 Mr. Kennedy, he is in the cabinet room recording on television some of his statements in the press conference today, and I'll have him call you as he sees it. Well now let me, should I tell you what the problem is, and the, I've just seen these parents, you know, these kids that have been picked up or lost down in Mississippi. And I think that two things, number one I think he should probably make a statement about that. Now I heard he said something at the press conference this morning, but I think it should really be more formalized, although I haven't seen the statement and perhaps satisfactory. Second, I think you should consider seeing them, the parents. And third, I think you should consider making a call to Governor Johnson and expressing concerns or would be said that he had made that call. All right. Do you know the facts about that? Yes, sir. I'm very well acquainted with it, sir. And now you see yesterday, I told them to use the, you know, the helicopters and they get the FBI in as if it's a kidnapping. So we're doing all we can, but I think that there's going to be more of this and people are going to wonder. Let me read you his question. The question was, Mr. President, do you have any information about the three kids that disappeared in Mississippi? The answer. The FBI has a substantial number of men who are closely studying and investigating the entire situation. We have asked them to spare no effort to secure all the information possible and report to me as soon as possible. We believe they're making every effort to locate them. I have had no reports since breakfast, but at that time I understood they had increased their forces in that area. Several weeks ago, I asked them to anticipate the problems that would come from this and to send extra FBI personnel into the area. They have substantially augmented their personnel in the last few hours. That was his statement on it. You see, I think to express sort of concern, you know, personal concern for them and for their families. Now, I don't know whether you want to, I've seen their families. It might not be necessary, but we're going to have more of this than the hell of a problem. Yes, it is. But I think at least, I think that the, what the, I do think you should call the governor, all right, and just say that how concerned he is. Will you be in your office for a while, sir? Yeah. All right. And would you have him to think about those three possibilities? While he's on television, he might just, you know, just supplement that answer by expressing personal concern about them. The two things that they're doing on television right now is his re-reading his statement on Lodge and Taylor, and second, re-reading his restatement of U.S. policy on Vietnam. Those are the two things that he's reading on television. They wanted that for the, for the TV audiences. Yeah. I'd like to have him say something also, you know, even just a paragraph on, so get on television about his concern about this thing. All right, sir. I think it'd make them feel, and that's not as important as just the fact that he's on top of all these things. I think it's the human equation that's damn important for every, for everything. All right, sir. Okay. Thank you, sir.