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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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but the food was more than necessarily elaborate. I was impressed by it because I thought it was a shade too-too and not necessary at a political affair. It's slightly embarrassing to have it so super-luxurious. The decorations were all elaborate. There were quantities of palms, trailing smilax, roses and other flowers.

The seating was interesting. We all came from Washington and we were accustomed to the seating by protocol. But what is protocol in the Democratic Party? How does anybody know what it is? It certainly doesn't follow State Department rules. Mr. Kelly had made up what he thought was protocol, but it didn't seem to me that it was good politics. I was shown to my place at a table and to that table came only other members of the Cabinet. That was the way he had fixed it. He put us all in a pen by ourselves in order to show us respect, I suppose. I have never been able to penetrate what was in his mind. Certainly, for political good fellowship he should have scattered us around. There weren't too many women present. The members of the Democratic National Committee were there. That was, of course, required, in his way of thinking, for his dinner. There were also a lot of the Chicago people present, whom I didn't recognize, but whom Harold Iekes did. Harold





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