Word: cheyfitz
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...also proved too strong for the United Auto Workers union, which forced him out of his post as chapter secretary in 1947. By the time he won a seat in the state legislature in 1964, Young had moved toward the political center, but he still harbors memories. Says Kirk Cheyfitz, editor of Detroit Monthly magazine: "Young draws his energy from the carefully preserved sense of outrage he discovered while being kicked around as a poor black...
...such is smart, red-haired Edward T. Cheyfitz (who named his little son John Lewis), at 28 one of the youngest members of C.I.O.'s potent executive board. Cheyfitz started unioneering after a trip to Russia in 1933, helped organize the National Association of Die Casting Workers, of which he is now national secretary. Superactive in Toledo union affairs, Cheyfitz was named in Dies Committee reports. Then he went to Cleveland and things began to pop. Slowdowns and strikes became the order of the week in Alcoa's plants; production sagged...
First real blow-off came in June 1941 when the union and the company argued over still higher wages and most of the workers walked out on $60,000,000 in defense orders. The Cleveland News ran a picture of Cheyfitz on page one, flatly accused him of starting the strike. Snarled the News: "He is a regular member of Communist caucuses." The reliable Plain Dealer also blamed Cheyfitz for most of the trouble, cited a Dies report that he was "active in the bloody [Electric] Auto-Lite strike in Toledo...
Quiet. However rambunctious in the past, Cheyfitz gave not one peep after WLB's jolting decision. But his old sidekick, tough, grim-faced Alex Balint sounded off, lambasted the order as a "mistake," said that worker "morale has dropped from 100% to zero." Then the union surprised everybody, said it would not sanction any protest strike because "we fully realize it would only create disunity...
...Cheyfitz and his pals have enough disunity already, could hardly stand more. Besides scrapping with Alcoa and WLB (partly over a $1-a-day wage boost), the Die Casting local is fighting counter-organization drives by the powerful Aluminum Workers of America (which already controls nine Alcoa plants), and John L. Lewis' District 50 division of the United Mine Workers (which controls Alcoa's Buffalo plant). Both would like to get a pipeline into Cheyfitz' fat 7,000-man dues pot. Thus the Die Casters' "no-strike" edict was partly prompted by a desire to keep...
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