Sidney Fine's Sit-down Sit-down is a historical non-fiction book. It represents Flint nationwide from 1936 to 1937 and a strike at the factory of General Motors. The author of this book is Sidney Fine. In this report, I learn what I learned from the fight between the company and the union. It was a GM strike from 1936 to 1937 when I was seated. The strike mainly concerned the right for workers to represent themselves through collective bargaining.
Sitney's Sidney Fine explains what happened. Dedicated T-shirts organize entertainment, information, courses, postal service, health. The court was founded to deal with people who do not wash dishes, throw out garbage, smoking at places where alcohol is banned or in wine. "Punishment" includes additional duties and the final punishment is to expel plants. The restaurant owner on the other side of the street prepared three meals a day for 2000 transfers a day. Postgraduate students at the University of Michigan, such as Congressional procedures, speaking in public, sports history of workers, have journalism and creative writing programs. There was a ban, but 5,000 military workers marched around the factory and did not try to force the ban. Police attacked with tear gas and workers fired back at firefighters. Thirteen strikers were shot dead, but the police returned in a hurry.
The response of the country to the Detroit riot is incredibly hopeless. As social historian Sydney Fine pointed out, the next day the media in the eastern part came into condolence. "The Detroit has always been an example of wisdom and courage to deal with the rule of a large industrial city, I regret that the New York Times is more than any other big city," Washington Post said. But for the inhabitants of Detroit there are signs. The murder rate of this city has grown dramatically over the last decade. As historian Thomas Sugar wrote by 1967, Detroit actually passed its peak and is no longer "Detroit Dynamics" or "Democratic Armory". Twenty years have passed since demanding Detroit to help the United States win the World War II. A large factory for the production of weapons and military vehicles is now abolished