Honor Norman Corwin with The Congressional Gold Medal

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Honor Norman Corwin with The Congressional Gold Medal

To The Distinguished Members Of The Senate And House Of Representatives Of The United States Of America:

Norman Lewis Corwin is a national treasure whose contributions to our nation have long been cherished by millions of fans. Mr. Corwin will become a centenarian on May 3, 2010. This gives Congress a unique opportunity to award The Congressional Gold Medal to a man that inspired this nation with his legendary radio programs before, during and after World War II. He never failed to give his listeners a greater appreciation of the liberties and rights afforded to all Americans.

Mr. Corwin’s December 15, 1941 four-network broadcast celebrating the 150th anniversary of the Bill of Rights, “We Hold These Truths,” was heard by Sixty-Three Million Americans—half of U.S. population at that time. Fifty years later, Mr. Corwin wrote an updated version for the 200th Anniversary in 1991, expanding the program for a new generation via National Public Radio.

When Nazi Germany surrendered on May 8, 1945, V-E Day, millions of Americans turned to the Poet Laureate of Radio to hear what has been called the single greatest radio broadcast of the 20th Century: Norman Corwin’s “On A Note Of Triumph.” The show was so appreciated that a repeat performance was given on May 13, 1945.

On August 14, 1945, V-J Day, the nation once again turned to Mr. Corwin and once again he delivered: “14 August.” The show would be expanded and rebroadcast as a Day of Prayer Special on August 19, 1945 as “God and Uranium.” Again, Mr. Corwin revisited this program a half-century later with “50 Years After 14 August” in 1995 in order to educate a new generation about The Greatest Generation.

Sadly, this great American’s career suffered at the hands of McCarthyism and the Red Scare. Never a communist or socialist, Mr. Corwin nevertheless paid a price for his fierce defense of the principles of freedom and equality for all Americans. As Mr. Corwin wrote at the conclusion of “On A Note Of Triumph,” “Brotherhood is not so wild a dream as those who profit by postponing it pretend.”

We urge you to support the unanimous passage of legislation to give the thanks of a grateful nation to a great American Icon.

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Dear and good friend of my family.
I had the pleasure of having dinner with Norman about 3 years ago. I had never heard of him before that: since then, I will never forget him.
I met Mr. Corwin at a family gathering, when I was a child along with his brother Emil. They are my late father's uncles. I grew up hearing about them both from time to time, but it wasn't until recently that I learned about his rich and valuable history.I agree, this honor is long overdue.
Sincerely,
Janet Lafargue Borden
This would be a long over-due honor for a great American.
A brilliant writer and a true American. Would that we still had regular access to his inspiring works of truth and hope. Let us honor him while he's still with us!
heard "they fly through the air" for the first time today. very moving.
Mr. Corwin is nothing less than a cultural treasure.
Needs to happen.
i approve that... peace out John Bias
I remember listening to the b'casts when they first originated: 26 by Corwin and other series. One powerful one I recall was the program (apparently during WWII) when the story line was an exchange between an American submarine that was disabled and resting on the ocean floor. The surviving men with limited time left to "breathe" and live, began to express their views and in one instance, bitterness at the impending death. Powerful stuff.
I recall a more "recent" program when Mr Corwin was interviewed on a PBS radio program, "I'm too busy to talk"--interviews with creative people over 70. Marvelous stuff.