 President of the United States, Vice President and Mr. Doug Fliggy. Please be seated. Fifty years ago, J. Berwanger of the University of Chicago was a powerful halfback and a hero to millions of football-loving Americans, including a certain sportscaster named Dutch Reagan. In 1935, he won a new award, the Heisman Trophy, and a great American tradition was born. A list of Heisman Trophy winners reads like an honor roll. There was Nile Kinnick of Iowa. There was a brilliant running back and a true patriot who gave his life during World War II. There were the great young men of Notre Dame, Angelo Bertelli, John Lujak, and others who kept on going out there for the Gipper. In recent years, we've seen players set new standards of excellence. Champions like Earl Campbell, Herschel Walker, last year's trophy winner Mike Rosier, and this year, well, this year, there's a young man who stands in a class by himself, Doug Flutey. When Doug Flutey arrived on the Boston College campus in 1981, he was just a fourth-string quarterback. And since that time, he has put together the most prolific passing career any major college quarterback has ever had. He's given us fans a host of moments to remember, including a play during the final seconds of this year's Boston College Miami game that will go down in football history. With a score of Miami 45, as you all well know, BC 41 in just seconds left in the clock. Doug took the snap, dropped back, and with the clock at zero, he fired into a sky-high 65-yard pass right, arched into the M-zone and right into the hands of Boston College receiver Gerard Phelan. BC won the game. Doug Flutey won our eternal admiration. And for 50 years, the Heisman Trophy has stood for loyalty, courage, teamwork, and a ceaseless striving for excellence. Doug Flutey, it's an award that you richly deserve. Congratulations and God bless you. Thank you very much. It's indeed an honor for myself to be here in the presence and having the opportunity to meet the president. And thank you very much for your comments. I'm excited to be here at the White House and it is a great opportunity for my whole family also. I'd like to welcome the fellows from Gonzaga High School and wish you all the luck in the future. It's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for me. The Heisman Trophy is something that means a lot and it's something that I never would have expected. And just, I guess for you guys, if you can dream it, it's possible. I never could have dreamed winning the Heisman or being here in this situation. And it's something I'll treasure for the rest of my life. Thank you. Mr. President, Mr. Vice President, it is an honor to be here today and I'd like to inform everyone that honoring the Heisman's 50th at the Downtown Athletic Club for the first time in award history, we have made a reduced replica to bring to Washington today. Mr. President, on behalf of the Downtown Athletic Club of New York and the Heisman Trophy Committee, it is a pleasure to make you an honorary Heisman winner. That's better than an Oscar. Thank you very much. You're welcome Mr. President. I remember when we met you in New York and you came over with Archbishop O'Connor. Don't forget I played guard at Eureka. Well, thank you very much. I'm very pleased and proud to have this. I'm not even going to put it back down on the table. All right. Thank you all. I guess this includes our show. Oh yes, I will put it down on the table. Thank you. Welcome to St. Hyde. Congratulations. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Congratulations.