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- <text id=93HT1417>
- <title>
- Man of Year 1959: Dwight D. Eisenhower
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Man of the Year
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 4, 1960
- Man of the Year
- Dwight D. Eisenhower
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>"I saw close at hand the faces of millions..." Dwight Eisenhower
- in his homecoming speech.
- </p>
- <p> The faces of people reflected the biggest news about the
- world in 1959.
- </p>
- <p> The faces belonged to the thousands of thousands who massed
- along the streets of Ankara, Karachi, Kabul and New Delhi, of
- Athens, Madrid and Casablanca. The faces were of all shapes and
- shades. But as they turned toward the smiling, pink-cheeked man
- who had come among them, they held in common a look--a look
- of thirsting for the good things that the modern world seemed
- to promise.
- </p>
- <p> That thirsting, as many of their slogans and leaders made
- clear, was less for the things themselves than for the kind of
- life where the good things could be attained. In 1959, after
- years of hostile Communist propaganda, spectacular Russian
- successes in space, threats of missiles and atomic war, the
- throngs of Europe, Asia and Africa cast a durable vote for
- freedom and liberty. The faces were turned to the U.S. and to
- the man who had become the nation's image in one of the grand
- plebiscites of history--Dwight David Eisenhower, President of
- the U.S. and Man of the Year.
- </p>
- <p> Names Making News. Behind Eisenhower's in 1959 came other
- names familiar to the cold war, and the news they made was
- dramatic evidence of freedom's vital toughness on many fronts.
- Britain's Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, challenger for Man
- of the Year, led his Conservative Party to a crushing third
- straight election victory, an unprecedented feat; in booming
- Britain his triumph buried the socialist dogma of the 59-year-
- old Labor Party as an effective political force. Under Konrad
- Adenauer, Man of the Year in 1953, the resurgent economic
- strength of free Germany posed such intolerable comparisons that
- Communism tripped from threat to entreaty in its attempt to
- reduce German influence. France's Charles de Gaulle, Man of the
- Year in 1958, set himself to the task of restoring French pride,
- tried to bind up the debilitating wounds of Algeria, chipped
- away at NATO's supranational foundations; but the problems
- raised by De Gaulle's France were at least and at last those of
- national purpose, not political paralysis. Just a hot breath
- away from the Red Chinese dragon, Japan's premier Nobusuke
- Kishi, Man of the Year in the Far East, opted for conservatism,
- free enterprise and closer ties with the U.S., won a thumping
- victory in elections for the upper house of the Diet, routed
- Socialists who campaigned for an alliance with Peking and
- Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> Of all foreign leaders the one who did most to prove
- freedom strong--by confronting it with its sternest tests--was
- the Soviet Union's Nikita Khrushchev. In 1957 Khrushchev's
- Sputniks made him Man of the Year. In 1959 he scored even
- greater successes in space; on Jan. 2 the U.S.S.R. sent a 3,245-
- lb. package into sun orbit as the first man-made planet; eight
- months later, a Soviet rocket smacked the face of the moon and
- on Oct. 4, two years to the day after Sputnik I, the Russians
- launched a rocket that passed around and photographed the moon's
- hidden far side.
- </p>
- <p> Khrushchev's space challenge was underrated from the
- beginning by the U.S.--and it still is. But the very show of
- technical prowess helped prove how the West's pundits had
- underrated the appeal of independence and liberty in the so-
- called battle for men's minds. To millions of the world's
- uncommitted peoples, Communism's ability to master space was
- less impressive than its inability to master its own nature--and
- the symbol of Communism in 1959 was not that of Red rockets
- reaching for stars, but of Red China reaching brutally into
- Tibet and India.
- </p>
- <p> Against that abhorrent spectacle, and the memories of
- Hungary and other Communist conquests, the U.S. example of
- liberty under law, of self-restraint imposed by what Jefferson
- called "a decent respect to the opinions of mankind," of
- willingness to use strength to protect independence stood out
- as powerful assets. Dwight Eisenhower has been shaped by those
- principles--and in 1959, carrying a message of peace with
- freedom to three far continents, he represented them to the
- world as could no one else.
- </p>
- <p> "We Can Trust Him." Last week, returned from his journey
- to Europe, Asia and Africa, Eisenhower towered as the world's
- best-known, best-liked citizen. His trip had been one of
- breathtaking excitement, high point of a bold venture into
- personal diplomacy. How that venture came about and developed
- was one of the year's most fascinating behind-the-scenes
- stories. But its real meaning lay in an understanding of Ike the
- Man and Eisenhower the President.
- </p>
- <p> At 60, closing out the seventh year of a presidency marked
- by three major illnesses, Dwight Eisenhower had never looked
- better. His color was high, his face firm (a slight puffiness
- around the eyes was the most visible sign of his age), and there
- was spring to his step (he sometimes startled visitors by
- bounding up stairs two at a time). On his trip he stood
- bareheaded in the Italian rain (it was just after greeting the
- King of Morocco in foul Washington weather that he suffered a
- stroke in 1957), stood for more than 100 miles while riding
- through the streets of eleven countries, came out of it all with
- less apparent fatigue than most of those who accompanied him.
- </p>
- <p> His popularity, as marked last week by his Gallup rating,
- is a U.S. phenomenon. Anyone seeking specific reasons why the
- people like Ike will get answers no more complicated than "he's
- a good (or decent, or honest) man," or "we can trust him," or
- "he does his best." But Dwight Eisenhower is not that simply
- explained, and there are contradictions in his public image and
- private personality. Although he can tie words into knots ("I
- do say this: I may have, but I am not saying I didn't, but I
- don't believe I have. I do say this...") he has been vastly
- successful in making himself understood. His warm grin is known
- around the earth, but in private his temper can flare with
- crackling, barracks-room fluency. He seems boundlessly friendly
- and outgiving, but White House insiders have long since grown
- used to having him pass in the halls without a nod or a word.
- He has seen and been seen by more crowds than any other man of
- his time, but in fact he dislikes crowds and is uncomfortable
- with them.
- </p>
- <p> "The Glory of America." Ike's faults are those that his
- countrymen can share and understand, and in his virtues he is
- more than anything else a repository of traditional U.S. values
- derived from his boyhood in Abilene, Kans., instilled in him by
- his fundamentalist parents, drilled into him at West Point,
- tempered by wartime command, applied to the awesome job of the
- presidency and expanded to meet the challenges of the cold war.
- </p>
- <p> Returning to Abilene in 1952, Dwight Eisenhower spoke of
- his mother and father. "They were frugal," he said, "possibly
- of necessity, because I have found out in later years that we
- were very poor. But the glory of America is that we didn't know
- it then." In a 1959 speech, he again drew on his memories, going
- back to his days as an Army subaltern, newly married to Mamie
- Geneva Doud, when he scrimped to buy a tiny insurance policy.
- "Well," he said, "I gave up smoking readymade cigarettes and
- went to Bull Durham and the papers. (Back on three packs a day
- of readymades when he was Army Chief of Staff, Ike abruptly gave
- up smoking in 1947, told a friend his method was simple: "Just
- don't feel sorry for yourself.") I had to make a great many
- sacrifices...Yet I still think of the fun we had in working
- for our own future."
- </p>
- <p> Fiscal responsibility was more than a nostalgic, negative
- notion with Ike. He saw it as the basis of a positive
- philosophy of government. Against the background of the New and
- Fair Deals, with the momentum toward more Government spending
- and control, Ike's philosophy was as radical as it was
- conservative. He explained it best in a little-noticed 1959
- speech to representatives of the National Rural Electric
- Cooperative Association, gathered in Washington to holler it up
- for continued Government subsidy of rural electrification.
- </p>
- <p> "Government, at all levels, has certain clear obligations
- to you and me," said he to a hostile audience. "It owes us
- security from external attack, protection of our person and
- property, protection in the exercise of all the individual
- rights guaranteed by our Constitution." Government may also help
- out "particular groups" with special aid or subsidy. But the
- reason for help or subsidy "is not to give one group of citizens
- special privilege or undeserved advantage. Rather it is to see
- that equality of opportunity is not withheld from the citizen
- through no fault of his own." The groups for which the
- Government has made special provision must "use that help
- responsibly and constructively." The aim should be to rise as
- swiftly as possible above public aid and "re-establish speedily
- our own equality of opportunity, and so share proportionally in
- the productivity of our economy."
- </p>
- <p> The Essential Cut. Taking his oath of office in 1953,
- Eisenhower moved swiftly to liberate the U.S. economy from the
- obsolete wartime controls that still hobbled it. Fair Deal
- economists issued dark warnings, but the economy whooshed off
- toward new highs. The doom criers were again out full force in
- the worrisome days of Recession Year 1958 when Eisenhower
- refused to use Government's heavy thumb for pushing the panacea
- buttons of subsidy and deficit spending.
- </p>
- <p> Also to Eisenhower, a sound U.S. economy (I know what I am
- for. I am for a sound dollar") was the bedrock for construction
- of a free-world economic system. "Dollars and security," said
- Ike, "are not separable." Again: "I say that a balanced budget
- in the long run is a vital part of national security." And
- again: "We not only have to be strong today but for 50 years,
- and if we become reckless in the economic field, we will no
- longer find ourselves with the means to protect ourselves."
- </p>
- <p> In that cause, Dwight Eisenhower fought one of his hardest
- and most successful battles in 1959. In January, when he
- formally announced his determination to balance the budget at
- $77 billion, the lopsided Democratic congressional majority
- hooted and howled. Indeed, it seemed all but impossible at a
- time when the recession and the challenge of the U.S.S.R.'s
- Sputniks had ballooned the deficit to some $12 billion.
- </p>
- <p> But Ike rammed across his point. He scolded his Cabinet
- members (Defense Secretary Neil McElroy had airily announced
- that military spending would have to go up by about $2 billion;
- he soon got the word from his boss), wrote personal letters to
- political, business and civic leaders around the nation, urged
- his cause in press conferences and on radio and television,
- worked closely with Republican congressional leaders, and used
- his veto and the threat of his veto against lollygagging money
- bills. At year's end a balanced budget was in jeopardy only
- because of the steel strike. Eisenhower had performed the
- political miracle of making economy popular. Grinned a White
- House staffer: "When those Congressmen come back in January,
- they're going to be so anxious to find something to cut that
- they'll cut their own wrists if necessary."
- </p>
- <p> Above and Beyond. The victory for a sound U.S. economy
- meant not only a U.S. that could continue to meet its
- obligations of free-world leadership; it served as a spring
- board for vast creative forces. With postwar U.S. help the
- industrial nations of the West had built their economies to the
- point where they could begin to tear down the trade barriers
- that are always a sign of weakness. They could start to share
- with the U.S. in the immense and compelling job of aiding the
- world's underdeveloped lands. Those lands, with examples of
- successful free enterprise ranging from West Germany to Japan,
- were beginning to shuck off their socialist notions of economic
- order by government decree. Thus the tooling of U.S. fiscal
- responsibility to the facts of economic life set off by 1959 a
- revolution in dynamic ideas and plans that held out to the
- humblest of peoples the promise of a better life.
- </p>
- <p> In recognition of that promise--vague, unstated but
- everywhere in the air--came the tumults that met the President
- of the U.S. as he traveled among the masses in 1959's last
- month. Into that promise the U.S., as represented by Eisenhower,
- breathed the hope that economic gain could be achieved in people--and
- enjoyed outside political bondage.
- </p>
- <p> One Last Chance. Dwight Eisenhower first ran for President
- with the idea that he might help bring the world closer to
- peace. In his first term he demonstrated in the Strait of
- Formosa that the U.S. would stand staunchly against aggression;
- he demonstrated in the Suez crisis that the U.S. would resist
- aggression by its friends as well as its enemies, that peace
- was meaningless without justice. In 1956, he decided to run for
- re-election despite two major illnesses and the possibility that
- a constitutional ban against a third term might dilute his
- effectiveness (in the event, the 22nd Amendment strengthened
- Eisenhower's hand; with no political future he could plainly
- prove that he acted in the national interest, not out of
- personal ambition). He gave his reason for seeking re-election
- to a small group of friends: "I want to advance our chances for
- world people, if only by a little, maybe only a few feet."
- </p>
- <p> At first his second term seemed only to bring more cold war
- crises. The President sent U.S. troops to Lebanon, again
- deployed U.S. warships in Formosa Strait. Then, on Nov. 27,
- 1958, Russia's Khrushchev handed the Western allies an ultimatum
- to get our of Berlin.
- </p>
- <p> Increasingly, as he saw the calendar running out on him,
- President Eisenhower spoke to friends of wanting "one last
- chance" to move toward peace. But he was determined not to be
- forced to a summit conference by the club Khrushchev held over
- Berlin. "We are not going to give one single inch in the
- preservation of our rights," he said. "There can be no
- negotiation on this particular point."
- </p>
- <p> Yet might not the creative energy of freedom be used to
- seize the initiative? Eisenhower and Secretary of State John
- Foster Dulles sought the answer in long, intensely personal
- talks (often a sleepless President picked up his bedside phone
- in the middle of the night to call a sleepless Dulles)--and
- the idea of Ike's exchanging visits with Khrushchev came up.
- "We began to work on this thing," Eisenhower recalled months
- later," and I gave the subject to two or three of my trusted
- associates in the State Department and said `Now let's try to
- tote up the balance.'"
- </p>
- <p> Explosive events. Dulles saw merit in the proposal for an
- Eisenhower-Khrushchev exchange, but first he wanted to find out
- if some sort of progress could be made at a U.S. sponsored
- meeting of the Big Four foreign ministers at Geneva. The U.S.
- was represented at that conference by a new Secretary of State,
- Christian Herter, for in February Foster Dulles, gallant
- warrior, entered Walter Reed Army Hospital with a recurrence of
- cancer. And on May 24, 1959, the colleague Ike had trusted
- beyond any other died in his sleep.
- </p>
- <p> Predictably, inevitably, the foreign ministers' conference
- ended in failure. Recalls a top State Department official: "The
- President was very firmly committed not to go to a summit meeting
- as long as he was forced to go under threat, or as long as there
- was no prospect that a summit meeting would show some results.
- He thought it over--and he decided to take the initiative."
- </p>
- <p> From that decision stemmed the explosive series of events
- by which 1959 would be long remembered--and which made
- Eisenhower the Man of the Year. On the morning of July 11,
- President Eisenhower drafted a formal proposal that Khrushchev
- visit the U.S. and suggested that the President travel to the
- Soviet Union. The letter was flown to New York by U.S. Deputy
- Under Secretary of State Robert Murphy and Deputy Assistant
- Secretary of State Foy Kohler, placed in the hands of the Soviet
- Union's First Deputy Premier Frol Kozlov, about to return to
- Russia after a U.S. tour. It was kept tightly secret for almost
- a month; Vice President Nixon was informed of the plan only the
- day before his July departure for the Soviet Union; Milton
- Eisenhower, accompanying Nixon, was not told at all. Ike's
- invitation and Khrushchev's acceptance crashed into world
- headlines on Aug. 3.
- </p>
- <p> More Than Personal. To prepare for the confrontation with
- his tough clever cold-war adversary, Eisenhower flew to Europe
- in late August, there to consult and coordinate plans with U.S.
- allies, In Germany, the land overrun by his Allied armies, in
- England, and in Paris, the city he had liberated, the swell of
- popular emotion brought a mist to the old soldier's eyes.
- </p>
- <p> The tribute was more than personal. When Ike left Europe,
- he knew that it was in his capacity as the President of the
- U.S., in his symbolizing of U.S. prestige and principles, that
- he bore with him the free world's faith. Supported by that
- knowledge, Eisenhower was ready for Khrushchev.
- </p>
- <p> Khrushchev came in September, and his visit is recalled in
- kaleidoscopic flash back--of Khrushchev baronially breathing
- the morning air in front of Blair House; of Khrushchev bulling
- his way across the U.S., now boasting of Russian military might
- and space achievement, now uttering dulcet promises of peace and
- friendship; of Khrushchev threatening to pick up his marbles and
- go home when denied a chance to go to Southern California's
- Disneyland; of Khrushchev falling in love with San Francisco;
- and of Khrushchev roaring in merriment while an Iowa farmer
- shied ensilage at the newsmen who had crowded too close.
- </p>
- <p> Closeup View. But it was at Camp David, the presidential
- retreat on a Maryland mountaintop, that Khrushchev's visit came
- into focus with its greatest meaning to 1959. At Camp David,
- under a canopy of oak leaves, the President of the U.S. and the
- Premier of the U.S.S.R. walked and talked along winding gravel
- paths, lived together for three days in Ike's grey, batten-
- board Aspen Lodge.
- </p>
- <p> From their conversations came only one tangible result:
- Khrushchev agreed to lift his Berlin ultimatum. But more
- important was the personal, closeup view that Ike got of
- Khrushchev.
- </p>
- <p> President Eisenhower had already heard from such travelers
- to the Soviet Union as Nixon, his brother Milton and democrats
- Adlai Stevenson and Huburt Humphrey that the Russian people
- seemed desirous of peace. He was told that they stubbornly held
- to a fund of friendship for the U.S. that had not been washed
- out by 14 years of hostile propaganda, that they were pushing
- their own government for more consumer goods and even for a
- measure of freedom.
- </p>
- <p> Now, at Camp David, Khrushchev seemed to reflect those
- drives. He impressed Eisenhower as a leader extremely anxious
- to win the respect and approval of his own people, as one who
- might wish to divert armament spending to consumer production
- for internal political reasons, as one almost pathetically eager
- to be accepted into the society of legitimate statesmen. When
- showing off before Soviet underlings as Foreign Minister Andre
- Gromyko and Ambassador to the U.S. "Smiling Mike" Menshikov.
- Khrushchev was full of bluster; in his private meetings with
- Ike he spoke quietly and seemed ready to do business.
- </p>
- <p> At Camp David then, Eisenhower came to believe that formal
- negotiations with Khrushchev could be more than an exercise in
- thumb-sucking, tongue-twisting futility. After Camp David, Ike
- was willing as never before to go to the summit.
- </p>
- <p> In fact he was eager. Plans were made for an October summit
- conference, but France's De Gaulle scuttled the schedule. The
- Western allies agreed to a December meeting of the Western
- leaders in Paris--and in that, Ike saw and seized upon a
- historic opportunity to display the dynamics of freedom before
- the world.
- </p>
- <p> "A Great Awakening." He had long wanted to visit India.
- Now he decided that on the way to Paris he would go not only to
- India but would also sweep the southern tiers of Asia and
- Europe, where ancient civilizations stood alike with infant
- nations in constant, poverty-torn struggle to improve their lot.
- </p>
- <p> From Rome to Ankara to Karachi to Kabul journeyed the
- President of the U.S., and to Tehran, Athens, Tunis and
- Casablanca. And everywhere, he carried his message,
- understandable to all and backed by unbroken U.S. performance:
- "We want to live in peace and friendship--in freedom." More
- than that: "We want to help other peoples to raise their
- standards, to be as content with their lot as humans can be."
- To India's Parliament, he spoke of "a great awakening" in which
- the world's peoples have come to recognize "that only under a
- rule of moral law can all of us realize our deepest and noblest
- aspirations." Without mentioning Communism by name, he defined
- it as the dead hand of tyranny, pointed to a free-world future
- based on economic order and law. At Delhi University, he said:
- "A reliable framework of law, grounded in the general principles
- recognized by civilized nations, is of crucial importance in all
- plans for rapid economic development...Law is not a concrete
- pillbox in which the status quo is armed and entrenched. On the
- contrary, a single role of law, the sanctity of contract, has
- been the vehicle of more explosive and extensive economic change
- in the world than any other factor."
- </p>
- <p> A High Presence. On foot, by car and by camel-back, on
- bicycles and in bullock carts, millions crowded into the cities
- along his route to see Eisenhower, and their reply to his
- message came in a torrential outpour. "We love you, Ike," cried
- the Turks, tough fighters on the cold-war frontier. "Take back
- our love, Ike," cried Pakistani throngs. In India, the reception
- burst the chains of imagination, crowds surged and seethed
- around Ike, and in front of village huts appeared brass vessels,
- festooned with mango leaves in recognition of a high presence.
- </p>
- <p> The moment of profoundest meaning came at an outdoor
- "civic reception" in New Delhi. When Ike, with Nehru, stepped
- up to the speaker's stand, he blinked and shook his head in
- astonishment; the crowd reached farther than eye could see. In
- neutralist India, Eisenhower invoked the memory of India's
- saint, impled that Gandhi himself would today favor the dynamics
- of strength: "America's right, our obligations, for that matter,
- to maintain a respectable establishment for defense--our duty
- to join in company with like-thinking peoples for mutual self-
- defence--would, I am sure, be recognized and upheld by the
- most saintly men...In a democracy, people should not act
- like sheep but jealously guard liberty of action." At his words,
- countless thousands of Gandhi's disciples broke into cheers.
- </p>
- <p> In his talks with the leaders of the nations he visited,
- the President aimed at no t-crossing, i-dotting agreements. None
- were needed. Reported New York Times-man Paul Grimes from New
- Delhi after Ike's departure: "It did not seem to matter much
- whether Mr. Nehru had actually requested or been given a
- guarantee that the U.S. would help India to meet further Chinese
- Communist aggression. What mattered was the obvious
- strengthening of Indian-American friendship to a point where no
- such guarantee was necessary."
- </p>
- <p> In 1960, Dwight Eisenhower's last year in office, he may
- in a sense be the victim of his own success in 1959. Ahead lie
- his trip to the Soviet Union and a series of summit conferences--all
- carrying a special challenge, since the U.S. has become
- the home of so many hopes. For the same reason the U.S. will
- have less privacy and more urgency in facing 1960's other
- problems, old and new: the dangerous lag in space achievement;
- the delicate, perilous balance between fiscal responsibility and
- military strength; the integrity of NATO as a free-world shield;
- the unrest in the U.S.'s backyard as shown in 1959 by anti-
- American riots in Bolivia and Panama and by the bearded
- demagoguery of Cuba's Fidel Castro.
- </p>
- <p> But the look on the faces turned toward Eisenhower in 1959
- was the future's best portent. In Paris, during his trip, Ike
- rejected the view of a "dark and dreary future," classified
- himself as a "born optimist, and I suppose most soldiers are,
- because no soldier ever won a battle if he went into it
- pessimistically." He thinks of the future, said Ike, in terms
- of his grandchildren, and hopefully, someday, great-
- grandchildren, "and I am very concerned that they get a chance
- to have a better life than I had." The forces for freedom fired
- by 1959's Man of the Year would inevitably change the lives of
- millions of grandchildren and great-grandchildren in an epochal
- historic way. And men of hope might have new reason to believe
- that tomorrow's world had a better than even chance.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-