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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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a feeling of great pleasure at seeing a lot of old associates and this being the chance to throw the line over into the next era, so that you leave this company with the thought that, “We've done the best we could. We have met unprecedented situations and circumstances. I have no regrets. Mistakes have been done will live on. Now we all bring ourselves together to pledge to each other and to the good forces of America that what done will gon on over, and we will go with it. We will continue it.”

I'm speaking in terms of idealism, and I don't know how much idealism there was on Truman's Cabinet level. Truman himself is full of idealism. That I know. I know it from my private conversations with him, both before he was President and since. He has elements of shyness, I suppose, which may bog him down when he comes to an attempt to express a feeling and an idea in elegant terms. He's more a man of action, and his extemporaneous political speeches are on the rough side. People like them. That's all right. They're absorbed by the people that come out to hear them. They do them good, and they get the idea.

This, of course, was a rather elegant company and a company which had been the rulers of the U.S.A. for a period





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