 and try to figure out the bar associations, progressive governors and everything else. What I can do to get 100% people to vote, our goal wants to be 100%. The claim that 63% voted in 60% and 62% this year. I've already told DeGrosso and some of them that we're going to try to get everybody to register and that those that don't register, we're going to register in postmasters. That the congressmen nominate them and the senators confirm them and they're bound to be good men. Even in Mississippi and Georgia, we're going to see that the attorney general and the postmaster general got the blanks and whatever they need if they're registered. If they get a halfway point, he growled a little bit, but that may not be the way I don't know. I want you to undertake the greatest midnight legislative drafting. It's happened since Corcoran and Cohen wrote the holding company act. On that, I basically believe that if we can have a simple, effective method of getting them registered. If the state laws are too high, disqualify a bunch of them, maybe we can go to the Supreme Court and get them held in the Constitution. Or if the registrars make them stand in line too long, maybe we can work that out where the postmasters can do it. Let's find some way that we problem under the Constitution. That's right, I know that. How can we beat it? Can we beat that some way? Well, we've tried hard to beat it, and of course, that's what we have in the act that you got through and then these modifications of it in the last, in the 57, 60, and then now you're familiar with all those problems. No, I'm really not. I don't know what we're really doing. But I know there's a constitutional amendment, Mr. President, to just flatly have federal officials registered for federal elections. Well, let's do that. Let's shoot at that. Let's recommend that, if you can't do it any other way. Well, let's go into all the other alternatives. Let's get the best people you've got. Joe Rao's been talking about postmasters. Let's see what you can do, and we're going to need it pretty quick. Number two, this damn Roy says that you're pussy-footin' on prosecuting civil rights people. Who says, oh, Rao? Roy is a congressman from Wisconsin. Oh, yeah. And he announced out here to the Finay breath in Wisconsin that he's protesting at Johnson's pussy-footin'. Now, I don't know whether you know Roy or not, I'm going to make up for you telling him to quit saying that about us. It's not a rule. And I think you ought to call him and say, what in the goddamn hell are you talking about? I've got 200 FBI men working here every day, and I've caught them in Georgia, and I've caught them in Mississippi, and I've got these tests pulled to the Supreme Court. And what in the hell are you going to hit your administration for? And what are we doing on Montgomery? Are we movin' on that? On Montgomery? Yeah, that bomb yesterday. They investigated. Every one of those, we go move right away. The Bureau goes into those right away. They won 9-0 up in the court this morning. Did you see that? No, but there's one on that constitutional. Yeah, and they went the whole way, both cases, so we got the whole of Title II unequivocally constitutional. Well, that's a dictated statement. I've got one coming over. I'll give it to George Reedy. I thought something on the order that two presidents had recommended it and supported it. Congress had overwhelmingly supported it. The court had decided at 9-0. Let's get on with it. Now, that's good. Now, is there any question about Connors of Merck and Company showing up with any trouble over at your shop? No, sir. He was very cooperative. They told me on the Cuban thing. He's a fine, yes. I know him quite well. He's a fine fellow. Now, we might have some civil problems with Merck from time to time on any trust because of the nature of that industry, but this would be nothing that would reflect on Jack Connors' perspective. Would you mind looking at his name check and writing me a letter and say, Mr. President, pursuant to your request about Connors? I've known him good while. He's been cooperative with the government. He worked public interest. I think he's a good man, just so that I'll know. And would you tell FBI to go around the clock with everything they've got to get as far along as they can by next Monday night on anything they might run into? They did a full field on him some while ago. I've seen it. So, just a question about feeding. Well, they tell me they're not going to have it ready, so make them go as far and past as they can. All right. Well, let's see. Now, that takes care of the Conner thing. Now, if you've got any other imagination or anybody around you that's a dreamer, let's get it into any of your programs, juvenile delinquency or immigration or anything. We haven't got much creative thinking in our message to go to Congress. And if we're going to have four years here, I'd like for you to thank and for me to thank what they're going to say about what we proposed and what we achieved in this next four years. So, I sure wish that you'd pull in any inside people you've got thinking and any outside ones you get and see if you can't get over to Bill Moyer at the end of the week, anything else that you could supplement what you've already done. He told me really that we kind of, some of our top counselors from some of these schools say our cabinet's not as creative as it ought to be, and I thought I had the best cabinet in the world. So, you just get anybody that you know you've got a wonderful academic background and you've got a practical one here and you show you can work to Congress and I try to get some of these thinkers that scratch their tail and see what we can do to play ground or the juveniles or the governors or anything else that you can propose. Do you think we ought to have a constitutional agreement?