Senator KENNEDY. Ladies and gentlemen, Congressman
Randall - can anybody hear that? [Response from the andience.]
Congressman Randall, Senator Ed Long, your candidate for Governor,
who I know is going to be the Governor, Hugh Dalton, the attorney general,
ladies and gentlemen, I am delighted to be in this State. And I am delighted
to * * * [inaudible].
Mr. Nixon 2 weeks ago in Boston, in my home
town, attempted to dismiss me as saying that I was just another Truman.
I said I regarded it as a compliment, and he was just another Dewey.
[Applause.] And be has not said it since. The fact of the matter is that
this shopping center is called Truman Center, but also Mr. Truman is remembered
for being a fighting President, who helped defend freedom after World War
II in Greece and Turkey and Western Europe, through NATO and the Marshall
plan and the rest. The Truman Center and the Truman Doctrine rests thousands
of miles apart, but they are an expression of America at its best. I come
here tonight to this center of a great Democratic State. I come here and
ask your help. I ask you to join us in building the strength of America
again. [Applause.] I shook hands coming over here tonight with some
farmers, and how can you tell that they are farmers. It is because their
hands are twice as big. I don't know what they do with it all day but it
is twice as big because they work longer and harder than anybody with the
possible exception of candidates for the Presidency. [Laughter.] And they
average in pay about 60 cents an hour. I believe that this administration
and its policies, pursued by Mr. Benson, called by Mr. Nixon the most remarkable
Secretary of Agriculture in history, has helped liquidate the American
farmer, and Mr. Nixon's program will continue it.
How can any farmer vote Republican in 1960?
[Applause.] I understand nearby there was a farmer who planted some
corn. He said to his neighbor, "I hope I break even this year. I really
need the money." We want him to do more than break even. We want him to
move ahead. [Applause.]
That is a Massachusetts joke. [Laughter.]
We are a little slow up there.
I want to express my regrets to all of you
for keeping you waiting. We were not playing golf. [Laughter and applause.]
We started at midnight in New York after debating the Great Debater, Mr.
Nixon. [Response from the audience.] The man who stood up to Mr. Khrushchev
but won't stand up for a fifth debate. [Response, laughter, and applause.]
We left there at midnight, came to St. Louis, then to Joplin, then Wichita,
now Truman Corners, back to Kansas and we end up in Green Bay, Wis., and
we don't even get 60 cents an hour for doing this.
I come here to Missouri and ask your help.
This State is key. If we can carry this State of Missouri, I think the
Democrats can win in 1960. [Applause.] I believe this year,
just as in 1932, and just as in 1948, just as in 1912, when Woodrow Wilson
was elected, I believe it in the national interest that a new administration
with new people, with a new sense of purpose, a Democratic House and a
Democratic Senate and a Democratic President and administration, working
together to strength our country, to move it ahead, to protect the interests
of our farmers, to protect those who live over 65 and are retired, to build
better schools, to set a standard of excellence for our society, to demonstrate
here in this country that freedom can move, so that people around the world
will want to be connected with us, will want to follow our example, will
want to be associated with us, will wish to follow this leadership not
of Mr. Khrushchev, not of the Chinese Communists, not of Castro, but they
want to stand with Americans. All over Africa there are children named
George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, Woodrow Wilson, Franklin
Roosevelt. There are none called Nixon. [Laughter and applause.] There
are none yet called Lenin or Stalin, and we don't want them to be. We want
those people to be associated with the cause of freedom because they are
impressed by what we have done here, because we move, because we build
a vital society, because we move ahead and provide employment for our people,
a secure life for our people, a better life, and in so doing we strengthen
the cause of freedom. [Applause.]
Your Senators, men like Stuart Symington,
have spoken for Missouri and they have also spoken for the United States.
You cannot live in this State and read his speeches, which warn of our
peril for the last 8 years, without knowing in your heart that the Republican
Party which has always stood still, which has always looked back, which
has always taken the easy way, which has always blocked progress, which
has always stood in the middle of the road against movement - you know
that that is the program that Mr. Nixon runs on in 1960, that we have never
had it so good, that our prestige has never been higher, that our influence
has never been greater. You know it is not true. You cannot be a citizen
of this country and read the paper and listen to the radio and watch television
and look at space, and look across the street and come here and know that
we are doing enough. We are Americans. That is a proud boast. That
is a great privilege, to be a citizen of the United States, and we must
meet our responsibilities.
In 1960 and 1961 our responsibility is to
pick this country of ours up and move it, and that is what we are going
to do with your help. [Applause.]
Senator Long, Senator Symington, this State's
saying from the time of its first history has been "Show me." I am attempting
to show you in this State before November 8. I am attempting to show you
what this country must do if it is going to fulfill its destiny. And I
hope that on November 8 you will show us that Missouri will go Democratic.
[Applause.]