Senator KENNEDY. My friend and colleague in
the Senate whom I sit next to daily, and whom I hope to sit next to in
the future Senator McNamara - I don't quite mean it that way [laughter]
Governor Williams, Sam Clark, who I hope will be the Congressman from this
district [applause], John Swainson, who I hope is going to be the next
Governor of the State of Michigan [applause], ladies and gentlemen:
I want to express my thanks to you for being
kind enough to come down here and for giving me an opportunity to speak
to you. I come here as the standard bearer of the Democratic Party in the
campaign of 1960. Many of the problems which we discuss here in this campaign,
which we ordinarily would consider domestic problems, also have their implications
in our position around the world. The Tennessee Valley, which Franklin
Roosevelt developed in the thirties, was a great asset to the Tennessee
Valley, but it also has demonstrated since that time to people all over
the world how a free people can harness their resources, and now in Persia
and now in the Indus River and now in Colombia in South America other free
people are building Tennessee Valleys. The same is true of education here
in the United States.
About 10 years ago the United States graduated
from two to three times as many scientists and engineers as the Soviet
Union. Last year the Soviet Union graduated twice as many scientists and
engineers as we did. The long-range implication of that concentration,
of that ability to speed up when they thought it was needed, indicates
how serious is the competition in which we are now engaged. I want to make
it very clear that I believe that the United States must have an educational
system second to none, and I believe that the Federal Government has a
responsibility in this area for school construction and for teachers' salaries,
and it is on this issue, I believe, that the Republican Party and the Democratic
Party--------- [Applause.]
The question which is frequently asked is,
is it possible for the Federal Government to assist education without the
Federal Government controlling education? All of you who live in Michigan
live in what was originally the Northwest Territory, and all of you know
that in the original Northwest Ordinance at the end of the 18th century,
one-sixteenth of all of the land was set aside by the National Government
for education at the beginning of our country, by Thomas Jefferson and
by John Adams. All of you know of the University of Michigan, and of the
other State universities and colleges in this State. The University of
Michigan was established around 1837, and it was financed by lands of this
State to support education. The Land Grant Act of 1862 set aside land by
the Federal Government, public land, belonging to all the people, in order
to support public education in the States of the United States.
The Federal Government is now paying out money
for vocational training. It is also paying out money for schools in areas
where there is a defense impact. My feeling is that this should be more
orderly, that the Federal Government should assist in school construction.
It should give funds to local communities and they should make the judgment
how the money should be spent in cooperation with their own expenditures.
I believe the Federal Government must provide
loan funds for students who wish to go to college. [Applause.] Over 35
percent of our brightest boys and girls who graduate from high school never
see the inside of a college. Can we afford to waste that talent in the
most difficult and dangerous time in the life of our country? [Response
from the audience.]
This issue separates Mr. Nixon and myself
and it separates the Republican and Democratic Parties. We have stood on
this program for many years, and we stand on it now, and will stand on
it next year. [Applause.] This is only one of many problems which we face.
But education is going to be necessary if the young men and women in this
audience are going to get good jobs. They are going to have to be well
educated. If the boys and girls of this country are going to meet their
responsibilities as Americans, if they are going to find employment and
decent wages, if they are going to maintain the freedoms of this country
we are going to have to have the best educational system in the world.
Our lack of interest in intellectual pursuits
is reflected in the fact that 10 years ago there were more foreign students
studying sponsored by the Government in the United States than there are
today. Last year we gave 200 scholarships to all of Africa to come here
to the United States. In the Congo, 8 or 9 million people, who could go
Communist at any time, there are 12 college graduates, in all of the Congo.
In all of Africa, 1 percent or less have finished high school, and yet
we expect them to maintain a free society? And the U.S. Government did
not even establish a Bureau of African Affairs until 1957.
We see two independent countries, Guinea,
independent in 1958, now supports the Communist position at the U.N. Ghana,
independent in 1958, now supports the Communist position at the U.N. Do
you know when Guinea became independent the Soviet Ambassador showed up
that day. We did not recognize Guinea for 2 months and did not send an
ambassador there for 8 months. I think the issues are very clear, not merely
whether it is Mr. Nixon or myself. It is two different philosophies. It
is two different views of the necessity for vigorous, foresighted, farsighted
action. [Applause.]
Do you know what position the United States
holds in radio propaganda broadcasts today? Fourth in the world. Moscow
is ahead of us, Peiping is ahead of us, Radio Cairo is ahead of us, and
we are a poor fourth. Do you know how many programs we send to Latin America,
the basic defense area of the United States, in Spanish? None in the last
8 years. These are all serious problems. They affect the education here,
they affect our employment here, they affect the ability of Michigan to
meet competition in the sixties. They affect security of the United States,
and I believe that this country has to once again determine what it wants
to be. In my judgment, it wants to be not only a great country, which it
is; it wants to be a greater country. It wants to protect not only its
own people, but it wants to serve as an example and inspiration to all
these who wish to move along the road of freedom. So I come here today
as the nominee for the oldest political party on earth, the Democratic
Party, founded [applause] founded by the most extraordinary individual
of the 18th century, the most gifted, the most farsighted, Thomas Jefferson,
and I come in 1960 and say that we need men of intellectual curiosity,
farsighted, concerned, interested, who want this country to be what it
can and must be. Thank you. [Applause.]