Mr. Fehrenbach. No.

Mr. Griffin. Well now, you have indicated you didn’t think Sam Jaffe was a Communist?

Mr. Fehrenbach. Well, Sam Jaffe.

Mr. Griffin. How about his son-in-law, Max Pritcher? Do you have any doubts about his being a Communist?

Mr. Fehrenbach. No; I don’t.

Mr. Griffin. What makes you think he was a Communist?

Mr. Fehrenbach. Because he was always there at the meetings; whenever they were going to have a meeting upstairs why he was always there. They would all be up there in the afternoon and they would talk about being at the meeting at night.

Mr. Griffin. How many people attended the meetings that you are talking about?

Mr. Fehrenbach. I don’t know; because the days or the evenings that they had their meeting, I had never been in the building, but I would judge there must have been quite a few from the list of names that I picked up.

Mr. Griffin. You never attended any of those meetings; did you?