 This is the Management Report for the year 1989, fiscal year 1989, and this is something that Joe, of course, has been instrumental in working on Jerry Rizzo, the Associate Director for Management and also Chief Financial Officer. This is a little out of the masses, at least for 89. Remember when we started 6, 7 years ago, and this whole program was initiated, all financial accounting systems are going in this year, all the personnel and federal systems, all the productivity programs, the whole thing is going to be implemented in place as you are leaving the government. This whole Reform 88 project, when we call it Reform 88, there is a good reason for it, and that is that Ronald Reagan leaves that what he's going to do is put in a better government. Well, it's all that. And then we are going to come in with the report to you in August on what guidance that you're going to give in the future, on the government in the future. And so we'll have it for you in August. You'll have three or four months to take a look at it and then decide the Reagan legacy and how you may apply in the year 2000. Mr. President, as we've talked before, this is the kind of legacy that's very difficult for a successor to mess up. I mean, if you've got the right kind of management in place and you have a culture there that is committed to productivity improvements and not being wasteful of the taxpayers' money, it takes a long time to change that culture. By the way, Mr. President, remember the IGs that you put together? They just finished up this last report to you. $110 billion saved. Saved already? No, no, it's already done. By the time that you leave, it will be about $125 billion. That's a natural idea. Well, listen, thank you very much. Thank you all. That is the end part of OMB, and we're very proud of pushing that very hard. This ought to be something that our candidates ought to know about in the coming election, too. He started it. And you give us support when you need it. Thank you, Mr. President. All right, well, thank you. See you now. I'm glad to see you. I appreciate you having us in here today. Mr. President, great pleasure meeting you, sir. Good to see you. Thank you. Mr. Sherman and Greg. How do you do, sir? Hello there. See you. Mr. John Poston. Mr. President, great to meet you. Mr. George Hixon. Mr. President, how are you? Mr. William Spencer. Hello, Mr. President. My cellmate, Rustin, sends his best. Mr. Richard Carlsberg. Greetings from the great chair. Well. Mr. Richard Barth. How do you do, sir? Mr. Howard Pollock. Hi, Mr. President. First Republican Congressman for Alaska. Well, I'm just great to see you. Good to see you. Mr. Lowell, there. Mr. President. Good to see you. I understand that 100 years you're on today. Yes, sir. I'm just trying to deal with these men that made me look this way. I guess I'd better give you some advice. Don't play with me. Can't make up a better place. Did that look straight? Yeah. We need to close in more. Yeah, the picture. Yeah, you bet. Let's just think about how old all these people looked in that way. Thank you, sir. Let me express my thanks, not only myself, but for everybody in this country, for all that you do to preserve the great duty to make this. We appreciate you taking it. I know this isn't the only thing you've got to do today. But I do appreciate you taking the time to do it. We've got two or three things we want to leave with you on this particular occasion. It's kidding. I'm a surgeon and one of those things go off. I always think I'm being paid. I don't mind. I'd like to give you this. This is our centennial print. And Bob Kuhn, one of our members, did this for us. And this is a pretty special one, I think. And of course, the five of the representatives. I guess you probably know that the reason Rosewood started this whole organization a hundred years ago was because that group recognized the commercial killing of Big Game and the near loss of Yellowstone Park is what got him going. He would have developed the whole National Park System, the National Wildlife Refuge System, and all that. And this is a history of it. And this is the American Truth Day of Wildlife. It's really a history of the club. That's great. Now this, I know you've got a lot of time in Washington. You probably don't know that. I'm a doctor. I was surgeon in Houston and I do a lot of medical television. This has to do with the Bowman Crockett Centennial Project. Much to the efforts of that man right next to you, we bought a 6,000 acre ranch just south of Glacier National Park. We're running into cattle ranch, but we're also funding a chair of Wildlife Research at the University of Montana. And we're endowing that research because what our goal is, you know, man's here. So if we've got to help and man's got needs, but so do I, we're going to try and deal with those delicate issues that just can't, others won't be able to. But the trouble with this is it's got a lot of mail. It'll explain to you, but it's about, except we haven't got anything else to worry about. Yeah, we'd appreciate your confirmation, too. I really don't have anything much to do today except to thought maybe my life's in souvenirs. These are key rings with the great seal. I appreciate that, sir. Thank you very much. Should have a, and particularly as a fitting one, there should be a souvenir for this particular group in this particular place. Because not only did Teddy do that, but played a hand in this very office. There's never served in this office. It didn't exist, but this is kind of a copy of a room that's up in the residential part of the White House there that used to be in the old days in the President's office. Because the White House was both executive office building and residence until one day, Mrs. Teddy Roosevelt said to her husband, if I'm going to raise six kids in this place, you're going to get your people out of here. So it's the best wing in this office all along. He never got to serve in this room. Mr. President, one other thing that we could not produce for you today, though it is, you know, it's, if you were my patient, you wouldn't like this. But of course, with this other thing, Mr. Bayer right there behind you, he's a local, he's ready as a residential area. I mean, he's a resident of this area. But as a commemorative issue of this whole Centennial celebration, we've had a Mr. Schreiber, Robert Schreiber, who's one of the top wildlife artists. Well, he's canned to Jackson, and you've got two of Harry Jackson's. Well, I know he knows about Harry. Well, only Harry is a good buddy of mine, too. I'm not going to get you sorry to me. I won't tell you where he called me at Cody, but he woke me up early in the morning. And we have had this statue of Roosevelt Commission bronze, and there will be a hundred. And we will, if you, I won't tell you, totally over here about how to get it to you, but we want you to have one of our Centennial editions of TR, The Conservation. And put it in the Roosevelt room. And put it back in Buckskins and his old floppy hat. Well, we've got a rant down there in the Santa Inez Mountains that was quite a chunk of nature. We're keeping it that way. Some people are not so happy about that. I remember when we first were there with Secret Service, and up on a hill looking down where they cover a lot of territory, they set another post and a little camp chair up there where the man on duty would come and sit there, keep everybody's one in mind, and that one day he came down and his eyes were rather hard. He didn't know whether what he'd seen was correct or not. He'd been sitting up there in the chair in a mountain line and strolling by. I think you're sad. I'm glad you're strolling by. That's a very good option. He didn't ask for identification. Thank you. We appreciate so much, Mr. President. We're really proud of you. Thank you. I want to have you back on the rancheroes riding one of these days. I know I'll look at both of that. Thank you, sir. Thanks for your time. You know, Park Myers, he's the old President of the Rancheroes. He invited me to go this year. I belong to the spin-off in Texas. Good to see you. Thank you again for your time. President Ambassador, Mrs. Mastiel? Yes, hi. Let's put this in you again. I'm not sure it do. Hello. Nice to see you. Are you stored health? No. You look well. I sure do. Except I'm having a little sniffle thing here. Oh, well, that's the air. Well, listen, I think, it doesn't seem like a suitable size pin for 50 years of service, but that's what the government does anyway. This is 50 years of bureaucracy, Mr. President. Thank you. I prefer to think of office service. Well, thank you very much. Can't do anything about time. I want to event you. Thank you very much for doing the rest of your day. Now you do it. Say you're going to kill him. I sure will. Here's a little present for you. Don't drop it, it's glass. So I carry it. When he gets walking and so forth. Your support and encouragement. Thank you for these precious gifts and thank you for the opportunity, the respect and the honor to meet with you on this occasion. You're pretty busy. Not going to take any of your time. Thank you so long and thank you again. Give our best to Nancy. I sure will. Bless you.