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gone—Mrs. Dawson, the high school principal who comes in on her day off to run the polling place at her school and the tough-talking union official in “Deadline for Action” who cynically says, “Big Business is not giving up. It’s starting a new offensive . . . Where are we going? With this Congress re-elected we’ll have a Company Country, with Company Towns, Company Stores and Company discrimination. We’ll have unemployment at home and ultimately—WAR abroad.” Where are people like him now that we need them? In the end Don and Clare come out of their trance (sort of), “And as these impressions came to consciousness, you could recognize and feel right about them, couldn’t you?” the off-screen voice asks, “I feel just like I always did!” answers Don. Maybe that’s the problem. gone—Mrs. Dawson, the high school principal who comes in on her day off to run the polling place at her school and the tough-talking union official in “Deadline for Action” who cynically says, “Big Business is not giving up. It’s starting a new offensive . . . Where are we going? With this Congress re-elected we’ll have a Company Country, with Company Towns, Company Stores and Company discrimination. We’ll have unemployment at home and ultimately—WAR abroad.” Where are people like him now that we need them? In the end Don and Clare come out of their trance (sort of), “And as these impressions came to consciousness, you could recognize and feel right about them, couldn’t you?”