Vice President NIXON. Mr. Chairman, Secretary
Seaton, Senator Kuchel, Senator Fong, Mr. Mayor, all of the distinguished
guests on the platform and my fellow Californians, my neighbors and my
friends.
I want to say that during the course of the
next few months Pat and I will attend many meetings in this country from
Hawaii to New York to Florida to Main - all over the 50 States; and there
will be none, I can assure you, that will make a more lasting impression
upon us than this one tonight. And we thank you for coming out in such
great numbers, for your warm enthusiasm, for the friendship which you have
shown to us, and we only wish we had more time - time to meet each of you
individually, to talk over with old friends old times, and to talk with
some of the new people who live in this area and I notice from San Diego,
and Orange County, and all over the State, to talk to all of you about
some of our problems that we confront in the world today. But in any event
may I say that we do deeply appreciate this great crowd, the fact that
so many of our friends and neighbors are here.
I was reminded just a minute ago by Hubert
Perry that when we had a homecoming 8 years ago here on this athletic field
that we shook hands with everybody who came and the crowd's a little bit
too big to do that tonight I find. But we certainly wish that there were
time for that. As some of you know we do have a schedule that tomorrow
morning at 4 a.m. will take us to Hawaii and consequently we cannot stay
here as long as we would like.
But as I look back over here and see that
1933 football team - and, incidentally, that was one of Whittier College's
better teams [applause] - as I look over here and think of that team and
as I see the great stars of that team, I want to tell you something that
impresses me. This is the first time those guys have been on the sidelines
and I've been on the playing field. [Laughter-applause.] Because as Chief
Newman will tell you, I really played well in the middle of the week but
always playing the opponent's team for the varsity to run through the opponent's
plays. But it's good to see them, and I hope after this meeting we will
have a chance to get over and greet them.
I also find that there's another special section
back over here. I looked at these bleachers and I said, "What's that group
of 150 people?" Hubert said, "Those are 150 of your relatives." [Laughter.]
And I've often said with the Milhous family and the Nixon family all we
need to do is to get our relatives to vote for us and we'd win in a landslide.
So I'm going to talk to them tonight too - you can be sure of that.
And then looking around this crowd I see people
with whom I went to high school to college, people with whom I participated
in various community affairs - the Twenty-Thirty Club, the Junior Chamber
of Commerce, Kiwanis Club in La Habra. Certainly it is a moment where I,
Mr. Mayor, find just as much difficulty as you to express the feelings
that are in my heart, to say the things that I would like to say to those
without whom neither I nor Pat could be here today in the capacity we hold.
Because except what you did in the campaign of 1946 and again in the campaign
of 1950, we would not have the high honor that we have today. And we thank
all of you for that, for the hours of work, for the confidence and the
faith you have expressed in us in those years, and we trust that in these
months ahead that we will always be worthy of that trust, that we will
represent our town and our county and our State as you would want us to
represent it. And if we do that, I am sure it will be the best kind of
representation because I know what is in your hearts and the feeling of
patriotism and faith and confidence that you have in our country. [Applause.]
As I stand here today there are many thoughts
that do run through my mind, memories of those days that we were growing
up. I think of some of the houses where I used to deliver groceries, the
service station out on Whittier Boulevard where some of you used to stop
and we tried to give you fair measure and that sort of thing for your business
at that time. I think, too, of my days at Whittier High School and I'm
very happy that Stan McCaffrey, who finished Whittier High School and was
president of the student body there the year that I finished Whittier College,
is now one of my top advisers in Washington with particular responsibility
for the State of California. And if a Whittier boy can do it, and I think
he can, we're going to carry California with Stan's leadership in this
State. [Applause.]
We think of California, of the many, many
speeches that I have made throughout this State, the people that we've
met. I think of my days here at Whittier College, the things I learned,
the things I should have learned and didn't, and particularly what I think
of tonight are those who made it possible for me to be able to stand here
- not simply by your participation in elections, but those who were my
teachers, those who were the ministers in the church which I attended,
those who inspired me in high school and college-men like Paul Smith who
have given their lives to teaching and who along the way have inspired
young men and women to make their greatest contribution of which they are
capable to their communities and to their States and to their Nation.
I think perhaps the best theme that I could
use tonight in speaking to this great audience of my friends and neighbors
in California is to tell you what I think I learned at Whittier College,
and how I have tried to apply what I learned to the position of public
trust which I have had.
This is a small college but as has been said,
there are those who love it very deeply, those of us who have had the privilege
of attending it. And we love this school because of the dedication of its
faculty and because of an intangible something that you call spirit. The
Whittier spirit is one that is not different from that in many other small
colleges and larger universities in the sense that each of them, too, has
a spirit. But it is different in the sense that here at Whittier we developed
in our college years I would say a concern on three major problems.
One was that each individual had a responsibility
beyond that of simply making a good living for himself, that each individual
had a responsibility to do his best for his community, for his State and
his Nation in whatever assignment he might have - individual responsibility.
This was part of the lesson of Whittier.
And a second part of that lesson was expressed
by the word "concern" that I used a moment ago and it's related to the
first. Here at Whittier there was drilled into us in compulsory chapel,
which incidentally I think was a good thing - I don't know whether it's
still that way or not - and also in our classrooms a concern for people
less fortunate than we in our communities, in our State, in our Nation
and any place in the world, a concern for their welfare clearly apart from
how helping them might help ourselves.
And then, of course, third and perhaps above
all, any person who went to Whittier then, and I am sure that is the case
now, developed a devotion to and a dedication to peace, not simply to the
static peace which means the absence of war, but to the creative vital
peace which enables a people and which enables the world to make progress
toward solving problems of tyranny and want and disease wherever they exist
in the world.
And I would like to talk just a bit about
these three major principles which we had so much instruction in here at
Whittier. I would like to talk about them in relationship to the
problems we presently confront in this Nation.
First, the problem of peace. There is nothing
more important. You know we can solve every other problem we have in this
world today, in this Nation, we can have the best social security, the
best education, the best jobs that we can possibly imagine, and it isn't
going to make any difference unless we're around to enjoy them. And
so the most important function that a leader of this Nation has is to find
a way to keep the peace and to keep the peace without surrender of principle,
without surrender of territory. Peace with freedom for the world. [Applause.]
Now some of my good Quaker friends and I happen
to be a member of that faith as you know, have written me letters from
time to time expressing a concern about the positions our Government and
the positions I have taken on this great fundamental issue of peace. I
would like in effect to state those positions now in a positive way so
that you may understand why what we do in our Government today is in the
interests of peace, in the real interests of peace, and not obstructing
the way to peace.
First, we are keeping America strong. We believe
that America, together with her allies, must be stronger than any potential
aggressor in the world and we believe that this is necessary not because
we want this thing for the purpose of being able to launch a war, not because
we want war, but because we know this is the way to avoid war. [Applause.]
I can assure you that America today is a strong Nation, and I can assure
you, too, that this strength is essential to maintain and we will maintain
it.
Now a second point: In addition to our military
strength we must have a policy diplomatically and we do have a policy diplomatically
of firmness in dealing with those who would threaten the peace throughout
the world. I have those who have written to me and said, "Now, Mr. Nixon,
you're a Quaker, you believe in peace. Why is it that you stand against
the proposals for disarmament that are made by Mr. Khrushchev? Why is it
that we can't go more than halfway on these proposals and take some of
them on faith?" I want to tell you why we can't. Because if the United
States ever enters into a disarmament agreement with the Soviet or with
any other potential aggressor which they might break and which we would
keep, that would increase the danger of war rather than reduce it and that
we must never do. [Applause.] And the reason that we insist that disarmament
must not be just a fine slogan but that it must be honest and that there
must be an agreement which will see that both sides keep it is not because
we do not want disarmament but because we do want disarmament. We want
the fact of disarmament rather than the fiction of it which is what the
Soviets up to this time have been offering, since they have not offered
inspection along with it. [Applause.]
Now a third point. When I speak of firmness,
firmness in dealing with the Soviets, with the Communist threat, as I said
in my acceptance speech, we must have firmness without belligerency. It's
very easy, I can assure you, and sometimes very tempting when you are insulted
to strike back with the same words. But we must avoid engaging in a war
of words which would heat up the international atmosphere to the point
that we would have a nuclear disaster. And a nation that is strong, a nation
that is confident that it is right does not have to resort to returning
insult with insult. We can be confident of ourselves. [Applause.]
But turning to firmness, I know there are
those who suggest that possibly the United States is too firm, possibly
we should be more flexible in accepting the proposals that those in the
Communist world make. And again may I say it is because we are for peace
and for freedom that we are firm because we know that the way to war and
the way to surrender is through appeasement, through taking on face value
those proposals that are not going to be kept and that will result in the
end in strengthening the positions of the enemies of freedom and in weakening
our own.
Then another point that I would like to make
tonight with regard to this factor that I have called a concern for the
problems of others. This is something which applies here at home. It is
something also that applies in our relations with our countries abroad
and it is something which is essential if we are to win the battle for
peace, for freedom, and to win that battle without a war.
Let me explain it in this way. First of all,
it is not enough if the free world is to be the example that it should
be and if America is to be the example of freedom that it should be to
the rest of the world that we simply hold on. It is not enough that we
point to the fact which is the fact that we are the strongest nation, the
richest nation in the world today, that our people have the highest standard
of living, the greatest freedom that people have ever enjoyed in the history
of the world. We must constantly work to make this country better, not
just for ourselves but to make it better for those less fortunate than
we are. Let me use a specific example which will mean a great deal to any
person who has attended Whittier College.
We hear a lot those days about the problem
of prejudice and discrimination and here at Whittier we do not know prejudice
and discrimination. This is one of the great features of this college.
I think all of us would agree. But sometimes you hear this problem of prejudice
and discrimination being spoken of as a southern problem. I want to tell
you what it is. It isn't a southern problem; it's a national problem. Other
people say the problem of prejudice and discrimination is a legal problem.
This is something that the people down in Washington ought to pass laws
to solve and laws will help. But it isn't a legal problem primarily; it's
a moral problem. And other people say this is a Government problem; but
it isn't a Government problem. It's a personal problem. And what I'm meaning
to say by that is this: In every part of this country we have prejudice.
In every part of this country we have discrimination. And the only way
it's going to be dealt with is for each individual American to recognize
this very great truth, that prejudice hurts us abroad, that prejudice saps
our strength at home and that we individually must assume the responsibility
for removing it, removing it so that a hundred years after Lincoln America
can realize the great objective of equality of opportunity for all of our
people regardless of what their background may be. [Applause.] This
is a personal problem. And as I say that this is a personal problem, I
mean that each of you when you deal with this problem in your communities,
in your hearts, you help America and you help her be the example that we
want of freedom and justice for all the world to see.
This brings me now to another point that I
would like to make with regard to America's position in the world. You
often hear, I am sure, of our programs abroad in the field of assistance
to the newly developing countries of Africa and Asia and to some of those
in Latin America, and oftentimes you have heard this assistance cast solely
in terms of how it helps America, that it is necessary to help these countries
because if we don't the Communists will help them. And this is true. Therefore,
it's in our self-interest to help them, to keep the Communists out of them,
because if the Communists take this part of the world, they will have the
balance of power in the world. And a case can be made, certainly,
from the standpoint of our selfish national interest for the assistance
that America provides for these countries abroad.
But let me say something else. That position
isn't enough for America today and it isn't worthy of our traditions as
a country. It isn't enough that it isn't worthy because put yourself
in the positions of these people. They are proud people. Or they may be
poor and most of them certainly are. But they don't want to be treated
simply as pawns in a struggle between two great powers - the Communist
world and the free world. And America has a great tradition, a great tradition
from the time of our beginning, of concern for those who may not have freedom
and who want it, of concern for those who may be living in poverty and
have suffered disaster and have concern to the extent that we will help
them -why? - not for selfish reasons but because we want to help them,
not because it's for our own self-interests but because it's right. [Applause.]
I say to you today that if in our national posture we could present to
the world the picture of a country, of an America, yes, that is interested
in defending our own freedom, in building the citadels of freedom around
the world, but also a nation which from the time of its beginning and today
and in the future will stand for the right of people everywhere to enjoy
what we have, the right to choose our governments, the right to have an
opportunity to develop our own lives without having ideas imposed upon
us by a foreign power.
And now if I could turn finally to one other
subject, one which is very close to my heart and I am sure also to yours.
I have spoken of these specific things because they do relate to my background
here at Whittier and to the background of many of you who have known this
community and having known it have learned to love it as I have.
I speak now of where we go from here, where
this Nation goes and of the responsibility that each of us as a citizen
has to see that America is worthy of the trust and of the love of millions
throughout the world for whom America is the hope of the world. Let me
put it this way.
You often hear it said that as far as America
is concerned what we need is a President who will point the way, what we
need are leaders in Washington who will know who the enemies of freedom
are, know how to deal with them and develop the policies that will be effective
to meet them. But, as I said in Chicago, this is not enough. And speaking
to my friends in my own community and in my own State, let me reiterate
that that is not enough. That would be enough in a country ruled by a dictator
but in a free country we need the best effort of all of our people in our
jobs, as students, in whatever activities that we have, because unless
we have the best effort of all of our people, America is not going to live
up to the responsibilities that she
faces in the world today. And let me tell you what the stakes are.
The stakes are freedom for America, freedom
for the whole world, freedom for civilization and peace as well. We can
win. We can win the peace. We can win the battle of freedom against tyranny.
We can do these things but we can't do it just with a President and a Vice
President and Members of Congress who believe in these things. We can do
it only with a whole nation united and dedicated to the great principles
and ideals of America. [Applause.]
When I left Whittier College 26 years ago
in the heart of the depression, there was no chance, even if we had been
able to develop a program that would keep peace, there was no chance that
we could win the battle against poverty and hunger and disease in the world.
Today, just 26 years later, looking ahead in the next 10 years, there is
a chance that that can be done. Because of the developments of our scientists
we now find that if we can keep the peace, if we can develop a united effort,
not only in America but throughout the world, that we can use the great
resources of the world that have been untapped by our scientific research
to wage a winning battle against tyranny and disease and misery and want
every place in the world.
This is what we can do and this is America's
mission. This is what we must do. And this I say to you tonight is the
reason why I am so honored to be here and to speak to my own friends, the
people who know me the best, and to say to you that I only hope that I
can be worthy of my heritage in attempting to provide the leadership not
just for my party, because this is bigger than any party, and not just
for this Nation, it's bigger even than this Nation, but the leadership
for the causes of all mankind. But that leadership can be provided only
if you, too, give the best that you have to this great cause.
And so in conclusion, Mr. Chairman, again
may I say, we will have many meetings during the course of this campaign.
We will speak in all of the 50 States and we will see thousands and thousands
of people and speak to millions on television. But there will be none which
will stay with us in our hearts more than this one. And we thank you for
coming tonight. We thank you for coming, for listening as courteously as
you have, and I just want to say that the ideals that this college represents,
this community, this audience, the ideals you believe in are worth fighting
for. They're worth working for and, as far as I am concerned, I pledge
to you that in the months ahead and in the years ahead if I am given the
opportunity, that I will devote all that there is in me, my whole life,
which comes from this community, to the cause which you believe in, the
cause of a world of peace, of freedom, of justice for all. It is this pledge
I make to you, my friends in my own community, and I thank you again for
making it possible for me to be here in the capacity that I now have.
Thank you very much. [Applause.]