 Telephone conversation between President Johnson and Congressman Hale Boggs on November 29, 1963, at 1130 a.m. Congressman Boggs. We are having some serious things that present themselves in connection to all these investigations going on. Yes. On the Dallas thing. Yes. Now we think perhaps the best way to process is try to get a couple of members of the House, a couple of the Senate, maybe somebody in the court. I don't want to say anything about that to anyone but I've talked to the Speaker and I've talked to the Leader of the Senate and the Justice Department and that seems to be the consensus best thing to do. That's what I had intended to put in a resolution but I had no intentions of doing it unless until I talk with you. Well that's the whole back. Let me clear that and see how it goes. Now I've got to talk to some other people about it but I want you to know what we were thinking. My thought was that you might put a couple of people on that from the public too Mr. President. Well we might do that. Yes. That was exactly what I had in the resolution that I had asked the Lieutenant of the Draft which I have not put in. Two from the House, two from the Senate, two from the Judiciary and two from the public. Well that gives you eight. Two of course from the public to be appointed by you. Well wouldn't they all be appointed? Their thought was to have a presidential position. I would write all of them appointed by you. Oh. Magnificent, isn't it? Well thank you my friend. We sat there and Lindy and I and a few long friends and just cried. You got what a job you've done. You were utterly magnanimous. You might have wanted a bird won't spend it to help her on good many things so tell her to be as charitable as my little girl as she can because she got to be careful of who she asked to have. Well don't worry she's got a whole flock of letters. I think she's waking on right now. Thank you my friend. Thank you Mr. President.