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- January 2, 1933NATIONAL AFFAIRSMan of the Year: Franklin D. Roosevelt
-
-
-
- Scanning the dreary horizon of 1932 as it recedes into
- history, upon whom would the discerning eye of an alert U.S.
- citizen fix as Man of the Year?
-
- Beyond his own shores he would find no new name that had
- skyrocketed into world consciousness during the twelve-month.
- Mahatma Gandhi, 1930s Man of the Year, is still a prisoner of
- Britain in the Poona jail and his Indian followers are
- quiescent if not quiet. Pierre Laval, 1931's Man of the Year,
- was swept out of the premiership of France last February, is
- today only a Senator without portfolio. The May elections put
- Edouard Herriot into power for six months but fortnight ago he
- and his Ministry went crashing out on the issue of paying the
- U.S. War Debt.
-
- The year showed Neville Chamberlain, Chancellor of the
- Exchequer, to be Britain's strong man but he was not yet on
- top; Laborite Ramsay MacDonald continues to head the National
- (Conservative coalition) ministry. Prime Minister MacDonald,
- more than any other official participant, was given credit for
- the outcome of the Lausanne Conference in July but there have
- been other conferences, will doubtless be many more.
-
- In 1931 Adolf Hitler was Germany's rising star. In 1932 he
- and his Nazis slipped back to the tune of 2,000,000 lost votes.
- His thunder was largely stolen by General Kurt von Schleicher,
- the new Chancellor to whom many a German looks as Man of Next
- Year.
-
- Russia and Italy, one with its Stalin, the other with its
- Mussolini, rocked along through the year unchanged and
- unchanging under dictatorship.
-
- Turning back to his own country, the discerning citizen of
- the U.S. would find more promising material. Charles Augustus
- Lindbergh, 1927 Man of the Year, had become the Victim of the
- Year in 1932. For the loss of his son & namesake the nation had
- given him all its sympathy but to him went no plaudits for any
- new achievement. When in 1928 Walter P. Chrysler became Man of
- the Year his Manhattan office building was starting to rise as
- the world's tallest, his Chrysler Motors organized to vie with
- General Motors. Now the Chrysler Building is overtopped by the
- Empire State and the automobile industry is pinioned on the
- rock of hard times. The prestige of 1929's Man of the Year, Owen
- D. Young, world financier, friend to Samuel Insull, is still
- great but even he has produced no sovereign simple for
- prostrate business.
-
- Banker of the Year was certainly Winthrop Williams Aldrich
- who last week seemed about to succeed Albert Henry Wiggin as
- head of the great Chase National but his big achievements lay
- ahead of him. Scanning the realm of business the well-informed
- citizen would probably conclude that the biggest and boldest
- strides against the economic tide were those of Errett Lobban
- Cord who turned from highways to skyways in his restless effort
- to expand. The year proved that there was no such thing as a
- Depression- proof industry. Yet John Hartford's Great Atlantic
- & Pacific food stores, by holding the line, came closest to an
- exception.
-
- Most scientific citizens would award the title of Man of
- the Year to General Electric's Irving Langmuir who won this
- year's Nobel Prize for his surface chemistry. Yet Dr. Langmuir's
- work which earned the award was not confined to 1932. And ready
- to dispute such a title would be the friends of Dr. Arthur
- Holly Compton, 1927 Nobel Prize winner, who traveled 50,000 mi.
- in 1932 researching the cosmic ray.
-
- To the attention of ordinary citizens were brought during
- the year the findings of the Committee on the Costs of Medical
- Care rather than eminent accomplishments by individual
- physicians or surgeons.
-
- Sportsman of the Year was certainly Golfer Gene Sarazen
- who by winning both the British and U.S. open championships came
- as close as any professional can to Robert Tyre Jones Jr.'s
- record in 1930. Yet Sarazen flubbed the Professional
- Championship, did not even qualify. Josef Paul Cuckoschay (Jack
- Sharkey) of Boston retrieved the world's heavyweight boxing
- championship for the U.S. from Germany's Maximilian Adolf Otto
- Siegfried Schmeling in a bout that satisfied few patrons.
- All-around athlete of 1932 was Mildred ("Babe") Didrikson of
- Dallas who scored more individual points in the Olympics than
- any other participant. Last week Miss Didrikson turned
- professional.
-
- Play of the Year was Of Thee I sing, but George S.
- Kaufman, its author (with Morrie Ryskind), rarely works alone.
-
- Into the cinema firmament swam a new star to replace Garbo
- and Dietrich. Seasoned performers carried on competently rather
- than brilliantly.
-
- More people went to hear Lily Pons sing than heard any
- other 1932 soprano. But she was new, young, pretty.
-
- In the book world, Allan Nevins' Grover Cleveland took
- high rank among Presidential biographies and Historian James
- Truslow Adams (March of Democracy) held his grip on the popular
- mind. But the year produced non Main Street, no Bridge of San
- Luis Rey.
-
- The Man-of-the-Year-hunter could hardly fail to spot John
- Davison Rockefeller Jr. as Builder of the Year with Rockefeller
- Center.
-
- Fad of the Year: Technocracy, as preached by Howard Scott.
-
- The discerning citizen would not be satisfied with any of
- these specialists as Man of the Year. Looking to Washington he
- would see old familiar figures passing below the political
- horizon -- figures for whom 1932 meant defeat and exile. After
- four years of relentless effort unequaled by any man in the
- White House. Herbert Hoover remained a psychological product of
- 1928. Millions of citizens hoped that by some last-minute
- miracle he would turn out to be Man of the Year but more
- millions felt -- and voted -- otherwise.
-
- Alfred Samuel Smith had added nothing to his public
- stature by his display of bad temper following his defeat for
- the Democratic Presidential nomination. Throughout the year,
- along with Calvin Coolidge, he remained a distinguished private
- citizen.
-
- No new leader came out of the Senate and the old ones were
- either "lame ducks" or disgruntled individualists with a
- narrowing conception of public service. Borah stock was far
- below par.
-
- In the House the country for a few weeks thought it had a
- hero in Georgia's Crisp, sales tax advocate. But the riotous
- defeat of that legislation and the subsequent defeat of its
- sponsor for the Senate fogged the Crisp name. [Last week Mr.
- Crisp resigned from the Tariff Commission, to which President
- Hoover had appointed him as a "lame duck." Jan. 1 he becomes
- lobbyist for Savannah Sugar Corp.]
-
- Flashes in the Man-of-the-Year pan: Walter Waters,
- commander-in-chief of the Bonus Expeditionary Force and Milo
- Reno, leader of the Iowa farm strike.
-
- -- Two months ago, in a lively referendum from ocean to
- ocean, the people of the U.S. chose their own Man of the Year,
- and clearly the election of Franklin Delano Roosevelt to the
- Presidency was without equal elsewhere in the world as an
- individual accomplishment. To millions & millions of "forgotten
- men" he was a big-jawed, happy Messiah whose "new deal" would
- somehow put money into everybody's pocket. To himself, victory
- was the sweet reward of long years of careful planning,
- unremitting work.
-
- The story of Governor Roosevelt's rise to be Man of the
- Year and 32nd President of the U.S. is fresh in mind. Future
- historians describing it as a feat of political
- mountain-climbing will not fail to mention:
-
- -- How Franklin Roosevelt was the deadest of dead
- Democrats when defeated for the vice-presidency in 1920.
-
- -- How the following year an acute attack of
- poliomyelitis (infantile paralysis) left his muscles atrophied
- from the waist down.
-
- -- How he, a helpless cripple, was lifted to the rostrum
- of the Democratic convention at Madison Square Garden to
- nominate Alfred Emanuel Smith for the Presidency in 1924.
-
- -- How he discovered the mineralized waters of Warm
- Springs, Ga. as a cure for his infirmity in 1924.
-
- -- How a cane had replaced crutches when he again
- nominated Al Smith at Houston in 1928.
-
- -- How Smith induced him to accept nomination for Governor
- of New York in 1928.
-
- -- How he was first hailed as "our next President" by
- friendly Georgians at Warm Springs following his 1928 State
- election.
-
- -- How he was re-elected Governor by the biggest majority
- on record in 1930.
-
- -- How he made James Aloysius Farley his pre-convention
- manager and sent him out scouting for Presidential delegates in
- 1931.
-
- -- How he pretended he was not a White House candidate in
- 1931.
-
- -- How he was examined by eminent physicians in 1931 and
- publicly pronounced "sound in all respects."
-
- -- How, last January, he first announced his candidacy in
- time for the North Dakota primary.
-
- -- How he, already an Elk, Odd Fellow, 32nd degree Mason
- and joiner of a score more clubs and societies, joined the
- Improved Order of Red Man and the Tall Cedars of Lebanon in
- 1930, the American Philatelic Society and the Academie
- Diplomatique Internationale in 1931, etc. etc., the Maccabees
- last week.
-
- -- How, after winning the nomination last July on the
- fourth ballot, he dramatically flew to Chicago to address the
- convention.
-
- -- How he campaigned 12,000 mi. during September and
- October.
-
- -- How he was elected Nov. 8 by 22,813,786 votes to
- Hoover's 15,759,266.
-
- Man ofthe Year Roosevelt's climb to the Presidency
- represented a physical triumph of the first order. For a decade
- he had fought a dogged fight to regain control over his
- paralyzed legs. Today the President-elect can walk in his
- braces, without crutch, stick, or assisting arm, about 15 steps.
- Declares his wife: "If the paralysis couldn't kill him, I guess
- the Presidency won't." The Man of the Year's attitude toward his
- affliction is one of gallant unconcern. After his November
- election he went to Warm Springs where he addressed others there
- taking the cure: "We've shown that we people here have
- determined to get over the small physical handicaps which after
- all don't amount to a hill of beans."
-
- Governor Roosevelt's political comeback after 1920
- involved efforts even greater, because their object was less
- tangible, than his conquest of his lame legs. Years ago Louis
- McHenry Howe, his friend and adviser, had inoculated him with
- the White House virus. His election and re-election as Governor
- re-awakened the Presidential fever, which burned with
- increasingly intensity as the months at Albany wore successfully
- on and Herbert Hoover's prestige sank at Washington. Forgotten
- now is the fact that two years ago some of Franklin Roosevelt's
- oldest friends were deploring the evident, consuming degree of
- ambition as almost indecent. Such ambition is the mainspring of
- most political candidacies. Certainly no man without it could
- have become the third Democratic President since the Civil War.
- Translated from ambition to realization, the "indecent" passion
- becomes heroic.
-
- After his 1930 re-election Governor Roosevelt got out and
- humped himself for the national nomination. Typical were his
- activities during June 1931: 1) attendance at the Governors'
- Conference at French Lick, Ind. where he worked into a non-
- partisan speech a full-length campaign platform which stole the
- headlines; 2) a stop-over in Ohio, "Mother of Presidents," to
- see Governor White, James Middleton Cox and the local
- Democratic bosses; 3) a trip to Manchester, Mass. to call on
- Col. Edward Mandell House whose support he enlisted. In July he
- appeared at the Charlottesville (Va.) Institute of Public
- Affairs, held court. In August he dramatized his disagreement
- with President Hoover on St. Lawrence waterpower. In February
- 1932 he jettisoned the League of Nations as a party encumbrance.
- In April he was not above talking partisan politics over the
- Lucky Strike radio hour.
-
- Yet while his ambition was burning hottest, he kept his
- head cool and clear enough to make no rash mistakes. He
- listened carefully to the astute Colonels Howe & House. He
- trusted hustling Jim Farley to line up the important West and
- Midwest. He appealed to and for the Forgotten Man without going
- so far off the deep end of demagoguery that he could not regain
- his balance among potent conservatives.
-
- Most Men of the Year complete their memorable achievement
- between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31. The Chrysler Building stands, not
- only completed but occupied. The Young Plan, despite subsequent
- events, remains world history. But Colonel Lindbergh after his
- flight was required to serve the nation year after year as its
- No. 1 Hero -- a role which set in motion a train of
- circumstances ending in tragedy the windy night of March 1 at
- Hopewell, N.J. and, as Lindbergh had, Man of the Year Roosevelt
- has his greater job ahead of him. Will he make good in the White
- House? The country is only too ready to hope so. Yet in spite
- of his campaign utterances and the activities of his "brain
- trust," by last week President-elect Roosevelt had apparently
- only begun to arrive at his answers for the problems of 1933.
- Some of the problems and their present status:
-
- Cabinet. Yet to be selected were the ten men who can make
- or break ad administration. The President-elect planned to do
- his choosing at Warm Springs during January.
-
- War Debts. Beyond flat refusal to follow the Hoover
- commission method his specific remedies for this international
- complexity remain unknown.
-
- Farm Relief. Yet to be worked out in detail are Domestic
- Allotment and Mortgage Relief.
-
- Economy. Promised was a billion-dollar cut. Will a member
- of three American Legion posts go hammer-&-tongs after the
- veterans?
-
- Tariff. Many a manufacturer wishes he knew the Roosevelt
- mind on rate cuts.
-
- Taxation. The 32nd President has yet to declare himself on
- the Sales Tax or any other form of new taxation to balance the
- Budget. [Last week House Ways & Means Chairman Collier
- announced: "In order to balance the budget at this session I'll
- support the sales tax as a last resort. I want the new
- administration to have a clear sheet March 4."] Last week he was
- considering a revolutionary proposal to tax corporate surpluses,
- now estimated at $4,000,000,000. Such a tax, it was argued,
- would squeeze much water out of inflated capital structure,
- discourage corporate hoarding.
-
- Prohibition. The intricacies of keeping the Repeal pledge
- have yet to be developed.
-
- A year from now the U.S. electorate will have a much more
- real idea of the worth of its 1932 Man of the Year.
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