 Mr. Congressman? Yes. Thank you, sir. Does that come on in, Ms. Bundy? Yes, sir. And Congressman Teague of Texas on 9-2. You know how much trouble is that you've got on this poverty for me, but Walter indicated that if it meant the difference that you'd go there, and I appreciated it, and I'll make it up with interest. I don't know how, but I'll start tomorrow anyway in the world that I can get in with you. I sure do, because I appreciate the guts it takes. But I want you to talk to some of these folks like you that look to you. If they rule me on this one, it'd be just like when they beat Roosevelt, I'll lose my leadership to Charlie Halleck, but I'll never get that tall back. And this is the only bill I've got to have this year. They can take the rest of them. I don't care about... I want them. I'd like to have Appalachia, but they vote against it, they have to. I'd like to have ARA, but they vote against it, they have to. This one, if I don't get it, I'm in deep trouble as far as being a leader of this country is concerned, and they ought to vote against me now, and it doesn't do any good for some of these liberals to go around and say that. They can't get any votes. But if you can say it to two or three folks, you can make the difference, and we're within five votes who won in this thing. Well, Mr. President, I don't want to vote for the bill, but if my vote means the tax, then I'm going to vote for it. No, Walter told me that. Then I'll talk to... I'll offer these others, and back to how I already have. I'll run these kids out of the ears of A&M, though, with this bill. It'll be a real thing for a little rudder. I'll put enough stuff down there that I've got there. They'll be calling the old and teen college. Well, I'm talking. I've now told them that I'm on a team, and that I owe some obligation to the Democratic Party, and as bad as I'd hate to it, it's nice of me to stand up and change the vote and say I'm voting for it to pass. I'll damn sure do it. Clef and Walter told me that, and I'll never forget you, and they didn't help me with it. Joe wants to help. He's a good boy, but he's going to leave, and he's afraid some of his clients will be mad, and he doesn't want to vote for the bill to begin with. I'm not so sure. I'm talking to Joe, and I think Joe may vote for it. Well, he wants to help. He wants to help like you, but he's got lots of problems, and they're raising hell. George Mayhawn's worried, and if George Mayhawn and Clark Thompson shouldn't go against me, well, then I just had it. I want you to get around that delegation talk a little. I don't want to be coming up there because they'll be calling with me. I was up until 2 o'clock last night. I've been up to New York today, but this is a vote I just can't take. I just lose all my leadership. I do, and I've got to depend on two or three of you that are conservative to get out there and put some risk because their future is better with me than this Charlie Hallick. I guarantee you that. I tell some of our Texas boys that, if they can't vote for me, let them get away and not embarrass me because I have to explain to every state in the union that I lost my Texans and tell little Burley and Walter Rogers, they have to just please go fishing or something. Don't give me a pair for somebody that's sick or something, but you just try to get that delegation lined up. Some of these liberals can't do it, but you can if you work at it, they do, and I'll give you two hours for one. For everyone you certify, you spend on me 29 Friday, I'll double it. I'll try. Thank you, Tiger. Call me and tell me what you hear and who I might be able to talk to. I'll do it. Thank you, Tiger. Hello.