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THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary


For Immediate Release March 3, 1995
                        REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
                    AT NPR PERFORMANCE AND RECEPTION
                                    
                             The East Room

9:05 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much, Carl. I have all these notes, and then I have all these things I really want to say. (Laughter.) What can I tell you -- I'm just sort of an NPR-kind of President. (Laughter and applause.)

President Kennedy, many of you will remember, in 1962, hosted a dinner here of the Nobel Prize winners, and said it was the most stunning array of talent every to dine in the White House since Thomas Jefferson ate here alone. (Laughter.) Well, tonight you did Thomas Jefferson one better -- you joined him with Abraham Lincoln and Teddy Roosevelt and Harry Truman and Mark Twain and George Bernard Shaw and Click and Clack. (Laughter). And you all did very well.

I want to tell you that Hillary and I are particularly grateful that you spared us -- (laughter) -- from all the things you said that were not true and from the things you said that were. (Laughter.)

I thank you for giving America this wonderful history lesson of the White House. Those of you who may or may not have known, the things they told you were really true, all those wonderful little history lessons -- everything except what Jane Curtain said. (Laughter.) This is "Friday Night Live." (Laughter.)

I am honored to have all of you here at the White House as we celebrate NPR's 25th anniversary. You should know that NPR is alive and well in the real White House. We are members of both the NPR stations in Washington, DC, Hillary and I are. And when we lived at home in Arkansas, Hillary helped to bring the full range of NPR programming to our state. In fact, we woke up every morning to NPR at 6:00 a.m. We had one of these little radios that ticks on, and instead of an alarm clock, we had NPR. Some days it was so soothing, we didn't wake up. (Laughter.) But still it was a lot better than talk radio. (Laughter.) At least on those days we did wake up, we were able to eat breakfast. (Laughter and applause.)

Let me say that there were a lot of interesting things said tonight. And I have to shorten my speech because of all those things you heard about -- nature's call and how there was only one restroom in the White House for the longest -- (laughter) -- well, guess what? There's still no restroom on this floor. (Laughter.) So just take a deep breath -- I'm nearly done. (Laughter.)

Public radio stations are partners in America --partners in things that are worth doing. They offer reading services to the blind, town meetings on violence, information on health care and voting. They team up with schools and libraries. They help our children learn. They bring more than issues and news, from live classical and jazz performances to radio drama, and, of course, that car advice. And you get it all for 29 cents a citizen a year, about the price of a day's newspaper.

I know it's fashionable today to condemn everything public, but it seems to me that public radio has been a good deal for America. You know, I've done a lot of work here as President trying to build up the private sector, and we've got a lot more people working than we had two years ago, and I'm proud of that. But we're having this great debate in Washington about what the role of the government should be as we come to the end of this century, and I'm glad we are. But I think it's important that we not forget that we have some great challenges here. How are we going to get into the next century with a country where everybody still has a chance to make it? And how are we going to deal with all this diversity in ways that bring us together instead of tear us apart? And how are we going to learn enough as citizens to make good decisions about those issues that don't fit very well into the screaming and the clamoring, cutting us up in little pieces and making our blood boil instead of our hearts open and our heads clear? NPR can play a role in all that, for 29 cents a person a year. It's a good deal.

I'm glad that one of the many fights we're going to be waging this year for ordinary Americans is the fight to preserve National Public Radio. (Applause.)

Hillary and I are deeply honored to have every single one of you here tonight -- honored by the generosity, especially, of our performers who came here, who have been so gifted and who have shared their gifts with us tonight. We thank you for doing it, and mostly we thank you for the purpose for which you have done it. We thank you for caring about your fellow Americans, who really need this great institution to be here 25 years from now celebrating the 50th anniversary of National Public Radio. Let that be our dedication on this wonderful night.

God bless you and thank you. (Applause.)

END9:13 P.M. EST