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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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a vague impression.

I never really thought about all this, but I just thought that he was quite a close friend of Wallace's. I would have supposed that he knew a good deal about Wallace and Wallace about him.

I don't remember Wickard's first Cabinet meeting as secretary, because he had already been there once or twice as Wallace's substitute. So it wasn't a complete break. We had become acquainted with him. Wallace and I sat next to each other at Cabinet meetings. We used to whisper to each other and pass notes to each other. So this was a break for me. I had felt an intellectual companionship with Wallace. Things that were said in the Cabinet meeting or matters that were brought up I often thought had deeper implications than those that were being mentioned and I would write a note about that to Wallace. He would write an answer. He would do the same to me sometimes. I still must have some of those pieces of paper somewhere. I think I saved some of them because I thought they were interesting. They're hard to interpret now because they're a form of shorthand - lots of words left out in order to write briefly.





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