 I'm Senator Ellington on the line. Thank you. The paper that you had, had it too thick. Oh, I just had a little fill-in came out. Get your day-to-day and you... All the lines were busy and I abandoned it. Well, I've been... I've been very busy going over the state. Yeah? Our section of the country, uh, what... Well for you, except... I was in support of the audience. Yeah? You know, in 180,000, 60,000 votes, uh, you... You topped Goldwater Boundary at barely 1,000 votes. How are we doing? In Mount Parish, uh, Turbo only topped that two times as much. How are we doing? The Third District, uh, went for you almost, uh, your national average. That's where I live. That's good. Well, that's wonderful, isn't it? I'm sure glad I didn't know how to stay program. I'll tell you that northern part, as well as the Florida Parish, as you know, the Negro question was predominant. That's right. And I...I didn't understand it. I knew it was awfully... Yeah? Yeah, impossible. But I was really disappointed with the Northeast Parish, where I, uh, talked to Boggs the day before the election. He said everything was hunkidory. But it didn't turn out that way. Yeah? Yeah. I don't know what caused it. Well, we'll just have to work on them. Well, I hope that you take a good rest, and that you don't, uh, rush yourself into more work until January. I'm not. I'm gonna take it a little easy. I wish you would. I'm gonna take it a little easy, my friend. There's anything I could do to give assistance on your foreign policy. I'd like to talk to you sometime about it. All right. All right, we'll...we'll sit down. This business is pretty rough. Yeah? We'll sit down. What do you think we ought to do in Vietnam? Well, if it were left to me, as I said on many occasions, it might be that this is more of a civil war than anything else. It has been that way for the past seven, eight years. And, uh, there were a lot of dissidents that grew up there, and, uh, in my estimation, uh, a DM, of course, didn't try to take care of those two pockets that give us the great trouble we had later. Now, of course, uh, I've got all my reports, uh, Lyndon. I'd like to go with women over here personally when I have a chance. All right. Before anything is done there, because it's gonna be another second career, you know? And our army people tell us we can't get out of there now. We've got to stay there. And we're spending quite a bit of money there, you know, and sustaining two divisions there. And if we don't mind out, we'll have another, uh, another second career in South Vietnam. Oh, yeah. I'll put you there. Yeah. And another thing, Lyndon, is to strike. I notice where Rusk is in, uh, Western Europe with the NATO. I believe we've been a little too liberal there. And we ought to, we ought to try to make our allies, uh, a little more conscious of what they ought to do before we go away from them. Yeah. Now, those are things, uh, I don't want to bother with them now. But I've studied that carefully. I've been on the ground. I know what I'm talking about, I think. And, uh, as I told you two, three times, I think we have entirely too many military missions abroad. These military missions, you know, keep things straight up. And, uh, it's my belief that you could save money there and, uh, have bought a lot. All right. Okay. Well, we'll get together when we get back. Okay. And, uh... Thank you for calling me. All right, uh... I sure enjoyed seeing your grandson, Tyler. Well, I tell you, they're very proud of that. They're fine boys, aren't they? I enjoyed being with them. We're going out fishing this afternoon. Well, good luck to you. Good.