 Just a moment. Lyndon Johnson. Oh yes. How are you? I hope I'm not interrupting your dinner or something. No, no. We finished some time ago. Gordon, we, I just learned tonight, our folks have been out looking at these libraries and is there no way in the world that we could reconstitute as nearly as possible in the president's office at the library, the president's office here. Well, we haven't thought of it, but it's possible. I hate to build me a little one out there inside and say, this is the way the president's office looked, and here's his desk, and here's his chair, here's his FDR picture, here's where all these people sat. Now that is the most attractive thing they tell me to the people who go in here. It is Truman discussing where he sat in this office. Yes. I've seen the one that's in Kansas, President Truman. Lady Bird said, well, we have a trouble. She said it just ought to be. We just should have thought of it. We just played hell not doing it. And now we've got a bunch of can't do philosophy. She says that the ceiling is not high enough. Well, maybe we don't have to have the same height ceiling. But maybe, and maybe we can have the same over room. Maybe we've got different dimensions. But it seems to me that if we could, we ought to take this rug out of here, and just as the Kennedys are doing and have done, just as the Truman's dead, and ought to take the desk and ought to take the chairs. And we ought to say, we see relatively a few people come through the President's office here. But all of them want to see where the President worked. Just as much as they want to see where the President was born when they come to our little house. That's one of the basic things. And it's going to be remembered and impressive on them a lot more than some book up in a shelf. And if we could, that's the one thing I want. I'd like to have as near a reproduction as finances and architectural requirements would permit. I don't say it's got to be 18 feet high or 14 or it's got to be 38 feet long. We might have a little card on the door and say this is not an exact reproduction or something. But I'd like for it to be such and say where they get an impression that here's where the President worked. Because they all want to see that. They all want to, that's what they come to see. Well, Mr. President, we'll get the dimensions and we'll try to several locations, or maybe there's more than one and it would be nice if we could do it to do it exactly. Because I think the quality of that room is the total thing and it may be possible to do it. Well Truman, they tell me they've done a rather good job out there. Well that's the main thing in the whole place. There isn't much to see as the Truman Library accepts that. That's why sort of people orient towards it. Right off the lobby and as I recall it's pretty exact even to the height. It's a wing off of a low building so they could reproduce it exactly. In fact that's the whole feature of the whole Truman Library. So it was easy to do there and goodness me if that's what you'd like we'll make every effort. I'd rather have that than anything else about the building. I'd gather that all right and we'll see. I'm in there now. I'm in that office tonight and I come in sometimes at 6.30 in the morning and I'm here late and I would like for them to see just where we work. And I'd like to have the exact replica as near as possible. But I would accept anything that would be better than nothing. I think we'll try to make it exact and incidentally it's a beautiful room. It really is a beautiful room. So we ought to try to see if we can do it by going through a floor or something. That part I see thrills. Just a question for this room and plan you know but we'll see what we can do. I see thrills come in here. Every person walks into it. I think it's a beautiful room and if you could work on that. How are they coming on it? Well they're pouring away. In fact the place that might go is just about we've had to catch it right now because there'll be pouring floors above that pretty soon. But it's not too late right now. Oh for God's sake. The only problem is if we have enough space the height I think we could work. But just a question whether we have enough space and plan to reproduce that oval. We'll take some space for somebody else. I know. Well we'll see what we can do. You do it. Thank you. I know you can. And when we're going to open it. Well I think the latest plans are really for opening is in June of 70. It'll be done earlier in that construction but then you'd have to put all the exhibits in. And I think the max and I think the safe date for sort of an official opening would be around June of 1970. I thought I was going to make it anyway. That's what I heard. The contractor is going along. And it's hoped that he might be done in January, February, March. But it's going to take a little time to move in. Get all the exhibits arranged. Are you generally happy with it? Well the best thing about this president is that the contractor is very good. And he's doing a very good job. And everybody we're all very happy with the quality of the job so far. And that's of course very important. Now what about our exhibits? Well Mrs. Johnson's been working with Arthur Drexler and I think the whole thing is coming along fine. I think the general design as far as I know of it looks very good to me. Of course if we can get this oval in where I have in mind your office. I don't know if we have enough room but if we can then everybody would be happy. You just get it. Make it smaller. I'm sure we'll get it. Thank you Arthur. Thank you. Waiting. Waiting.