s, especially Illinois  and Pennsylvania. They supported him in part because he and Robert  Kennedy had tried to get the release of the civil rights leader Martin  Luther King, Jr. King, who had been jailed for taking part in a civil  rights demonstration in Georgia, was released soon afterward.  The election drew a record 69 million voters to the polls, but Kennedy  won by only 113,000 votes. Kennedy was inaugurated on January 20,  1961. In his inaugural address he emphasized America's revolutionary  heritage. 2"The same  beliefs for which our forebears fought are  still at issue around the globe," Kennedy said. 3"Let the word go  forth from this time and place to friend and foe alike, that the torch  has been passed to a new generation of Americansborn in this century,  tempered by war, disciplined by a hard and bitter peace, proud of our  ancient heritageand unwilling to witness or permit the slow undoing  of those human rights to which this nation has always been committed  and to which we are committed today at home and around the world."  Kennedy challenged Americans to assume the burden of "defending  freedom in its hour of maximum danger." The words of his address were,  4"Ask not what your country can do for youask what you can do for  your country." Kennedy sought with considerable success to attract brilliant young  people to government service. His hope was to bring new ideas and new  methods into the executive branch. As a result many of his advisers  were teachers and scholars. Among them were McGeorge Bundy and Arthur  M. Schlesinger, Jr., both graduates of Harvard. Kennedy's most  influential adviser was Theodore C. Sorenson, a member of Kennedy's  staff since his days in the Senate. Sorenson wrote many of Kennedy's  speeches and exerted a strong influence on Kennedy's development as a  political liberal, 5 a person who believes that the government should  directly help people to overcome poverty or social discrimination...