 Attention, forward march. Yes, sir. Listen, I'm going to introduce him. I've got a number of brothers and sisters. I have? No, just talk again about it. All right. Thank you, sir. You're welcome. Kathy, what's up in correspondence? I'm sorry. This is my brother-in-law, Jack. Thank you, sir. Is this a bell? A bell. Jack, where? A bell. John, go on. This is a bell. This is a bell. This is a bell. This is a bell. This is a bell. This is a bell. Thank you. This is my brother-in-law, Jack. My pleasure. This is brother-in-law, Jack. You're welcome. I think we ought to get a ruble. All right, sir. Why don't we have everybody come down here, on the President's Center here. We can have them stand in the left and have them go right. Some of them on the left, some on the left. I need them to stand left. Here's the lunchbox, here. This is the lunchbox, here. This is the lunchbox, here. This is the lunchbox, here. Okay. We've got to get a bottle of highlanders. Oh, yeah. We're going to go over there and you can move that chair. How are you doing? We've got everything in here? I would love that. Oh, OK. OK, thank you. Thank you. Yes, thank you. Well, I guess it's nothing to do with Rebecca. Well, we'll have it all the way here. Thank you. Nice to meet you. Well, we all know what the occasion is and naturally it's tinned with sadness, but also with warm best wishes and with great appreciation. That's all that you've done here. I think it was wonderful the way you were able to hide your liberal tendencies. Be attuned to my basic philosophy here. But we're going to miss you and we wish you well. And I think there is a little something here that I have to say. I've got some notes in here. Do you want me to hold that for you, sir? No. I don't want you to even look at it. Where did it go? There it is. I have to have a little script here for this now. In addition to all the other chores here, he distinguished himself by running on two White House teams. In 1985, it was the Reagan's V-toes. And in 1986, it was the Reagan reruns. And he beat Senators Pell and Nancy Cassabon, Jim Miller and Bill Bennett. And that was for the Nike Cap Challenge. And so I just thought that just as we try to preserve memories of someone very young and our households and all that contribute to this, and since that puts him in the White House Hall of Fame, we had your running shoes. These are yours. There's a left one here. And you can even have the Gucci bag. Mr. President, thank you very much. It's really been an eventful two years since your chief of staff went out to the press room and made a surprise announcement of your new director communications, and Sam Donaldson left the length of his chain. I spend 12 hours a day here working in the best, the most rewarding office, the best office in the world to work in. It really is. And then we've got privileges to do night work, doing out beds at the Washington Post. It's very helpful. This crowd here we just brought in from Lafayette Park. Seriously, there's a number of things that you've done here that have really made us, I think, all of us proud, and I've been involved in a few of them. One of them, when you stood up graciously and vetoed that South Africa sanctions bill. Another one was your leadership and the whole battle for contra aid. We'd have never gotten it without you. Another was when I watched you come out of that Haughty House in Reykjavik, Iceland, and I don't know what you said to Gorbachev at the door, that car, but I'm delighted you said it. But I'd like to tell one little story about the president and the Reaganites. Incidentally, your jokes at the issues lunch, we forgive you because your staff has found that George Bush is responsible for most of them. One story, sir, that we, you know, a lot of Reaganites argue, when did you come aboard the Reaganite? When did you become a Reaganite? And some said, well, after Detroit, and people say, well, I was there before Detroit, and I was telling them, I said, well, look, friend, I was there pre-Kansas City. And so that was pretty impressive until I had breakfast last week with Lynn Knopfsinger in Long Beach. He said, okay, you were there, 1976, pre-Kansas City. He said, where were you in Miami Beach in 1968? And so in 1968, when I was with former president Nixon, candidate Nixon, and we were trying to stop a right-wing takeover organized in California. So at any event, whenever we joined with the president, whenever we became the Reaganites, 66, 68, 76, 80, we are all Reaganites now. We are with you in this embryo. We are with you to the end of this administration, and we are with you to the end because nobody has done more for our cause, our country, our movement than you have. And thank you very much for the honor of having served you, sir. Something in the nature of not bronze shoes or something. Right. Now, I know how hard you've been working and get out there, and before you start going to work again, take yourself a little trip and a vacation and relax. Terrain, you might go. You might go. You got a flight? All right. Well, fall in tune and enjoy. Don't care. Thank you again, sir. All right. Miller time. All right. And I'm sorry. They won't let me have parties in the afternoon. I've got to get going again. All right. Thank you.