 Thank you Thank you Thank you Thank you Thank you Thank you Thank you Thank you Thank you Thank you Thank you Thank you Hello. Thank you. President? John Scarfover. Thank you. Thank you. Little change. Can I have a hug? Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. You've got seven minutes to tell this to me, but I always... There's a real picture like this, and we are in the middle of the picture. There's a very famous actor, Frederick March, and I find him one day I got him to get in. You know, why are you... When he said, nobody ever reads the entire caption, but they always... The starring role. Oh, thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you. You're always welcome. You're talking to us. I don't think very much. Thank you. As you can see. Bye-bye. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Should we get a group picture here? Let's do a very fine picture here. I'd like to take some pictures, give you a couple of our book, Jews, American History, about how I know that. And just a symbol or a token of our appreciation for having us and giving us the opportunity Well, thank you. I'm well aware of the service your organization has done. Probably the most appreciative honor to have you here. Given Max here a copy of Rochure we have on the member of our faith who served our country very violently during the Korean War, we're going to see if we can get him proper recognition for the service he gave our country that he had served. Korea was a prisoner of war, had been an inmate in the concentration camp as a child and served our country before he became a citizen. But we're going to look into that further. Well, I can't match anything of this. You've been one gentleman. I just thought I'm going to give you a souvenir of your visit here to keep you chained to the sea. Thank you. Thank you very much, sir. I really appreciate that. And I want you to know that Colonel Bernstein and I had the opportunity of being in Berlin this past Veterans Day. And your comments in regard to the war that the Grand Envoy gave is something that I certainly appreciate it because I wholeheartedly agree with you, sir, that you can't appreciate it until you see it firsthand. You just don't tell the story. I have to tell you I enjoyed myself saying it very much. We saw it from the other side also. And there was a little bit of eerie to see these Germans goose-stepping. It was certainly a memory that we will never forget. And in currency's extent, it was by the form of defense and everything. I very much appreciate it. Mr. President, Colonel Bernstein, with the permission to retire to see his assistant superintendent at this point. Yes, sir. I'm not very happy. Thank you very much, sir. I really appreciate it. Have a good day, sir. Thank you. Mr. President, thank you for all the good work in the past. Oh, thank you, Mr. President. Thank you very much. Thank you, sir. Thank you very much. Yes, sir. There seems to be a little bit of a difference. Thank you very much, sir. Thank you, sir. Mr. Dettelbar. Yes, hello there, Mr. President. It's a pleasure to see you again. Sir, right here. Thank you. All right. And, ma'am, is that the ambassador? Yes. And, of course, our ambassador. Mr. President, how are you? Nice to see you. Well, looking forward to working together here with your country now in charge of the European community. You're handling the foreign relations part of that. An incident you were very grateful for. And, of course, that you followed with regard to the oils and fats and the trade restrictions on them. It was quite a problem for us. And I'm sure that would have added to our battle against protectionism on the Hill if that had succeeded. Thank you, Mr. President. We are certainly appreciative of the way in which you are fighting protectionism yourself. And what we did to the oils and fats, even though we left us with some problems, was certainly in order to support you. We're most appreciative. Mr. President, may I bring you the warm greetings from my Queen, who has dear recollection of what she made you in the first lady in 1972. I think it was a great deal. Yes. And, please, our warm regards and many happy memories of our time there. The President then, I was still a governor, and the President had asked me to represent him at the Ray-Billed Fourth of July celebration. It was a wonderful, an important experience. I can tell you that this year was the President's first, but the biggest turnout coming was almost 30,000 people showing up at Ray-Billed. And it was the only summer day we hadn't been mocked so far this year. So what more can we do to warm up in America? Your message was very well received. I read it. Well, that's quite a unique ceremony there. Our Fourth of July is there, a society that's dedicated to the Americans of ancient background. Your daughter was there last year, Mr. President. I think she liked it. I went with her to this place in Alpol, where you get a member of the guilt, the old Christians, the forced guilt, and the daughter-gain speech waiting for you last year, a big success. I told her she was going to enjoy it. She did. Mr. President, I hope, as you've said, that during the six months in which we have the President and the community can strengthen their basic quality of acting, we certainly want to take away whatever tension there may be and to support you, not only with regard to afraid potential facing, but also with your stance on the idea. I'm very happy with the stance that the United States government has taken. Thank you. We'll stay with it. Mr. President, thank you for giving me another time this evening. Thank you for coming. Thank you so much. I say my turn right warmest regards to Your Majesty. Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you very much. When I was there, I was a young people. They were still talking about the German soldiers here in the streets. They said, who is that? They said, that is our king. Well, they said, it can't be. Where is his security? Where is his protection? They said, it's weird. That's nothing with the story. That's the main course. Unfortunately, in the end of the war, his horse got hit because he did that every morning. In the end of the war, some arm went off his horse. He was scared. He got thrown off. And got panty-entered and wasn't in the end of the war. Oh. But until then, every morning, he showed himself to the people. Yes. Yes. Well, thank you very much. Thank you, Mr. President. Do you know Colonel Perfizian? I sure do. And why? Mr. President? You can see him from behind. Yes. And why Susan? A little bit. A little bit. This dollar, that's all. And if something happens, no way. I think if you get in the middle here, you ladies, it'll be a prettier picture. Oh, thank you. We've got a family picture. Can you join us? Sorry to see you go, but I can understand it. I'll be glad to have you. Well, I can't tell you how much I would appreciate it. But my troops say, we fly many DOD, head of states, vice presidents, but you're the friendliest man they ever meet. That goes, I'm forgiving the sakes, thank you very much. Well, they're thanking you through me, but they work very hard on the helicopters, and they say all the time, president, no matter how many it is, always has time to say thank you, and good afternoon, or acknowledge their presence. You'd be amazed at the number of VIPs who are pseudo-VIPs compared to you, who walk by them and don't even acknowledge their presence. So, from us to you, thank you for making our job a great job. I'll wait for a second. Sue, Sue, here's... Oh, dear. Broke me, Sue. So it's a bit of a look. It's pretty hard to get her in, but I just tore it out of it fast. Thanks for that. Thanks for you. It's a bookmark. Oh, thank you so much. I'll chat with her. Thank you. And Kieran. Thank you. And a little Sue in here at the Oval Office for you. Mr. President, thank you very much. Well... Thank you. Thank you. See you. Bye-bye.