[ti:] [ar:] [al:] [00:00.00]Among them are Thomas Saving,a trustee of the Social Security Trust Fund, [00:05.68]Rosario Marin,a former United States treasurer,and one really,really young Republican. [00:13.03]Noah will not be eligible to collect Social Security for nearly 60 years. [00:18.34]Noah will travel to a handful of states ahead of visits by the president and will go on radio programs, [00:25.18]answer trivia questions and say a few words about Social Security. [00:29.34]Though he is obviously not an expert (and not really a lobbyist, either), [00:34.49]officials say the effort is a lighthearted way to underline Mr Bush's message. [00:39.83]"What I want to tell people about Social Security is to not be afraid of the new plan," Noah said. [00:46.11]"It may be a change, but it's a good change." [00:49.13]The trip was a brainchild of Stuart Roy,a former aide to Representative Tom DeLay,Republican of Texas, [00:57.45]who recently joined the DCI Group,a political consultancy here with ties to the Republican Party and Mr Bush. [01:05.31]Noah became interested in presidents as a 5 year old after a mock election in kind ergarten. [01:11.82]Today, he has more than 3,000 books on presidential history. [01:16.33]He campaigned for Mr Bush, speaking to Republican groups. [01:20.50]After 27 trips to the first President Bush's presidential library at Texas A&M University in College Station, [01:28.23]he scored a meeting with the former president. Noah plans to run for the White House in 2032, [01:35.66]and he wants Social Security addressed before then.