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- ╚January 6, 1930Man of the YearOwen D. Young
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- To which of his fellows might the discerning U.S. citizen
- point as Man of the Year?
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- Civic loyalty would automatically turn the citizen toward
- Washington and the White House, where 1929 saw Herbert Clark
- Hoover installed. But the first Citizen is obviously in a class
- by himself and really, psychologically, belongs to the year of
- his election.
-
- For heroism plus skill, 1929 was undoubtedly Richard Evelyn
- Byrd's in the popular mind, just as 1929 was Charles Augustus
- Lindbergh's. Through their Congress the citizens paid
- acknowledgement by raising Byrd from Commander to Rear-Admiral,
- an act unprecedented since Robert Edward Peary discovered the
- North Pole. But fair-minded citizens might dispute Admiral
- Byrd's preeminence by bringing in Pilot Bernt Balchen, who
- actually flew the Byrd ship to the South Pole, or by pointing
- to Endurance Flyers Dale ("Red") Jackson and Forest O'Brien who
- kept the St. Louis Robin aloft longer than any living thing has
- ever flown (420 hr. 21 min. 30 sec.).
-
- Undoubtedly there may be historians who will find the name
- of Frank Billings Kellogg brightest in 1929, for it was the year
- in which 57 nations signed the world-peace treaty with his name
- on it. But researchers and analysts could show that Mr. Kellogg
- did not originate the outlawing-war idea; that a comparatively
- obscure lay figure named Salmon Oliver Levinson, Chicago lawyer,
- was invited to the White House the day the signatures were
- affixed in recognition of certain conversations he had had years
- prior with Senator Borah of Idaho and others.
-
- An enormous body of citizens might turn to Alexander Legge,
- prime "new patriot" of the Hoover era, the man selected to cope
- with the country's most pressing politico-economic problem as
- chairman of the Federal Farm Board. But Chairman Legge only
- began his task in 1929.
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- Contemplating education as an important field, many a
- citizen might hail the feat of Robert Maynard Hutchins, who
- became president of one of the country's hugest universities at
- the age of 30.
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- All these and many another were Men of the Year, but the
- discerning citizen would pause long before putting any of them
- ahead of the man, apparently the one man, who could and did
- perform the year's largest politico-economic job for the world's
- leading nations. Economic tangles which must be straightened out
- before society can proceed in peace. The man who spent four
- months as foreman of the high financial wrecking crew which was
- the Second Reparations Conference, was Owen D. Young of Van
- Hornesville, N.Y.
-
- Last January when European powers, President Coolidge not
- objecting, asked Mr. Young and John Pierpont Morgan to come to
- Paris, Mr. Young was reluctant to accept. He knew and his
- countrymen were beginning to know how large a part of the so-
- called Dawes Plan had been his handiwork in 1924. There was no
- patriotic compulsion to go and do some more hard work,
- especially since it then looked as though no amount of work
- could bring success. When he did accept and reached Paris, it
- became apparent that the other nations' delegates could agree
- on him alone for chairman.
-
- One delegate died of overwork in those five months. Never
- in his life did Mr. Young have to subject himself to such severe
- physical discipline as then to keep going. He got away from
- Paris for exactly one week-end -- and got back to find weeks of
- work virtually undone. The other delegates were at each other's
- throats. It took him three days to restore harmony. On three
- other occasions the conference was actually declared dead -- but
- he revived it. For besides the stupendous detail and the
- baffling interplay of economic facts and factors, he had to cope
- with his foreign colleagues' temperaments. This called for rigid
- self-discipline of another, subtler kind. When Germany's
- bristling Herr Schacht came to get his ear privately after a
- day's sessions he had to convince himself and Herr Schacht that
- he was treating him exactly as though French Delegate Moreau
- were present. When M. Moreau came, similar convictions were
- necessary. In his preservation of the confidence of all the
- parties, in his resuscitation of their confidence in each other,
- lay Chairman Young's greatest right to have his name applied to
- the Reparations plan which was finally adopted. From the Orient,
- where such things are most highly appreciated came Chairman
- Young's highest praise, when Delegate Keingo Mori of Japan said:
- "I could not have conceived, unless I had seen it, of an
- American having such patience."
-
- When, looking five years older, Owen D. Young returned to
- the U.S., he was as weary as he was modest in asking New York
- City not to give him a public reception. Also, he was in a hurry
- to get back to his private life. His son Charles was getting
- married next day in Cleveland. (A second son, John, was killed
- in a motor accident in 1926. The daughter, Josephine, was
- graduated from Bryn Mawr in 1928. Philip, third son, is a
- sophomore at St. Lawrence College. Richard, youngest son, is in
- primary school.) He was due after that at Elihu Root's college,
- Hamilton, to receive an honorary degree. From there he wanted
- to go home to Van Hornesville, which is still his home town in
- a very real sense. He was born there the day the late great
- Theodore Roosevelt was having his 16th birthday party, Oct. 27,
- 1874. Everyone there still calls him "Owen." He has kept Van
- Hornesville growing up with him, not by taking it in hand the
- way Henry Ford or a Rockefeller might do, but by getting his
- neighbors to join him in improvements. He has not expanded his
- home farm to gobble up the town, but stayed at 700 acres. When
- the little red schoolhouse was rebuilt along colonial lines as
- suggested by him, he put on overalls, helped gather fieldstone,
- and swung a pick, beside paying all bills. He wanted this school
- to be a model of city and country advantages for rural
- education. When they put up a plaque with the names of the
- builders and what each had done, he paired his name with the
- village patriarch's: ABRAM TILYOU AND OWEN D. YOUNG -- Rocking
- Chair Consultants.
-
- The activities of a Man-of-the-Year are bound to be
- manifold. Being board chairman of General Electric Co. and Radio
- Corp. might not keep some men very busy, but it keeps Owen D.
- Young busy because of another quality which made him
- internationally invaluable at Paris; his sensitiveness to, his
- prescience of the Future. Never a technician, he is nonetheless
- obsessed with the idea that some day it may be possible to write
- a message on a pad at one's desk or bedide and have it
- instantaneously transmitted to the addressee anywhere on earth.
- No trained artist, he has been stirred, by Radio Corp.'s
- development from a communications business into an amusement
- business, to ponder the potentialities of radio as the basis of
- a new national art form, especially for a new generation
- unhampered by old art forms. Never a moralist, he has said: "In
- no other profession [besides Business], not excepting the
- ministry and the law, is the need for wide information, broad
- sympathies and directed imagination so great." Always that kind
- of a businessman, he has foreseen the necessity of national
- communications monopoly, wires and wireless, government-
- controlled if not government-owned, to meet world competition.
-
- It was this last foresight which took him last month to
- Washington D.C., and, by a quirk of human affairs, to the
- borderland of another phase of the future. The Senators who
- asked him to come and tell about Radio Corp.'s plan for selling
- its communications business to International Telephone &
- Telegraph Co. were far less interested in his business ideas
- than in the effect which those ideas, publicly expressed, might
- have upon Owen D. Young's chances of becoming the Democratic
- party's candidate for President of the U.S. in 1932 or 1936. No
- man of Mr.Young's acumen could have failed to sense the
- undercurrents of that hearing, with Senators Wheeler of Montana
- and Dill of Washington trying to embarrass him and Senators
- Tydings of Maryland and Hawes of Missouri trying to protect him.
- Perceiving the situation Mr. Young insisted on talking
- economics, nor did he hesitate to startle the Senators -- and
- many of his conservative business acquaintances -- with his
- frankness, notably his opinion that investment value is a fairer
- base than replacement value upon which to scale the profits of
- such public utilities as radio companies.
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- His visit with the Senate was not Mr. Young's only visit
- in Washington last month. As deputy chairman of the New York
- Federal Reserve Bank he has given far more time to stabilizing
- the U.S. financial structure than to Europe's. It was in this
- capacity that President Hoover asked him to go down for two of
- the post-stock-crash Confidence Conferences. Mr. Young went, of
- course. He has never refused Herbert Hoover anything except, in
- 1928, his vote. He would hate to refuse Herbert Hoover anything
- and Mr. Hoover knows it. Regardless of what the Democrats do to
- make or unmake Mr. Young as presidential timber, it is unlikely
- that President Hoover needs to worry. He is probably the last
- Republican, as a person and as a type, that Democrat Young would
- choose to run against. The same is true in the case of Dwight
- Whitney Morrow, his onetime colleague on the General Electric
- board of directors, with whom Mr. Young has already received a
- headline nomination for 1936. It is also true, however, that no
- man has ever refused the official nomination.
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