Senator KENNEDY. I want to express my appreciation
to Barney Ross, who comes from this community, who served with me in the
Pacific and who is a great friend of mine. Barney, I want to thank you.
Also I want to hope that this State will show
its usual good judgment and send Paul Douglas back to the U.S. Senate to
serve our country as well as Illinois. [Applause.] And Judge Kerner to
be the next Governor of the State of Illinois. [Applause.] Tyler Thompson,
who is running for the congressional seat in this district. [Applause]
Ladies and gentlemen, I come here to a district
which is not overwhelmingly Democratic [laughter], in order to ask your
support in this campaign. As citizens, you have to make a judgment about
the candidates, what we stand for, what our view is of the future. I want
to make it very clear that Mr. Nixon and I differ on many issues. He presents
his views of what he thinks is best for the country, and I present my views.
But I think the biggest difference, and the most significant one, and the
one that you should consider most carefully is our judgment of our present
position in the world, and what we must do as citizens in order to build
our strength.
Mr. Nixon runs on a program of saying that
our prestige has never been higher - do you have the paper here?
Mr. Nixon 2 weeks ago, and I am ready to let
this campaign make a judgment on which one of us is informed - he made
a statement on our debate that our prestige in the world has never been
higher. You may recall that. This is the New York Times of Tuesday, October
25, 1960, the front page. Here is what it says:
"The United States Survey Finds Others Consider
the Soviet Mightiest. Summer Poll Shows Belief Is Nearly Unanimous Among
the Nations Sampled. Lead Is Expected To Hold. Some Expect Gap To Widen."
Then the story starts:
An almost unanimous belief that the Soviet Union is the leading military power was disclosed in a worldwide survey conducted for the U.S. Government during the summer, reliable sources abroad report. According to these sources, the survey also disclosed unanimity among the free and uncommitted nations of the world that the Soviet Union would maintain and possibly widen its lead over the United States through the next decade. These are the major findings of a report drawn up by the Office for Research and Analysis on the basis of the results of the survey. The office is part of the U.S. Information Service.Now, the fact of the matter is that this administration has refused to make these surveys public. I asked Mr. Nixon if he would the other night. They have refused to give these surveys to the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Senator Fulbright as late as a week ago, and the reason is that they show that this administration and Mr. Nixon have been wholly misinformed about our position in the world, and this goes to your survival. If the people of the world once get the idea that the Russians and the the Communists represent the strongest power, how many of them will stay with us? How many people in Latin America, Africa, and Asia will decide that we represent the way of the future? This is what this means. Once they come to the conclusion that the Soviet Union is a stronger society than we are, what happens to us as leaders of the free world?