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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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himself from the Labor Relations Board and take office in the Court of Claims. I always maintained my friendship for him and my firm support of him. I know he regards me to this day as having intervened to save him both a job and a very humiliating position.

Madden's retirement went over all right with no fireworks and Harry Millis, somewhat against his judgment, was brought back and made head of NLRB November 26, 1940.

So the Board now consisted of Millis, Leiserson and Edwin Smith (until August 1941 when his term expired.) Nat Witt operated in such a way that he got Millis under his thumb also. Millis was eventually taking his idea of procedures and ways of doing things from Witt. I came to believe at this time that Nat Witt was at the bottom of the confusions and foolish rigidity of the National Labor Relations Board. Witt had so organized the place that everything went over his desk. He was the bottleneck - and a very capable bottleneck he was by intention. As Secretary in charge of the administrative division, he arranged for the preparation of cases, had them come to his desk, and then sent them back to be fixed or fixed them himself if they didn't suit him. At least that was the impression





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