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For
the story of the real George Gipp, don't forget to see our
February newsletter at the link below:
http://www.irishlegends.com/newsletter/feb02.htm
On May 17,
1981, President Reagan at the 136th commencement ceremony
of the university, which was held in the Notre Dame Joyce
Center on the campus in South Bend, Ind. The President
was introduced by Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, president of the
university, who had presented the President with an honorary
doctor of laws degree prior to the commencement address.
In his
remarks, the President referred to Governor Robert Orr, former
Governor Otis R. Bowen, Senators Richard G. Lugar and Dan
Quayle, and Representative John P. Hiler, all of Indiana. The
President also referred to the movie ``Knute Rockne -- All
American,'' which was filmed at Notre Dame in 1940. The
President played the part of All American halfback George Gipp,
who died of pneumonia.
The occasion
marked the first trip by the President outside of Washington,
D.C., since the assassination attempt on March 30. Four former
Presidents -- Franklin D. Roosevelt, Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Gerald R. Ford, and Jimmy Carter -- addressed convocations or
commencement exercises at the university and were awarded
honorary degrees.
The following
is the text of the President's speech at the Commencement
Exercises:
Father
Hesburgh, I thank you very much and for so many things. The
distinguished honor that you've conferred upon me here today,
I must say, however, compounds a sense of guilt that I have
nursed for almost 50 years. I thought the first degree I was
given was honorary. [Laughter] But it's wonderful to be here
today with Governor Orr, Governor Bowen, Senators Lugar and
Quayle, and Representative Hiler, these distinguished
honorees, the trustees, administration, faculty, students, and
friends of Notre Dame and, most important, the graduating
class of 1981.
Nancy and I
are greatly honored to share this day with you, and our
pleasure has been more than doubled because I am also sharing
the platform with a longtime and very dear friend, Pat
O'Brien.
Pat and I
haven't been able to see much of each other lately, so I
haven't had a chance to tell him that there is now another tie
that binds us together. Until a few weeks ago I knew very
little about my father's ancestry. He had been orphaned at age
6. But now I've learned that his grandfather, my
great-grandfather, left Ireland to come to America, leaving
his home in Ballyporeen, a village in County Tipperary in
Ireland, and I have learned that Ballyporeen is the ancestral
home of the O'Briens.
Now, if I
don't watch out, this may turn out to be less of a
commencement than a warm bath in nostalgic memories. Growing
up in Illinois, I was influenced by a sports legend so
national in scope, it was almost mystical. It is difficult to
explain to anyone who didn't live in those times. The legend
was based on a combination of three elements: a game,
football; a university, Notre Dame; and a man, Knute Rockne.
There has been nothing like it before or since.
My first time
to ever see Notre Dame was to come here as a sports announcer,
2 years out of college, to broadcast a football game. You won
or I wouldn't have mentioned it. [Laughter]
A number of
years later I returned here in the company of Pat O'Brien and
a galaxy of Hollywood stars for the world premiere of ``Knute
Rockne -- All American'' in which I was privileged to play
George Gipp. I've always suspected that there might have been
many actors in Hollywood who could have played the part
better, but no one could have wanted to play it more than I
did. And I was given the part largely because the star of that
picture, Pat O'Brien, kindly and generously held out a helping
hand to a beginning young actor.
Having come
from the world of sports, I'd been trying to write a story
about Knute Rockne. I must confess that I had someone in mind
to play the Gipper. On one of my sports broadcasts before
going to Hollywood, I had told the story of his career and
tragic death. I didn't have very many words on paper when I
learned that the studio that employed me was already preparing
a story treatment for that film. And that brings me to the
theme of my remarks.
I'm the fifth
President of the United States to address a Notre Dame
commencement. The temptation is great to use this forum as an
address on a great international or national issue that has
nothing to do with this occasion. Indeed, this is somewhat
traditional. So, I wasn't surprised when I read in several
reputable journals that I was going to deliver an address on
foreign policy or on the economy. I'm not going to talk about
either.
But, by the
same token, I'll try not to belabor you with some of the
standard rhetoric that is beloved of graduation speakers. For
example, I'm not going to tell you that ``You know more today
that you've ever known before or that you will ever know
again.'' [Laughter] The other standby is, ``When I was 14, I
didn't think my father knew anything. By the time I was 21, I
was amazed at how much the old gentleman had learned in 7
years.'' And then, of course, the traditional and the standby
is that ``A university like this is a storehouse of knowledge
because the freshmen bring so much in and the seniors take so
little away.'' [Laughter]
You members
of the graduating class of 18 -- or 1981 -- [laughter] -- I
don't really go back that far -- [laughter] -- are what
behaviorists call achievers. And while you will look back with
warm pleasure on your memories of these years that brought you
here to where you are today, you are also, I know, looking at
the future that seems uncertain to most of you but which, let
me assure you, offers great expectations.
Take pride in
this day. Thank your parents, as one on your behalf has
already done here. Thank those who've been of help to you over
the last 4 years. And do a little celebrating; you're
entitled. This is your day, and whatever I say should take
cognizance of that fact. It is a milestone in life, and it
marks a time of change.
Winston
Churchill, during the darkest period of the ``Battle of
Britain'' in World War II said: ``When great causes are on the
move in the world . . . we learn we are spirits, not animals,
and that something is going on in space and time, and beyond
space and time, which, whether we like it or not, spells
duty.''
Now, I'm
going to mention again that movie that Pat and I and Notre
Dame were in, because it says something about America. First,
Knute Rockne as a boy came to America with his parents from
Norway. And in the few years it took him to grow up to college
age, he became so American that here at Notre Dame, he became
an All American in a game that is still, to this day, uniquely
American.
As a coach,
he did more than teach young men how to play a game. He
believed truly that the noblest work of man was building the
character of man. And maybe that's why he was a living legend.
No man connected with football has ever achieved the stature
or occupied the singular niche in the Nation that he carved
out for himself, not just in a sport, but in our entire social
structure.
Now, today I
hear very often, ``Win one for the Gipper,'' spoken in a
humorous vein. Lately I've been hearing it by Congressmen who
are supportive of the programs that I've introduced.
[Laughter] But let's look at the significance of that story.
Rockne could have used Gipp's dying words to win a game any
time. But 8 years went by following the death of George Gipp
before Rock revealed those dying words, his deathbed wish.
And then he
told the story at halftime to a team that was losing, and one
of the only teams he had ever coached that was torn by
dissension and jealousy and factionalism. The seniors on that
team were about to close out their football careers without
learning or experiencing any of the real values that a game
has to impart. None of them had known George Gipp. They were
children when he played for Notre Dame. It was to this team
that Rockne told the story and so inspired them that they rose
above their personal animosities. For someone they had never
known, they joined together in a common cause and attained the
unattainable.
We were told
when we were making the picture of one line that was spoken by
a player during that game. We were actually afraid to put it
in the picture. The man who carried the ball over for the
winning touchdown was injured on the play. We were told that
as he was lifted on the stretcher and carried off the field he
was heard to say, ``That's the last one I can get for you,
Gipper.''
Now, it's
only a game. And maybe to hear it now, afterward -- and this
is what we feared -- it might sound maudlin and not the way it
was intended. But is there anything wrong with young people
having an experience, feeling something so deeply, thinking of
someone else to the point that they can give so completely of
themselves? There will come times in the lives of all of us
when we'll be faced with causes bigger than ourselves, and
they won't be on a playing field.
This Nation
was born when a band of men, the Founding Fathers, a group so
unique we've never seen their like since, rose to such
selfless heights. Lawyers, tradesmen, merchants, farmers -- 56
men achieved security and standing in life but valued freedom
more. They pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their
sacred honor. Sixteen of them gave their lives. Most gave
their fortunes. All preserved their sacred honor.
They gave us
more than a nation. They brought to all mankind for the first
time the concept that man was born free, that each of us has
inalienable rights, ours by the grace of God, and that
government was created by us for our convenience, having only
the powers that we choose to give it. This is the heritage
that you're about to claim as you come out to join the society
made up of those who have preceded you by a few years, or some
of us by a great many.
This
experiment in man's relation to man is a few years into its
third century. Saying that may make it sound quite old. But
let's look at it from another viewpoint or perspective. A few
years ago, someone figured out that if you could condense the
entire history of life on Earth into a motion picture that
would run for 24 hours a day, 365 days -- maybe on leap years
we could have an intermission -- [laughter] -- this idea that
is the United States wouldn't appear on the screen until 3 1/2
seconds before midnight on December 31st. And in those 3 1/2
seconds not only would a new concept of society come into
being, a golden hope for all mankind, but more than half the
activity, economic activity in world history, would take place
on this continent. Free to express their genius, individual
Americans, men and women, in 3 1/2 seconds, would perform such
miracles of invention, construction, and production as the
world had never seen.
As you join
us out there beyond the campus, you know there are great
unsolved problems. Federalism, with its built in checks and
balances, has been distorted. Central government has usurped
powers that properly belong to local and State governments.
And in so doing, in many ways that central government has
begun to fail to do the things that are truly the
responsibility of a central government.
All of this
has led to the misuse of power and preemption of the
prerogatives of people and their social institutions. You are
graduating from a great private, or, if you will, independent
university. Not too many years ago, such schools were
relatively free from government interference. In recent years,
government has spawned regulations covering virtually every
facet of our lives. The independent and church-supported
colleges and universities have found themselves enmeshed in
that network of regulations and the costly blizzard of
paperwork that government is demanding. Thirty-four
congressional committees and almost 80 subcommittees have
jurisdiction over 439 separate laws affecting education at the
college level alone. Almost every aspect of campus life is now
regulated -- hiring, firing, promotions, physical plant,
construction, recordkeeping, fundraising and, to some extent,
curriculum and educational programs.
I hope when
you leave this campus that you will do so with a feeling of
obligation to your alma mater. She will need your help and
support in the years to come. If ever the great independent
colleges and universities like Notre Dame give way to and are
replaced by tax-supported institutions, the struggle to
preserve academic freedom will have been lost.
We're
troubled today by economic stagnation, brought on by inflated
currency and prohibitive taxes and burdensome regulations. The
cost of stagnation in human terms, mostly among those least
equipped to survive it, is cruel and inhuman.
Now, after
those remarks, don't decide that you'd better turn your
diploma back in so you can stay another year on the campus.
I've just given you the bad news. The good news is that
something is being done about all this because the people of
America have said, ``Enough already.'' You know, we who had
preceded you had just gotten so busy that we let things get
out of hand. We forgot that we were the keepers of the power,
forgot to challenge the notion that the state is the principal
vehicle of social change, forgot that millions of social
interactions among free individuals and institutions can do
more to foster economic and social progress than all the
careful schemes of government planners.
Well, at last
we're remembering, remembering that government has certain
legitimate functions which it can perform very well, that it
can be responsive to the people, that it can be humane and
compassionate, but that when it undertakes tasks that are not
its proper province, it can do none of them as well or as
economically as the private sector.
For too long
government has been fixing things that aren't broken and
inventing miracle cures for unknown diseases.
We need you.
We need your youth. We need your strength. We need your
idealism to help us make right that which is wrong. Now, I
know that this period of your life, you have been and are
critically looking at the mores and customs of the past and
questioning their value. Every generation does that. May I
suggest, don't discard the time-tested values upon which
civilization was built simply because they're old. More
important, don't let today's doomcriers and cynics persuade
you that the best is past, that from here on it's all
downhill. Each generation sees farther than the generation
that preceded it because it stands on the shoulders of that
generation. You're going to have opportunities beyond anything
that we've ever known.
The people
have made it plain already. They want an end to excessive
government intervention in their lives and in the economy, an
end to the burdensome and unnecessary regulations and a
punitive tax policy that does take ``from the mouth of labor
the bread it has earned.'' They want a government that cannot
only continue to send men across the vast reaches of space and
bring them safely home, but that can guarantee that you and I
can walk in the park of our neighborhood after dark and get
safely home. And finally, they want to know that this Nation
has the ability to defend itself against those who would seek
to pull it down.
And all of
this, we the people can do. Indeed, a start has already been
made. There's a task force under the leadership of the Vice
President, George Bush, that is to look at those regulations
I've spoken of. They have already identified hundreds of them
that can be wiped out with no harm to the quality of life. And
the cancellation of just those regulations will leave billions
and billions of dollars in the hands of the people for
productive enterprise and research and development and the
creation of jobs.
The years
ahead are great ones for this country, for the cause of
freedom and the spread of civilization. The West won't contain
communism, it will transcend communism. It won't bother to
dismiss or denounce it, it will dismiss it as some bizarre
chapter in human history whose last pages are even now being
written.
William
Faulkner, at a Nobel Prize ceremony some time back, said man
``would not only [merely] endure: he will prevail'' against
the modern world because he will return to ``the old verities
and truths of the heart.'' And then Faulkner said of man, ``He
is immortal because he alone among creatures . . . has a soul,
a spirit capable of compassion and sacrifice and endurance.''
One can't say
those words -- compassion, sacrifice, and endurance -- without
thinking of the irony that one who so exemplifies them, Pope
John Paul II, a man of peace and goodness, an inspiration to
the world, would be struck by a bullet from a man towards whom
he could only feel compassion and love. It was Pope John Paul
II who warned in last year's encyclical on mercy and justice
against certain economic theories that use the rhetoric of
class struggle to justify injustice. He said, ``In the name of
an alleged justice the neighbor is sometimes destroyed,
killed, deprived of liberty or stripped of fundamental human
rights.''
For the West,
for America, the time has come to dare to show to the world
that our civilized ideas, our traditions, our values, are not
-- like the ideology and war machine of totalitarian societies
-- just a facade of strength. It is time for the world to know
our intellectual and spiritual values are rooted in the source
of all strength, a belief in a Supreme Being, and a law higher
than our own.
When it's
written, history of our time won't dwell long on the hardships
of the recent past. But history will ask -- and our answer
determine the fate of freedom for a thousand years -- Did a
nation borne of hope lose hope? Did a people forged by courage
find courage wanting? Did a generation steeled by hard war and
a harsh peace forsake honor at the moment of great climactic
struggle for the human spirit?
If history
asks such questions, it also answers them. And the answers are
to be found in the heritage left by generations of Americans
before us. They stand in silent witness to what the world will
soon know and history someday record: that in the [its] third
century, the American Nation came of age, affirmed its
leadership of free men and women serving selflessly a vision
of man with God, government for people, and humanity at peace.
A few years
ago, an Australian Prime Minister, John Gorton, said, ``I
wonder if anybody ever thought what the situation for the
comparatively small nations in the world would be if there
were not in existence the United States, if there were not
this giant country prepared to make so many sacrifices.'' This
is the noble and rich heritage rooted in great civil ideas of
the West, and it is yours.
My hope today
is that in the years to come -- and come it shall -- when it's
your time to explain to another generation the meaning of the
past and thereby hold out to them their promise of the future,
that you'll recall the truths and traditions of which we've
spoken. It is these truths and traditions that define our
civilization and make up our national heritage. And now,
they're yours to protect and pass on.
I have one
more hope for you: when yoy do speak to the next generation
about these things, that you will always be able to speak of
an America that is strong and free, to find in your hearts an
unbounded pride in this much-loved country, this once and
future land, this bright and hopeful nation whose generous
spirit and great ideals the world still honors.
Congratulations,
and God bless you.
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