In ’33, women wore house dresses and news came from newsreels
100 years of history by Carol Pelosi Some grandparents like to pass on stories of the good old days when they were young. For this week, let us imagine ourselves as 84-year-olds transporting themselves and their 14-year-old grandchildren back in time by 70 years to 1933 when they were 14. Just to set the stage, “An Encyclopedia of American History” says the major events in that year were the beginning of the New Deal after President Franklin D. Roosevelt assumed office in March, and lynchings in the South claimed 42 lives. The average life expectancy had increased from 49 to 59 since 1900, although clearly not for all social groups. A law passed that year by the New York legislature setting a minimum wage for women laundry workers was soon invalidated by the U.S. Supreme Court. The summer before, General Douglas A. MacArthur, under orders from President Herbert Hoover, had