FOR RELEASE ON RECEIPT AUGUST 17, 1960
MY DAY
By Eleanor Roosevelt
NEW YORK. - - In my conversation with Sen. John Kennedy at Hyde Park Sunday, I
was anxious, needless to say, to find out if he and Adlai Stevenson had planned to work closely
on foreign affairs during the campaign.
I knew there would be no question of Rep. Chester Bowles working closely with the
Senator, because it was for this purpose that he withdrew as a candidate for re-election to
Congress. And I felt sure that it would be easy for Senator Kennedy and Representative Bowles
to work together.
Senator Kennedy has a quick mind, but I would say that he might tend to arrive at
judgments almost too quickly. Therefore, it seemed important to me that he should have a good
relationship during the campaign with Mr. Stevenson, thereby demonstrating that their
philosophies are sufficiently similar so that they could work well together in the future, even
though Mr. Stevenson has a more judicial and reflective type of mind.
I was pleased to learn that the Senator already had made plans much along these lines. It
gave me a feeling of reassurance.
Our Democratic candidate is a likeable man with charm, and I think that already, since
the convention, the difficulties and responsibilities that the future may hold for him as President
have opened up new vistas for him and brought about a greater maturity.
I think Senator Kennedy is anxious to learn. I think he is hospitable to new ideas. He is
hard-headed. He calculates the political effect of every move. I left my conversation with him
with the feeling that here is a man who wants to leave a record of not only having helped his
countrymen, but having helped humanity as a whole.
I had withheld my decision on joining Herbert Lehman as honorary chairman
of the Democratic Citizens Committee of New York until I
had a chance to see and talk with our Democratic candidate.
After Senator Kennedy's visit, I telephoned my acceptance
to serve with Mr. Lehman, and I told Senator Kennedy that
I would discuss what help in the campaign I could give,
for I have come to the conclusion that the people will have
in John F. Kennedy, if he is elected, a good President.
As the weeks go by I hope I will have an opportunity to see our candidate more and to
know him better, but I have enough confidence in him now to feel that I can work
wholeheartedly for his election.
Senator Kennedy was met by a very large crowd Sunday morning when he landed at
Dutchess County Airport on his way to Hyde Park. I had sent my car and two friends, Dr. And
[and] Mrs. David Gurewitsch, to meet him.
Dr. Gurewitsch got out of the car to go forward and welcome the Senator. Mrs.
Gurewitsch stayed in the car and, while waiting there, asked several people in the crowd if they
were Democrats or curiosity-seekers. To her surprise, she found that most of them professed to
be Democrats. Both she and Dr. Gurewitsch reported to me later that the applause upon Senator
Kennedy's arrival was astonishing.
The Senator and his party came straight to my cottage, and he had with him William
Walton, the coordinator for the Citizens Committee of New York State, and Pierre Salinger, his
press secretary.
The occasion which brought the Senator to Hyde Park was a meeting of the Golden Ring
Clubs, members of which were laying a wreath on my husband's grave on the anniversary of the
passage of the Social Security Act. I arranged to have the Senator lunch alone with me while the
others ate on our outdoor dining porch. But at the close of the interview the Senator asked if Mr.
Walton might come in, which he did for a few minutes.
E.R.