THE GARDEN is filled with some of your old friends from the Congress.
We are glad to see them here. I wish perhaps they would all come forward
- the Members of Congress. This is the only bill we've gotten by lately,
so we would like to have them. Won't you come up Senator Robertson, who
reported it out of the Committee, and Charley Halleck, George - all of
you gentlemen, come on up here, now.
We want to express a warm welcome to all of
you, to the Members of Congress. Ninety-seven Members of Congress sponsored
this legislation - 97 Senators - and I think the overwhelming support it
was given in the Congress and in the country, Bob, shows the great affection
that all of us hold for you and most especially the great appreciation
we have for you for so many years going so many places to entertain the
sons, daughters, brothers, and sisters of Americans who were very far from
home.
So, in passing this bill, in making this medal
- and it is one of the really rarest acts of the Congress; I think, since
the end of the second war, this has been done on only 10 or 11 occasions
- Dr. Salk, Billy Mitchell, Justice Brandeis. It has been one of the rarest
honors given to Americans, and it is a great pleasure for me on behalf
of the Congress to present this to you.
We have a splendid picture of you. I hope
everyone will have a chance to look at it. I present it to you on behalf
of the people of the United States.
Mr. Hope: Thank you very much, Mr. President.
That is very nice.
I suggested to Senator Symington I should
have had a nose job, but he said there would have been less gold.
I actually don't like to tell jokes about
a thing like this because it is one of the nicest things that has ever
happened to me, and I feel very humble - although I think I have the strength
of character to fight it - and I am thrilled that you invited all the Senators
and Congressmen up here with us. For awhile it looked like a congressional
investigation, but I really appreciate this very much.
And this is sort of an anticlimax to some
great thrills that I have had touring the world, and I want to thank the
Defense Department, and especially Stuart Symington who started all our
Christmas trips and has been more or less a den mother to all of us all
these years.
This is a great thing. There is only one sobering
thought: I received this for going outside the country. I think they are
trying to tell me something.
But I do appreciate it and I want to thank
the President for inviting my family. I enjoyed meeting them, and this
will mean a lot to my kids. It won't explain why I wasn't in the service,
but at least it will point out which side I was on.
Thank you very, very much.
I think it is deductible.
THE PRESIDENT. You might read it on the other
side, Bob.
I will read it. It says: "Presented to Bob
Hope by President Kennedy in recognition of his having rendered outstanding
service to the cause of democracies throughout the world. By the Act of
Congress June 8, 1962."
Mr. Hope: Wonderful, Wonderful. That is very
nice, and I want to say I also played in the South Pacific while the President
was there, and he was a very gay, carefree young man at that time. Of course,
all he had to worry about then was the enemy.
But it is thrilling to note that 20 years
later he is still on Government rations.
Which way is the golf course?
THE PRESIDENT. You go right out there.
Mr. Hope: Thank you very much.
NOTE: The President spoke at noon in
the Flower Garden at the White House. In his opening remarks he referred
to U.S. Senator A. Willis Robertson of Virginia; U.S. Representative Charles
A. Halleck of Indiana, House Minority Leader; and U.S. Senator George A.
Smathers of Florida. He later referred to Dr. Jonas Salk, Brig. Gen, William
(Billy) Mitchell, and Justice Louis Brandeis of the U.S. Supreme Court,
who had been honored by similar medals.
The medal presented to Mr. Hope
was struck pursuant to Public Law 87-478 (76 Stat. 93), approved June 8,
1962.