 Yes, I sure do. Mr. President, I'd like to present a room that's middle. Let's try. Let's see. How are you doing, Mr. President? Good to see you. Good to see you. Hi. OK. My name's George Burlinger. How you doing, Mr. President? Hello, yes. Good to see you. Good to see you. Dr. Nancy Mermardo. Hello. See you again. Hello. See you. Mr. Sidney Plotkin. Mr. President? Hello, yes. This one. Dr. David Gratman. Mr. President? Good to see you. Mr. Nathan Anstoff. Hi. Hello there. This one. Nice to see you. This is Waila Buchanan. Hello. Dr. David? Yes. Mr. Glenn Kirkland. Hello there. Nice to see you. Dr. Patrick. Hello there. Great. Well, this time, good to see you. How are you? Great. Oh, no, it's good to see you all. Good to see you. Dr. David. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. It's good to see you all. It's good to see you all. It was five straight years now. We've made November. Right. A month of recognition. Yeah. To be... I've even got a stack of the proclamations there on my desk. Do you all have walls in there? Not until you sign one. Not until you sign one. They're all signed. Oh, they're all signed? All right. No, we haven't received it yet. We've got a little sign. I think they want to have everybody move down this way. And kind of sit on this door here. Thank you. Thank you. President. Thank you. Thank you. Shall we... I think this time... Oh, I guess we've got a lot of work to do. This is one... They lost this in the... I don't know whether you can sign it standing up or not. I think so. Thank you. Thank you. You're welcome. That's wonderful. Now, there's a little presentation that Mrs. Browinger and Yasmin have for you. Well, for heaven's sakes. It's a special box. Each one. Well, thank you very much. Thank you. Yes, the resistance. Yasmin? Yasmin, you're going to present this to the President. I got extra large size for Yasmin. Yes, this is on behalf of ADRDA. Well... In recognition of National Alzheimer's Disease Month. Well, thank you very much. This is one of the... This is one of the... Thanks, Mr. President, for National Alzheimer's Disease Month. Thank you very much. Well... Well, for you. This is for you to wear jogging. Yes. And this one, where's my felt pen? Well, that's for you to get you to sign this. Maybe... Which one are we going to sign? This one. This one here. Is there a felt pen? I think there is. Mildred, do you have that felt pen? Yes. This is the kind that would... Where would you like this? That's very often, have you? Well, then... So I'm coming out, too. Great. Thanks very much. That's absolutely wonderful. Well... You know, Mr. President, you signed the bill last Friday for Alzheimer's. That was a drug immunization bill. Yes. The Alzheimer's writer was attached to it. I know you had missed... Kind of misgivings about signing part of it. We're glad you signed it. Yes. Thank you. But, you know, sometimes it's a kind of a catch-all. It's an ill-win that blows no good. So we feel very good about the Alzheimer's portion of it. Well, all right. Did I hear any... You said it. You'd like a copy of the problem? We'd love it. Thank you. All right. I'm sorry. Of course. I'm thinking we'll pass it on to everybody. I don't think you have enough copies, have you? Yeah. I guess I do. Yeah. Good. There's enough. Yeah. Is this time-dancing? Yes. I have more trouble separating the last one. I get two pages together. I'd like to help you with that. I'm going to talk about that. You know, I'm also getting to where I am. It reminds me of a story here, experience. We were talking about whether that could autograph or I could autograph Stanley. Thank you. I came out of the picture business with one story that I've always treasured about, signing and all that. And he says, ah, I know you. And he just yelled it. And, of course, you know New York. Everybody stopped. I just kind of formed two sides here. And the grandstand, now, he starts down in the middle of the lane toward me. And all the way he's talking, he's following in his partner. And he's saying, I see you all the time on that screen and on that television. And he says, I know who you are. He gets right up to me and comes out with a piece of paper and a pen. And he says, Ray Milan. He's the voice of Ray Milan. I thought he was going to say, home shuttle. What? President of your fan club now, huh? Well, appreciate the help. You've given us all the help. Dollars of research. As a matter of fact, in the last two years, it's been more dollars spent on states. Eighty years since Osama was discovered. So we're too young, though. Too shy. Too shy. You've never even seen Barbara Lawders in the big 50-year life program. That really turned over when Bob Hope was on. And Bob Hope, one of his lines to the audience was, I'm almost old enough to run for president. Well, he enjoys hoping you, that's for sure. That's a wonderful new book. Yes. Well, I guess your day is first starting now, Mr. President. No, I'm getting kind of close to the end. Things are a little easier when the Congress is away. We'll write our congressman about that. To incidentally speaking, that life thing. I've got one on life that I think you ought to be sorry about. That could have been, I just thought at the last watching this show, what a great thing it would have been. Back when, you know, in Hollywood, pictures sometimes, they'd have to have magazines around. So the property department just had stacks of old magazines, and they'd come in and put them around to make it look home like it. And so one day, sitting there between shots, there was an old life magazine on the set. And this was right after the war. And I picked up, and I'm looking through, and the letters to the editor. It was not only a letter, but a picture, a photograph, where these kids, young fellows, in this magazine was dated back before World War II. They had created a thing like a foxhole with sandbags and everything, and then had draped themselves all over this, all as if they were dead. And they had written a letter to life and said, we wonder if this is a prophecy of what's going to happen to us. Now, well here I am, the war is over in this magazine. And I called in our people in the studio there, and I said, hey, look, somebody, get a hold of them, because it'd be wonderful for them, the names were all there, to find out now what did happen. Are they still alive? What happened to them now that the war is over? And you know, the answer we got back from whoever they contacted at life, said, well, we're not interested in giving publicity to some picture that's being made in Hollywood. They thought that because the fellow explained to them where the magazine was and that I'd found it and so forth, I didn't even think our names even had come into it, it just was an idea for them. And I still regret that it was so silly not to do it. It might have been quite a story. That's how I got a question about it. Great idea. It didn't listen carefully. Too many people didn't like Howard. Thank you very much. Thank you so much. Thank you so much. It's always a treat. It's a very nice. It's got our t-shirt on. It's now a free to try. No. I'll save you, please. I gave us, now, the millions of people. Pure election, man. It worked out well. We appreciate you coming to the dinner. The company's raised the money that last with the publicist. I'm pleased to do it. I think we'll make a difference. I think we'll be able to create some kind of an agenda coming back that we might touch base on since we don't have the senators as friendly as you did before. We might be able to use the governors to help us out. I'd be very pleased with that. I have an item to add to your agenda. How are you? Good. That's it. You don't look any worse for wear and tear. No. They didn't like too many gloves on you. Let's say good morning, Mr. Speaker. How are you? Oh, I've been called by an awful lot of worse than I have. Besides that. Good to see you. Besides that, I guess I'm a majority leader. Majority leader. Technically. We're going to take a seat. We're going to bring some stuff. Maybe by the time there won't be any speakers from the third until the end of the Congress. At the end of the Congress, you see, Mr. Tipple and Neil no longer will be a member of the House and that we will not be elected by another speaker. So we will just have to struggle as long as best we can. Three days. Just call them. I'm sure you'll agree. When you're guaranteed, there'll be no speaking when there's no speaker. Well, that's a pretty good point. We will have no sessions with the House. That's right. We'll be recovering from New Year's. The cyclones will be cold. We'll be more of each other. And congratulations. Thank you. I'm still 39. I've been 39 and 36 times. I thought that it sounds better than doing it this simple. Well, it's good to see all of you again. Thank you for being here. Knowing you as well as I do, I'm sure that you've come to total agreement on that. I haven't got a vote for next year. Let us on the budget and how to reform. Why don't we go right ahead? I don't have a chance to hear from one of you. All right, Mr. President, I'll attempt to use or summarize the already set group, the universal outlook, universal opinions. This time in the economic outlook, I would say this group is closer to consensus than most times we've meant before. And they tend to follow a scenario that says that next year will not be very different from this year. You have shades of difference. If you reduce it to numbers, we have a 1% amount of BNP around inflation. There are a couple of members.