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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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in my mind to turn me against certain of the people who were involved in this strike. It wouldn't have made any difference to us one way or the other, but it convinced me that he was playing a game, that he wasn't being a straight union man, that he was playing somebody's game. A straight union man doesn't do that kind of thing.

Then we got even further information from other people, who were in a position to know, that he was playing the Communist game. We had nothing to do with him really. His union was rarely involved in a strike. There was no necessary point of contact, but I was always interested and curious about him. He was always telling everybody about his heart trouble. He told the union people about his heart trouble. Every union man who knew him at all knew he had this terrible trouble, that he was likely to die at any time.

Finally he disappeared from the scene, and from the radio operators' union. I knew this only through something having to do with some of the shipping business. He just disappeared. I remember asking Scharrenberg, I guess, “Why did he happen to pull out?”

“Well,” he said, “you know, he's always had this bad heart. I guess his heart went back on him.”





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