 Now, if you're clapping for Jim Watt, go keep on. I don't intend to stop the festivities here or anything, but I do want to say about Jim Watt as he leaves us, and we're going to miss him, we're going to miss you too. But Jim Watt, when he took that job, told me that he figured it'd take about 18 months before he would have to leave. If he did, what needed doing? And then he realized that by doing that, you can't do that without shaping up some places and some people. Then that leaves you not quite as well situated to be the fellow to carry on after it's been fixed up. And Jim was big enough to know that. Well, it was about 33 months or so before that happened. But I just want to tell you just a few things that you don't know. Some of the best kept secrets in Washington have been accomplishments of this administration. One of the best of all of those kept secret was the record of Jim Watt in the Department of Interior. He headed more land, more national parks, and wildlife refugees, in just this year alone than has ever been done at any time in a single year since 1867 when we bought Alaska. I had to hold him down. He had his eye on Australia. But there have been, with all of the talk, the other way, there have been more than 1,600,000 acres of land at the federal estate of Parkland and other lands of that kind, including wilderness and wildlife refugees. That is more than has been done in that long time, I make sure. And more in one year than was done in the preceding of four before we got here. I think I can sum it up so you can get back to the party. I simply say that Bill Clark is not stepping into a storm-damaged yard that needs cleaning up. Bill Clark will be taking over a Department of Interior that is in better shape, I think, than it has ever been since it was created. It's a farewell, but don't go too far away. Do I get to open this now? I just like to comment that the support the President has given us has been tremendous. When he interviewed me before the job in December, I said, Governor, he was Governor. If we're to accomplish the agenda that you and I have worked out this morning, you'll have to back me and back me and back me. And when you no longer can back me, you'll have to fire me. And he said, I will. So we've been nervous for all these months. And he never had to, did he? But it is a remarkable thing. We did bring the change that he's talked about. And it couldn't have been done had we not had a President who understood the importance of the wealth that is managed by the Department of Interior. I tease Ron Don Regan that he's not the Secretary of the Treasury. He is the nation's bookkeeper. The Treasury is managed, built by what you're taking over. And it would be the best job in Washington. President, thank you for your support. I'm talking to several of you. Ronald Reagan, I just like to live. The signature in the seal, I thank you, Mr. President. A high honor to serve you in the country. Thank you very much. He sold off, I have to think it's right and correct me if I'm wrong. He sold off a script that was two and a half miles long and one foot wide. It was pretty good salesman. Just a lot of stuff. An awful lot of titles. We bound the spaghetti farmer.