THE MAKING OF A NATION 210 - John Kennedy Inauguration, Firs(在线收听

THE MAKING OF A NATION -September 12, 2002: John Kennedy, Part 1 / First 100 Days

By Jerilyn Watson


VOICE 1:
This is Rich Kleinfeldt.
VOICE 2:
And this is Phil Murray with THE MAKING OF A NATION, a VOA Special English program about the history


of the United States.
(Theme)
Our program today is about the beginning of the administration of President John Kennedy.
((Music)
)
VOICE 1:
January twentieth, nineteen-sixty-one. John Kennedy was to be sworn-in that day as


president of the United States.


It had snowed heavily the night before. Few cars were in the streets of Washington.
Yet, somehow, people got to the ceremony at the Capitol building.
VOICE 2:
The outgoing president, Dwight Eisenhower, was seventy years old. John Kennedy was just forty-three. He was


the first American president born in the twentieth century.
Both Eisenhower and Kennedy served in the military in World War Two. Eisenhower

served at the top. He was commander of allied forces in Europe. Kennedy was one of
many young navy officers in the pacific battle area.
Eisenhower was a hero of the war and was an extremely popular man. Kennedy was

extremely popular, too, especially among young people. He was a fresh face in
American politics. To millions of Americans, he represented a chance for a new
beginning.

VOICE 1:

Not everyone liked John Kennedy, however. Many people thought he was too young to be president. Many

opposed him because he belonged to the Roman Catholic Church. A majority of Christians in America were

Protestant. There had never been a Roman Catholic president of the United States. John Kennedy would be the
first.
VOICE 2:
Dwight Eisenhower served two terms during the nineteen-fifties. That was the limit for American presidents. His


vice president, Richard Nixon, ran against Kennedy in the election of nineteen-sixty.
Many Americans supported Nixon. They believed he was a stronger opponent of communism than Kennedy.
Some also feared that Kennedy might give more consideration to the needs of black Americans than to white
Americans.


(Photo - National Archives)

The election of nineteen-sixty was one of the closest in American history. Kennedy defeated Nixon by fewer than
one-hundred-twenty thousand popular votes. Now, he would be sworn-in as the nation's thirty-fifth president.
((Music)
)


VOICE 1:
One of the speakers at the ceremony was Robert Frost. He was perhaps America's most popular poet at the time.
Robert Frost planned to read from a long work he wrote especially for the ceremony. But he was unable to read
much of it. The bright winter sun shone blindingly on the snow. The cold winter wind blew the paper in his old
hands.


VOICE 2:
John Kennedy stood to help him. Still, the poet could not continue. Those in the crowd felt concerned for the


eighty-six-year-old man. Suddenly, he stopped trying to say his special poem. Instead, he began to say the words
of another one, one he knew from memory. It was called "The Gift Outright.
"
Here is part of that poem by Robert Frost, read by Stan Busby:
The land was ours before we were the land's.
She was our land more than a hundred years before we were her people ..
.
Something we were withholding made us weak
until we found out that it was ourselves
we were withholding from our land of living ..
.
Such as we were we gave ourselves outright.
VOICE 1:
Soon it was time for the new president to speak. People watching on television could see his icy breath as he


stood. He was not wearing a warm coat. His head was uncovered.
Kennedy's speech would, one day, be judged to be among the best in American history. The time of his
inauguration was a time of tension and fear about nuclear weapons. The United States had nuclear weapons. Its


main political enemy, the Soviet Union, had them, too. If hostilities broke out, would such terrible weapons be
used?
VOICE 2:
Kennedy spoke about the issue. He warned of the danger of what he called "the deadly atom." He said the United


States and communist nations should make serious proposals for the inspection and control of nuclear weapons.


He urged both sides to explore the good in science, instead of its terrors.
KENNEDY: "Together let us explore the stars, conquer the deserts, eradicate disease, tap the ocean depths, and
encourage the arts and commerce ... Let both sides join in creating a new endeavor, not a new balance of power,
but a new world of law, where the strong are just and the weak secure and the peace preserved.
"


VOICE 1:
Kennedy also spoke about a torch -- a light of leadership being passed from older Americans to younger


Americans. He urged the young to take the torch and accept responsibility for the future. He also urged other
countries to work with the United States to create a better world.
KENNEDY: "The energy, the faith, the devotion which we bring to this endeavor will light our country and all



who serve it -- and the glow from that fire can truly light the world. And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what
your country can do for you -- ask what you can do for your country. My fellow citizens of the world: Ask not
what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man."

((MUSIC)
)
VOICE 2:
John Kennedy's first one-hundred days as president were busy ones.
He was in office less than two weeks when the Soviet Union freed two American airmen. The Soviets had shot


down their spy plane over the Bering Sea. About sixty-million people watched as Kennedy announced the
airmen's release. It was the first presidential news conference broadcast live on television in the United States.
Kennedy welcomed the release as a step toward better relations with the Soviet Union.

The next month, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev made another move toward better relations. He sent Kennedy a
message. The message said that disarmament would be a great joy for all people on earth.

VOICE 1:
A few weeks later, President Kennedy announced the creation of the peace corps. He had talked about this
program during the election campaign. The peace corps would send thousands of Americans to developing
countries to provide technical help.


Another program, the alliance for progress, was announced soon after the peace corps was created. The purpose
of the alliance for progress was to provide economic aid to latin American nations for ten years.

VOICE 2:
The space program was another thing Kennedy had talked about during the election campaign. He believed the
United States should continue to explore outer space.


The Soviet Union had gotten there first. It launched the world's first satellite in nineteen-fifty-seven. Then, in
April, nineteen-sixty-one, he Soviet Union sent the first manned spacecraft into orbit around the earth.

VOICE 1:
The worst failure of Kennedy's administration came that same month. On April seventeenth, more than one-
thousand cuban exiles landed on a beach in western Cuba. They had received training and equipment from the
United States Central Intelligence Agency. They were to lead a revolution to overthrow the communist
government of Cuba. The place where they landed was called Bahia de Cochinos -- the Bay of Pigs.

The plan failed. Most of the exiles were killed or captured by the Cuban army.
VOICE 2:
It had not been President Kennedy's idea to start a revolution against Cuban leader Fidel Castro. Officials in the


last administration had planned it. However, most of Kennedy's advisers supported the idea. And he approved it.


In public, the president said he was responsible for the failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion. In private, he said, "All
my life I have known better than to depend on the experts. How could I have been so stupid.
"
VOICE 1:
John Kennedy's popularity was badly damaged by what happened in Cuba. His next months in office would be
a


struggle to regain the support of the people. That will be our story next week.
(Theme)



VOICE 2:


This program of THE MAKING OF A NATION was written by Jeri Watson and produced by Paul Thompson.
This is Phil Murray.
VOICE 1:
And this is Rich Kleinfeldt. Join us again next week for another VOA Special English program about the history


of the United States.

 

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