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OCR Page 1 of 2THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
J.
TRUMAN
June 5, 1952
Dear Mrs. Roosevelt:
I certainly did appreciate your good letter of May
thirty-first regarding the McCarran and Walters Bills.
They are both very bad Bills and I think we would be
better off with no legislation than the strait-jacket they
are endeavoring to give us with that legislation.
They are still working on the Conference Report but I
am of the opinion that they can't get either one of those
two measures in shape to make it a good law.
Of course, I can never publicly say what I expect to do
until the legislation is on my desk but I'll say to you in
confidence that if either one of those Bills comes up
here in the present form, it won't become law if I can
prevent it.
We have sent messages to the Congress with a proposed
Bill for the future increase in immigration quotas for the
displaced persons up to 300,000. I don't know how far we
will get with it but I hope it will come to my desk before
the Congress quits.
Sincerely yours
Harphanan
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt
Val-Kil Cottage
Hyde Park, Dutchess County
New York
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