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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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Part:         Session:         Page of 915

It's very hard now to say whether I'm remembering exactly or whether this re-reading of Farley's book has stimulated my memory to the point where I'm bringing up into real memory something that is only half remembered. I do seem to remember telephoning about this, but not to the President - probably to one of the secretaries, perhaps to Miss LeHand, or one of the men secretaries - to say that Farley had not been consulted about the Barkley statement, hadn't seen it and was sore. I thought that the least that the President could do was to speak to him personally and tell him that it was on the way and that Barkley was to give it out. I think I did do that, but I don't think I spoke to the President. I do seem to remember now that I spoke to one of the others and said, “Do see that the President does that,” because it's the kind of a thing that someone on the spot there could fix up with him, and stay with him until he did it. I might have spoken to Early, McIntyre, Miss LeHand or Miss Tully - one of the group that were very close and were his personal, private entourage, not a politician.

I don't remember saying to Jim, “Did you get a call from the White House?” but I might have. He knew that I was surprised that he hadn't been consulted, and he would have at once concluded that I had maneuvered it.





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