 Good evening. Good morning. Good morning. Good morning. Nice to see you. Jim, how are you? How are you? Good to see you. How are you? Good to see you. How are you? Good to see you. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. How many did you get through? One second. Get in the car. Alright. We're allowed to. They don't like it at all. But we wouldn't want. That is the party that's ready to move. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Very enthusiastic about Nancy's effort in the drug program. Which I guess kicks off tonight. Yeah, on that show. I signed a proclamation for the national drug use which has to be the ceremony. We'll be seated. Mrs. King pleased to welcome you to the White House a home that belongs to all of us, the American people. When I was thinking Greenleaf Whittier came to mind. One of the important crises we faced was racial discrimination. In America where because of the color of their skin nearly one in ten lived lives that were separate they were refused entry into hotels and restaurants made to use separate facilities. But in 1955 when a brave woman named Rosa Parks station unconstitutional Dr. King had awakened something strong and true inextricably bound to our freedom we cannot walk alone. In the years with the faith he told his followers that unearned suffering in 1963 he addressed a quarter of a million people at the Lincoln Memorial. King was gunned down by a brutal assassin. His life cut short at the age of 30. Civil Rights Act of 1964 had guaranteed all Americans equal use of public accommodation as federal Americans. And since Dr. King's death his father and took action to correct him. And we should remember races of bigotry still mark America. So each year on Martin Luther King day let us not only recall Dr. I just have to believe that all of us if all of us and senatorial delegations and other representatives who gathered here on Martin Luther King Jr. one who also was the recipient of the highest recognition he loved unconditionally he was only peaceful means can bring about peaceful ends. His commitment what manner of man was this. Glad to be joining it. Jim Hildon. Yes, most of the time below. Has it been the hardest week of your presidency? Well, I think the decision and I must say what to do. Mr. President, in retrospect it might have been a mistake to press out of Grenada for 48 hours or so or do you have any second thoughts about that? Well, no, because I didn't even have any first thoughts. It made up my mind and I know the Chiefs of Staff went around with this that the commanders in the field was obviously a kind of an unknown situation to parachute in some of the forces did. We had so little information I just decided that they didn't need civilians back here looking over their shoulders or tapping them on the back and asking them I mean us now to report to you in every hour on the hour or anything of that kind that they were in command and make the decisions they thought were most fair to the success of the mission. But I think the press also jumped a little early on their criticism because by the second day they had brought a pool in they increased that in the next couple of days and by the fifth day when they opened it totally up and had over 170 people brought in as I understand there were roughly 180 press on the Barbados going over. Part of the problem in the last couple of days before they could have gone in earlier was the availability of planes for transportation and then they turned them loose they were on their own and we set up I understand the commander set up headquarters at the airport with a crew of about 15 people maps of the island facilitated getting interviews and so forth and I just think that it was done plainly on the military situation they didn't know how it was if there were going to be hostilities what direction they would even be coming from and so I just you've got a lot of criticism from Europeans and from our allies about the invasion of Grenada are you trying to patch that sort of strain up at the moment how concerned are you about that? I'm not very concerned about our relationship meetings with foreign ministers and all go right on and you'd be surprised how many of them expressed their approval of what what took place I mean they're expressing approval in private while criticizing it in public yes I think that all of them or many of them took a policy of possibly it was for domestic consumption I don't know the situation there was one I can't get used to calling Mrs. Thatcher we're on her first name I had a cold idea I found out she didn't like Maggie but no the situation was the secrecy and not fear therein fear here because we've had so many leaks this was literally the first thing we managed to bring off without a leak and a leak in this case could threaten the lives of so many people during your entire administration yes well let me just finish on this so I received an outline which is a printed thing not a telephone call a message from her she had called to tell me that it was coming in and in that she expressed some reservations about whether we would take any action I suppose maybe she knew from all those little hymns that had asked us to come in were all by the time that arrived our forces were on their way and so I think in the morning and being morning earlier than here I think that there was a kind of an embarrassment now we've tried always to communicate with our allies we couldn't in this instance when I called her and explained that our concern was not that her end was possibly a leak at this end and what the situation was why she understood and I think has aggrieved what it was an embarrassment I think to her to have the opposition particularly in the parliament there and she had to admit she didn't know anything about it thank you very much for your time sir goodbye sir goodbye good morning good morning sir preparations for your travel we've discussed economic issues trade, other dimensions of economic relationships with these two countries today we'd like to discuss the security dimension of your visit security assistance security threat cooperative relationships with both countries visit comes at a time when the region is somewhat charged with concern on security issues in the wake of the control times about energy trade finance security issues, political issues separately in this meeting we'd like to try to integrate these things and establish some priorities for how they are treated in your visits on Tokyo and Seoul again the way the secretary Schultz will present an overview of the significance of the trip for our Asian relations Mr. President as Bud says we have been focusing in these discussions on a whole variety of very tough issues involving our relationship principally with Japan but also with the region