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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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I had begun to be aware, at any rate, that Sidney Hillman, working man's representative though he might be, was subject to all the aspects of the sin of pride that any other man is. At this convention he showed himself in a curious kind of arrogance and vanity that I had never registered so completely before. I knew that at conventions of the Amalgamated Garment Workers, when he was having a fight with somebody else, got the best of the fight and got the organization under his control, he would swell up, strut around the place and sort of manage it like a political convention. But I thought that was just inside the union. However, I began to see that in him at this convention.

It was physical. The demonstration of this was physical. The front of him would swell out. It doesn't seem possible. He was a lean man, but his front would stick out. His chin would go up. His mouth would set itself into a queer, hard, but firm and smirking position. It was a kind of frozen smile. He would pull his lips together, which meant that his teeth had come together, and allow a cynical smile to freeze onto his face. He would look up into the air and his nostrils would expand, a very marked expansion of the nostrils, out and in, out and in, when he was in command, or so believed. I noticed





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