 I've been here since first year. I want to go home. I just dying to go home, but I don't dare go home with this education bill like it is. I want to go this weekend. I'm just scared to death that that woman's going to beat me. I didn't dare do it when Appalachia was there. I talked to Bob Jones every day, and I don't dare do it with my gold cover bill. But they're bogged down. The house had nothing this week. All goddamn week. Now that's for you, and for more year, and Larry Obama got to find something for him. You've got to get the Petmans to get some bills out there for him. They had not one thing all week. And the Senate had nothing. So we just wasted three weeks with Lincoln's and Washington's birthday. Then we wasted this week. Now we're in here in the middle of, we're the first week in March, and we just got to get these things passed. We're not having hearings on immigration, but that's got to be one. We get reported pretty quick. Yes, sir. And that's a basic one. But the ones that I'm really interested in, like my flour and coffee and sugar, that's three things you got to have. One of them's education, one of them's medical care, and one of them's Appalachia. Now I've got Appalachia, and you get education next week. If you get these partisan groups where they just hold, they're already committed. And I had them down here the other day, and they just cheered and everything else, and I made a little speech to them. But if they hold, and you can get a rule out of Smith, if you can't, you take it up anyway. We pass the House, they'll pass it and send it without any trouble. Then we'll have education. And I think the medical care will go through like a dose of salt through a widow. But the education is going to be the key one, and then we've got to work on individuals. You've got to look each week and say, what is the Senate doing in committee this week? And when will they be through? What is the House doing? And sit down with Larry without a penny. If I call up Larry calls and wants to know what I said to McCormick. So you've got to just be running in these guys in the halls, going over there and having a drink with them in the evening, making Carl Albert come meet you to drink that little educational office. That's where the pour out the heart. That's where the parliamentarian comes. And McCormick will come as he knows you're going to be there in 5.36. And then it's got to be informal, so Larry doesn't get his tail up. And you've got to kind of be helping Larry and telling him reports. It's a ticklish thing. Everybody wants to be the big shot. Now the big shot is the Vice President. And I'll do what you tell me to do. And I'll be the little shot. I'll be second on legislative. I want that program carried. I'll put every cabinet officer behind you. I'll put every banker behind you. I'll put every organization we've got behind you that I can deliver, including NAM and Chamber of Commerce. I told Chamber of Commerce over there, I said, you're cutting the guts out of my program. Now if you're going to do it, I'm going to cut the guts out of you all. And I got a favorable statement out of Cary then on some stuff. But I'll put the labor unions behind you. George Menier's labor crowd ought to be there tomorrow morning trying to get people to read and write. I told Martin Luther King, I said, hell, I'm for voting. And we're going to get voting. So that's not your problem. You're going to have a voting message, and it's an issue that we can do. But the big thing, Dr. King, with you is a billion, 200 million for Negroes only. Because who the hell do you think makes less than 2,000 a year? It's the Negroes. Now my God, they can't work in the filling station, put water and radiate unless they can read and write. Because they've got to go and punch the cash register. They don't know which one to punch. And they've got to take a check. They don't know which one to cash. And they've got to take their credit card, and they can't pull their numbers. So you've got to teach them read and write. And that's what you damn fellas better be working on. And if these Republicans want to be for the Negroes, I hope to do. I want a two-party system. I hope some Negroes vote for Republicans. But you make them go vote for education. And I think you ought to find out this group. That's meeting with Ms. Green. And as vice president of the United States, you ought to ask two of them to come to your home on Sunday afternoon. You ought to have two of them at breakfast with you on Monday morning. You ought to have two of them in your office in the afternoon and give them a card to the gallery and give them a picture of you and your wife and give them one of the president. And then tell them that this is the greatest thing and their names are going to be built to be written and fire on every schoolhouse in the country that they've made the breakthrough. And the pope don't get a damn thing out of this but a pencil. And then the school board's got to give it to him. And that you're a Protestant. And that this is the best thing you've ever seen because if you can't do more, no Lady Green. I'm in the hell of a shape. I ought to have had her. And if she had been a little younger, I might have picked her. Goodbye.