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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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Madame Chiang there. Now, it had been a great journey, a great enterprise, for Chiang and Madame Chiang to come and meet them there, and of course Chiang was very, very hurt and offended that he wasn't included in the Teheran Conference. He thought he should have been and really pressed Roosevelt and Churchill very hard, that it was their duty to get him invited, and that he couldn't do business secondhand and so forth; that he represented a sovereign state, and the sovereign state was in disorder only because of war conditions. Very insistent upon it.

I think Roosevelt always sort of laid a good deal of it to his diplomacy. How whether it was his diplomacy or Anthony Eden's or somebody else's, I don't know, or whether it was just natural native-born Chinese politeness, but they parted on excellent terms. Madame Chiang gave a charming small party. She was beautifully dressed and she had lovely things. They parted good friends, Chiang having laid upon Churchill and Roosevelt a commission. He looked upon them as his friends. He looked upon America and England as his friends, definitely the friends of China. So he had committed to them, you see, what he wished to contribute to the Conference at Teheran, if he had been invited.

Miss Perkins:

Roosevelt told us a great deal about that journey. But then, he didn't tell much.





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