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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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When Stimson came, he was, of course, very well thought of, and a man whom I personally greeted into Cabinet circles with a great sense of relief and confidence. I thought he was a man of very great good sense, as well as great experience, with very high standards of personal and political integrity. He was an older man then, but I knew him too well to have his increasing age bother me. He was a man of great vigor and superb health, with that kind of fully developed mind, an organized memory and a pattern of reasoning which he can rely on so long as the blood flows through his body. It's not going to disintegrate because he has hold of himself. Long before he reached this age his own interior mentality was operating in a pattern that could be trusted to work. A lawyer's training and a lawyer's experience had done a great deal to keep alive that flexibility and that approach to the determination of facts without passion that is, after all, the key of a great lawyer's abilities. When you've been doing that for years and years and years it becomes a fixed habit. You don't have these awful fatigues that come from the emotional crises which are generated when emotion, prejudice and personal desire flood your mind and prevent your solid reasoning for





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