 Listen, if I get my hands on this, they'll faint and faint and fall out of me. Oh, Bill's hands on you. He's coming in. We're going to bring him into a death prison. Oh, we're going to hold him back. Go. 1986. I know that you are, by the most prominent role in making sure this happened, and I'm delighted to be able to sign it. There's a lot of difference for opportunity for it. Yes, it does in that sense, with some of them, yes. It worked. You can't really, you know, in some way, in a group picture taking place. Are we going to have come in? Yes. I'm going to open it up. Bill Martin had one of those. You can see it. They got him standing there. I know you have got a lot of hands on you. You're firing with a vague compliment. I got a bunch of hands on you. Thank you. I'll teach you. I won't. It's been allowed, but your graciousness, to have three Louisiana young, this great group of all the strong Republicans and the story of the oars, myself, the woods, and the eagle. I'm sure you've heard Louisiana's our statistic from Lafayette, Louisiana, over here. And of course, this is Pat Taylor from the law. I'm assuming you remember for a year. Sure. I did it down there. You actually have to hold that opinion. I didn't know that. There are all three independent operators in Louisiana, all three strong Republicans, all three campaign managers of mine, Eagles, and how are things like me? You can't afford me. It's important to you, but the other two are. We've got some old moments, too. I'll introduce to you Ray Heffner down here. It's the President of the Independent Producers Association. Donna Kilmer just went in and done. And Donna says, well, come on and change. You might have heard that. And also down here at the other end, Sam Turner is the President of the Independent Producers Association. We appreciate you letting us have a chance to visit with you. We just have you all here. Just a minute. We have a lot of camp owners. We've got some good potential cabinet members around here. Dalton, are you interested in that? Yes. I'm a part of it. Can't drill for all of my voters. I'm out to help with the ride. Jim Beggar's right. We'll tell you. Yeah, let's do the solution to the problem. We're secretary now. You guys come. Well, gentlemen, thank you all very much for coming this afternoon. I know that you're very busy. Those of you from up on the hill, this being the last day of the fifth of the year, and the money to keep the government functioning, running out at midnight tonight. So I'm not going to keep you long. You have a lot of hard work before you turn your beds tonight. I've asked you all to come in because I know that this is a tough time for the oil and gas patch. The dramatic adjustment of the world price of oil has provoked tremendous financial hardship, and I know that many people have lost their jobs and have lost their jobs. And the exploration and drilling budgets have been slashed. It's a situation that greatly concerns all those here, certainly me. To my view, it's not simply an oil and gas patch problem, but a matter of mind and concern for every American. The fact is that every American needs a strong and competitive oil and gas industry for our national security. I want you to know that we're continuing to do concrete things to help the industry without dragging big guns back into your eyes. We're fighting for deep control of natural gas prices and transportation reform to increase production and demand, and we're also seeking a repeal of laws that restrict the use of natural gas. We stood up for maintaining tax incentives for petroleum exploration and drilling. We're working to lift government barriers to energy exploration on federal lands and the Outer Continental Shelf. We've lifted government regulation that would have forced the capping of stripper wells, and I voted a review of other ways to cut regulation on our marginal oil production. I called for Congress to put an end to the counterproductive and unnecessary windfall profits tax. We're trying to fill the Strategic Petroleum Reserve with oil produced here in America. As I announced last week during my visit to Louisiana, I have asked Secretary Harrington to carry out a high-level review of America's energy-related national security concerns. America must never again be left dependent on unreliable foreign sources of oil. Senators Phil Graham and Don Nichols have been working with Chairman Jim McClure to construct a new measure to further address these energy problems. And I also know that you've both been advancing the same package on the House side, and I'd like to ask you to give us some of the specifics on exactly what you have in mind for this new oil and gas revitalization legislation. But first, let me ask John Harrington and then Don Hodel if they want to ask something about what I thought on concerning our efforts on behalf of the oil and gas batch. John. John. Thank you, Mr. President. As you so rightly pointed out, there's a need to do something now in the short term, and we have, obviously... Hi, Jesse. Hi, sir. This is your host, the F.C. State University, when you were down with the rabbit. Well, it's good to see you. No, they're pregnant. You got a new hundred-gantt pressure, and you kicked off the taxi form. We're doing that here. We have lots of students, and they wanted... This is for some reason, but they're not going to do anything to reset you. Well, she then wanted to have a little something to wear around the room. Okay. All right. Running season at night seems very handy. Protect myself. But they so much appreciate the time you spend with them. It's still tough on this flag. Ah, yes. Which flew over the capital. Next door. Next door. Now, they were very innocent. All of them. If you mind, I'll photograph it for you. Check. Yes. Do you have permission to do that some more? No, I can honestly say now, I just have to be neutral and just admire the violent threat. Oh, you're wonderful. Well, Coach Vodlan was looking for a photo to come back to this evening. So, it's very awesome. You're working on it. You're working on the sanctions now that you would ever ask me to write. You'd be surprised at the signs, the only signs that pop up out there in the audience. You're right about that. Yeah. And that's the way it is everywhere I have been. And I'm trying to travel around for some percent of candidates. I have not gone into a state which has not been that way. They're not, they're not paying attention to the truth down there. They just try to – he sent me a letter that was the most straight to my think. And I never ran. He and the 6 men in Zulu don't want sanctions because they'd have a water source. They want to make the situation right. And, you know, Tutu can get his name in a paper anytime he wants to not tell him, but there's another bishop down there named channel 2. That's right. Who has more than Tutu and his father. And they don't want it at all, but you never hear of that. he comes here and nobody can get him on the talk shows. That's right. Well, we thank you so much for your leadership. It's a pleasure to teach you so much for your time. I bless your heart. We'll keep pushing. Cal, thank you very much. Keep it. Good luck. Mr. President, how are you? Good. Nice to see you. Thank you. I have this is David Reeve-Waltz, right here. You're talking her swimming less. Yes. Hello, Mark. And this is Mr. President's granddaughter, Mark. Where are you? Mr. President, how are you? Fine. Nice to see you. I've got a little something for you. You might use it later. This came from three seniors, the facts I was going through. You stand with the presidents for a long time. We can get some kids out of here. That came, uh, some of her things that I thought you might be. Oh. Well, for heaven's sakes. No, there was one of them. And this is for me? No, yes. Yes. Oh. So we're going to pay for this. So we thought we're going to enjoy it. Oh, yeah. It shows. There was one other thing. The lodge. I thought I found cash in it. Turn off. I'll hurt you. They come after us. Tell me, has she taught you to swim? No. I can still swim though. He taught me well. There's one of the old lodge. That's the old lodge, yes. Oh, yes. That's her mother and dad. I don't know whether you remember it or not. Now, this one, I had to take up your busy day. That's the old horse he used to pull them on. Oh, sure. That was the first one that ever got me started where I ended up in the horse house. Ran the lodge, and he did all of this maintenance work and everything. He'd sit down there. I'm like in a quiet day. And he'd sit down there. I mean, be able to be. And he'd run the lodge down very bad. Is that right? And so he dared me once to get up on it, and I wound up. Most of the while, when he'd come down, he would hook him forward to it, riding that old grey horse around. Now, you can have all except this one. If you'd like to keep them in them. For your issue. All right. Well, now, wait a minute. I've got it. I've got to do that. I can do it real formal. I can do it like in the Oval Office, or I can do it like in real informal, right? Good. Which one do you want? This is the Oval Office. That's the one. All right. All right. And while you're writing your name on that one, you're writing your name on that one. You know that? Yes. Is this for him? Yep. That's for him. That's for him. You know what I'm saying? When you get to the well, great hardly. But I hate to take up your time. Jimmy and I won't just make it informal to Jimmy. Yeah. I didn't know he was going to do that, Mr. President. I don't know where he got that picture. It's certainly good of you, though. People find out you've got a whole bag full of things. People find out you have clearance to get in here. Everybody jumps on the bag wagon. All right. That's Dave. And there's a young lady over there at his office that had that. Oh, yours is the only one that's missing. I wonder how many. It's got to be in the thousands now. Of these. Providing, you know, it's the first and only time. There's never been four presidents in the White House before at the same time. And how many of these must have been put out because I'm still signing. Oh, it's interesting. They're catching up with you. Yeah. And how the people get them, I don't know. I wish I could hold this one. Yeah. It's K.A.E. K.A.E. D.E.R. That's why I married her. She knew the press in the United States. But in that report to, from the Olmstead brothers on the park, they give directions on how the park should be run and what the superintendent should do and what the leader of the board should do and what they should not do. Well, you know, the park, actually, they had to get a special law in the state passed in order for Dixon to own the park because it's outside the city limits. But the name is Wise Lowell. That's James Russell Lowell, the poet. It was his family that owned the adjoining estate. And they gave that land with the terms that it must be kept in that natural park. They would allow just the nearest of facilities there, like for the swimming or picnicking and so forth. But everything had to remain as nature meant it. And he wrote to a waterfowl there in looking up the river past Lowell Park. And that was for that memorial. There was a little house, not a little house, but a little sort of conceivable that was there. And I think there was something like that that the park was in now. Mr. President, there. Thank you. Well, I supported your veto a lot and played by the two of you, Rod. Thank you very much. We're proud of you. It's very much a no-right. This has been wonderful. Thank you very much. Good to see you. You still swim? That's good. Most important. Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you. Good to see you. Thank you very much. Thank you very much.