 25th and 4 at 400. We have come to introduce the newest member of the Olympic team, the President of the United States. You gave us moments that we will never forget. I was glad to drop into his knees in thanks. Mary Lou Redden getting that perfect 10. There was Steinziefer and Hogshead getting a war with the exact same 100. It was something like USA, USA. But it doesn't matter whether you won the gold or the silver or the bronze, the cheer was for you, for all of you. The specialness of this Olympic was apparent in the Jedi. A vibrant and a very human delight that was transmitted to me by what they saw of you. Then they think, Americans, well, they're generous and full of serious effort. They're full of high spirits. They're motivated by all of us. Everyone in this city had to put in or herself out some way, one way or another, while the games were on. The South Korean boxers, the Chinese gymnasts, the Romanian athletes, the Jamaicans, the Japanese. For a lot of us, one of the really indelible images of the games was of Gabriel Anderson Scheisse of Switzerland. Walking dazed and dehydrated to the finish line, refusing to give up. Pushing on, even with all our expenses going, summing up just that last bit of reserve and crossing that line. She truly was heroic. Read forever books about the melting pot. But the past two weeks, there it was, winning medals for us, representing us every day. 140 countries represented here. In the only place in the world where those who are competing for this nation had the blood runs in the background of more than 140 countries. So I say be ready for games because you've soared to greatness.