Mrs. NIXON. Madam Chairman and friends, it
certainly is a wonderful honor for me to be here today and hear all these
women tell me what they are going to do this week. When Clare Williams
first told me about the enthusiastic reception to her idea of "Pat Nixon
Week," I felt very humble and proud. Of course, I realize that all of us
are working for a cause which is bigger than ourselves. We are devoted
to our country. Along with all the other women, I will be out working from
now until the last vote is counted because I feel it is so important to
the Campaign to get the best leadership, experienced leadership, and leadership
with a program, and I know that you share that same feeling. I do want
to close by saying that Dick joins me in appreciation of all of you wonderful
volunteers who are doing such a magnificent job in this campaign.
The VICE PRESIDENT. Thank you very much for
giving me the opportunity to be the only man to speak on this women's program.
I am in somewhat of a predicament I must admit. The predicament is that
whenever I talk about Pat, she always gives it to me afterward and says:
"You shouldn't have said those things." And consequently, I'm going to
violate her rule and admonition and say a word about her if I might on
this occasion.
I will begin with one of my favorite stories,
which came out of the campaign in Nebraska. Some of you have heard it,
but it is worth repeating. A farmer came through the receiving line and
said he had driven 200 miles to the meeting. As he shook hands with Pat
and me, he turned to me and said, "Young fellow," he said, "my wife is
going to vote for you, but I'm going to vote for Pat." Now, if you can
just multiply that by several million, we have it made as you can well
see. Certainly one of the most inspiring things about this campaign is
to have this group of * * * [roar of planes cut off a few words
here]
Leading women in the United States pay their
tribute to Pat and also to indicate their support of our campaign. This
is a hard campaign. There are still 5 weeks to go, but we intend to win
it and when the campaign is won, I am sure that a maximum part of the credit
will go to the women on this stage, including Pat Nixon.
I have been trying to think of what I could
say about Pat that hasn't already been said. What occurred to me was, as
Bertha Adkins agreed in those "Ten Reasons to Vote for the Vice President,"
was to transpose those to Pat. For example, she pointed out that I worked
my way through school. Well, I did work my way through school, but my parents
were able to help me to an extent. My mother used to get up at 5 o'clock
in the morning, I remember, and bake pies and sell them in our store, and
the savings from that came into my college and law school education. Pat,
on the other hand, worked her way through school, too, but she did it in
a far more difficult situation. Her mother died when she was 13 and she
had to take care of the whole family at that point because she was the
only girl in the family at home. Her father died when she was 17 and from
the time she finished high school, Pat earned every cent to send her through
college where she graduated with honors from Southern California. As
you well see, she ought to be running for President rather than I.
[Plane roars overhead again] * *
* and then Bertha Adkins referred very kindly to my experience in traveling
abroad and I have been to 55 countries, but with the exception of 1, Austria,
Pat has been to all of them, too. People think of the speeches I have made
and the meetings I have had and the effect of them, but they are really
nothing compared to what she did. While I would be meeting all the dignitaries,
as was my responsibility, and discussing matters of state, Pat was out
visiting literally hundreds and hundreds of hospitals and children's homes.
She was bringing to the people abroad the heart of America, and I can tell
you that while many people underestimate what they call so-called good
will - they sneer at it, they say you can't build a policy on it - let
me say this, that you can certainly negotiate much more effectively when
there is a feeling in the hearts of people of good will for the United
States than when there is none. And Pat Nixon has done more for that than
anybody that I know in these last few years.
If I could personalize it a bit. When we were
in Panama, a country where we need good will at the present time, Pat was
the first individual who had gone through the leper colony and greeted
the lepers there, also to the extent of shaking hands with them. In countries
abroad, as for example in Korea, where it was very cold at that time. I
remember that she went through the hospitals where the Korean soldiers
were. I saw newspaper reports from Korea that were translated afterward.
She made an impact on the Korean people for good that I am sure was greater
than anything I could have said. For what I am really trying to bring home
to you with regard to her is not that in itself such visits as this settle
the affairs of state. It is not that we do not have problems in the world,
but it is that the women of America have done and will continue to do a
great deal in bringing to all the people of the world our true feelings
toward them, because the women of America are for peace and they want leadership
that will bring peace. The women have a feeling in their hearts for all
the unfortunates not only in this country but in other countries and the
very fact that they get this across; that they let the people of these
countries know that we help them, not just because we are fighting communism,
but because we would be concerned about misery and disease, be concerned
about want even if there were no communism - because the women can convey
that and do convey it better than the men - this, believe me, helps us
abroad and Pat, certainly, I say with pardonable pride, has done that for
all the women of America, has helped to convey that true picture better
than we men have been able to convey it.
And so in the years ahead, if I might just
close with this, I can only say that I think we have been fortunate to
have in the past 8 years one of the most gracious First Ladies that the
world has ever seen, in Mamie Eisenhower.
Now, it would be presumptuous for me to say anything
about who ought to be the next President. It would be presumptuous for
me to say anything about myself. I have often thought this about my running
mate. I certainly think he's got it all over his opponent, but I can say
something in regard to Pat, and this has nothing to do with regard to her
opponent, because the ladies are not running against each other. I will
say this, whatever people may think of me, Pat would make a wonderful First
Lady.
Thank you.