreements that promote stability and use the support of more ICBM structure. Let me just say that regardless if some of you wanted, when Russians bring up the matter of planes and submarines and so on, we had never ignored those. Our whole approach in the start-up was based on the idea that the most destabilized, the thing that was the most frightening and panicky, was the missile that somebody could just push a button in 20 minutes it's there. The others that were born for submarines and aircraft, but that is as you get to those after you do something about this destabilizing element. And the others we don't think have the same effect on people because at least they're carrying conventional weapons systems that people are familiar with and there's hours and even in the case of submarine days involved in which normal combat can intercept these craft before they do what they're doing, but they weren't ignoring. This was our whole idea was okay get to those after we do something about reducing and I hope some of you are eliminating these very frightening things that are there for someone who push a button and go there on their way and that's that. I welcome the letter that some of you were urging me to take the lead to achieving long-term destabilization, but I tell you I think I have taken the lead and as I just said this is what we want and I'm totally dedicated for pursuing this all the way. We've done a careful examination of the points raised in the sent house and senate letters and our examination includes an 80-part medal review of how these recommendations invest the integrated into the overall arm control approach. These letters I must say do recognize or represent the bipartisan spirit that I think could lead us to common goals and objectives. Central value of the bipartisan commission's recommendation with Secretary Weinberg as you know the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the entire National Security Council have all joined me in supporting is this thoughtful integration of the relationship between the importance of modernization such as the quality of the MX the peacekeeper and assuring us of a collective role in effective deterrence and what this will do also in helping us to promote arms control. I need to use up their arms control. Arms reduction, because I think that we need that and we need a sound approach. We've gotten the Soviet Union to the table and we've either gotten them to talk and propose themselves during their reductions and we think this is an indication that it's a response on their part to what they see as our determination to go forward that we're programmed to this kind so we've provided an incentive and to do it needs your support also for the overall recommendations to include the development and production of the MX and its deployment as has been proposed by the commission out there in your war and air force base and the development of the single head, this smaller missile that we're going to take take development is already we couldn't get in order to produce it right now but to proceed with that but I think the main thing about the about the commission's report is that if we start picking it apart and saying I don't like this or that or something else I think the whole thing of you like putting a keystone out of an arch and I think that taking it as a whole it is a package that merits all of our support each of the past four administrations have made proposals and they've become unroyalty partisan politics and I think if we move close ranks and move forward on a program of this kind that we can wind up with what I think we all want to make is not only the presence of a deterrent peace in the world but an approach that could lead as I say hopefully eventually this kind of to me to look down the road and think that for all time to come the world is going to sit here with this kind of weapon of each other and continue to build up without someday a disaster I can't concede to that and I can't say it without our school and it's not now when I don't know if there's any better time to start working toward this I would like to ask General Malia to take the secretary down I think it's a president President President Do you want to Mr. President I'm pleased to have you I know what you're going to want You guys You guys doesn't set up a couch Wait a minute We're getting the photographers coming in Okay. That's a hard-than-cheap start here. Thank you. Good to see you. How are you? I'm fine. Thank you. Good luck. Look out, see what happens. It's all right. Thank you. That's nice. Thank you for the interview, thank you. Thank you for the interview. Thank you for being here. I'm not speaking to the center of my own celebration. Let's go over it again and we do this again. Oh. And the more interesting is that we're in the Range of Thank you for having me.