 Turn around here. Great. That's tremendous. Thank you. Thank you very much. Pleasure to see you. Pleasure to see you as well. We realized that you like to dress casually, so we brought some Cleveland Brown sweatsuits. This will go with the sweatshirt that you held up when you were in Cleveland recently. Remember, win one for the Giffer during our playoff run, so we also brought one for Nancy. Well, thank you very much. Hopefully we'll enjoy them. I think they are. That's great. Maybe we can just set them down on the couch here. There we go. A couple of little souvenirs of yours. Oh boy. That's very kind. That's tremendous. Thank you very much. That's great. We also have something in common with you that David's... We're family members in a way. That David's mother's dog is a cousin of Nancy's dog. I guess the... Yeah, my parents got a dog from Marvin Davis, and he got it from, I guess, the same folks. King Charles dog? Is that the name of the type of dog? A King Charles dog? Yeah, the King Charles family. It's a cousin of your dog. Well, I didn't know why. It's yours, Mark, and everybody else does. It's so friendly. It's so friendly. He'll sit on it like my daughter when she's here. He'll sit on her lap for half an hour when she gets up to go. He'll chase her out of the room. I don't think my father would have the dog. He's going to miss her so much. Well, listen, you could speak to your father on behalf of me, because we won't do any good for this season, but I played right guard, and I'll be on the job by... We could have used you last while during the strike. We'll be just the top of the Super Bowl. So we could do both offense and defense. Right? Would you play both ways for us? That would be... And no guaranteed contracts by the bottom. That's right, as we appreciate that. Well, it's super. All right. So nice to meet you. It's a pleasure to have you. It's a pleasure. Pleased to see you. Thank you very much. I should know that there are plenty of young people that appreciate what you've done for our country. Well, thank you. This is important. And older people? Very shortly, I'm going to be meeting a very interesting group of young people. A whole gang that went over to the Soviet Union, family of Finland. And that'll be half of the group, the other half of the Soviet kids that came back with them. These Soviet young people are from schools that teach English there, so there won't be any language problem. And I'm kind of interested to see whether you're going to be able to pick out which of the Americans and which of them are interesting. Is that what we're going to be sitting at? Yeah, I think we're going to be watching that. What a neat experience for some kids to be able to go over to the Soviet Union, likewise, go back and forth. This is a result of some of our summit meetings in getting an exchange of things like this and culture and so forth. They've really loosened up. It's really wonderful. I hope they keep loosening up. I'd love to go over there someday. It's really great. It's really super. I don't want to take up any more of your time. You're very kind to have us and best wishes to you. First lady, very kind. Thank you for everything you've done the past eight years. She's telling you that I'm working too hard. No, no. The knuckles are bleeding and you're working so hard. Thank you very much. Thank you, sir. Be well. Good to see you. Thank you. Yeah, we're going to... Well, sir, just one on the deal with Noriega. How can you sanction it? The senator is entirely against dropping those indictments, as you know. The answer is there, but the negotiations... So you have not struck a deal as the L.A. Times said. They said you have signed off on that. You mean you're going to begin believing what you read in the papers? Always. All right. This way, please. Thank you. Can you break the deadlock about the Middle East during this visit, Mr. President? Can you break the deadlock about the Middle East? Are you still optimistic? You're optimistic. Thank you. Thank you. We've got another group to get into this. Excuse me, sir. You've got to go. I had it surveyed very broadly. I'll do everything I can to see it remain that way. I'm optimistic. I'm just thinking about peace prospects. Well, let me say I could be persistent. That conversation with regard to the peace process and I realized that we were running out of clock with all the waiting here for us. But the process will be discussed at the summit very definitely. And our agenda will cover the regional conflict between the human rights and bilateral relations and our introduction as well. Our many intensive discussions with the Soviets in the Middle East over the last seven months haven't indicated, as you said yourself with your own talks, they're indicating much movement in their position on the key issues or much responsiveness to our concerns. But we'll be looking for signs of positive movement and not just variations of the same position. I hope we see them in the Palestinian representation, the authority of the plenary and other issues. And I can assure you that we will press them on restoring relations with you and would also press on a Soviet Jewry both with regard to immigration and with regard to liberalizing the constraints on the practice of Judaism within the Soviet Union. I started that in a meeting that we had here on the basis that all the emphasis on immigration, the ideas to be taken up that if people were allowed to worship the way they were going to worship, maybe there wouldn't be such a demand for immigration. There may be some movement on religious rights in general in the Soviet Union, and we're hopeful that we're going to have to wait to see. We know that George will be going to the Middle East after the summit, and the main purpose of his visit will be to press acceptance or at least concrete movement on the initiative. And also they need to sharpen the focus on those who resist progress toward peace. I don't realize the difficulties, but we have to inject urgency into our efforts, particularly at the events of the Arab summit. No one should believe that we'll let peace process fail. But now, even for your thoughts on how to proceed over these next several months and how we can move to a dialogue with the Palestinians, perhaps. So, brother, one, a failure on our part. We, the Israelis, tend to be so much divided that we feel it is almost un-Jewish to be united. But unfortunately, on one thing, we failed to be divided. And this is, on the respect to you, as one of the greatest presidents of the United States of America, who gave strength still country to pop to the free world and introduced unprecedented achievements, including the disarmament, the verification, the first time to change the course of the world by reducing dangers, no technicality. All right, I see you there. I can see you. I can see you. You better get in the middle of that. Nice picture. Yes, sir, I retire. Wait one second then. I think he's getting too much sun, Mr. President. You know, I live for the suntan year-round for most of my life. I was a lifeguard for seven years when I was young. I didn't wear makeup, so I had to keep tanned. I got cancer off the end of my nose from the suntan. Now I can't get tanned. Yeah. So, most of this is from South Barbara. I was going to say you should wear sunblock. Well, I do, I try to, but it still leads through. All right. Well, of course you'll have more time to use those now. Thank you, sir. Sure will. I won't hit these, trust me. They'll have a special place. See you later. Thank you very much. All right. I wish you well. Thank you, sir. I miss you. It's been a pleasure, sir. The best commanding chief I've had the pleasure of working with. Where are you going? A couple places. I have a job here with Marconi, if I wanted, or down in Jacksonville, Florida. So we'll see. It should be California. I agree. It's nice of you. Thank you, sir. Well, good luck. Thank you. Thank you. You're welcome.