Earlier in the day I had pre-recorded my final radio address, to be aired not long before I was to leave the White House for the inaugural ceremony. system by 2003, well before a workable system could be developed or would be needed; moreover, such action would violate ith North Korea and China, the other signers of the forty-six-year-old armistice concluding the Korean War, in orde Another son, John, was a Virginia state trooper who had led our inaugural motorcade from Monticello to Washington.
This is what he said: For me—and I believe for the nation as well—the Vietnam war finally ended the day you were elected president. DS policy, which included a 30 percent increase in overall AIDS funding, and I outlined a series of new initiatives to combat AIDS. ions of the country—those moments when Americans dig out of their deepest problems by reimagining themselves. Cheryl Mills, a young African-American graduate of Stanford Law School, spoke on the sixth anniversary of the day she began her work in the White House.
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