 Hello. Hello, Mr. President. Hello, my sweetheart. How are you? Well, I'm fine, are you? You know, the only one thing I dislike about this job is that I'm married and I can't ever get to see you. I just hear that sweet voice and it's always on the telephone. And I'd like to break out of here and be like one of these young animals down on my ranch, jump a fence. But do you know what I tried to do in the poignole commission the other day, the K-gram commission? Yeah. I talked all day long and into the night on that, including talking to you. But they did justice for me and turned the justice down, just falling down. They catch him back and went to him. He wouldn't do it. I had to come in here and plead with him and finally got him to do it. Everybody else wanted to turn it down. Dick Russell, I had talked to him four times. But we went through with all that thing. Now, you know where I had to talk to him? Russell was in Winder. Dirksen was in Illinois. Humphrey was on the beach. Mansfield was on the beach. And Miami and houses that people become popular at Lindemtown. Charlie Hallick was out hunting turkey. Now, there wasn't a human here. And they're not here now. And they're not working now. And they're not passing anything. And they're not going to. Now, somebody has got to, instead of just writing the stories about how the Pages live, are about Bobby Baker's girl. Whether he had a girl or whether he didn't is not a matter that's going to settle his country. But whether we have justice and equality is pretty damn important. So I'd like for them to be asking these fellas, where did you spend your Thanksgiving holidays? Tell me about it. Was it warm and nice and write a little story on it? Because we were here a bunch and we're going to have to do it now. If you don't, they're going to start quitting here about the 18th of December. They'll come back about the 18th of January. And then they'll have hearings and rules committed about the middle of March. And then they'll pass.