
Three weeks before the presidential election of 1960, John F. Kennedy came to the
University of Michigan at two o'clock in the morning to rest for the night before
continuing his campaign. There, he was stunned to find a sea of ten thousand students
awaiting his arrival. Moved by their ardor, Kennedy made an off-the-cuff speech
challenging them to serve their country, to use their talents to combat hunger and
disease abroad.
A small group of students took hold of the promising idea and organized a petition
with signatures of a thousand students, challenging Kennedy to create a national
program, and offering to serve if he did. Ten days before the election at a massive
rally in San Francisco, Kennedy offered a bold campaign promise to create the Peace
Corps.
The Peace Corps became the first U.S. government-sponsored public service program
outside of military service. In the coming years, the Peace Corps model was used
to develop other government-sponsored service programs including VISTA (Volunteers
In Service To America), Head Start, Job Corps and Foster Grandparents. A plethora
of programs involving even more young Americans evolved into AmeriCorps and the
Corporation for National and Community Service. As the result of a student petition
more than four decades ago, today thousands of volunteers serve humanity at home
and around the world.
Just as with the campaign of 1960, the presidential campaign of 2008 promises to
usher in new leadership and revitalize the American political landscape.