 It's a great honor for me and a sincere, sincere personal privilege to introduce a great man, a great American, a great President, the President of the United States of America, Ronald Reagan. Thank you very much. And I thank you very much for that very generous and kind introduction and to prove how grateful I am. I, a Californian, will say to a Floridian, I have just returned from California. This is the first time I've seen sunshine in two weeks. Well, I am I'm delighted to be here. I'm especially pleased to acknowledge the presence today of a group of students from eight countries. They're participants in the World's Showcase Solution Program, which Disney World is generously established as part of EPCOT. This excellent program brings young people from Canada, China, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Mexico, and the United Kingdom to EPCOT. It gives them the opportunity to experience American culture firsthand, to learn, and more important, to teach. This is just the kind of approach that we're encouraging through the President's International Youth Exchange Initiative, which I announced last May at the White House. For those of you who haven't seen it, well, first of all, let me say I'm convinced that people-to-people programs like World's Showcase and the International Youth Initiative are one of the best ways to build real understanding in the world. I'm very happy to see so many young people here today, the math and science quizzes of Central Florida, plus the students participating in the World's Showcase Fellowship Program. And you adults are welcome, too. I just watched a program. I don't know just what to call it. A show, a pageant with several hundred of my junior high and high school friends here, but I'm pleased to announce I didn't get hit with one spitball. But this program does capture the vitality of what we represent as a nation. And as I started to say earlier, I was going to remark that earlier, for those of you who haven't seen it, at one point in the movie Mark Twain speaking of America says, we soared into the 20th century on the wings of invention and the winds of change. Well, in a few years' time, we Americans will soar into the 21st century, and again it will be on the wings of invention and the winds of change. This afternoon, I'd like to explain how you, our young people, can ride those wings and winds of the future to a better life. Abraham Lincoln is supposed to have said that the best thing about the future is that it comes only one day at a time. In this modern age, it often seems to come more quickly than that, I know. Our nation is speeding toward the future at this very moment. We can see it coming. We can see its shape. I know in your history books, you've read about the industrial revolution. Well, today we're in the midst of another revolution, one marked by the explosion of technological advances. It's a revolution of microchips and biotechnology. And yes, it is ironic that products seen only through a microscope can cause such large changes in our society. We can see the benefits of this revolution already. Many of the advantages you can view right here at Epcot Center, which itself is a celebration of tomorrow. Other aspects of the transition are more difficult and painful to bear. A large number of people are unemployed, not because of the recession, but because their former jobs were in declining industries. Their skills are not in demand in the post-industrial America. And as you know, this has caused grievous hardship. I don't want any of you young people to suffer what some of your parents are experiencing. I want you to have the training and the skills to meet the future. Even without knowing it, you're being prepared for a new age. Many of you already understand better than my generation ever will, the possibilities of computers. In some of your homes, the computer is available to the television set. And I recently learned something quite interesting about video games. Many young people have developed incredible hand-eye and brain coordination in playing these games. The Air Force believes these kids will be outstanding pilots should they fly our jets. The computerized radar screen in the cockpit is not unlike the computerized video screen. Watch a 12-year-old take evasive action and score multiple hits while playing space invaders and you will appreciate the skills of tomorrow's pilot. Now, don't get me wrong, I don't want the youth of this country to run home and tell their parents that the President of the United States says it's all right for them to go ahead and play video games all the time. Homework, sports, and friends still come first. What I am saying is that right now you're being prepared for tomorrow in many ways and in ways that many of us who are older cannot fully comprehend. But those of my generation and now I have to say of your parents generation cannot just assume that you will adapt to the future. We must conscientiously prepare you for the years ahead. We must provide you with a good education with solid math and science instruction. Not only will math and science serve you well in meeting the future it will serve the nation. We Americans are still the technological leaders in most fields and we must keep that edge but to keep it we need scientists and engineers and mathematicians. Many of you here today are above average in math and science skills. You've won awards for your knowledge and you'll be among the brightest of tomorrow's workforce. But I want to give you some facts and figures here and by the way I've been known to give a pop quiz now and then but I want to show you the challenge that we as a nation face. Japan with a population only about half the size of ours graduates from its universities more engineers than we do. In Japan specialized study in mathematics biology and physics starts in the sixth grade or take the Soviet Union. Soviet students learn the basic concepts of algebra and geometry in elementary school. That's elementary school and then they get four more years of advanced mathematics in high school. I have a feeling the kids in the Soviet Union have to hit the books a bit more than American students. Not surprising the Soviet Union graduates from college almost five times more engineering specialists than the United States. The number of scientists and engineers engaged in research and development in the United States has increased by only 25 percent between 1964 and 1979. The increase in France was 90 percent, 125 percent in Germany, and 145 percent in Japan. Obviously we must do better or we will be overtaken. In math and science instruction the United States is a slow learner among the major industrial nations. Like millions of other Americans I'm a firm believer in the back to basics movement because it is the basics that will best prepare us for the future. I think you would agree that if a young person doesn't receive adequate math and science teaching by age 16 he or she has lost the chance to become a scientist or an engineer. There's a story about a boy whose math homework paper was less than inspiring. Now I know that yours are never like that. When a boy's paper was handed back the teacher said I never saw so many errors in my life. I just can't understand how one person could have made all these mistakes. And a boy said one person didn't. My father helped me. Well your generation will need better math and science skills than your father's generation. And the America of tomorrow will also need those skills more than the America of today. Since the future is technological we simply must educate more people in the technological areas. And that's one reason I'm delighted to see more women going into scientific and engineering fields. I'm especially pleased that eight women have been selected as astronauts for the shuttle flights. All of advanced degrees PhDs in engineering and physical sciences to have medical degrees and late this spring on a launch pad not far from here a woman named Sally Ride will have the ride of a lifetime. She'll blast off in the space shuttle become America's first woman in space. The relatively short supply of technically qualified people in the United States is not because we don't have enough students men or women interested in tomorrow's job opportunities. In fact engineering schools have to turn away many qualified students. The principal reason is the shortage of engineering faculty and universities and qualified math and science teachers in the secondary schools. This shortage cannot continue. And I know you'll be happy to hear that we intend to improve the quality of math and science education. And right now we're working with the Congress to determine the funding necessary to begin reducing this shortage. We seek a fiscally responsible initiative in this area fair not only to your educational future but your economic future as well. Private industry is also recognizing the problem and seeking ways to correct it. The American Electronics Association's goal is to obtain contributions from its high technology companies equal to 2 percent of their research and development budgets. I also know businesses around the country are loaning computers and other equipment to schools to prepare students for the new age. It's this kind of commitment from the private sector that would eventually help us meet the math and science shortages that we face. That's a great thing if our visitors will forgive me for being chauvinistic. That's a great thing about our country. Once we've determined what the problem is we take out after it. I know you young people are bombarded hourly with the problems the nation faces. And yes we do have problems which all of us are working to solve but you can't become paralyzed by these obstacles. This sounds like something you'll hear at graduation but you really do have a wonderful future ahead of you. Don't be afraid of it. The future is what America has always represented. My generation wishes it had the years left to us that you have left to you. The things you will see. The changes that you will experience. We just can't imagine them all. Hang on to the American spirit of adventure as you head into this future. Remember the quote by Thomas Wolfe that we heard in that program we've just seen. To everyone a chance. To all people regardless of their birth. The right to live to work to become whatever you very much in you. I believe in your intelligence your courage and your determination. And when the time arrives the people of my generation will be very proud to turn America over to your care. May I just in the spirit of that program that we saw also say something about the presence here of our gifts of this exchange program for you of the same age will meet with those from other countries and get to know each other as human beings and as individuals. I have always believed that a lot of the problems in the world come about because people talk about each other instead of to each other. And maybe one day with programs of this kind you are setting the stage for the dream that has lived with mankind from the first and earliest days of history. And that is the dream of peace that one day knowing each other it will be impossible for someone to say to you that there must be a war or that you must take off arms and do away with these people that you have come to know so well. And we shall do everything we can to see that this program prospers and goes forward and increases the ability of young generations like your own to meet and become acquainted with others around the world. I've used up all of my time here and I know they have other things for me to do but I don't know that they will be as much of a high spot as this has been and I just want to say to all of you thank you and God bless you all.