 Testing testing This is Amy Torres and her sister, Mary-Jud's guardian and her sister, my daughter and her husband, and my grandson. This is Lady Lewis, who is my daughter and my daughter. Good right arm, Peggy Larson, who is my assistant leader. This is Kirstie Hudson, and her mother, Mary-Jud. This is Diana Bumley. Hi. She is also the owner of the Elk Slodge in Elkville. We are the sponsors of this room, and we are generous supporters. We are very much in the band and this trip. Definitely. I bet you can do a cloth. She wants to show you her cloth. See, that's pretty. She can, Mr. President. Mr. President, yes, yes, yes. She can. If you wouldn't mind saying the word about it. I know what you all did and how hard you worked to make this room possible, but I also know what else you do in regard to this. Mr. President, thank you so much. Amber and Brigitte. Please thank everyone. I love you. Girl Scout troops sold 2,004 boxes of Girl Scout cookies this year, and I have a message for you. With two cases, and the Congress were very generous. We offered to buy one of the cases of cookies, and we just wanted to give her one. Yes, we wanted to give her one. You can do that. How much is it? Girl Scout cookies, 12 boxes to her case, and $12 boxes, $24. And the presidential seal. Oh, Mr. President. Glad to have you as our president. Yes, we have a schedule there. But again, it's been wonderful having you. Have a good time. Yes. We can all send a torture. There's a pin in the way. Wait, wait. This wouldn't be like CDE. It wasn't written that way before. I think that's what he was trying to do. Because I even had written it in Brazil. I sent it down the picture section. He said, we have any photos of me riding this horse in Brazil. They did. No Martin Gale. We'll free him. We've got a lot of wild horses, you know. That's kind of a major problem all the way. Eating up the grays, too. Just a huge surplus. And if we didn't have a transportation problem to send them to China, they had a pretty huge need for horses. But the problem is to get them over the rain and eat a wild horse pillow. And now for lunch. There's a horse that's got a horse. There's a horse that's equal to what? Two units. Or is it four of cattle? That's 40 in Asia. No, that's 40 horses. Eight horses and 40 men. That's too crazy. That's crazy. Because they go to the new grass. And they tear it up. And eat it for cattle. Eat off the top of the organs. Well, listen, I know we're running out of time. I was late to get started. But as you know, the secretary in April submitted a Congress request, a report on direct communications links and other measures to enhance stability. And we appreciate the specific suggestions that you've each made about possible ways to advance our mutual goal of reducing the risk of conflict. And they've been an indispensable source of assistance to what we've been trying to accomplish. And I've reviewed the report and endorsed the recommendations. And the recommendations are an integral part of our overall program to reduce the risk of war and see if we can enhance stability. In the start, 9F negotiations, several measures have been proposed to build confidence between the Soviet Union and ourselves. Advanced notification of horribleistic missile launches, major military exercises, and expanded exchange of data on strategic and intermediate-range nuclear forces. Our new competence-building measures would complement the proposals already made. These include the addition of a high-speed facsimile capability to direct communications. The creation of a joint military communications link with the upgrading of the high-speed data capabilities in existing diplomatic communications channels between Moscow and Washington and their respective embassies in the other's capital. Each of these has merit in its own right, but the joint military communications link, in particular, has the potential to lead to even broader and deeper forms of cooperation. And as the Department of Defense report suggests, its use over time might point the way to broader arrangements for controlling crises. It would also be proposed in a monolire agreement open to all states, similar to the 1980 convention on the physical protection of nuclear material that would establish a general framework for consultation in the event of a nuclear incident involving terrorists. Formulating these proposals would greatly benefit the advice of the Congress, and we now need congressional support, as well as support from our allies and friends as we engage the Soviet Union and the Third World Nations in a dialogue on these initiatives. I'm going to stop talking and ask Camp Safety. I actually go around the country supporting your foreign policy. I think really strategically you have a good chance of untypical areas. I'd agree with the second half if it's enough. My only question is whether it's enough. I know you had to make the choice of what you can get through the country. That is the one area where my people cannot go and where on the president