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Under Letters in your issue of Dec. 3. one Maurice S. Sheehy, Ph. D., Director, Survey Council, Catholic University of America, Washington, D. C., nominates for "Man of the Year" our eminent Postmaster General, the Honorable James A. Farley...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Dec. 17, 1934 | 12/17/1934 | See Source »

...Farley's Figures...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Dec. 17, 1934 | 12/17/1934 | See Source »

...This time Jim Farley's numerous enemies set up a tremendous hullabaloo. The Republican Press burgeoned with sarcastic editorials charging him with deliberately deceiving the nation. Wrote Political Pundit Frank R. Kent in the Baltimore Sun: "In a normal administration no department head would have dared present such a report. He would have known it would be analyzed at once, the joker discovered and the pretense punctured. . . . The truth is Mr. Farley spent $52,000,000 more last year than he took in and his 'surplus' is obtained only by not charging as expenses some $64,000,000. . . . Having performed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CABINET: Farley Surplus | 12/10/1934 | See Source »

...Fact was, Mr. Farley's operation had been neither unprecedented nor unlawful. Hoover's Postmaster General Walter Folger Brown first performed the bookkeeping trick in 1929, got Congress to validate it the following year.* But not even Congress can turn a bookkeeping trick into anything but a trick. No certified public accountant would ever have approved Jim Farley's own company books if he had tried to balance them as he did the Post Office's. No comfortable legal fiction could relieve U. S. taxpayers from making up the very real $52,000,000 which the Post Office last year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CABINET: Farley Surplus | 12/10/1934 | See Source »

...Philadelphia for the 35th Army-Navy game went such notables as Secretary of War Dern, Chief of Staff Douglas MacArthur, Postmaster General Farley, Maryland's Governor Ritchie, New York's Mayor LaGuardia. Speculators sold tickets for $40 each. In the first quarter, Slade Cutter, Navy's tackle and heavyweight boxing champion, place-kicked a goal from the 20-yd. line. After that, the two teams struggled up & down the muddy field with Fred Borries doing most of Navy's ball-carrying, and a quick-charging Navy line effectively checking Army's Jack Buckler and Joe Stancook. Navy's first victory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Football: Collegiate | 12/10/1934 | See Source »

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