Senator KENNEDY. Senator Fisher, Governor,
Senator Bartlett, Senator Gruening, Congressman Rivers, ladies and gentlemen,
yesterday afternoon I campaigned in Aroostook County, Maine, which is the
potato center at the other end of the United States. I am glad to be here
in this rich valley on the opposite end of our country, but united with
Maine in a common determination to build a stronger State and a stronger
United States.
I am the first candidate for the Presidency
to actively campaign in the State of Alaska. [Applause.] There are three
electoral votes in Alaska. I left Washington, D.C., this morning at 8 o'clock.
It is now 11:30 in Washington. I have come, I figure, about 3,000 miles
per electoral vote, and if travel 800,000 miles in the next 2 months, we
might win this election. But I am prepared to do it. [Applause.]
There is a story that once a traveler from
Boston, Mass., used to complain that the train stood still at night in
the West, and the reason, of course, was that when they woke up in the
morning, they saw the same mountains and the same rivers that they had
seen the previous morning. I, too, come from the other end of the American
continent. I was born in one of the oldest cities of the United States,
the city of Boston, and I find myself tonight in one of the youngest cities
of this country. I was raised in one of our smaller States, and I find
myself tonight in our biggest State. But I feel at home as an American
in the State of Alaska, and for good reason, for Alaska is a new State,
and it typifies the kind of opportunity and determination which we need
if we are going to restore our country to a position of second to none
around the world. [Applause.] For in America, too, nothing stands still
at night. This is a changing State here in Alaska an it is a changing country.
The pressures and needs have increased, and yet we have stood still. I
don't thing that that is the kind of action which in the State of Alaska
they want, if this State is going to realize its great potential.
Tomorrow there will be 7,000 more Americans
living in this country than lived here today. By the year 2,000 there will
be over 300 million people living in the United States, many thousands
here in the State of Alaska. But I don't think that we have begun to prepare
for that day, either in this State or in this country. I don't think we
have looked to the future with the same kind of courage and determination
which it took to build this valley.
I come here to Alaska because I believe in
a very real sense this is the last frontier, and in a sense it is a new
frontier. This State can be one of our great States. It needs vigorous
action on the Federal level, and so does our country. [Applause.]
We have substituted in this State a program
of no new starts. We have failed to recognize the fact which the Soviet
Union has recognized, and that is the necessity of power as the key to
their national development. On the Angara River, north of Mongolia, the
Russians are building a hydroelectric project which will be twice as large
as any project ever built in the United States of America, twice as large
as the Grand Coulee and Boulder Dams combined. Their one project will be
the largest in the world and they are doing more. The tragic fact of the
matter is that if Alaska belonged to the Russians today, Rampart Canyon
Dam would be underway.
I don't think it is going to take the Russians
to do it. I think we can do it. I think this is the kind of project [applause]
which Alaska needs.
I came here in 1958, and I come back again
in 1960. I think here in the largest State of the Union we have an unparalleled
opportunity to grow, by recognizing our great natural resources, by harnessing
our rivers, by building our roads and highways, by improving our fishing
resources, by recognizing that this is an opportunity not merely for the
people of Alaska, but for the People of the United States.
I come here to Alaska with pride as an American
in this State, and with confidence that this State and this country will
be, by the year 1970, once again second to none, the capital of the free
world, the hope of men who desire a better life for themselves and their
children. Alaska represents what can be done. I am delighted to be here
today. I am delighted to campaign in this State. I hope the Vice President
comes here after me, because here in Alaska it is an education for him
and for me. Whoever is President must know this State, must recognize its
opportunities. I can assure you that if I am successful, the needs of this
State will be recognized, because here is the new frontier.
Thank you. [Applause.]