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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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type of mind. I don't think that he could follow it. I don't think that Mrs. Roosevelt would have been interested or could ever have caught onto it. But, of course, I don't know all of this at first-hand. As I say, if anybody had told me that Roerich was going out to the East to collect botanical, or any other kind of specimens, I should not have thought it was peculiar, because he had a considerable museum and all kinds of things there. He certainly didn't have a bad reputation in New York, at any rate.

I can't remember all this too clearly, because it never would have meant anything to me if somebody had said that Henry Wallace had known Roerich. I wouldn't have thought that any more peculiar than to have said that he had known Jimmy Walker or the President of Columbia University. I suppose I learned about these letters during the campaign when they became rumor. I'm not sure if I knew about it even then, except I do recall this remark of Roosevelt's about the letters. It was probably to Frank Walker and Ed Flynn, or somebody like that. He said, “Think, they're not even to a girl. How did it ever happen?”





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