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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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Who in the Government would be the boss? That's the great point. I see the idea. I get the idea. The United Mine Workers might go to work for the Government, but there would have to be an administrator, there would have to be an individual appointed by the President whose duty it was to run the coal mines.”

I said, “Yes, I see that.” I had given this a little thought--oh, quite a little thought--before I spoke to him, and I said to him, “Well, of course, I've reached no conclusions, because I haven't canvassed this with anyone, but how would it strike you if the Secretary of the Interior were designated by the President to run the mines, to operate the mines, under the United States flag, inviting the United Mine workers to go back to work and setting up all the committees, safeguards, safety committees that had existed before? In every mine, the same organization, and the same superintendent, and the same check weighmen. The same boss, the same everything, would operate the mines as they had always operated them, except that the United States Government would be in charge and nothing could be changed or done without the assent of the United States Government.”

“Ickes,” he said. “Ickes? He's an honest man, isn't he?”

I said, “Yes.”





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