 George Bush very much. The organization has done more to foster the spirit of enterprise in America. You have my man, Smith, Mr. Chairman. You deserve a particular note of thanks. It's been hard work, I know, but your time and skill have been deeply appreciated. The way to get into the game of golf, that was just when he took his first swing, he missed the ball and hit the annual. He sent a few hundred of them into orbit. He took his second swing and again he missed and hit the annual. As you well know, we came to office in 1981 with your assistance with the first steps in decades to restain the growth from the power of government and to bring that in to choose leisure or work, conformity or innovation and immediate gratification over saving and investment. The impact characterized the ending of the last decade. Inflation is at the lowest rate in almost two decades, and the economy has been creating new jobs at the rate of nearly 300,000 each month. Oh, unmistakable. The American people have rising incomes and new opportunities. Business is growing and government is actually watching its revenues rise. It will make us all government servants or whether the American people can once again master the governmental process. In a fundamental sense, when this is over, you can make up for it by skipping lunch. This week will prove crucial. Critical votes will take place in the Senate and there will be long days and late nights. It so happens that it has been a pleasure. Thank you. God bless you all. Thank you. If you prepare to order trade sanctions against Nicaragua at this point, give a decision here on the 14,700 million employees, which they voluntarily started and asked anybody to get it. In fact, I didn't even know until I got a call from one of our foremen that said they'd had this going in the plan asking if something be done for the territory of the text of our competitors as well. We have quite a problem. We only say it's a really tough one. We've got a number of courses to try to get out. But we have a problem that some of the lots of our competitors pay those 25 cents an hour and have no fringe benefits of any kind. If they get sick, they just go home and stay there. Well, if our people get sick, we keep out on paying them and what kinds of fringe benefit. And we pay from 10 to 20 times as much. There are governments who are buying the same equipment that we're buying, the same newly automated equipment. And there's no way that we can keep our industry. I know this was a very tough problem and all of our efforts have taken us to get markets open to them and to get free trade.