 Hello, sir, nice to meet you, good to see you. Hello, sir. Bill Myers. Hello there. You're in the base. Yes, sir. Hello. Hi. Nice to meet you. Well, I'm pleased to see you. I've been waiting next to you because you have moved. My favorite kind of music. We're going to do one for you. That's right. Never could be one myself. Oh, is that what you're going to say? You might be singing the shout. Let's sing one here for you. I figured that this is right now. We're going to do it a little bit on the afternoon. It's time for a coffee break. Maybe we should go and sing a coffee song. I love coffee. I love tea. I love the Java jive and it loves me. Coffee and tea and the Java and me. What is it? I love the Java and I love the Java and me. I love Java. I love Java. I love Java. I love Java. I love Java and you. We have an album here that would like to just give you this. Actually, that song is known this album. This is an album of music material that we did here recently, so we thought maybe that you might like to have that for your personal collection. Thank you very much. Well, thank you very much. Can we get a picture with all four of you here? All right, great. Those individuals would certainly... Thanks. I want you to get that right here right in the middle. Okay. There we go. We'll grab a shoulder in your back. I appreciate it. Between the lead and the big. There's a five-hour smile on me. Thank you so very much. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thank you. Appreciate it. Thanks. We've had a wonderful day. Thank you. Oh, thank you for just giving us a few minutes of your time. Certainly means a lot. It really does. Thank you. I enjoyed it very much. You're a wonderful person. Very good. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Have a good day, Mr. President. Good day, sir. Thank you. I was going to tell him a little bit. I was trusting you. I knew it. That's the niece, Mr. President. That's my acclaimed her. This is Susan. I was just telling her, I don't think you're anywhere when I was telling her that's my very favorite person, and it was. We're going to tell her why you said that! Thank you, sir. Thank you very much. Thank you. Good day. Thank you. We're just told her the risk-based story. I know you won't believe this. Yes. Mr. President, I am so sorry to see you. Come on in. You're going to be here tomorrow. Thank you, sir. Take care. Fire at your back. How are you doing? I'm talking about laying duck. When I began to be a laying duck, I don't know what it was. It's actually longer. You know, something creates great fruit and blues and stuff like that. It doesn't crystal anymore. They asked Eisenhower when he left office, I told him, he noticed any difference in the way people treated him. And he thought about it and said, yeah, I noticed they don't give me as many long cuts. Mr. President, I appreciate your saying. Mr. President, may I say again. Good to see you, Mr. President. This is a great project that you've started on the development. Please, the department would like to make a great... Harris-Makas from the National Restaurant Association. We represent the food service industry. Thank you very much. Kent Titzke from the National Council of Rebuilding and Therapy, and Horded Welles. Excellent proof. I'll see you in your name again. This is Mike Fishman, who has headed the employment commission of the staff. And Commissioner Elder, Jean Elder, and Commissioner of Developmental Disabilities. Your personal encouragement helps you. You know, in the pre-binding for the ants, it is good to keep them urban. They know the price for us from the examination of rubber blades for jet owners. They have found their touch is more important than sight. And they have enhanced sense of touch so that I can do a better job. She's perfectly ready. Yes. Arizona. Arizona. Come up to Arizona. Arizona. Arizona. Arizona. It's in the field inside. I'm a little hot. The life of my life. The Lucas-Harding has been greatly in this program. The line departments and Jean Elder has been outstanding. And I think you really, together with the Friday sector, you've put together a dynamite team. And we're going on for the whole decade, even though we only have four more years. We're going to do it together. My brother was born last week. Who you are, Mr. President? Mr. President, Mr. President. Mr. President. Mr. President. Mr. President. Mr. President. Mr. President. Happy to have you. Happy to have you. Mr. President. Continue. Mr. President. Mr. President. Ladies. Distinguished guests and ladies and gentlemen. It's an honor to present the National Security Medal to John Hughes, John's 33-year career, the last 23 being in the Defense Intelligence Agency, have been marked by extraordinary and distinguished service to the United States. Since the Cuban Missile Crisis, 1963, when John was selected by President Kennedy to provide a 90-minute nationwide television presentation on the nature of the Soviet presence in Cuba, he has been our nation's preeminent expert and spokesman for all the most highly classified, authoritative aspects of military trends, capabilities of the Soviet Union armed forces. He has attained the unique and lasting place, a place of honor for his contributions to the security of the United States. On behalf of the American people who owe him a very profound debt of gratitude for his selfless service, it gives me great pleasure to award him the National Medal of Freedom. The Commander will read the citation. Citation to accompany the award of the National Security Medal to John T. Hughes, for outstanding contributions in the field of intelligence relating to the national security from 1952 to 1984. Mr. Hughes is honored for excellence in defense intelligence, but has brought the greatest credit upon himself, the Department of Defense, the United States intelligence community and the nation. His outstanding devotion to duty, technical expertise, and leadership have earned the recognition of Presidents, of Congresses, and of leaders of free nations. Mr. Hughes has guided the reorganization and increased effectiveness of the intelligence community in the fields of reconnaissance and photography. For more than a decade, he has worked directly with successive directors of the Central Intelligence as chairman of the Interdepartmental Committee addressing the nation's most sensitive intelligence. From the time of the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis and his national briefing of US surveillance activities, Mr. Hughes has emerged the nation's pre-eminent expert in the authoritative monitoring and analysis and reporting on the military trends and capabilities of the Soviet Union's armed forces. Mr. Hughes contributions fully warrant the award of the National Security Medal. He has earned the nation's gratitude for his unique and lasting contributions to the security of the United States. Mr. President, second line-brewer, distinguished guests, friends, family. I'm deeply honored by this presentation of the National Security Medal, Mr. President, knowing the stream of meeting with the President of the White House. So that's for me. It's a great honor and a great blessing. Mr. President, for my wife, my sons, myself, we thank you. We are deeply honored. For the past 33 years, I've had the privilege and good fortune to learn and to grow in the white and intelligent profession, dismantling others. During the past 33 years, I've seen and had the opportunity to contribute to the technological evolution of our intelligence capability. And it has been an evolution measured in light years, as many of you know. I've also had the opportunity to be a spokesman and sensitive intelligence regarding military trends and capabilities and other survey initiatives in the U.S. interests. These included presentations to the Congress, senior foreign officials, and our own operational military forces. Where I've made a contribution, it has produced those people higher up the line, the Director of D.I.A., the Director of CIA, the Chairman of the Directors of Staff, the Secretary of Defense and the President. They knew there was a final job to be done. They gave me and my countless colleagues the support we required to do our sharing for the national security of our great country. As a result, all I've learned and all I've experienced over the past 33 years, now here's one conclusion. And it is a conclusion that you, Mr. President, stayed so healthily just three years ago. Good intelligence saves American lives and protects our freedom. Mr. President, I'm proud to play a role in such an important nation and thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you very much for your time, Mr. President. Thank you very much. It's quite a basketball team job. I feel that way sometimes in my own kids, just regular blocks off the old ship. President Reagan, how are you? Just fine. How are you? Just great. You're looking fantastic. Look at this, it's a little bigger than that line. That's a little bigger than the line. It took a little longer to do it, too. I could imagine, hey, that's magnificent. You've got to tell you a little bit about it. This stone is from Arizona. It's petrified with, I research it at the Smithsonian. It's 280 million years old, so... It's going to your front. They had dreams then? Definitely. And that's what they say anyway. Anyway, it was cut with a six-foot diamond blade and then polished with diamond polishers. They value the stone at $1,500 an inch. Let's see what you and I do about that. Heaven's sakes. Here are those we can reduce a bit. The eagle is a golden eagle and I spent a year just working on the feathers, doing each one in wax. I did 250 feathers separately and then put them all together and I had a live golden eagle in my studio to work from so I could get every feather perfectly. And I really had a terrific time doing that. The Indian is an Apache Indian. The necklace is a bear claw, eagle claw necklace. And this was quite a thing to cast. We had to cast each piece separately and put it all together. And I call it Friends of Freedom, which is appropriate for our time, I think. And it's where we are in the world today. And this is typically Americana. I'm holding it for a while until you're finished. I appreciate that very much. Thank you. I'd like you to meet the donor. This is George from Shirley Islands. Bless you. This is my wife Shirley. Thank you. Nice to have you. This is my daughter Holly and my wife Nancy. This is Tom, my son. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. I can't tell you how much. We had a job getting it in here. Probably going to be, right? This stone is about 750 pots. I just thought that you were a couple of you carried it in. I think the interesting thing that was different from the time you got the lion when you were governor was this time. The group that brought the Indian and the Rockian was Doug and a driver. He had with him a couple of others. Herb and I helped him. But we had a treasury secret service man who was checking to make sure there were no.