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that she probably represented votes and that she probably knew how women would vote. Of course, women don't give a hang about it actually. The woman voter never looks at that and is not concerned about it. There are about a dozen women in the whole United States who ever felt the oppression of unequal laws. You can't dig them up to swing an election. However, that was the way they figured, I think, althought I don't remember the outcome of that particularly, because it ceased to be important.

That was about all there was to the platform. It really just advocated expansion of what we had been doing for the last eight years. I wasn't on the platform committee, of course, but I did contribute ideas to the planks on Social Security and labor matters.

The convention itself opened in the conventional style of conventions. There was a woman's breakfast one of the days during which we again introduced Mrs. Wallace to everybody. Bernice Pike, who was a national committee woman, was there. She was a committee woman from Ohio who is still alive. I've known her ever since the days of the Al Smith campaign. She was Collector of Customs of the port of Cleveland, I think, during the just finished (1953) Democratic administration.





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