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Mr. Toastmaster, members and distinguished guests of the Manhattan
Society:
I am glad to have the opportunity of being here this
evening for this occasion in honor of my associate and colleague
on the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
I have had the privilege of being associated with him
ever since I became a member of the Board, and although I regret to
say that he is younger than I am, I am obliged to look up to him as
a veteran, for despite his youth, he is in point of service the
oldest living member of the present Board.

And since I have touched

on this delicate question of age, I should like to remind you of
another interesting fact.
Mr. Szymczak is, of course, a native-born citizen and I
think I may describe him as a typical American, though I recognize
that such a phrase is rather abstract, like aaelk phrases which we
such as "the average citizen" or "the economic man".
He retains a natural and pardonable pride in the race from which he
has sprung, as do the rest of us who like to think of ourselves as
typical Americans and who trace our ancestry to other lands.
In a special sense, however, I think he demonstrates
why this Republic deserves to be called the land of opportunity.
In other times and in some countries more than ever today, opporthe
tunity is restricted or non-existent for/average citizen. I know
that those of you Americans here tonight who are proud of Polish




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achievements and of Poland's rightful place among the democracies
of the world, will not regard it as any reflection upon the Polish
Republic when I remind you that it does not offer to very young
men, like Mr. Szymczak, opportunity equal to that existing in the
United States.

-—

I have discovered that under the Polish Constitution of
March 17, 1921, establishing Poland as a republic, there is a pro­
vision to the effect that noone who is under the age of forty is
eligible for election to the Senate.

And I call your attention to

the fact that my distinguished colleague, whom you are appropriately
honoring tonight, was only thirty-nine when he became a member of
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
Now, I will deny that it requires more aging and wisdom
to be a senator than it does to be a member of this Board.

I shall

not expect senators to agree with this, but I just want to call your
attention to the unfortunate fact that there are still great numbers
of people who suppose that this Board either possesses at the present tintep5r could De put in a position with just a few changes in
the law to control completely the economic welfare of this great
nation^ *!piat the Board either has the power or needs but little
more latitude under the law in order to achieve and maintain some
fixed price level and to prevent either a boom or a depression.
If that were the case, I think that all of you would agree that any
senate would be a minor and relatively unimportant body, and that




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it would require infinitely more wisdom to be a member of the Board
than to be a mere senator*

vtcL*

But even though frhooo of uer who

*9

likc^^my colleague^ whom

iJOL „

you are honoring tonight/possess no sue!
such vast authority to produce
/
and preserve tbe, economic well-being
each one of us, quite re­
gardless of the actions and possibly the mistakes that we may make
individually or collectively, the Congress, as you know, has vested
in the Board a very large and heavy responsibility for the exercise
of far-reaching monetary powers affecting the volume and cost of
money and the soundness of the banking system.
of us were a Methuselah

And even though each

a Solomon combined, we would still, I am

sure, be aware that we did not possess a monopoly of experience and
wisdom.

In fact, I think the older we grow and the more we learn,

the more we reco^m'
I

qp iral,] as legal limitations.
should like to add just one or two words, speaking very

seriously for a moment, about Matt Szymczak.

I am somewhat con­

strained in paying any tribute to him because, speaking to me as my
senior in service on the Board, he has ordered me not to do so, and
has warned me, or at least implied, that an occasion might sometime
arise when he might be called upon to speak about me in public and
he would feel obliged to say something pleasant and complimentary,
irrespective of what his honest convictions might be, if I should




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venture to say a rather personal word about him tonight.
Nevertheless, I am going to take that risk just long
enough to say to you that I consider him the highest type of public
servant.
tinction.

He has served upon the Board with real ability and dis­
He is an American in whom the Manhattan Society and the

Polish people may well and do take justifiable pride.

More than

any other one man connected with the Federal Reserve System, he has
put into practice what he preaches in making for a better and more
widespread understanding of the functioning of that System as a part
of the government of this country.
think, first of all an educator.

He has been and he remains, I
He has been given the gift which

every educator needs to have in order to reach the minds and under­
standing of men, and he has cultivated that talent.
More than anything else in these times, it seems to me that
our bankers and business men and our people as a whole need deeper,
broader understanding of the functioning of our economic system.
It is not enough that public servants be wise in the discharge of
their duties, and honest and just in the administration of the offices
they happen to hold.

In a democracy they must also be able to make

their actions and policies understood.

The more difficult and complex

the problems are with which they have to deal, the more necessary it
is for them to be able to explain what they do and why they do it.
That takes time and patience and it calls for unusual ability both to
analyze and to explain.




Although the administrative duties are con­

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fining and there is never enough time to learn all that members of
the Reserve Board would wish to know about the daily problems be­
fore them, Mr. Szymczak has drawn upon his energy and his talents
repeatedly in order to meet with interested groups of bankers,
business men, and students, and to lay before them the essential
facts which they need to know if they are to have an understanding
of the part which the Federal Reserve System plays in the functioning
of our economy.

He has spoken, always and without exception, I

venture to say, as an educator, never as a partisan or a special
pleader.

He has made an important and necessary contribution to the

understanding which is so essential to the preservation and success­
ful functioning of our democracy and our economic system.
The members of this distinguished Society do honor to­
night to that kind of public service which is a safeguard of our
system and an example and inspiration for all Americans.