 Good morning, Mr. President, how are you? I'm going to announce your appointment at Press Conference. What Press Conference? That's it, ma'am. Oh, God, I think it would be advisable. If you don't mind if I could have this weekend, I wanted to sit down with a couple of people and see what we could get in the way of some sort of a plan, because what happens, at least my story, is that what happens is that you're now somebody who is here, somebody else, and they don't know what the hell they're doing or what the program's going to be specifically. And who's going to hide? Then you're in a hell of a cave, and they're going to start calling you up and saying, what are you going to do? Well, just don't talk to them. Just go away and go to Cam David, figure it out. We need something just to save the press. We've got to save Tom, and I've got to tell him what I talked to you about yesterday. And you can just take off, work out your Peace Corps any way you want to. You can be head of the committee and have some acting operator. Bill to help you. I'll let him do that. I'll do anything. But I want to announce this and get it behind me. So I keep quit getting all these other pressures, and I think you've got to do it. You just can't let me down. So the quicker we get it behind us, the better. You can talk to them as special assistant to the president. It'll help a lot easier, and you can talk to them just as peace administrator. And if they want to talk to you, you can tell them to speak for me. Don't make me wait until next week because I want to satisfy this press with something. I told them we're going to have a press meeting. They're going to have all these damn questions and I don't want to be indecisive about it. If you can't run a hundred million programs in your left hand and a billion in your right hand, you're not as smart as I think you are. Besides the money's got no problem at all. It's the people that I know. I want to keep all these people for the government. They're going to be in the Peace Corps and bring them into any other programs. That's good. I'm not going to savor you from the Peace Corps at all. I'm going to say that you're going to maintain your identification with the Peace Corps and how much of the details you do, whether you hire them or sweep out the room, it's going to be a matter for you to determine. And I'm going to make that clear. But I am going to make it clear that you're Mr. Poverty. And the whole man abroad, if you ought to be. And I don't care who you have run the Peace Corps, if you can run it, wonderful. If you can't get Oshkosh from Chicago, I don't know how to name it. I can't get anybody. The only guy that could possibly do it is the president of this bill. Well, you can write your ticket. You can write your ticket on anything you want to do there. I want to get rid of poverty, though. Yeah. And you can organize the poverty right from the beginning. And you'll have to get on the message Monday. But Sunday Papers is going to say that you missed poverty unless you've got real compelling reasons, which I haven't heard. And I'm going to say that you're going to maintain your identification with the Peace Corps and operate it to such an extent as you may think desirable.