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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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feeling and it was well done. My memory is that he got a very, very big ovation on it - an ovation not entirely from those who felt he ought to have been the Presidential candidate, but from all the others, because of its eloquence and its appropriateness to the occasion. It was an artistic piece of work. I felt very warmly towards him, not because he had withdrawn, but because he had made such a good contribution to political thinking and political feeling for the moment.

I gathered that now the ball was rolling and that the others would withdraw and Roosevelt could be nominated. The tone and spirit of the convention began to be obvious at about this time. It was obvious to me, who wasn't a delegate and therefore wasn't milling around with the delegates much, but was just meeting them in the halls and corridors and observing them from the floor, the galleries, or the platform, that a great deal of bad feeling and ill will was moving around the convention. A lot of people were awfully sore about a lot of things.

Farley, of course, always attributed that to the fact that when a party has been in power two terms, the rank and file of the party management want to change because it gives an opportunity for more jobs for more





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