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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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department who thought it was a weak case, and so told him. There were stronger legitimate cases available. Certain members of the Department of Justice went to the Attorney General after the Schechter case was in full preparation and asked him to withdraw it because it was such a poor case, but he decided to go on with it.

I say this because I do believe myself that Homer Cummings was the author, instigator and persuader of this whole Supreme Court plan.

At any rate, when I went to see the President to ask him not to consider that the NRA had been scrapped by the Schechter case, as I've already described, I had with me the opinion of Wyzanski, who had cabled me from Europe, and of this group of lawyers with whom I conferred, the conference being mentioned on page 252 of my book. Then I ran into Homer Cummings who was convincing the President that the NRA was through, had been destroyed by the Court. He was berating the Court before the President. Homer Cummings was very mad. He was not a man who got mad usually. At that very moment, I thought he was simulating an attack of temper. I didn't think he was as mad as he acted. I thought that day that he was putting on a show. He put on a show of anger, paced the room, pounded his fist into his hand, saying, “I tell





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