 Supporting Mr. President's defense ministry. Thank you very much. Mr. President, nice to see you. Spanish ambassador. My name is Ron Lager. I'm from our Defense Department. The Minister has been extremely helpful, very supportive, and we worked together very well, and we have a very good relationship with his partnership and his ministry. The first visit of the Spanish Defense Minister was made to Europe. We have to resolve that and to come more often. That's right. More often. We had a dinner in the Air and Space Museum last night, which was a very good place. I'm really touched by the quality of reception of my friend. I'm very happy to visit your Prime Minister and to visit your King. We're sorry they were due to be here again. We ended that tragedy at the airport for that event. Mr. President, we have a few minutes to sit down for that. Thank you. I'm glad you're here. In his last visit to the United States, he watched a point of the funeral drama of one of his colleagues while he was in the military. Honoring him. Honoring him. Yes. Thank you. We had first met any years ago, when I was 1972, when I was still a government official. Hello. Mr. Ambassador, you and I will have a photo. You will come and join us. Thank you, sir. Thank you, sir. Well, welcome. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Mr. Ambassador Paraguay. Yes, Mr. Ambassador. Mr. President, well, it is a great honor to address you to be here. Right. Right. Thank you, sir. I know this is not new to you coming here, but you were married here. That's right. And I know you were also a good friend of our ambassador to Japan, like Mansfield. That's right. Mr. King. How do you do it? How do you do it? Oh, it was George. Mr. Ambassador, could you step back? Just to take a picture of the talk. That is the... Hello there. Can I have a minute? Can I have a minute? Can I have a minute? Can I have a minute? How do you do it? We're all in front of the front plates with the photo. And then you will all join us and we'll have one all together. Thank you, sir. We're very pleased to have you present to you. Well, we're pleased to have you here. Thank you, sir. All right. Thank you very much. That was good. Thank you very much. How do you do it now? That's against the poor government side. You and I were over in front of the front plates at the picture. I mean, you will all come in and join us and we'll change our credentials. Thank you. Oops. Can we do that? I resent that. Thank you. Thank you. Yes, and it's good to see you again. Yes, sir. I'm very pleased to present my credentials. We are. They would like to have everything over here for you. Thank you very much. Thanks to you. I don't remember. I had to tell you it would be your next in Sacramento when you were governor and I was the second consul general in San Francisco. Yes. You have to send it to my son. He's been in high school here for the last three years. In anticipation of my coming. This is the letter of recording where it's pleasant. I can make sure The ambassador of Europe won. Yes. Well, I sent you out of the letter. That's what you saw. You and I were both in front of the back plates for the photo and you were joining us for the photo. It's a great pleasure to be here. So, thank you. You still got dubs, photo and dicks. I'll be in a way but you would friend over. You came all the way back down here. Well, I'm pleased to do it, Mr. President. When you call. Mr. President, how are you? Good, how are you? Good, how are you? Good morning. Good morning. Well, I appreciate it. Limited on time. Let me just say a little bit. He's on the school prayer. I've been concerned. I've been concerned because I've told a son and talked to him. The whole image that's being portrayed I think is distorting this in people's minds. The image that somehow we're forcing prayer on the schools. I bet I've got more experience in grade school than anybody here because my old man moved around a lot. So I went to about a half a dozen schools before I got through eighth grade in different cities. And I remember in summer I've never mentioned prayer. I think it's all we're saying is that with protection building as I think is in 72 protection against someone being able to order or dictate a prayer. Protect against that. But simply to make it plain, the Constitution says if people in school want to pray they should have the right to pray. And one of the reasons I feel so strong about it is it's not so much the fact of whether they do or don't pray actually in a school. It's what we're doing in saying to children that there is something questionable done in places like school and I used, I think I told you I used the example of these children, these kindergarten children down in the south whose parents have not at least sent grace at meals because in the cafeteria these little five-year-olds, now there he is we're saying grace in a federal judgeable things is ordered. They can't do that. Well now what happens when a five-year-old comes home and they start to say he says well we're told school you shouldn't do that. You can't do that. How do you explain to a five-year-old things of that kind what has happened? So I just I would hope that we could find our way to say no the Constitution does not say that you can't pray in school. But you won't take over. Mr. President maybe I ought to say a word I think all of us here certainly the four of us in the Senate