 Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States. Please. Month ago on December 8, 1987, I signed a treaty with General Secretary Gorbachev. You know the successful completion of the negotiations resulted in that treaty as a direct result of your efforts, led by Ambassador Earthlipman, but involving each of you in this room. And that treaty, for the first time in history, pledged our respective countries to eliminate an entire class of nuclear weapons, all ground-launched missiles with ranges between 500 and 550, or I should say 5,500 kilometers. So to all of you in this room, as well as to Ambassadors Cavalman and Goodman, I'd like to take this opportunity to express my personal appreciation and congratulations for your truly selfless and outstanding work in bringing the INF Treaty to a successful conclusion. I recognize that sometimes agonizing effort you put in, repeatedly working your way through the myriad details of draft treaty documents and scrupulously reporting every change in the Soviet tactics to Washington, thinking at times that there never would be an end to the negotiations. But you hung tough. You forcefully and fairly defended our national interests, and especially in the hectic, final days, you never lost sight of the principles of security, stability, and effective verification that governed our negotiating posture throughout. I think probably my greatest linguistic effort is learning Dover Yaenoko. The result of sound treaty that protects and enhances our security and that of our allies is the final proof of your skill in fortitude. As we move forward in other areas of arms reduction negotiations, your fortitude and your skill will serve as mongrels for how to achieve results that support fully our objectives and our national needs. The U.S. government will continue to rely on your experience and counsel as we move forward to implement the treaty that you were so instrumentally concluding. So once again, I thank you all. Would you care to comment, Ambassador? Thank you, Mr. President. Your kind remarks in this meeting is the tools which led to the successful completion of the INF Treaty, however, were forged by many hands, American and Allied, over a long period of time. We could not have achieved an INF Treaty without the full support and dedication of our colleagues here in Washington, without your leadership and determination, the INF Treaty, and its truly groundbreaking provisions. God bless you. Good to see you. You know something? I talked to you on my 85th. I caught up then when I hit 90. Here I am. God bless you. You look wonderful. You're working. Oh, one. Hello. How are you? I've been a long time. Good to see you. Hello, Mr. President. Good to see you. Nice to meet you. And my granddaughter. Hello. Good to see you. Nice to meet you. Good to see you. Good to see you. Good to see you. Good to see you. Hello there. How are you? Good to see you. Well, listen, glad to do it. I think we better, if we're going to get a family bill, we better all crowd in. We'll kind of distribute it. Enough? Thanks to all of these years. I wasn't asking. That's fine. And my boy, Harry, is pretty close to young, and not too far, so... 90 miles away. Slip down and say, is there anything else? The White House is something. I wish you could have seen him. I've heard of his personality. Every year they have a theme, and this year it's Christmas music. It's a little display set up. And with the music, this one is illustrating this song. The music is coming out of that, like a cross. Oh, yes. All I want is my two front teeth and a big doll that I'm looking for. Cute. Incidentally, I want to tell you, I read about your ranch up there all the time. There's a lot of quail up there. A lot of quail. When they come time to collolate them, I'm very happy to go up there. Sure. He hasn't changed one bit, has he? Still hunting. I don't know that you could shoot these because they usually hang around the house. He hunted quail with me in the High Sierra a month and a half ago. Not bad. He didn't miss anything that came across. He used to bring home a deer now. Every now and then. As long as I can walk and keep breathing, I'm going to keep up. I say, listen, wait a minute. I think, Mr. Kaplan, you have to have a few souvenirs here with me, gentlemen. That's beautiful. Gentlemen, these are cranks. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. I appreciate it. Two ladies in hand. Right here in this problem. Thank you. Thank you, sir. The young man, David, is I've never been able to manage a little dance of my own with the picture of the White House and the great seal. I'll end up taking that away from you. Isn't that nice? Thank you, Mr. Brownlee. You're more than welcome. Who is this delightful? Thank you. I appreciate you taking time. This is the office that was made to copy the room over there in the White House, which in the old days used to be the president by the president's office. That caused all the executive officers were in there as well as being residents. That was until Mrs. Theodore one day said to Teddy, if I'm going to raise six kids in this house, you're going to get your people out of here. So now we have the West Wing. We see you sitting at that desk. Yes. There's a little history about that. That desk was once a sabership in the British Navy. It was lost in the ice on a voyage of rescue boats to the North Pole. Some years later an American sailor found this in Gordow. We refurbished the ship and sent it to England as a gift for their Navy. And then sometime later Queen Victoria caused a 1,300-pound package in the White House because that desk made a decommission of the ship and that was carved out of the crannies. It was beautiful. Absolutely. There's nothing to know for the young people of history too. The seal that's on all those things. The great seal. The eagle's head, you'll notice, is turned toward the olive branch in the one claw, not the arrows in the other. There's what the seal originally was for the eagle looking at the arrows. The war two, the arrow two and decided that the eagle was now looking at the symbol of peace and that's what's up there. Thank you so much. Thank you. How's Neil doing? Well, I think pretty good. He's had some problems on the open heart surgery and so forth, but he had the best live down there in the natural California now. Well, he loves it down there though. I know. He'll probably be in the summer when the racetrack down there is open, but he's there every day. I think he's trying to cut back on his alarm once more. Thank you very much. Good to see you. You remember us. Thank you very much. Okay. Man, I think we're supposed to be sitting down. Okay. Thank you very much. We're proud of you talking about the sun. Wow. Thanks to your words. Oh, this weather should be good practice. Well, except that we're not supposed to go to June. I guess though, they're far enough north that you could even release. It was my turn yesterday sitting here in that chair and then on the floor and they range from five years old to nine. Not in their question sometimes. You thought about those five-year-olds and your answers, anything they could understand. Okay.