Textile Machine Works, Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsNov 5, 195196 N.L.R.B. 1333 (N.L.R.B. 1951) Copy Citation TEXTILE. MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1333 season, mows the lawn. He carries no gun, and has no guard duties. Accordingly, we find that he is a maintenance employee, and we shall include him in the unit. On the Employer's payroll at the time of the hearing were 46 college students, whom the Petitioner would exclude as temporary employees. The record does not show how many of these employees work in the West Texas-New Mexico Division. The Employer asserts that it has no classification of "temporary employees," and that many college students remain on the payroll as permanent employees. It thus ap- pears that none of these employees work only part-time; that they do the same work as all permanent employees in the same classifications; and that they are subject to the same company rules and working con- ditions. The record does not show, as the Petitioner asserts, that they have a limited tenure of employment. In these circumstances, we shall include the college students in the unit.' Accordingly, we find that all production and maintenance employ- ees in the Employer's West Texas-New Mexico Division, including drilling crews, temporary employees (college students), gang pushers, drillers or tool pushers, the mechanic-foreman, and the watchman- janitor, but excluding clerical and professional employees, guards, and all supervisors as defined in the Act, constitute a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of the Act. [Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication in this volume.] B The Sheffield Corp., 94 NLRB 1781. TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. and PAUL J. GASSERT, ET AL. TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. and WILLIAM G. BAUER TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. and UNITED STEEL WORKERS OF AMERICA, C. I. O. Cases Nos. 4-CA-118,4-CA-277, and 4-CA-343. November j, 1951 Decision and Order STATEMENT OF THE CASE Upon separate charges duly filed (a) on September 8, 1948, by Paul H. Gassert and other individuals, (b) on July 22, 1949, by William G. Bauer, and (c) on January 12, 1950, by United Steel Workers of America, C. I. 0., herein called the Union, the General Counsel of 96 NLRB No. 195. 974176-52-vol. 96-85 1334 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD the National Labor Relations Board, herein called the General Counsel and the Board, respectively, by the Regional Director for the Fourth Region (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), issued an order on June 5, 1950, consolidating the above-captioned cases, and simultaneously therewith issued his complaint alleging that Textile Machine Works, Inc., Wyomissing, Pennsylvania, had engaged in, and was engaging in, unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Sec- tion 8 (a) (1) and (3) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, 61 Stat. 136, herein called the Act. Copies of the complaint, the order of consolidation, the charges, and notice of hearing were duly served upon the Respondent and the charging parties. With respect to the unfair labor practices, the complaint alleged, in substance, that the Respondent (1) during September and October 1947 discharged 85 employees, herein called the discriminatees, whose names are listed in the appendix attached hereto, and that during the period beginning about March 20, 1948, to about January 31, 1950, these persons applied to the Respondent for employment or reinstate- ment, but the Respondent refused and continues to ref use to employ or to reinstate them, because they had assisted the Union or engaged in other concerted activities, in violation of Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act; (2) and since March 20, 1948, informed its employees or appli- cants for employment that they were being and would be considered unfavorably because of their union sympathies and activities, inter- fered with the tenure of employment by other employers of some of the discriminatees, because of their union sympathies and activities, and by threats of reprisal and promises of benefit warned or persuaded its employees to refrain from union or concerted activities, thereby interfering with the exercise of the rights of its employees as guaran- teed by Section 7 of the Act, and violating Section 8 (a) (1) of the Act. Pursuant to the order of Trial Examiner Louis Plost, dated June 12, 1950, granting the Respondent's motion for a bill of particu- lars, the General Counsel, on June 13, 1950, specified certain named individuals and dates in connection with the allegations of paragraph 11 of the complaint. In its answer, duly filed, the Respondent admitted the allegations of the complaint concerning its corporate existence and the nature and extent of the business transacted by it. The answer also admitted that the Respondent had discharged the discriminatees and refused and continues to refuse to employ or to reinstate them, but denied that the refusal to employ or reinstate was for discriminatory reasons vio- lative of the Act. The answer also denied the commission of the other unfair labor practices alleged in the complaint. Pursuant to notice, a hearing was held in Reading, Pennsylvania, on various dates between June 19, 1950, and August 3, 1950, before TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1335 Hamilton Gardner, the Trial Examiner duly designated by the Chief Trial Examiner. The Respondent and General Counsel were repre- sented by counsel. The Union was not represented by counsel and did not participate in the hearing. All the participating parties were afforded full opportunity to be heard, to examine and cross- examine witnesses, and to introduce evidence pertinent to the issues . During the hearing the Trial Examiner granted the General Counsel's motion to amend the complaint by adding the name of Arthur Bordner to the above-mentioned list of discriminatees.1 The General Counsel's motion to dismiss the complaint as to George Gehring for lack of proof was also granted. At the close of the General Counsel's case the Trial Examiner granted the Respondent's motion to dismiss para- graph 11 (b) of the complaint which was unopposed by the General Counsel. The Trial Examiner also granted the Respondent's motion to dismiss paragraph 11 (c) of the complaint, and took under advise- ment the Respondent's motion to dismiss the complaint as to Stanley Tsakeris. The motion as to Tsakeris was thereafter denied by the Trial Examiner in his Intermediate Report.2 At the close of the hearing the Trial Examiner granted without objection the General Counsel's motion to conform the proof with respect to minor varia- tions between the pleadings and proof such as the spelling of names and dates. Various rulings were made by the Trial Examiner during the course of the hearing on other motions and on objections to the admission of evidence. The Board has reviewed the rulings of the Trial Ex- aminer and, except as hereinafter indicated, finds that no prejudicial error was committed. With these exceptions the rulings are hereby affirmed. All parties were afforded an opportunity to file briefs and proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. The Respondent a.nd the General Counsel filed briefs with the Trial Examiner. On January 30, 1951, the Trial Examiner issued his Intermediate Report, copies of which were duly served upon the parties, in which he found that the Respondent had engaged in unfair labor practices 1 The Regional Director had previously refused to issue a complaint based on charges filed in behalf of Bordner on the ground of insufficient evidence of discrimination The Respondent contends that because of such refusal the General Counsel's amendment should have been denied we affirm the Trial Examiner's ruling. The failure of a Regional Director to proceed on a charge is not res judicete of the issues , and does not estop the General Counsel from reinstating the charges by enlargement of the complaint . Republic Steel Corporation, 62 NLRB 1005, 1022. 1 The Respondent excepts to the Trial Examiner 's ruling as to Tsakeris because the latter had not testified at the hearing . The Respondent contends that any testimony with respect to Tsakeris is therefore hearsay , and that because he was not a witness the Respondent was deprived of its rights of confrontation or cross-examination. The evi- dence relative to the Respondent 's discrimination against Tsakeris is based upon the testimony of witnesses ( Stayer and Youse ) who had direct , not hearsay , knowledge of the pertinent facts, and whom the Respondent was permitted to cross-examine concerning these facts . We are aware of no rule of law which restricts the Board , in proceedings such as this , from finding discrimination unless the person discriminated against appears as a witness . Accordingly we find the Respondent 's exception without merit. 1336 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD in violation of Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act by refusing to employ 83 of the discriminatees and dismissed the complaint as to 2 of them, Arthur J. Bordner and Earl G. Detweiler. The Trial Examiner also found that the Respondent had violated Section 8 (a) (1) of the Act by unlawfully interrogating applicants for employment regarding their union and concerted activities and by urging them to refrain from such activities. He further found that the Respondent's un- lawful conduct affects interstate commerce, and recommended that the Respondent cease and desist from these activities and take certain affirmative action to effectuate the policies of the Act. Thereafter the Respondent and the General Counsel filed exceptions to the In- termediate Report and supporting briefs. The Respondent also re- quested oral argument. This request is hereby denied as, in our opinion, the record and the exceptions and briefs adequately present the issues and the positions of the parties. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3 (b) of the Act, the National Labor Relations Board has delegated its powers in connection with this proceeding to a three-member panel [Chairman Herzog and Members Murdock and Styles]. The Board has considered the Intermediate Report, the exceptions and briefs, and the entire record in the case, and makes the following findings, conclusions, and order : FINDINGS OF FACT I. THE BUSINESS OF THE RESPONDENT The Respondent is a Pennsylvania corporation engaged at Wyo- missing, Pennsylvania, in the manufacture, sale, and distribution of braiding and knitting machines. Annual purchases of raw materials by the Respondent are valued in excess of $1,000,000 of which 25 per- cent represents shipments from other States. The Respondent an- nually produces finished products valued in excess of $10,000,000, of which more than 85 percent is shipped to points in other States. We find that the Respondent is engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. II. THE LABOR ORGANIZATIONS INVOLVED The United Steel Workers of America, C. I. 0., is a labor organiza- tion within the meaning of Section 2 (5) of the Act. III. THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Collective bargaining relations between the Respondent and the Union before August 1947 The Respondent 's plant consists of 2 main operating units, the ma- chine shop which in 1947 employed approximately 3,000 employees, TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1337 and the foundry which, during the same period, employed 'approxi- mately 315 employees. On April 14, 1946, the Union was certified by the Board as the bargaining representative for a unit limited to the foundry employees. No bargaining agreement, however, was consummated following this certification. On February 24, 1947, following a Board-directed election, the Union was certified as the representative for a unit composed of both machine shop and foundry employees. Thereafter, between April 2, 1947, and July 16, 1947, representatives of the Respondent and the Union met 7 times to nego- tiate a contract, but no agreement was reached. At these meetings the Union presented to the Respondent the names of employees serving as stewards and grievance committeemen s The record also shows the Respondent's genera] familiarity with the names of the officers of the Union's locals in the machine shop and foundry .4 B. The August 1941' strike During the afternoon of August 1, 1947, a work stoppage occurred in department 53 of the machine shop in which approximately 200 employees were involved. As a result of this incident 5 the Respond- ent, on August 4, issued notice that it had discharged Gassert, the department 53 steward, and had laid off the other employees of de- partment 53 until August 11. On August 6 the Union instituted a strike of the Respondent's plant which lasted until September 3. The foundry was completely inoperative during the strike, but the machine shop was only partly affected. The Respondent's attendance records show that approximately 1,300 machine shop employees ab- sented themselves from their jobs on August 6, but that during the ensuing days of the strike this number diminished to a point where, on September 3, only 128 machine shop employees in excess of the number absent on the day before the strike were recorded absent. Considering the fact that 200 of the absentees on August 5 were the laid-off employees of department 53, of whom many probably did not return to work during the strike, it would appear that approximately 300 machine shop employees were still out at the end of the strike. This conclusion is supported by the testimony of Respondent's em- ployment manager, David Fleischmann, that there were approxi- mately 3,000 employees in the machine shop at the beginning of the strike and 2,700 at the end. 8 At least 28 of the discriminatees had been members of the Union while employed for the Respondent . Of these, 15 had been stewards , 5 had been members of negotiating or grievance committees , 4 had been officers, and 8 had been active organizers for the Union. 4It appears that there were separate locals for the machine shop and foundry which continued to exist after the Union 's certification for the single over -all unit. S The events relating to this incident are discussed at greater length, infra, in connec- tion with the finding of discrimination as to Paul H Gassert. 1338 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Clearly the Respondent knew from its attendance records which employees absented themselves from their jobs during the strike and which of them voluntarily returned to work before the end of the strike e It also may reasonably be inferred from evidence in the rec- oord that the Respondent knew the identity of employees engaging in picketing. Picket lines had been established at the outset of the strike which focused their activities about the main gates of the machine shop and foundry. There is abundant testimony revealing that photo- graphs of the picket lines were taken on several occasions by the Re- spondent from its premises and from the roof of the Berkshire Knitting Mills plant 7 which is near the Respondent's plant. Indeed, William E. Kaul, superintendent of the Respondent's machine shop, testified that photographs of the picket lines were taken by the Re- spondent on the advice of counsel. In addition the record establishes that the picketing was observed at both the machine shop and foundry by several of Respondent's supervisors including Employment Man- ager Fleischmann, Kaul, Foundry Superintendent Herman F. Good, Foundry Office Manager Rentz, Foundry Foreman Heater, and Machine Shop Foremen Impink and Hill. Eighty-one of the dis- criminatees participated in picketing. In view of the foregoing circumstances, we find that the Respondent had knowledge of such activity on their part. This finding is strengthened by the fact that most of these 81 persons had worked many years for the Respondent, and the fact that the supervisors who had observed them had also been associated for many years with the Respondent and were thus in a favorable position to make individual identifications of the pickets. We note, for example, Superintendent Good's testimony that in entering and leaving the foundry gate each day he could observe the pickets at that location and that practically all of the foundry employees "were out there at one time or another." As to the number of pickets involved, it appears that as a result of a back-to-work movement of the machine shop em- ployees, the number of pickets dwindled as the strike progressed. Although there are estimates of 2,000 pickets in the early days of the strike, the Respondent's supervisors in their testimony fix the number of pickets at 300 to 500 throughout the strike. Picket-line attendance records maintained by the Union on a daily basis show that 115 em- ployees picketed the machine shop on August 20, and 83 on August 27. Those records show also that 104 employees picketed the foundry on August 20, 106 on August 26, and 100 on August 29. On the basis of the Union's records, which we believe are more reliable than the mere U The Respondent compiled summaries of attendance during the strike based on data obtained from time cards and payrolls . These were presented in evidence . Further proof of the Respondent 's knowledge of the identity of absent employees is derived from the fact that the Respondent sent letters to them during the strike urging them to return to work. 7 The Respondent and Berkshire Knitting Mills are commonly owned. TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1339 estimates of the Respondent's supervisors, the number of pickets, espe- cially near the end of the strike, was sufficiently limited so as to in- crease the opportunity for individual identification by the supervisors who observed them. All of the discriminatees were on strike. We find, in view of the circumstances related above, that the Respondent had knowledge of their participation in the strike and their picketing activities." On September 3, 1947, a committee of employees representing the Union informed Fleischmann that the strikers desired to end the strike and to return to work. Fleischmann replied that all employees intending to return should sign the register in the Respondent's em- ployment office. Fleischmann testified that he did not advise the committee that all employees who registered would be called to work, but several members of the committee testified that he stated that all the employees would be summoned to report for work, as soon as jobs became available, and that he requested that they enter their names, addresses, and telephone numbers in the register. After the committee communicated Fleischmann's instructions to the strikers, the latter entered the employment office, signed the register," and departed from the Respondent's premises. The strike thereupon terminated. C. The terminations of employment in September and October 1947 Two or three days after the strike ended the foundry resumed oper- ations with a limited force of 200 employees . Because of curtailed operations caused by the strike only those employees required to meet existing needs were then recalled . Although the machine shop did not operate at full capacity during the strike, the record does not reveal whether any of the strikers were recalled to this shop after September 3. The record shows, however , that during the period immediately after the strike the Respondent filled 267 vacancies in both the machine shop and the foundry by hiring new employees in 8 The extent of the Respondent 's precise knowledge of the activities of its striking employees is indicated by the credited testimony of several of the discriminatees . Mervin Mengel applied to his foreman for his job about 3 weeks after the strike started but was referred to Fleischmann . When Mengel asked Fleischmann 2 days later why he had not been reinstated , the latter looked at a book and stated , " I see you were on the picket line." He then told Mengel he would have to wait until called. Charles Di Stasio and Leroy Haring sought to return to their jobs during the strike but were informed by Fleischmann that they could not do so at that time because of their strike activities . In March 1948 Fleischmann remarked to Bernard Maurer that he would not be reemployed because he had picketed . Foundry Office Manager Rentz ' comments in October 1948 to William Valerlo, Stanley Savage, and Harry Steiner to the effect that they were not recalled because they had picketed are set out at length hereinafter. 9 Any possible doubt as to the Respondent 's knowledge of the identity of employees who remained on strike until the end is dissipated by this circumstance We need not resolve the conflict as to whether Fleischmann on this occasion stated that employees signing the register would be recalled. We are convinced, however, particularly because it was not specifically denied by Fleischmann , that he did advise them to register in the manner indicated above and that in so doing they made the requested entries. 1340 DECISIONS. OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD numerous job classifications for which many of the former strikers who were not recalled were qualified.- At the same time the Respond- ent notified approximately 200 of the former strikers who had not been recalled, including the discriminatees, that their employment had been terminated. The termination notices were in the form of letters dated September 6 and October 15, 1947, informing the persons affected that their services were no longer required, but stating no explanation or reason for this action. Thirty of the discriminatees testified that on one or more occasions immediately before and after receiving their termination notices they contacted the Respondent's employment office or their former super- visors and asked to be recalled to work, but none succeeded in being restored to a job. On these occasions they were informed that jobs, were not then available and were told to wait until called, or, in some cases, they were given to understand that the Respondent would not recall them because of their strike activities. Thus, Foundry Manager Rentz, in response to William Valerio's inquiry as to why he had not been recalled, having previously learned that Valerio had picketed, stated, "That's it." This incident occurred about 4 weeks after the strike ended. One week before then Rentz had remarked to Stanley Savage, who had inquired about his job, "Savage, you were on the picket line. Good is at a meeting and your job depends on the outcome of this meeting." Harry Steiner spoke to Rentz about returning to his job when he received his October 15 termination letter. Rentz observed that there was no opening, but Steiner queried, "Is it because I was on the picket line?" To this Rentz replied, "That may be." Although these comments were denied by Rentz, the testimony of the foregoing witnesses was specifically credited by the Trial Exam- iner. Because the Trial Examiner was able to observe the demeanor of the witnesses, and because the clear preponderance of all the rele- vant evidence does not convince us that the Trial Examiner's resolu- tion was incorrect, we hereby adopt these credibility findings.", D. Applications for employment by the discriminatees and the Respondent's refusal to employ them On March 21, 1948, a meeting was held by Andrew Kondrath, then a subdistrict director of the union," which was attended by approxi- 10 This evidence is contained in General Counsel's Exhibit 19 which is a list of employees hired by the Respondent between September 2, 1947, and March 12, 1948. The Trial Examiner admitted this exhibit for impeachment purposes only. We regard the informa- tion contained in this exhibit , however, as an integral part of the events against which the conduct alleged in the complaint to be unlawful must be examined . The exhibit, therefore , is hereby admitted into evidence without the limitation imposed thereon by the Trial Examiner. 11 Standard Dry Wall Products , Inc., 91 NLRB 544, enf. 188 F 2d 362 ( C. A. 3). Sim- ilarly , we resolve other conflicts in the testimony of witnesses by relying upon the Trial Examiner 's credibility findings, which we hereby adopt. 12 At the time of the hearing Kondrath no longer had any official connection with the Union. TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1341 -mately 120 former employees of the Respondent including about 25 of the discriminatees. As a. result of events which transpired at this meeting,l" at least 27 of the discriminatees appeared on the following day at the Respondent's employment office and applied for jobs. During the ensuing days similar applications were made by other discriminatees, so that between March 22 and April 30 not less than ^61- discriminatees tendered such applications. In addition 11 dis- criminatees testified that they had applied for employment in March -without specifying a certain day, 3 testified that they applied in March, but before March 22, and 1 applied on February 7. The rest of the discriminatees applied later in 1948 and in 1949. Some applied repeatedly as late as January 1950.14 The Trial Examiner in his Intermediate Report concluded that because of the attendance at the union meeting by some of the dis- criminatees, and the resultant applications for employment made by these persons and other discriminatees who subsequently learned about the union meeting from them, the "mass applications" by the dis- criminatees constituted concerted union activity by them within 6 months of the date of the first charge filed on September 8, 1948. We deem it unnecessary to adopt this conclusion by the Trial Exam- iner, for whether the discriminatees engaged in concerted unit activity within the foregoing 6-month period is not at issue in this proceeding 15 When the discriminatees applied at the Respondent's employment office they were interviewed by clerks, who, on the basis of informa- tion obtained from the personnel records on file in the office and from answers to specific questions given by the discriminatees, were able to identify them as the former strikers whose employment was termi- nated in September and October 1947. A few of the discriminatees were also interviewed by Fleischmann. In general all received the same advice. They were told that no jobs were then available, but were instructed to sign the register with the understanding that they 13 The Trial Examiner excluded testimony which the General Counsel sought to elicit from this witness regarding the events of the meeting , and rejected the General Counsel's offer of proof to the effect that Kondrath had informed his audience that the Respondent was hiring , and had advised those desiring to obtain jobs with the Respondent to apply. We believe that this testimony is of value in establishing continuity to the sequence of events in this proceeding and could have been admitted for this purpose . We do not, however, need to rely upon this testimony in reaching our ultimate conclusions , and shall, therefore , not reverse these rulings by the Trial Examiner. '* The complaint alleges that all the discriminatees ( except Bordner, whose name was added to the complaint by amendment at the hearing ) applied to the Respondent for employment or reinstatement during the period from March 20, 1948, to January 31, 1950, and the Respondent's answer admits this allegation. 15 The Trial Examiner evidently believed that the General Counsel's theory was based on the Respondent 's discrimination against the disciiminatees for union and concerted activities in which they had engaged within 6 months before the filing date of the charge, whereas the complaint alleges discriminatory conduct by the Respondent within the 6- month period motivated by the Union and concerted activities of the discriminatees which had occurred before then. It was not , therefore , incumbent on the General Counsel, as the Respondent argues, to show knowledge on its part of union activities or membership by the discriminatees during the 6-month period preceding the filing of the charge. 1342 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD would be called when jobs became available. All signed the register except those who were told by the clerks that they need not do so because they had previously registered upon the termination of the strike in September 1947. Because of the permanency of the register, the fact that the registrations included information which enabled the Respondent to communicate -with the discriminatees at such time -as it desired to offer them employment, and the further fact that the Respondent informed them that they would be called when jobs became available, we find that the foregoing applications by the dis- criminatees were understood by them and by the Respondent to be continuing applications for employment 16 We reject the Respondent's contention that these applications were not for employment, but for "reinstatement" as this term is tech- nically used by the Board. In so finding we are mindful of the fact that some of the applications were requests for "our old jobs back," "reinstatement to our old jobs," or for "reemployment." Whatever the language used by the applicants, however, it is clear that in no sense did they expressly or impliedly attach conditions to their re- quests such as a demand for return to a former position with back pay, seniority, and other rights and privileges which the Board cus- tomarily specifies in a remedial order requiring an employer to rein- state employees. We are satisfied that the discriminatees, who with- out exception are industrial factory workers, did not use the terms they employed in the technical sense of labor law experts, but merely expressed themselves in the ordinary manner of former employees seeking jobs from their old employer, and presented themselves as new applicants seeking new employment .17 E. The Respondent's refusal to hire the discriminatees despite the availability of suitable employment for them Machine Shop Hirings Robert L. Davis, C. Paul Fisher, Mervin. C. Mengel, Stephen W. Polaha, Clarence F. Warczyglowa, Joseph Marko, Peter M. Tere fenko, Elmer E. Rupp, Franklin M. Shatter, Harry S. Koch, and William G. Batter were classified by the Respondent as bench hands, 12-4. Davis, Fisher, Mengel, Polaha, and Warczyglowa applied to the Re- spondent for employment on March 22, 1948; Marko and Terefenko applied March 23, 1948; Rupp and Shalter applied March 24, 1948; Koch applied in March 1948; Bauer applied in January 1948 and in the fall of 1948. The Respondent hired 57 bench hands, 12-4, between 11 Cf. Sax v. N L R. B., 171 F . 2d 1082 ( C. A 7). 11 Pennwoven, Inc., 94 NLRB 175; Childs Company, 93 NLRB 281 . Fleischmann's understanding that the discriminatees were seeking work as new employees is further evidenced by the unrefuted testimony of Clarence F. Warczyglowa that Fleischmann remarked to him and other discriminatees when they applied "the only way you would get your job back is to start as new employees." TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1343 March 25 and December 21, 1948. It is found that the above named discriminatees were qualified to fill the bench hand jobs for which employees were hired by the Respondent after they had filed their applications for employment. Pauline Avola Brubaker, Paul H. Gassert, Joseph J. Grimm, John Marko, George M. Sheehan, Stella Quaintance, William D. Undheim, and Lester L. Matz were classified as automatic machine tenders, 22-1. Grimm, Marko, and Sheehan applied on March 22, 1948; Brubaker, Gassert, and Quaintance applied March 24, 1948. The Respondent hired 15 automatic machine tenders, 22-1, between June 7 and Oc- tober 25, 1948. It is found that the above-named discriminatees were qualified to fill the automatic machine tender jobs for which employees were hired following their applications. Conrad H. Chlebowski, Catherine M. Frees, and Robert Guistwite were classified as punch press operators, 8-1. Frees and Guistwite applied on March 24 and Chlebowski on March 26, 1948. On March 25, 1948, the Respondent hired a punch press operator, 8-1. Frees and Guistwite were clearly qualified for this opening. We find that all 3 of these discriminatees were qualified for the automatic machine tender jobs, referred to above, for which 15 persons were hired between June 7 and October 25, 1948, as no particular experience was required for these jobs which called for a learning period of only 2 weeks. In addition, Frees' personnel record shows that she had formerly worked for the Respondent as an inspector and as a bench hand. Between March 31 and November 15, 1948, the Respondent hired 8 floor inspectors, 11-1, 13 inspectors, 11-4, and 1 metallurgical in- spector, 11-3, for jobs in department 89 where Frees had worked as an inspector. We find that Frees was qualified for one of these jobs in view of her past experience and particularly because of the testi- mony of Assistant Superintendent Smith that there are inspector jobs throughout the plant which do not require much skill. Walter N. Cieniewicz and Paul W. Pennypacker were classified as bench machinists, 2-5, Cieniewicz' personnel record also shows duty as a KM finish erector machinist. Arthur J. Bordner is listed on his personnel record as a machinist. Cieniewicz applied on March 22 or 23, 1948, Pennypacker in March 1948, and Bordner on March 7, 1948. The Respondent hired two machinists, 2-3, on May 10 and May 24, 1948, and two bench machinists, 2-5, on June 14 and September 20, 1948. Two machinists II, 2-6, were hired on August 16 and 30, 1948, and two KM finish erector machinists, 2-8, were hired on August 16 and September 20, 1948. According to Assistant Superintendent Kline's testimony the foregoing 2-3 and 2-6 classifications require the basic skills of journeymen machinists, which we are satisfied are pos- sessed by the above discriminatees. We therefore find they were quali- fied to fill the openings in these classifications for which employees : 1344 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD were hired after they applied. We find that Cieniewicz, because of his special experience, was additionally qualified to fill the openings in the 2-8 classification which occurred after he had applied. Ferdinand J. Mayer, classified as a machinist-floor inspector, 2-20, applied on March 22, 1948. On September 20, 1948, the Respondent hired an employee to fill a vacancy in that classification for which Mayer was clearly qualified. James D. O'Connell, classified as a KM frame erector helper (non- machinist), 2-11, had also worked for the Respondent as a painter. James P. Robinson and Cletus R. Musser were classified as KM finish -erector helpers (nonmachinist), 2-9. O'Connell applied in the spring .of 1948; Robinson and Slusser applied respectively on March 22 and 24, 1948. Between March 29 and July 19, 1948, the Respondent hired ES employees in the 2-9 classification for which Robinson and Sliisser were clearly qualified. From May 13 to September 8, 1948, the Re- spondent hired 12 brush painters, 36-3, for duty in the department where O'Connell had formerly worked. We find that he was quali- fied to fill these jobs. Earl G. Detweiler, classified as a rotary surface grinder operator 3-7, applied February 7, 1948. The Respondent hired two employees in that classification on September 27 and November 1, 1948, for which Detweiler was qualified. Philip Majka, classified as a surface grinder operator, 3-6, applied March 22, 1948. The Respondent hired an employee in that classi- fication on September 22, 1948, for which Majka was qualified. Patsy DeMatt, classified as a planner operator II, 9-1, applied April 16, 1948. The Respondent hired an employee in that classification on June 22, 1948, for which DeMatt was qualified. Angelo Tomeo, classified as a truck driver, 21-1, applied on April 6, 1948. The Respondent hired 2 electric truck drivers, 21-2, on April 12 and April 19, 1948. Because of the closely related skills and duties of the 21-1 and 21-2 classifications, we find that Tomeo was qualified for the electric truck driver jobs filled by the Respondent. The Re- spondent also hired 49 laborers, 16-8, between April 28, 1948, and September 7, 1949. Tomeo was clearly qualified for one of these openings. We find that Alpheus F. Groff, classified as a laborer, 16-8, who applied on March 28, 1948, also was qualified for one of the openings in that classification filled by the Respondent. Le Roy F. Haring, classified as a wood box maker, 17-4, applied in February and April 1948. The Respondent hired eight employees in that classification between March 29 and October 20, 1948, for which Haring was qualified. George A. Lutz, classified as a brush painter, 36-3, applied March 23, 1948. Lutz had also worked for the Respondent as a gardener. As hereinbefore noted the Respondent hired 12 brush painters, 36-3, TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1345 lietween May 13 and September 8, 1948, and- also hired a gardener, 34-4, on June 7, 1948. Lutz was qualified for the openings filled by the Respondent in both of these classifications. John A. Strausser, classified as a sheet metal worker, 19-1, applied in March and August 1948 and monthly in 1949. On November 22 and December 12, 1949, the Respondent hired two employees to fill vacancies in that classification for which Strausser was qualified. George I. Clay, classified as a packer 16-2, and Harry N. Krouse, classified as tool clerk, 35-1, applied respectively on March 23 and 22, 1948. We find they were qualified to fill jobs as laborers for which the Respondent hired numerous employees after they applied. Charles P. Di Stasio was classified as a radial drill press operator, 6-1; his personnel record shows that he is an "all around drill press" operator. Di Stasio applied on March 22, 1948. Thereafter, on May 3 and May 20, 1948, the Respondent hired 2 gang drill press operators, 6-7. Starting pay for the 6-1 and 6-7 jobs were the same. There is also evidence of similarity and interchangeability of skills and duties between these classifications in view of the testimony of Assistant Superintendent Smith that all drill presses are related to each other and perform the same general function. Accordingly,. we find that Di Stasio was qualified to fill one of the available 6-7 jobs. George F. Herzog, who was also classified as a gang drill press opera- tor, 6-7, applied on March 22, 1948. He, too, was obviously qualified to fill one of the available 6-7 jobs. George H. Berg, who was classi- fied as a gang drill press operator, 6-7, applied in 1948 after November and in January and November 1949. No jobs in his classifications were filled after he applied, but Berg was qualified, according to his personnel record to fill jobs as electric truck driver, 21-2, for which two employees were hired in December 1948, one in February 1949, and another in October 1949. Bernard C. A. Maurer, classified as a needle straightener, 18-1, applied March 22, 1948. The Respondent hired 16 employees to fill, jobs in the 18-1 classification between April 20 and October 4, 1948. Maurer was clearly qualified to fill these openings. Norman Davis, classified as needle bar filler, 18-3, applied March 20, 1948. Three employees were hired for jobs in the 18-3 classification between June 3 and July 14, 1948. Davis was obviously qualified for these jobs. Marshall V. Stoyer, Stanley Tsakeris, Earnest A. Mouse, and Anthony J. Pietrowski were classified as needle casters, 18-4. Pietrowski ap- plied March 26, 1948, and the others in this category applied March 24, 1948. Tsakeris' personnel record shows that he had formerly worked for the Respondent as a needle straightener, 18-1, and Pie- trowski's record shows he had formerly worked as a needle bar filler, 18-3. We find, accordingly, that Tsakeris and Pietrowski were re-: spectively qualified for the available 18-1 and 18-3 openings. In' 1346 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD view of the close similarity of skill and duties between the 18-4 and the 18-1 and 18-3 classifications, we find that Stoyer and Youse were also qualified for the available 18-1 and 18-3 openings. Donald H. Dreher.and Harold R. Edinger were classified as job setters II, 1-3. Dreher's records show that he was a precision ma- chinist and was assigned to such duties by the Respondent before the strike. During Edinger's tenure with the Respondent he had worked for 3 years as a punch press operator, and, as a setup man, made punches and dies in addition to setting up machines and checking their operation. Dreher applied on March 25, 1948, and Edinger applied March 3 and again on March 28, 1948. Between May 10 and October 25, 1918, the Respondent hired 3 precision machinists, 2-3, and from March 29 to September 16, 1948, hired 12 borematic operators, 23-1, for duty in department 17 where Dreher had last worked. We find that Dreher was qualified for the 2-3 and 23-1 classifications for which employees were hired. As hereinbefore noted, the Respond- ent hired 15 automatic machine tenders, 22-1, from June 7 to October 25, 1948, of whom 9 were hired for duty in department 53 where Edinger had worked as setup man. We find that he was qualified for these jobs. Foundry Hirings John W. Aulenbach, Anthony Bianca, Walter S. Davis, William H. Delcamp, Samuel S. Leone, and Charles I. Race were classified as grinders , 50-32 . Bianca, Davis, Delcamp, and Leone applied on March 22, 1948. Aulenbach applied in December 1948 and Race on March 3 or 25, 1948. The Respondent hired 60 grinders , 50-32, be- tween March 31, 1948, and December 27, 1949. We find that the above-named discriminatees were qualified to fill the jobs for which these employees were hired. William C. Boyer was last employed by the Respondent as a laborer, 50-42, and had worked many years for the Respondent as a molder "B", 50-11. Angelo Carabott and Russell J. Hartran f t were classified as laborers , 50-42. Boyer applied March 23, 1948, and Hartranft on April 1, 1948. The Respondent hired three laborers, 50 -42, from March 25 to April 6, 1948 , and hired 'one molder "B", 50-11, and 2 molders "C", 50-12 between May and September 1948. The above- named discriminatees were all qualified for the laborer jobs filled by the Respondent , and Boyer was additionally qualified for the molder jobs for which employees were hired. Herman O. Burkhardt was classified as a coremaker "A", 50-15. Robert E. Heist, William F. Miller, William H. Pike, Stanley Savage, and William Valerio were classified as coremakers "B", 50-16. Ac- cording to the testimony of these discriminatees and of Foundry Superintendent Good , coremakers perform a variety of other foundry TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS , INC. 1347 duties of a general labor or unskilled nature when they are not busy with the duties of their specialty, including such tasks as sand sling- ing, stocking the cupola, shifting weights, core carrying, and core cleaning. Burkhardt applied August 26, 1948, Heist March 20 or 22, 1948, Miller April 2, 1948, Pike March 1948, and Savage and Valerio applied on April 15, 1948. The Respondent hired a coremaker "C", on November 23, 1948, and hired 2 coremakers, apparently in the same grade, on June 5 and June 13, 1950. The above discriminatees were clearly qualified for these jobs. In addition the Respondent hired numerous foundry employees in a variety of classifications which re- quired no special skills and short learning periods, and for which these discriminatees were qualified, particularly because of their past ex- perience in the Respondent's foundry. Thus between March 25, 1948, and December 27, 1949, Respondent hired 49 common laborers, 50-42, 60 grinders, 50-32, 18 pourers, 50-48, 5 cupola chargers, 50-19, 5 crane operators, 50-22, 4 clippers, 50-33, 4 inspectors, 50-35, 3 mold transferers, 50-51, 21 jacket handlers, 50-52, 5 mold dumpout men, 50-54, as well as several other employees -in additional classifications. We find that the above-named discriminatees were all qualified to fill openings in the foregoing classifications for which the Respondent hired employees after their applications were made. Clayton L. Beck, Aaron L. Becker, Thomas C. Gruber, Albert 0. Hendricks, Clarence J. Kercher, Harry M. Steiner, and Walter W. Wenrich were classified as molders "A", 50-10. Paul W. Bleiler, Cyrus W. Speicher, and Ralph E. Troutman were classified as molders "B", 50-11. Bleiler, Hendricks, and Wenrich applied on March 22, 1948. Gruber, Speicher, and Troutman applied March 23, 1948. Becker applied in the spring of 1948, Beck and Kercher applied in August 1948, and Steiner applied in August 1949. The Respondent hired 2 molders "C", 50-12, on May 17 and September 30, 1948, and hired it molder "B", 50-11, on August 9, 1948. Clearly these discriminatees were qualified for such jobs. We find that they were also qualified for the numerous semiskilled and unskilled foundry jobs for which the Respondent hired employees between March 25, 1948, and December 21, 1949, particularly for the 18 jobs in the pourer, 50-48, classification whose duties were related to those of molders. Joseph Klein and Harold S. Ernst were classified as inspectors, 50-35. Following their applications on March 20 and 22, 1948, re- spectively, the Respondent hired four inspectors, 50-35, between December 21, 1948, and June 1, 1949. John A. Roth was classified as a leader, 50-2, but had also worked as an inspector, crane operator, grinder, and chipper. Roth applied on April 3, 1948. As detailed above, the Respondent hired employees in the several classifications in which these discriminatees were qualified after their applications for employment. 1348 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Clayton A. Schweitzer, who was classified as a chipper, 50-33, and. had also worked as a laborer in the Respondent's foundry, applied in December 1949 or January 1950. Thereafter, between February 23 and May 15, 1950, the Respondent hired two laborer-grinders and six laborers. Schweitzer was obviously qualified to fill the openings for which these employees were hired. Leon W. Scheipe, classified as a sandblaster, 50-31, applied in March 1948. Harvey M. Mull, classified as a cupola and furnace tender, 50-20, applied March 23,1948. On May 3,1948, the Respondent hired a sandblaster, 50-31, and on December 20, 1948, hired a cupola and furnace tender, 50-20. Scheipe and Mull were clearly qualified for those openings. George H. Borden, classified as a pattern storage clerk, 50-37, a classification which involved heavy manual work, applied on March 22, 1948. Norman E. Miller, classified, as a shipper, 50-36, Harvey H. Smith, a core oven attendant, 50-27, and Ralph W. Swisher, a core cleaner, 50-28, applied March 26, March 29, and April 7, 1948, re- spectively. Each of these latter three had also performed duties as a laborer in the Respondent's foundry. We find that each of the above-named discriminatees was qualified for the several semiskilled and unskilled openings hereinabove related for which the Respondent hired employees following the filing of applications by those discrim- inatees for employment. The record thus establishes that following the applications for em- ployment of all the discriminatees on the dates indicated, sufficient job openings were available in the Respondent's machine shop and foundry which the discriminatees were qualified to fill. Despite this circumstance, none of the discriminatees was offered employment or hired by the Respondent. The Respondent's answer admits that it refused and continues to refuse to employ the discriminatees, but asserts that such refusal is lawful. F. Interference, restraint, and coercion We find, as did the Trial Examiner, that on March 20, 1948, Employ- ment Manager Fleischmann asked Joseph Klein, who was applying to him for employment, whether he had picketed during the strike, and said, "If you were on the picket line, I can't promise you no job"; that on March 22, 1948, Bernard C. A. Maurer applied to Fleischmann for a job and was told by the latter he would not be hired because of his union activities and because he had picketed during the strike; and that on March 26, 1948, Anthony Pietrowski, while being inter- viewed by Fleischmann in connection with an application for employ- ment, informed him that he had engaged in the strike against the Respondent, whereupon Fleischmann remarked, "Sorry, no job." The TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1349 plain meaning of the foregoing interrogation , and comment by the Respondent 's employment manager, was that these applicants were being denied employment because of their past union and concerted activities . The effect thereof was to coerce and restrain employees in the free exercise of their rights guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act 1S in violation of Section 8 (a) (1) of the Act. G. Discrimination As hereinbefore noted the complaint alleges the Respondent dis- criminatorily refused to employ the discriminatees on and after March 20, 1948. The General Counsel contends that the Respondent 's failure to employ them following their applications for employment , the first application according to the proof having been made on February 7, 1948, constituted separate violations of Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act independent of any discrimination with regard to their hire and tenure of employment which may have occurred before then. Evidence of events which took place at an earlier time is relied upon only to explain and interpret the events which happened later. The Respondent, on the other hand, argues that the General Coun- sel has failed to prove by It preponderance of the evidence that the refusals to employ on and after March 20, 1948 , were discriminatory. Further, the Respondent argues, if ttiere had been any discrimination at all , it occurred on September 6 or October 15, 1947, when the em- ployment of the discriminatees was terminated . Had they desired to remedy such possibly wrongful action they were obliged under Sec- tion 10 (b) to file charges within 6 months from these dates, and, hav- ing failed to do so, their right of action thereby became extinguished and the remedy under the Act was no longer available to them. This proceeding , the Respondent 's argument continues , is merely an effort to revive a dead claim and to circumvent the Act by indirectly seek- ing a remedy which has legally ceased to exist. Consonant with this hypothesis , the Respondent contends that no evidence relating to events occurring before March 8, 1948 , is admissible in this proceed- ing, for a consideration of such evidence would necessarily result in the litigation of unfair labor practices against which the 10 (b) period has already run. , The Board has many times considered the effect of Section 10 (b) upon the admissibility of evidence concerning events occurring more than 6 months before the filing of a charge alleging unlawful conduct, and has uniformly held that such evidence, if competent and of pro- bative value, is not precluded from consideration by Section 10 (b) and may be admitted to clarify and impart meaning to the specific 's S. B Wh istler & Sons, Inc, 92 NLRB 1 ; J IV. Woodruff, Sr., d/b/a Atlanta Broadcast. Ong Company , 90 NLRB 808. 974176-52-vol 96-86 1350 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD conduct alleged as an unfair labor practice 19 The Board's position in this respect recently was sustained in N. L. R. B. v. Clausen, et al., 188 F. 2d 439 (C. A. 3), enforcing Frederica Clausen, d/b/a Luzern Hide and Tallow Company, supra. In its opinion the court con- firmed the Board's view that Section 10 (b) enacts a statute of limi- tations and not a rule of evidence, and that "it [Section 10 (b) ] does not foreclose the Board from accepting evidence of these events [i. e., events occurring more than 6 months before the filing of the charge] for the purpose of throwing light upon acts which happened within the 6-month period." During the hearing in this case the Board entertained an interim appeal from the rulings of the Trial Examiner excluding certain evidence offered by the General Counsel .211 In its order reversing the Trial Examiner's rulings, the Board, consistent with the well-settled principle enunciated above, held that evidence of union or concerted activity by the discriminatees, and of the Respondent's knowledge of such activity, as well as proof of circumstances incident to the dis- charge of the discriminatees was relevant and admissable, although this evidence related to events occurring more than 6 months before the filing of the charge. The Board's order further stated that its ruling was limited to the admissibility of such evidence subject to review on the record as a whole if raised for its consideration upon the filing of exceptions. Having reviewed all the evidence in this perspective, and having considered the Respondent's objections and exceptions to the Board's procedure,21 its ruling, and the evidence ad- mitted by the Trial Examiner pursuant thereto, we -reaffirm the 1° Pennwoven, Inc, supra ; Childs Company, supra; El Mundo, Inc., 92 NLRB 724, Frederica Clausen, d /b/a Luzerne Hide and Tallow Company, 89 NLRB 989; Sun Oil Com- pany, 89 NLRB 833; Florida Telephone Corporation, 88 NLRB 1429 ; Crowley's Milk Company, Inc., 88 NLRB 1049 ; Aceelson Manufacturing Company , 88 NLRB 761. 20 The Trial Examiner in his Intermediate Report asserts that the General Counsel's telegraphic petition to appeal to the Board detailing the circumstances constituting the basis of the appeal from the Trial Examiner 's rulings did not fully or accurately state the facts The Respondent acknowledged that it was served with a copy of the petition. No objection was raised by the Respondent before or after the appeal was considered by the Board with respect to the presentation of facts in the petition . We have carefully reviewed the petition and the record and find, contrary to the Trial Examiner's asseition , that the petition sufficiently and accurately presented the salient facts. n The General. Counsel's appeal from the Trial Examiner ' s rulings was taken pursuant to Section 203 26 (now Section 102 26 ) of the Board 's Rules and Regulations . While the appeal was pending, the Respondent requested permission to argue orally and to submit a brief This request was denied by the Board in its order reversing the Trial Examiner, stating that the record of the proceedings to date which it had reviewed adequately pre- sented the issues for its determination . The Respondent contends that the denial of its request violated the fifth amendment. This contention is without merit. Federal Com- munications , V. WJR, 337 U. S. 265 The due process provision of the fifth amendment guarantees no particular form of procedure , it protects substantial rights. N. L . R. B. v. Mackay Co., 304 U S. 333 (351). As the Respondent ' s position and argument in support of that position weie set out at great length in the record reviewed by the Board, no prejudice to its substantial rights resulted from the Board ' s denial of its request to be heard on the appeal TEXTILE, MACHINE WORKS,- INC. 1351 Board 's ruling and are satisfied that the evidence in question was properly admitted to provide background and to throw light upon the acts alleged herein as unfair labor practices. We perceive no merit in the argument that the complaint in this case seeks to revive a dead claim based on the terminations of employ- ment in September and October 1947 against which the 10 (b) period had run. The fallacy of this contention is apparent on the face of the complaint , for nowhere therein is it alleged that these terminations are statutory violations for which a remedy is sought . The gravamen of the complaint is clearly denoted as the unlawful refusal by the Respondent to employ the discriminatees following their applications for employment in 1948 and thereafter . The discriminatory conduct thereby alleged constitutes a separate and independent violation of the Act distinct from any unlawful conduct which may have been implicit in the earlier terminations of employment . Thus, the view advanced by the Respondent that the discriminatees are now barred from the relief presently sought because the right to remedy the Re- spondent's past violations was permitted to lapse by their failure to file a timely charge is without logical support. The Act imposes upon the Respondent a continuing duty to refrain from discriminating with regard to the hire of employees , and this obligation to the discrimi- natees was not lessened or removed by their failure to remedy a past violation . Were we to permit the Respondent 's approach to prevail, we would thereby license the Respondent permanently to continue blacklisting the discriminatees with impunity . Neither the Act nor its legislative history sanctions such a result. The Respondent further contends that the complaint should be dismissed to prevent abuse of the Board's processes , because this pro- ceeding was initiated in bad faith to harass the Respondent. In sup- port of this contention the Respondent submits that most of the dis- criminatees were profitably employed elsewhere when they applied to the Respondent for jobs, implying thereby that they could have gained no advantage from employment with the Respondent and must therefore have been motivated by an ulterior purpose in applying for such employment . The additional fact that they applied at the urging of the Union whose attorney assisted them in preparing for this pro- ceeding, the Respondent reasons, uncloaks the true motivation of the parties to a plot termed by the Respondent as a "conspiracy of harass- ment." We disagree that the discriminatees could not have benefited by obtaining jobs from the Respondent , as many of them testified they had applied for employment for such reasons as the proximity of the Respondent 's plant to their homes, more favorable working conditions, 1352 DECISIONS. OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD and the steadier employment prevailing at the Respondent's plant. Moreover, any encouragement and assistance extended by the Union in furtherance of the efforts by the discriminatees to overcome the Respondent's alleged discriminatory refusal to employ them was a legitimate fulfillment of its fundamental obligation to its members and the persons it represented to secure and preserve their rights guaranteed by the Act. Accordingly, we are satisfied that this pro- ceeding reflects the genuine concern of the parties with the Respond- ent's alleged discriminatory conduct, and does not constitute an idle invocation of the Board's processes for the purpose of inconveniencing the Respondent. The Respondent's contention therefore lacks merit. We turn to a consideration of whether the proof supports the allegation of the complaint that on and after March 20, 1948, the Respondent discriminatorily refused to employ the discriminatees. Under the theory of this case it was incumbent upon the General Counsel to establish the following elements of the alleged violation: (a) That on and after March 20, 1948, the Respondent had job openings which the discriminatees were qualified to fill; (b) that normally, absent a discriminatory policy, the Respondent would have considered the discriminatees for employment upon the filing of their applications; and (c) the discriminatees were rejected or denied con- sideration for employment because of their union and concerted activi- ties, rather than on the basis of some permissible criterion. As to elements (a) and (b), our subsidiary findings herein conclu- sively show that at various times after March 20, 1948, the Respondent had one or more job openings for which each discriminatee was quali- fied. These findings also show that the discriminatees had filed appli- cations in permanent form which effectively put the Respondent on continuing notice that they desired and were available for employ- ment. Our findings further reveal that the discriminatees were all experienced in one or more jobs in the Respondent's plant, and collec- tively represented a body of skills and training of which an employer in need thereof, under accepted industrial hiring practices, would readily avail itself. The undisputed fact, as exemplified by the Re- spondent's answer, is that the Respondent nevertheless refused and continues to refuse to employ the discriminatees. We proceed, there- fore, to (c), the final element, to determine the reason for the Respond- ent's refusal to employ the discriminatees'22 and whether that reason is unlawfully discriminatory. In explanation of its refusal to employ the discriminatees the Re- spondent asserts that their employment was terminated pursuant to a company policy which rendered them ineligible for reemployment. 22 In the ensuing discussion all the discriminatees , except Gassert , will be treated cate- gorically. Gassert's case will be discussed separately. TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1353 According to this alleged policy, which Fleischmann testified had existed for the last 20 to 30 years, employees upon separation are classified in one of the following five categories : A-discharged for cause; not to be rehired. B-laid off; may be considered for rehiring. C-laid off; not to be considered for rehiring. D-voluntarily. quit; may be considered for rehiring. E-voluntarily quit; not to be rehired. The individual personnel records of the discriminatees introduced in evidence reveal that each is coded A, C, or E, so as to indicate the ineligibility of all the discriminatees for reemployment. These rec- .ords also contain a reason for leaving, and final numerical perform- ance ratings for conduct, production, and ability. Each of these fac- tors is separately graded. A grade of 1 denotes excellent, 2 is good, 3 is fair, and 4 is poor. An average rating between 2 and 3 is consid- ered "good" by the Respondent. The following tabulation summarizes the relevant termination en- tries on the personnel records of the discriminatees. MACHINE SHOP EMPLOYEES Number of records Terminationcode letter Reason for leaving 37------------------------------- A Unqualified 8 ----------------------------- A Services no longer required. 1 (Oassert)______________________ A Insubordination. 3------------------------------- E Another position 1-------------------------------- E Did not report for work when called. FOUNDRY EMPLOYEES 33------------------------------- C Lack of work. 1-------------------------------- A Services no longer required 1-------------------------------- E' Another position. With respect to the final performance ratings of the discriminatees, their personnel records disclose that only 45 had ever been rated in the past. Of these, 37 were down graded upon termination, 2 received the same average grades as on their last previous ratings, and 5 re- ceived higher ratings. One received no final rating. Of the group of 85, 18 received final ratings which averaged between 2 and 3, equaling the standard which the Respondent considers to be "good." Fleischmann described the procedure under which the foregoing policy operates in the following manner. At the time of an em- ployee's separation his foreman transmits information to the employ- ment office, first verbally and then in writing, on a special report form. On this form appears a final performance rating, a reason for leaving, and a recommendation concerning eligibility for future em- 1354 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD ployment. This recommendation governs the reemployability of the employee irrespective of his final or past performance ratings. When this report is received by a clerk in the employment office he transfers the information to the employee's personnel card and enters an appro- priate code letter indicating eligibility for reemployment. Fleischmann also testified that the Respondent's policy precludes the rehiring of all persons who have been discharged, except those discharged for lack of work, regardless of the reason for discharge, but he was contradicted in this respect by Superintendents Kaul and Good. Kaul testified that only those discharges for reasons such as stealing, fighting, and continued loss of production preclude rehiring. Lack of work is not a ground for discharge, but only for layoff. Eligibility for reemployment of employees laid off for this reason depends upon whether they have good records, that is, whether they have been punctual and good producers. Good confirmed Kaul's testimony by indicating that ineligibility for reemployment results in cases of discharge for cause which he defined as "stealing, fight- ing, refusal to follow orders, and so on." We give controlling weight to Kaul's and Good's version of the Respondent's policy, as Fleisch- mann disclosed that these superintendents were his immediate super- visors and that they had related this policy to him on several occasions. Thus, the record establishes, first, that the Respondent's termi- nation policy does not automatically bar reemployment of all persons discharged or laid off, and second, the disqualification for reemploy- ment operates only against those who have been discharged or laid off for misconduct, violation of working rules, incompetence, or poor productivity. With this delineation of the Respondent's policy, we have carefully searched the record for evidence which might indicate that any of the foregoing factors was involved in the September and October 1947 terminations of the discriminatees and find a total ab- sence of such evidence. Furthermore, we are satisfied that none of these discriminatees was terminated for any of these reasons. Many of them testified without refutation that their work had never been criticized, and the Respondent stipulated that all of them would, if questioned, have so testified. Our conclusion that they had all been competent employees is reinforced by Fleischmann's testimony that had any been incompetent this would have been noted on their records. No such notation appears on any record. We attribute no significance to the final performance ratings as a factor relating to the terminations, for, as we have already observed, Fleischmann testified that the foreman's recommendation as to rehir- ing is exclusively controlling. Moreover, in view of the testimony of Kaul and Good that discharged or laid-off employees with good records are eligible for reemployment, there appears to be no logical connec- tion between the ratings of numerous discriminatees and their termina- TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1355 tions with disqualification for reemployment. Despite the inexpli- cable down grading of many of the ratings, an appreciable number nevertheless equaled the Respondent's standard for acceptable per- formance. Thus, if the ratings had been influential, those discrimi- natees with "good" ratings should not have been terminated under conditions barring reemployment. Certainly, their ratings should dispel any question as to whether they were terminated for cause. Further doubt as to the meaning and reliability of the ratings is derived from the testimony of Maul that he does not know whether periodic or final ratings are sent to the employment office, and of Good that he did not believe that the Respondent had a regular or customary procedure for rating employees before the -strike, and that employees are terminated without regard to their ratings. As to misconduct or violations of plant rules, we note that the Re- spondent has recorded on the personnel records of several discrimi- natees instances of warnings and reprimands for minor infractions, and other information including the fact that they had testified for the CIO in representation proceedings. However, no such entry appears on any record which is relevant to the terminations. We infer that had the discriminatees committed acts of misconduct or violated plant rules which could be related to their terminations, appropriate nota- tions would appear on their records, and that the absence of such notations is proof that such acts were not committed. During examination of the officials most responsible for the interpre- tation and application of the Respondent's termination policy, the' General Counsel sought to elicit from them information which would have revealed the existence or nonexistence of valid reasons under that policy for the termination and disqualification of the discrim- inatees for reemployment. Among the discriminatees are 37 who were classified "A" with "unqualified" given as the reason for leaving. When asked by the General Counsel for the meaning of this term, Fleischmann, on the advice of the Respondent's counsel, in disregard of the Trial Examiner's ruling and direction to answer, refused to answer. It was only after the General Counsel obtained an order from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania ordering him to answer, that Fleischmann undertook to do so. He thereupon testified that "unqualified" meant "not qualified for future employment." Through other questioning of this witness by the General Counsel it was developed that the term did not mean incompetent. Superintendent Good, after testifying that former employees dis- charged for cause may not be reemployed, was asked by the General Counsel whether any of the discriminatees had actually been dis- charged for cause. On the advice of Respondent's counsel and against the ruling and direction of the Trial Examiner, the witness refused 1356 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD to answer. Likewise, Good refused to answer the General Counsel's question as to why none of the discriminatees who had formerly worked under him in the foundry had been reemployed. Kline, the assistant machine shop superintendent in charge of labor relations, was questioned by the General Counsel as to the basis for the terminations occurring after the strike, but refused to answer on the advice of Respondent's counsel although directed to do so by the Trial Examiner. Questioned again as to whether any of these terminations were for economic reasons, Kline once more refused to answer on the advice of counsel in defiance of the Trial Examiner's direction. We attach particular significance to these refusals to testify. The information sought from these witnesses was peculiarly within their knowledge, for by their own testimony the 1947 terminations were preceded by high level meetings of machine shop and foundry super- visors and management officials during which the decision was made to terminate the strikers who had not been recalled. Moreover, be- cause of their official duties and responsibilities, they were unquestion- ably conversant with the facts sought from them. These facts were vitally related to the defense interposed by the Respondent, namely that its refusal to employ the discriminatees after March 8, 1948, was in furtherance of a nondiscriminatory reemployment policy. Their refusal to disclose such facts in their possession, which go to the very heart of the Respondent's defense, convinces us that these facts were deliberately withheld by the Respondent because their production at the hearing would have been detrimental to its interest. We conclude from all the evidence, that in terminating the dis- criminatees in September and October 1947, the Respondent did not apply objective criteria established by it under any preexisting termi- nation policy. On the other hand, we find that the terminations were administered in an arbitrary manner without regard to such company policy as appears to have existed, and that under such policy, no reason existed which compelled the disqualification of the discrim- inatees for reemployment 23 The Respondent having nevertheless raised its alleged policy to bar their reemployment, we find that the motivation for this action was the desire to exclude the discrim- 23 The Respondent contends that because the discriminatees failed to file charges within 6 months from the date of their discharges it must be presumed that the discharges were valid , and hence for cause . Granting that a remedy was no longer available under the Act based upon a claim of unlawful discharges because of the failure to file timely charges, it does not follow that the reasons for the discharges were thereby changed. Reasons for discharge , which do not exist when they are effected, do not spring into being because the discharged employees permit their remedy to lapse. TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1357 inatees from its employ because of their past union and concerted activities. In so finding we rely upon the evidence revealing the Respondent's knowledge of their strike activities when they applied for employment, the unlawful interrogation and comment by Fleisch- mann in March 1948 to certain discriminatees who applied for em- ployment manifesting the Respondent's hostility toward them for their past union and concerted activities, the Respondent's refusal to employ the discriminatees despite their continued application for work and the existence of abundant jobs for which they were quali- fied, the absence of any valid reason under the Respondent's alleged termination policy which precluded their employment, and the spu- rious explanation offered by the Respondent for its refusal to employ them. We are satisfied that the foregoing facts and circumstances suffi- ciently expose the Respondent's motivation for its refusal to employ the discriminatees. The true reasons for this conduct become even more evident when viewed against the background of events which occurred before March 8, 1948 24 The gathering of information dur- ing the strike as to the identity of the pickets, the statements of Flei- schmann and Rentz revealing the Respondent's unwillingness to recall or reinstate the discriminatees during and after the strike because of their strike activities, the unexplained precipitate termination of the discriminatees despite their written expression of their desire to return to work, and their termination at a time when the Respondent was hiring new employees to fill jobs for which many of the discrim- inatees were qualified, convinces us that the Respondent had, before March 8, 1948, established a policy aimed at excluding the discrimi- natees from its plant because of their past union and concerted activi- ties. The Respondent's refusal to employ the discriminatees, as al- leged in the complaint, was, in our opinion, the unlawful application of this policy. In reaching this conclusion with respect to all the discriminatees we overrule the Trial Examiner's dismissal of the complaint as to Arthur J. Bordner and Earl G. Detweiler. In dismissing the complaint as to them, the Trial Examiner indicated that Bordner had applied to the Respondent for employment on March 7, 1948, and Detweiler had applied on February 7, 1948. Each application thus was submitted before March 8, 1948, the cut-off date for the 6-month limitation period "Our consideration of such evidence is not to be taken as a finding that the Resppndent committed an unfair labor practice before March 8, 1948; in evaluating this evidence we are merely endeavoring to clarify and impart meaning to events which occurred after March 8, 1948. 1358 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD preceding the filing of the first charge 25 The Trial Examiner was apparently influenced by the mistaken view that the discrimination against Bordner and Detweiler had occurred when they had applied for employment, and that by failing to file charges within 6 months thereafter their remedies were extinguished by Section 10 (b) of the Act. What the Trial Examiner overlooked is that the discrimination occurred when jobs became available for which the discriminatees were qualified and which the Respondent refused to offer to them for dis- criminatory reasons. As noted above, suitable job vacancies were available between May 10 and September 20, 1948, for which Bordner was qualified, and vacancies which Detweiler was qualified to fill occurred on September 27 and November 1, 1948. The acts of discrimination against them thus occurred on the dates when the Respondent filled the foregoing vacancies without first considering Bordner and Detweiler for em- ployment. Because these discriminatory acts were committed after March 8, 1948, the charge on which the complaint is based was timely with respect to them. The Trial Examiner should have so found. We find that by refusing to employ the discriminatees after March 8, 1948, the Respondent violated Section 8 (a) (3) and 8 (a) (1) of the Act 26 0 The Trial Examiner concluded that the 6 -month limitation period of Section 10 (b) of the Act began to run with respect to all the allegations of discrimination in the complaint on March 8 , 1 948, 6 months before the filing date of the first charge . We concur in this conclusion for, under the rule enunciated in Cathey Lumber Company , 86 NLRB 157, enf. 185 F 2d 1021 (C A 5) (Board 's order recently set aside for other reasons ), the com- plaint may properly enlarge upon the charge on which it is based by the inclusion of the names of persons discriminated against who were not listed in the charge, and this may be accomplished without amending the charge . As the complaint in this case could have issued without regard to the second and third charges, filed July 2, 1949 , and January 12, 1950, respectively , these latter charges were mere surplusage and of value only in that they served notice of charges of discrimination in addition to those specified in the first charge. Thus , although Bordner's name appears only on the charge filed January 12, 1950, the complaint was issued as to him based on the allegations of the first charge of September 8, 1948. Similarly, the complaint as to other discriminatees who, like Bordner, are named only on the January 12 , 1950, charge , is regarded as having been based on the September 8, 1948, charge . The fact that the discriminatory conduct against several of these discriminatees thus occurred after the filing date of the charge does not, as the Respondent contends , impair the validity of the charge or the complaint on which it is based. Once the Board's jurisdiction is properly invoked by the timely filing and service of a charge , any unfair labor practice thereafter committed by a respondent and uncovered while the charge is being investigated becomes cognizable by the Board and may be included in the complaint . See Ferro Stamping and Manufacturing Co., 93 NLRB 1459. 20 As urged by the Respondent , we have duly considered its contention that evidence indi- cating lack of union hostility be regarded as a factor against a finding of discrimination. We do not agree , however, that such evidence is totally lacking in this case for the unlaw- ful 8 ( a) (1) comment by Fleischmann to Bernard C. A. Maurer , adverted to herein, reflects such hostility . In any event , we are satisfied that the Respondent , by refusing to employ the discriminatees as shown above, has encroached upon their statutorily pro- tected rights . It is immaterial to a finding that the law was thereby violated that the Respondent's conduct may not have been motivated by union hostility . Nashville Corpora- tion and Avco Manufacturing Corporation , 94 NLRB 1298; Cyril de Cordova & Bro., 91 NLRB 1121 ; Republic Aviation Corporation v. N. L. R. B., 324 U. S. 793, 797; N. L. R. B. v. Gluek Brewing Co., 144 F. 2d 847, 854 ( C. A. 8). Consideration has also been given to the Respondent's contention that the recall to work after the strike of many former strikers disproves the existence of a discriminatory motive TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1359 As to Paul H. Gassert whose discharge on August 4, 1947, was -incidental to the work stoppage on August 1 by the employees of department 53, the evidence discloses that he picketed throughout the strike. When the strikers capitulated on September 3 he applied .at the employment office for his job although, unlike the other discrim- inatees, he did not then sign the register. On March 24, 1948, he visited the Respondent's employment office and requested employment. This time he signed the register. Although the Respondent thereafter -filled several jobs for which Gassert was qualified, it has steadfastly refused to employ him. The Respondent's explanation for such re- fusal is the same as that raised in connection with the refusal to employ the other discriminatees, namely, that Gassert was discharged under conditions rendering him ineligible for reemployment according to the above-described company plan. Gassert's personnel record shows that upon termination he had been classified "A" with "insubordination" designated as the reason for leaving. As a matter of first impression it would appear that Gas- sert's case is distinguishable from those of the other discriminatees, none of whom, as we have indicated, was terminated for a reason which compelled disqualification for reemployment. Insubordination is a common ground for a discharge for cause, and, according to the Respondent's termination policy, precludes reemployment. We are satisfied, however, that Gassert was not discharged for a cause within the common meaning of that term and as it was contemplated by the Respondent's policy. The work stoppage on August 1, 1947, was prearranged by the employees of department 53 who sought by this action to register a grievance protest with the Respondent. At 1: 15 p. m. the employees shut down their machines and congregated on the fifth floor of the plant building. When ordered by their foreman to resume work they refused, informing him that they were not striking but were merely staging a protest which they wished to bring to the attention of some- one with authority. The foreman thereupon communicated with his superiors and called Gassert to the telephone. Gassert was instructed by his communicant to get the employees back to work but was unable to do so. Two other telephone conversations ensued between Gassert for the refusal to employ the discriminatees . We have weighed this circumstance along with all the other factors in this case, and are nevertheless convinced that the evidence preponderates in favor of the conclusion we have reached. The Act forbids an employer from discriminating against any of his employees , and he is not excused from the conse- quences of his conduct merely by showing he knowingly refrained from discriminating against others. Pennwoven, Inc, supra ; The Toledo Desk and Future Company, 65 NLRB 1086; Stewart-Warner Corporation , 55 NLRB 593, 610. The Respondent' s contention that the complaint should be dismissed as to all persons , other than Gassert , named in the charge filed September 8, 1948, on the ground that Gassert lacked authority to sign and file the charge on their behalf is without merit. No showing of authority to make the charge is necessary . The Standard Lime and Stone Company, 95 NLRB 628; Wilson f Company, Inc., 31 NLRB 440, enf. 126 F. 2d 114 ( C. A. 7), certiorari denied, 316 U. S. 699. 1360 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD and a person in either the employment office or in Superintendent Kaul's office. On one occasion an ultimatum was served on Gassert to get the employees back to work and to report to the employment or superintendent's office to discuss the situation within 10 minutes or be discharged. On another occasion he was ordered to report to Super- intendent Kaul on the second floor. These directives were relayed by Gassert to the employees who refused to return to work and forbade him to go alone to the superintendent, but expressed their willingness to send a union committee to confer with Kaul. This offer was turned down by Kaul who insisted that Gassert report to him alone. Gassert, heeding the dictates of his fellow employees, remained with them. At about 4 p. in. the employees departed from the plant without having resumed work. Gassert remained in the plant until quitting time, 5 p. in., and also left without having gone back to work. As noted herein Gassert was thereafter discharged and the other employees were laid off for several days. The Respondent took the position at the hearing and in its brief that the employees had engaged in a sit-down strike, and that Gassert's refusal to comply with Superintendent Kaul's request to report to him constituted insubordination which warranted his discharge with dis- qualification for reemployment. We disagree with these views. Ac- cording to all the relevant evidence the work stoppage was staged in an orderly manner without any violence, threats of violence, or inter- ference with the Respondent's use of its premises. As a means for registering a grievance protest, the method chosen by the employees was concerted activity protected by the Act, and Gassert's participa- tion with his fellow employees was equally protected. Nor could his refusal to report alone in behalf of the employees to Superintendent Kaul when so ordered rightfully have been regarded as insubordination beyond the protection of the Act. While Gassert testified as to the existence of a temporary grievance procedure under which the departmental stewards were to present grievances to super- visory officials in the first step of that procedure, the record shows that no formal contract had yet been signed or agreed upon by the Union and the Respondent; nor is there anything in the record which amply describes the terms, operation, or binding effect of the temporary grievance procedure on the parties. We may reasonably conjecture that under the procedure then existing Gassert's mandatory duties as steward terminated when the head foreman, Vogel, was notified that the protest was staged to bring employee demands to the attention of someone with authority; and that the procedure did not contemplate that in situations involving a general work stoppage the steward was to proceed as if he were processing an individual employee grievance in the usual manner. In effect, we have no evidence before us of an agreement supporting the Respondent's view that Gassert was obli- TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1361 gated in his capacity as a steward to discuss a work stoppage incident to a collective grievance with Superintendent Kaul. Under these circumstances, as said by the court in N.-L. R. B. v. Ross Gear Tool Co., 158 F. 2d 607 (C. A. 7), "neither an employer nor a union has any right, in the absence of an agreement relative thereto, to deter- mine who shall represent the other for the consideration of griev- ances." The employees had a right under the circumstances to desig- nate the union committee as their representative to deal with the Re- spondent on a matter relative to their collective demands. Because they forbade Gassert to represent them by himself, the Re- spondent had no right to order him to violate such instruction. Gas- sert's refusal to follow this order was not, therefore, the sort of wilful behavior typical of a discharge for cause such as a deliberate refusal to follow the work instructions of a superior, or an obstinate refusal to report to a superior 27 concerning a matter pertaining only to him- self. His conduct clearly was not the kind envisaged by Superin- tendents Kaul and Good in their delineation of conduct constituting cause for discharge with disqualification for reemployment under the Respondent's policy. We find, rather, that his discharge was not occasioned for a reason which rendered him ineligible for reemploy- ment under the Respondent's policy. In the absence of such disqualification, we find, as in the case of the other discriminatees, that the Respondent's refusal to employ Gassert subsequent to March 24, 1948, the date of his application for employment, when suitable job openings for which he was qualified were available, was because of his past union and concerted activities and therefore in violation of Section 8 (a) (3) and 8 (a) (1) of the Act. IV. THE EFFECT OF THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES UPON COMMERCE The activities of the Respondent set forth in Section III, above, occurring in connection with the operations of the Respondent de- scribed in Section I, above, have a close, intimate, and substantial relation to trade, traffic, and commerce among the several States and tend to lead to labor disputes burdening and obstructing commerce and the free flow of commerce. V. THE REMEDY Having found that the Respondent has engaged in certain unfair labor practices, we shall order it to cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action designed to effectuate the policies of the Act. It has been found that the Respondent discriminated in regard to the hire of the 85 discriminatees named in the appendix attached hereto. We shall, therefore, order the Respondent to offer each of 27 Cf. N. L. R. B. V. Rosa Gear d Tool Co., supra. 1362 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD them immediate employment with such seniority or other rights anti privileges as each would have enjoyed had each been employed on the dates when, absent the Respondent's discrimination against them, the Respondent would have employed them. We shall further order the Respondent to make them whole for any loss of pay each may have suffered as the result of the Respondent's discriminatory refusal to hire them from the respective dates of discrimination against the discriminatees to the dates when each is offered employment. The date from which back pay shall run in favor of each discriminates shall be determined upon compliance with this order, by fixing the date on which each would have been employed by the Respondent in accordance with nondiscriminatory hiring practices. In accordance with our practice, the period from the date of the Intermediate Report to the date of the Order herein will be excluded in computing the amount of back pay to which Arthur J. Bordner and Earl G. Detweiler are entitled, because of the Trial Examiner's recommendation that the complaint be dismissed as to them. Consistent with the Board's current policy of computing back pay,28 loss of pay shall be computed on the basis of each separate calendar quarter or portion thereof during the period from the Respondent's discriminatory action to the date of a proper offer of employment. The quarterly periods, hereinafter called "quarters," shall begin with the first day of January, April, July, and October. Loss of pay shall be determined by deducting from a sum equal to that which these employees would normally have earned for each quarter or portion thereof, their net earnings'29 if any, in other employment during that period. Earnings in one particular quarter shall have no effect upon the back-pay liability for any other quarter. We shall also order the Respondent to make available to the Board, upon request, payroll and other records to facilitate the checking of the amount of back pay due.3° The unfair labor practices committed by the Respondent, in our opinion, disclose a fixed purpose to defeat the attempts by its em- ployees at self-organization and its objectives. Because of the Re- spondent's unlawful conduct and its underlying purpose, we are con- vinced that the unfair labor practices found herein are potentially related to other unfair labor practices proscribed by the Act and that it danger of their commission in the future is to be anticipated from 21 F. W. Woolworth Co., 90 NLRB 289. 25 By "net earnings " is meant earnings less expenses such as for transportation, room, and board incurred by an employee in connection with obtaining work and and working elsewhere which would not have been incurred but for the unlawful discrimination and con- sequent necessity of seeking employment elsewhere Crossett Lumber Company, 8 NLRB 440 Monies received for work performed upon Federal , State, county, municipal , or other work-relief projects shall be considered as earnings Republic Steel Corporation v. N.. L. R B, 311 U S 7. 30 F. W. Woolworth Co , supra TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1363 the-Respondent's past conduct. The preventive purpose of the Act will be thwarted unless our order is coextensive with the threat. In order, therefore, to make effective the interdependent guarantees of Section 7 and thus to effectuate the policies of the Act, we shall order that the Respondent cease and desist from infringing in any manner upon the rights guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act. Upon the foregoing findings of fact, and upon the entire record in the case, the Board makes the following : CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. United Steel Workers of America, C. I. 0., is a labor organiza- tion within the meaning of Section 2 (5) of the Act. 2. By interfering with, restraining, and coercing its employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act, the Respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (a) (1) of the Act. 3. By discriminating in regard to the hire and tenure of employ- ment of the persons named in the Appendix, attached hereto, the Respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act. 4. The Respondent has not engaged in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act in regard to the hire and tenure of employment of George Gehring. 5. The Respondent has not interfered with or attempted to interfere with the hire or tenure of employment by other employers of persons named in the complaint because of their interest in, loyalty to, and concerted activities in behalf of the Union in violation of Section 8 (a) (3) and 8 (a) (1) of the Act. 6. The aforesaid unfair labor practices are unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. Order Upon the entire record in the case, and pursuant to Section 10 (c) of the Natioial Labor Relations Act, the National Labor Relations Board hereby orders that the Respondent, Textile Machine Works, Inc., Wyomissing, Pennsylvania, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall: 1. Cease and desist from : (a) Discouraging membership in United Steel Workers of Amer- ica, C. I. 0., or in any other labor organization of its employees, by discriminating in regard to hire of employees. (b) Interrogating applicants for employment concerning their union or protected concerted activities, and informing them that they will be denied employment because of their union or protected con- certed activities. 1364 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD (c) In any other manner interfering with, restraining, or coercing its employees in the exercise of the right to self-organization, to form labor organizations, to join or assist United Steel Workers of America, C. I. 0., or any other labor organization, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in any other concerted activities for the purposes of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection or to refrain from any or all such activities, except to the extent that such right may be affected by an agreement requiring membership in a labor organization as a condi- tion of employment as authorized in Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action which the Board finds will effectuate the policies of the Act : (a) Offer to each of the persons named in the Appendix, attached hereto, immediate employment with such seniority or other rights and privileges as each would have enjoyed had each been employed on the dates when, absent the Respondent's discrimination against them, the Respondent would have employed them in accordance with its nondis- criminatory hiring practices. (b) Make whole the persons named in the Appendix, attached hereto, in the manner set forth above in Section V entitled "The Remedy," for any loss of pay each may have suffered as a result of the Respondent's discrimination against him. (c) Upon request, make available to the,Board or its agents for examination and copying all payroll records, social security payment records, time cards, personnel records and reports, and all other rec- ords necessary to analyze the amount of back pay due and the right of employment under the terms of this Order. (d) Post at its plant in Wyomissing, Pennsylvania, copies of the notice attached hereto and marked "Appendix." 31 Copies of said notice, to be furnished by the Regional Director for the Fourth Region, shall, after being duly signed by a representative of the Respondent, be posted by it immediately upon receipt thereof, and maintained by it for sixty (60) consecutive days thereafter in conspicuous places where notices to employees are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by the Respondent to insure that said notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. (e) Notify the Regional Director for the Fourth Region in writing, within ten (10) days from the date of this Order, what steps the Respondent has taken to comply herewith. AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the complaint be, and it hereby is, dismissed insofar as it alleges that it discriminated in regard to the hire and tenure of employment of George Gehring, and interfered ' In the event this Order is enforced by a Decree of the United States Court of Appeals, there shall be inserted before the words "A Decision and Order ," the words "A Decree of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing." 974176-52-vol. 96-87 TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC. 1365 with or attempted to interfere with the hire or tenure of employment by other employers of persons named in the complaint. Appendix NOTICE TO ALL EMPLOYEES Pursuant to a Decision and Order of the National Labor Relations Board and in order to effectuate the policies of the National Labor Relations Act, we hereby notify our employees that : WE WILL NOT discourage membership in UNITED STEEL WORKERS OF AMERICA, C. I. 0., or any other labor organization of our em- ployees, by discriminating in regard to hire of employees. WE WILL NOT interrogate applicants for employment concern- ing their union or protected concerted activities, and will not inform them that they will be denied employment because of their union or protected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT in any other manner interfere with, restrain, or coerce our employees in the exercise of their right to self-organi- zation, to form labor organizations, to join or assist UNITED STEEL WORKERS OF AMERICA, C. I. 0., or any other labor organi- zation, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, to engage in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection, or to refrain from any or all of such activities, except to the extent that such right may be affected by an agreement requiring mem- bership in a labor organization as a condition of employment, as authorized in Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act. WE WILL offer to the employees named below immediate and suitable employment with such seniority or other rights and privileges as each would have enjoyed but for the discrimination against them, and make them whole for any loss of pay suffered as a result of the discrimination : Aulenbach, John Chlebowski, Conrad Bauer, William G. Cieniewicz, Walter N. Beck, Clayton Clay, George Becker, Aaron Davis, Norman Berg, George H. Davis, Robert L. Bianca, Anthony Davis, Walter S. Bleiler, Paul W. Distasio, Charles Borden, George H. Dreher, Donald Bordner, Arthur J. Edinger, Harold R. Boyer, William C. Ernst, Harold S. Brubaker, Pauline Avola Fisher, Paul C. Burkhart, Herman O. Frees, Catherine M. Carabott, Angelo Gassert, Paul H. 974176-52-vol. 96-87 1366 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Grimm, Joseph Groff, Alpheus Gruber, Thomas C. Guistwite, Robert Haring, Leroy Hartranft, Russell J. Heist, Robert M. Hendricks, Albert O. Herzog, George F. Klein, Joseph Koch, Harry S. Kercher, Clarence Delcamp, William N. Dematt, Patsy Detweiler, Earl G. Majka, Philip Marko, John Marko, Joseph Matz, Lester Maurer, Bernard C. A. Mayer, Ferdinand J. Mengel, Mervin Miller, Norman E. Miller, William F. Mull, Harry O'Connell, James Pennypacker, Paul W. Pike, William H., Jr. Pietrowski, Anthony Polaha, Stephen W. Quaintance, Stella Race, Charles I. Robinson, James P. Roth, John A. Rupp, Elmer E. Savage , Stanley Krouse , Harry M. Leone, Samuel S. Lutz, George A. Scheipe, Leon W. Schweitzer, Clayton Shalter, Franklin Sheehan, George M. Slusser, Cletus R. Smith, Harvey H. Speicher, Cyrus W. Steiner, Harry-M. Stoyer, Marshall W. Strausser, John A. Swisher, Ralph W. Terefenko, Peter M. Tomeo, Angelo Troutman, Ralph E. Tsakeris , Stanley Undheim, William D. Valerio, William Warczyglowa, Clarence F. Weinrich, Walter W. Youse, Earnest A. All our employees are free to become or remain members of the afore-mentioned union, or any other labor organization, or to refrain from such activities except to the extent that such right may be af- fected by an agreement requiring membership in a labor organization as a condition of employment, as authorized in Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act. We will not discriminate in regard to hire or tenure of employment or any term or condition of employment against any employees because of membership in or activity on behalf of any such labor organization. Dated --------------- TEXTILE MACHINE WORKS, INC., Employer. By ----------------------------------- (Representative) (Title) This notice must remain posted for 60 days from the date hereof, and must not be altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation