 Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, members of the 94th Congress, the State of the Union is not good. When President Ford spoke those words at the 1975 State of the Union address, it signaled an honesty in the executive branch, to which the country was not accustomed. The only way to talk about Ford is to talk about things like integrity and trust. It is just a great honor to be able to introduce to you Mr. Frank Zarb. Having served as the energy czar during the Ford administration, Frank Zarb came to the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy to engage with students in discussions about the president, ethics, and energy strategy. In terms of oil, with so much oil coming from Canada nowadays, do you see coal in the tar sands in Canada as oil as important parts of America's energy independence now? Yes. The formulas change somewhat. Today more than ever we need political leaders who care about what's right and are prepared to take pain because what right is not politically popular. How do we counter the public fear of radiation and basically how easy it is to quantify the risks of nuclear energy as opposed to other energies? There are things that nuclear power do for the country that are very good for the American people. It helps get us off oil. Secondly, it's very good for the environment. Nuclear power, which was part of the Ford program, has some real benefits. Nothing is risk-free, but it's getting to be very close in the regulatory regime around nuclear power. Part of the failure and lack of trust within the public is the failure of the government to regulate and dispose. It's going to take courageous political and public service thinking to surface the options and then cause the body politic to make a selection. The government's role in nuclear power has mostly been on the research side and if anything on subsidizing loans or guaranteeing loans. What role do you think the U.S. government should play to bring about this change in our electricity landscape? First of all the initial decision to do it and the political decision to do it. They are obviously smart young people and they wouldn't be here. They are at a stage in life where they really want to do the right thing. Can we use the context of relations with Iran or the debt crisis to kind of facilitate an energy policy? The crisis as long as it lasts. This is the time for them to understand that to do the right thing you're often time going to have to take some of the hard medicine and there's no other way to do it. So I see these young minds thinking in those terms. The most unforgettable part of Ford was the quality of his character and personality. He was just a good human being. In the sense that here this school seems to have adopted a culture that emphasizes harmony and team. You don't see in many places. I do pick up that vibration and I think it's very very valuable. Ford approached the issues honestly and surfaced them honestly. He set the stage. Now we need the young people here to take it over the finish line.