 Mr. President, is it correct, sir, that you're going to put forward a new arms proposal before Geneva? Mr. Prime Minister, would you, would the allies like to see the President give a new arms proposal before Geneva? Mr. President, there are people saying that your advisors are divided about the strategy on Geneva. Thank you, everybody, please. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. President. So, you know some people are saying that your advisors have muzzled you this week in New York. I don't think anybody would have muzzled you. Thank you. Thank you, Sam, please. Thank you. Give you a chance to recall. You win again, Mr. President. Thank you. Just trying to make trouble. Yes, yes. Yes, yes. Thank you. I think the gentleman from the building has a few right comments. Thank you. That's right. Thank you. You're welcome. Have a great night. Thank you. Thank you. OK, goodbye. Goodbye. Goodbye. Goodbye. Have a great night. You're right. Please come on in. Thank you for that trade, all right? We'll be right back. Far nuts. Maybe that's from two people. What do you have to do? Do you want to go to the front? Well, I'm waiting to find out what that is. I need to find out what that is. You should go to the front. You follow the picture. He will come there. I was in television this morning after him. He was much better than that. I don't know if you've had a story or if you've had a little bit of a story. I didn't speak about taxing. I was going about the president's side of the matter. It was my fault. I would eat it. I wasn't going to tell him. I don't understand much right now. President, Schultz is going to Moscow. What do you hope he will accomplish there? He won't tell us something. You're not going to be on television tonight. Neither will we. And neither will we. Can we ask you this? The last time I'm going to talk to you in New York, how you did this trip was to answer what you think you would comment about. I'd like to know. Later today? Should the president make a new arm control and proposal? Thank you. We have talked about everything. I don't think so. I think the president is right. Let's go. Let's get out of here. Let's go. Let's go. I can't control. Let's go. Bye now. Bye now. One more. Second gentleman. The flu virus brings our Nixon education to life. The morning President Nixon said he's ending my arm control. He had to remove him. He had to remove him. The man who interviews me in the room. I think the president is standing early. He's a retired person. He's getting up early. I was very confused. How can someone without a note remove him from the country? I find it difficult when you stand as somebody who has any needs to be in television. The only way properly to be in television at 7 o'clock in the morning is to tape at the afternoon before. He talks to people who have no virus that give them radio work around the 6 o'clock. Well, we have radio programs in Germany. We do it. We're sitting upright in bed and turn in the morning. Have the radio. I find it very difficult to record in the evening. There's a picture of me in the car. And I made him stop for a minute because he had the cap still on his lens. The woman said take off the lens cap. He didn't have the picture. Stand to think of the poor guy going to that dark room inside. We covered a lot of ground. Last week, I know you got some points about the most of your life. I have one.