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THE WHITE HOUSE
 Office of the Press Secretary
 
 
 
President William Jefferson Clinton
Excerpts From Remarks By The President
 To The Annual Meeting Of
 The American Society Of Newspaper Editors
 April 10, 1997
 
 
...I hope people will look back on this period and say that while I was 
President, we prepared America for the 21st century basically in three ways:  
that we preserved the American Dream of opportunity for everybody who is 
willing to work for it; number two, that we preserved America's leadership for 
peace and freedom and prosperity in the world, and the world is a better place 
because of it; and number three, that Americans are living in greater harmony 
with one 
another as one America because we passionately advocated a respect for people's 
differences and respect for our shared values, and we made real progress in 
overcoming these divides and extremist hatreds that have not only weakened our 
democracy but are virtually destroying countries all around the world.  
 
 
...This whole issue of how we deal with our racial diversity.  It's something, 
of course, that's 
dominated my whole life because I grew up as a southerner.  But it's a very 
different issue now.  It's more than black Americans and white Americans.  The 
majority of students in the Los Angeles County schools are Hispanic.  And there 
are four school districts in America -- four -- where there are children who 
have more than 100 different racial, ethnic, or linguistic backgrounds within 
the school districts already.
 
So this is a big deal.  And every issue that we debate, whether it's 
affirmative action or immigration or things that seem only peripherally 
involved in this, need to be viewed through the 
prism of how we can preserve one America, the American Dream, our shared 
values, and still accord people real respect and appreciation for their 
independent heritages.  It will be a great, great challenge.  It's a challenge 
that, by the way, I think the newspapers of the country can do a lot to help 
promote in terms of advancing dialogue, diversifying your own staffs, doing the 
things that will help America to come to grips with what it means not to be a 
country with a legacy of slavery and the differences between blacks and whites, 
but to have grafted on to that not only the immigration patterns of the early 
20th century but what is happening to us now.
 
             It is really potentially a great thing for America that we are 
becoming so multi-ethnic at the time the world is becoming so closely tied 
together.  But it's also potentially a powder keg of 
problems and heartbreak and division and loss.  And how we handle it will 
determine, really -- that single question may be the biggest determinant of 
what we look like 50 years from now and what our position in the world is and 
what the children of that age will have to look forward to.             
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