 How do you do? It's good to see you, dad in here. Nice to see you. I want to come in and have a few minutes of this. Hi, Paul. How are you? Good to see you. How are you? Good to see you. Nice to see you. How are you, sir? George Bush. Nice to see you. How are you, sir? George Bush. Nice to see you. How are you? How are you? Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Mr. President, I very much appreciate you giving this opportunity for receiving me as representative of Solidarity. I am instructed by Revan Wensa to give you his and your regards and warm greetings. Well, please give them a hand. We have a small thing for you which shows Solidarity, which has been hit, but it's still alive. This has been made clandestinely in the United States in 1981. I mean, during the, after imposition of state of war, it was the response of the United States workers. Well, thank you very much. We greatly admire all the Solidarity means and what it has been doing. And I have a particular sympathy because for several years I was president of my own union when I was in the Russian picture business. This we know. Well, we're very concerned and have very deep feelings for the people of Poland and what Solidarity has meant to them. And I very much appreciate the little time they have hearing from you as to what the situation is and what you look forward to. Mr. President, first of all, I would like to thank you for your calling to support Poland since the very beginning of your first period of presidency here. You are very admired in Poland and you will be remembered by our history for long. But this results that people in Poland have great hopes in you that this will be continued and this even will be strengthened. And like our answer has instructed me to give you... It was wonderful. It was a wonderful trip. Yeah, it was just great. Food is marvelous, but we just got a little tired on the jet lag. Where did you get back? Thank you. Welcome to our house. The loss of his life over at home. Once he gets out of the regular breakfast he comes here. That's the response, though. Thank you very much. Oh, thank you. How are you? I'm fine. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you for giving us this opportunity. I understand you're not only from Mississippi, but you're from his own town. That's right. Thank you. Thank you. This is an honor. I'm very pleased to have you. I understand that you have an interesting comment. You're studying communications and public relations. Yes. And I have an old sports announcer. And he's on the radio. Yes. And also your interest is swimming. Yes, swimming. I spent seven summers as a lifeguard. Did you? Tell me about what you did at Ole Miss. Well, I am a member of college Republicans at the University of Mississippi. And we, both the faculty and staff, hold our meetings when we have meetings. And they have never seen as much motivation, as much inspiration in college Republicans before ever since the University of Mississippi. So, on behalf of the College Republicans of the University of Mississippi, I want to tell you. Well, and then there's really a bipartisan... That's all my friends are public. I'll get one snack, but there we go. No, you stay there. We got it, but now we got it. Put the whole thing there. Thank you, Mr. President. You're welcome. You're welcome. Just a couple of souvenirs in the office. That's a stick. And this is just something in case you've got some papers in your desk or something. Thank you so much. Again, it's none of your business. Well, I don't know whether they think to this, because my day radio was so young that communications weren't a part of college at all. I'm going to give a lesson there. I remember one thing. I couldn't understand broadcasting majorly in baseball every day and so forth. And I'd get mail. And obviously, usually, and almost everywhere, there'd be something about it. That you sound as if you're talking directly to me. And I don't know how I'm doing that, but then one day it dawned on me. It was a pretty good lesson. I never forgot. I realized that, you know, you've had to live a lot of stuff when you're doing a ball game. Well, I knew that it was a little group of friends of mine that were usually at the barber shop we all patronized, listening to the ball game. And when I thought of anything to say, I would say to them. Right. And of course, the listener didn't know that. So he did sound like it. And I've always remembered, so when you're out there and doing it, keep in mind you're talking to somebody that you know and hold an affection and everybody will feel you're talking that way to them. Thank you. It's nice to meet you. Good to see you. All right. Good to see you. Bye-bye. Thank you, sir. Good afternoon, sir. Well, hello there, Mr. President. Nice to see you. Nice meeting you, sir. I believe you're making some certification to Congress in Pakistan. Is it your judgment that Pakistan doesn't have the ball? Well, we have no evidence that they do. This is required of us to make it. But we're very hopeful that in Southeast Asia, countries will forego nuclear weapons. All the countries there. And yet at the same time, we want to be of assistance with regard to legitimate energy needs. And that is a source of energy, but should not be a cover up for the bombs and the making of nuclear weapons. We're going to try our best to see if we at the level of the Soviet Union and ourselves cannot do something about creating those. And I would like to think that they might one day eliminate the law. But Mr. Gandhi, our prime minister, suggested in the news week in an interview that this cement and amendment waiver could need not be extended. Is there any way? Why should it be extended any further? You know, there's a waiver. That's the waiver of the cement and amendment which allows sale of arms to Pakistan. Otherwise, there's a law. There's a law which would not allow sale of arms to Pakistan because of its nuclear weapons program. But you have granted a waiver. And that waiver will expire in September in 57. He says it need not be extended. Why should it be extended? We hope by that time that we definitely know that there are no nuclear weapons. Not going to be any. Because that's what we've tried to, as I say, to impress on both the major countries there, but all Southeast Asia or for the rest of the world for that matter. Are you coming to India, sir? You have accepted an invitation to India, to visit India. But you were, Mrs. Reagan, visiting India. If we can work out a schedule to do that, we would like it very much. India is the largest democracy of the world. My only experience in New York country was one in which I wasn't even aware of it. I was on a flight from Taiwan to London, England. And I went home from some tours that I had had over there in the Far East. And it seems like long before dawn, but early in the morning, the plane dropped down in New Delhi for refueling. But I'm sound asleep. So at least I slept a few moments in India. But no, we'd like that very much. Sir, we would be very happy to see you there. I've only visited China once, but you did not visit India. So it's time that you also visited India. India is the largest democracy of the world. I know. We'd like that very much. And you are the leader of the democratic world. Thank you. Thank you, sir. Good to see you. Thank you, sir. Looking forward to seeing your Prime Minister in the next couple of days. Yes, sir. He's very much concerned about this Pakistan's program. We'll have a good talk about it. The section where they say things that happened 10 years ago, they reprint, and then they had one here 50 years ago. September 6th, 1935. Some one-of-a-bomb shell burst last evening at one of the longest council sessions since the President's City Commission assumed control of Dixon's affairs. The bomb was hurled by Commissioner Joey Vale of the Department of Streets, and in his action, he gained support from other members of the council. The commission attacked the city's application to various federal programs for financial aid, charging that the projects were only of a temporary nature and meant no good to the city. There. That's why I don't want more federal spending. Mr. President, Prime Minister Blaze of Grenada, President of the United States, it's good to see you. Well, pleased to see you. Why don't you overtake that chair right over there? No, Mrs. Blaze. Mr. President, I'd like to say this one right there. Mr. Secretary, Paul Well. Yes. Mr. Ambassador Zagir, the Ambassador. See you, Mr. President. Ah! I want you to go right over there. Your treatment is going very well. The continuity of the doctor was satisfied. The one-way happier message on the next. First, let me put that to the letter. We were very glad to be able to lend a hand. That's my message. October seems to be the height I'm going to remember. I think we did a similar kind of coverage. I mean, the discussion in the coming years is in the coming of the discussion, too. Very mostly also. Well, Friday will be the second anniversary. Well, Grenada, yes. Grenada, yes. I'm quite sure about a ready start. And I know a thing. It was good for me, very courageous. Thank you very much. And the incident, let me say we're... This is my first chance to be in person. Say a congratulations to you with that tremendous victory for December. Yes. To the reaction to what we went on before. And the people we need to assure that the booster turned the back. So, Mr. President, a lot of people think that we have won a significant victory. And we're going to see where we've won. We did win that, but we have not yet taken the battle. No, I know the economic problems and I wish we could be more help we're trying to, but we have a budgetary problem of our own right now. But how do I mean a little budgetary problem? Well, it depends. It's a relative talk, little. If you really need me to... Incidentally, we're divided to see your turn to our returning businesses to private ownership. I think... This is what we're about to do. Your field of government has no business in certain things. You can do making ice cream. But we have no business with that. No money? Of course.