 Billy Graham on one. Yes, sir. Billy? Yes, sir. Welcome back. Well, thank you, sir, and God bless you. I think about you and pray for you every day. Well, I just read about you while you were out there and thought you did a wonderful job, and I thought that whenever you had time, I'd like to get some of your impressions and hear some of your experiences. I wonder if you and Ruth feel like coming up here anytime soon. Well, we certainly do. I have to go to Texas for the next few days. I'll be down there for about eight days, and then I have to go straight to California. I'm going to Berkeley and bring them there for a few days. That's good. So I'll need your prayers there. That's where you're going to be at night. That sure is good. One of you taking off there? Sir? One of you going to all this trip? I'm leaving here on Thursday. I can come up sometime tomorrow or the next day, or I can come anytime after February 5th. It'd be good if you'd come Wednesday. We'd be happy to come up. All right. Come up and have lunch with me, and I may invite one or two folks. Now, I've got a cabinet meeting that morning, and you come up if you want to, be here say at noon, and we'll visit here a little while, and then we'll go over and have a quad luncheon. Well, thank you, sir. I'd love to tell you some of my experiences. All right. It was a tremendous thing. Would you see John Steinbeck's story yesterday in the Washington Post? No, sir. I get the post, but I won't get it till today. You get it? It won't stay late. It wasn't in the post. Steinbeck's story. What's what paper was in it? Any of you see the Steinbeck story yesterday? I believe it's in the post. Get it. It's very good. All right, sir. I surely will. I'll get it to that. Thank you, my friend. I'll be there. Wednesday at 12 o'clock. Thank you, sir. Are you waiting? Waiting.