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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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source of it.

I stress the Communist possibility of this sabotage, because in this case the army and the FBI discovered that there were a good many Communists in South Bend and that some of the men in the plant definitely were connected with the Communist Party. The fact that they were connected with the Communist Party and admitted it didn't mean, in those days, that you couldn't have a job, nor did it mean that necessarily you engaged in that particular kind of sabotage. The two things didn't actually go together.

It was a long time before they actually solved this problem. We got so that whenever they fired somebody we didn't get into the case any further than just to see that they had some reason for doing so that could be explained to the man. There was a great shortage of labor and most of the fired men were taken back into some other part of the plant, or got jobs somewhere else. After about a year they seemed to get the best of it, but it went on for almost a year, and was very, very disconcerting.

That was the worst and most obvious piece of sabotage that I heard of. There undoubtedly were others that the army and navy never disclosed to us,





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