 How are you getting along? Well, fine. I didn't know whether on this day we're, you know, and I know how hard you've been going. But it would make a big help, I think, in Long Island. You know, the day that you're coming in, I think it's the 31st. Yeah? If perhaps you could come in a couple of hours early and we could take a trip through, you know, arrive at the airport out of Long Island and take a trip through Nassau County, they think they could get a couple of hundred thousand people out. Well, if it's not already blocked out, it'll be done here. Jack Belendi is not here. Wait a minute, maybe he is. Well, let me see if he is now. That's the 31st. And I speak that. You're supposed to come in for the rally. You were going to come in for the whole day. And I think the day's been canceled. I speak that night at Madison Square Garden. Yeah. And if it could come in so that you could maybe arrive at one of those fields out in Long Island and just take a motorcade in through. Say it, three o'clock or four o'clock. Let me ask you. Let me ask you. Bobby? Hi. Is this important? He would really be a big help. We are trying to beat Williams very confidentially. That son of a bitch is going to give us a help for four years if he's still there. And we were then four points a beating him if we could get the Negroes to come down and get their people to vote. So I told him to put in my schedule that we would be in Wilmington at 3.30 and Dover at 5 o'clock before we went to New York. Now I've told Marvin Watson, who's in charge of my schedule, Jack Blenty's gone, that if this is important to tell them in Delaware, we'll be there at noon and we'll try to get through at 2.30 at Dover and leave at 3 and get up there by 3.30 at 4. Well, that'd be terrific if you could do it. If it's that important, we'll do it. We'll beat this son of a bitch, Williams. And if, well, now if I do this, you get some Negroes, you talk to Roy Wilkins and get him to send one or two of his organizers into Dover and Wilmington. They got a lot of people registered, but they say they won't vote. You know who's good? That's Charles Evers from Mississippi. Yeah. They could get him up there. All right, well, now, I can't do that. Well, do you do that for me? Yeah. I'll give you, I'll give you, I'll give you three hours. I'll get the people. I'll give you three hours before the Madison Square Garden. I'll be in New York not later than four o'clock. OK, and I'll get there after the game. And you just do it quietly and call on anybody in the federal government you need, but do it where they don't catch you. But we want all the money, and I'm putting some money in there, but we just want to keep him from hounding us every day for four years. And I'll be there, and you just set the schedule of what you want me to do. Is there anything else I can do? No, that's terrific. Give it, when you turn over at night and put that effle on your arm, give her a hug for me, will you? I'll do that. Good night.