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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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and didn't have to. There was no reason why they should. I think that two of these fired men came to Washington to present their case. They were very angry. They vowed that they were not Communists. This must have taken place just before Russia came into the war. I guess they never got that settled until Russia came into the war. These men, however, vowed that they were neither Communists, Nazis nor anything else. They vowed that they didn't know who put the iron filings in the gears. Everyone in the plant knew it had been done. It was common gossip that somebody was tampering with the works, but they didn't do it. The Army, at any rate, had a terrible struggle with that.

It was commonly known that there were a lot of Communists in South Bend and a lot of them were in the Bendix plant. There was a good big party unit there. At any rate, that was that.

Then there was the Helen Miller case. Helen Miller was a girl who worked for the Department of Labor. This happened during the war. She had a reasonably good job in the Bureau of Labor Statistics. She was a well-educated girl, with an A.B. degree from I forget what college. She was bright and intelligent,





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