I do not tell you that the Federal Government is the answer to all of our problems.
I say to this great convention here today, only if you believe that what I stand for, what I believe in, will be best for America, best for ...
Let us understand throughout this campaign that his motives and mine are sincere.
What I do want to say is this: As far as the goals which Mr. Hutcheson described in his speech this morning - I had a report of it - are con...
I can only say I would rather be a grocery clerk in the United States than to have his job in the Soviet Union.
In that respect, may I just suggest this, if you carry the argument to its logical extreme and you were to say, 'Well, the more the Federal ...
I subscribe completely to the spirit that Senator Kennedy has expressed tonight, the spirit that the United States should move ahead.
It isn't a question of how much the federal government spends; it isn't a question of which government does the most. It is a question of wh...
We have to remember that the cold war that Mr. Khrushchev is waging... is waged right here in the United States.
They respect firmness.
We are living in a civilization and in a world and at a pitch of crisis that put an ultimate premium on sheer brainpower - fully developed a...
We dare not waste it; we dare not misapply it; we dare not be satisfied with standards of mediocrity.
There must be no arbitrary barriers - neither racial nor economics.
To cover such costs might help greatly.
My point is that if the Government was responsible, primarily, for these surpluses which are on the farmer's back which depress the prices, ...
The contrast between the President's attitude and his will speak more eloquently than anything any of us could say about it.
I believe that the charge that America's prestige in the world is lost, or impaired, or low, or declining, is both absurd and irresponsible.
Let me make this clear: in our foreign affairs, as at home, I do not say we have achieved perfection.