 1980 World's Fair. I really would be remiss if I didn't say thank you to all these special guests. On my right, Congressman James Claude. We'd please thank him. What is it? I'm the Commissioner General of the 1982 World's Fair, George Cole. I'm an enthusiast of the hell to say welcome to President Mrs. Reagan from the U.S. Committee today. Mr. President so far, beginning late last year, he and he has purchased a hundred and twenty dollars from the American citizens in this country and helped finance it. It's going to be crowded for many, many years to come. It would not be one of the ends. It's a real pleasure to introduce you, the honorable Malcolm Baldwin, Secretary of Commerce. It's been done here and the people who will play, work, and will care for this committee over the next six months. And it's most fitting that to mark this historic occasion for the city of Knoxville and the state of Tennessee, the President and Mrs. Reagan are here. How can you, if you put yourself in my place, how can you adequately introduce a man who you admire and respect as much as I do the President? I think it makes... Rogers, and a very special degree, not only to you all, but to this young man here who is on the platform. Mac, I hope you won't be wrong by telling something about it. To ask him to take that position and his wife answered the phone, told me he couldn't come to the phone because he was out in a terrible big contest. And I said, he's in, he belongs. Well, Omar, we thank you, contains the names of the 12,000 people who contributed, a penny. Now, it must have taken a long time to collect so many, and I understand that Omar said a couple of times it kind of got a feel going because he also asked for those signatures at the same time. Well, it must have taken a long time, and 12,000 people is a lot to have contributed to any effort. I'm glad that so many people wanted us here in Knoxville. I hope we're just trying to get us out of Washington. But I'm proud that America is still bringing up young children like Omar. Boys and girls who care about their community, their town, and their country. Omar, when I think of what you've seen, young people still undergo as far as their talent and effort will take them. This beautiful pavilion is proof that other generations of Americans believed in dreams. It's wonderful. Omar may be familiar with it. There's a character in that book who's trying to find a way to expect Sunday in the rocket sun, their carriages go by, and the troops and the bayonets and so forth. They celebrate a government that promises a freedom it systematically denies, that proclaims justice while practicing tyranny, and that uses what it calls law as little more than a thing because we have it. Omar and his generation are free to dream and then turn those dreams into reality. As you walk through these exhibits today, just imagine, I wish all of you a good time, and hope that as you stroll around these grounds, you're as grateful and proud to be an American as I am, as Nancy is. God bless you and thank you all again.