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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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workmen's compensation. I began doing this before I was Industrial Commissioner. As Chairman of the Industrial Board we had the duty of selecting the Referees to whom we delegated the authority to make judgments in workmen's compensation. What we inherited were some quite good ones - fairly good - but a considerable number of awfully third- rate, washed-out lawyers, who were not ever awfully good lawyers. One of the best ones we ever had was a country lawyer. He was fine. That had to do with his personality and his experience as a general practitioner. But mostly they were fairly feeble. I saw that we needed stronger Referees with imagination, courage and much better education and philosophy of the law.

I ran into the President of Fordham University at some dinner. I think I sat beside him and we got to talking about the educational problems, Fordham University, their law school and so on. He said, “You know, the thing that's basic in the study of these modern subjects is philosophy. We pride ourselves at Fordham that our boys go out trained in philosophy no matter what they're going to do. Whether it's medicine, engineering, law or what have you, they have a fundamental training in Christian philosophy. They therefore view the problems of medicine, law, engineering, social





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