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calls.
[[Page 13]]
The President. Well, they would be, here.
Q. Well, they were.
The President. This is our pastime at this time of year. But you can
buy--you can have a duck call, pay anywhere from $5 to $125.
Q. We saw that, $40 for a duck call. The one around your neck looked
like an expensive one, too.
The President. Yes. Well, like I said, those are hand-made. And the
guy that hand-made that is the mayor of Stuttgart, which is where they
have the international duck calling championship.
Q. [Inaudible]
The President. Oh, yeah. You know, I've worked like a dog for the
first 2 years. I worked every weekend. I worked at night. And I think I
need to do a little more of this. And I'm glad I did the work, and I'm
glad we got done what we did, but I also think it's important to kind of
keep your batteries charged, your roots watered.
Q. Batteries charged for the start of a Republican Congress
tomorrow?
The President. I'm looking forward to it.
Q. Somebody has to ask that question, right?
The President. I'm looking forward to it.
Q. Not dreading it?
The President. No. I just don't want to talk about it until
tomorrow. [Laughter] I want to enjoy my----
Q. So much for the duck call.
Q. Got everything?
The President. No, no. These guys don't have their hamburgers yet.
They said 5 minutes they'd have everybody's. I'm sorry, I thought you
all had been fed.
Q. It's been a great day, Mr. President. Thank you.
The President. It has. I'm sorry it's raining on us. I guess I'd
better not go play golf. [Laughter]
Q. [Inaudible]--worse than when you played golf in Martha's Vineyard
on Labor Day?
The President. Yes, I've played golf in a lot worse. I've played
golf here in 35 degrees sleet. But I had my uniform. It takes a special
uniform for that.
Q. You can't golf in a duck uniform, is that it?
The President. You know, Hillary gave me a great Goretex suit that
you can wear in the rain. It's rain repellent. I've played a lot of golf
in it.
Q. Doesn't it restrict your movement?
The President. No, because it's a double extra large. It's too big,
so you can just swing away. [Laughter] But it's a--yes, it cuts down on
your distance. But when you're out there in a hailstorm, you don't
expect to hit it very far. [Laughter]
Are we ready?
Q. Can we get one picture?
The President. Oh, sure. This young lady made it all the way from
here to Mount Vernon College. Good for you. Good luck to you. What do
you teach?
Q. English, 12th grade.
The President. Hang in there.
Q. Are you going to go to the Plantation----
The President. I'm going to go home and put on some different duds
and talk to Hillary about it. Then I'll go down to the Plantation
Museum. Did you see it down there?
Note: The President spoke at approximately 11:50 a.m. A tape was not
available for verification of the content of this exchange.
<DOC>
[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
[frwais.access.gpo.gov]
[Page 13-17]
Monday, January 9, 1995
Volume 31--Number 1
Pages 1-30
Week Ending Friday, January 6, 1995
Remarks in a Question-and-Answer Session With Elementary Students in
Sherwood, Arkansas
January 4, 1995
The President. Well, good morning.
Students. Good morning.
The President. It's cold out there, isn't it?
Students. Yes.
The President. But it's warm in here.
Students. Yes.
The President. Do you like your new school?
Students. Yes.
The President. I want to congratulate you on being in positions of
leadership in this school. I want to say how glad I am to be in this
media center and how pleased I am it's named for my wife, who did a lot
of work to try to help make sure we created schools like this magnet
school that children and
[[Page 14]]
their parents could choose to come to, and it could give you very
special learning opportunities. I'm very, very happy about that. And I'm
glad to see all of you.
Hillary Clinton. I'd like to ask how many--are there any
kindergartners here? Good. Now, this is your first year of school, and
you're already going to be helping to lead the school. That's great.
How many first-graders do we have? Congratulations, first-graders.
How about second-graders? That is wonderful. Now, some of you who are in
first and second grade, you were at different schools last year, right?
So you're here. That's good. You get to help create the school.
How about third-graders? Ah, third-graders, that's really important.
And I see a T-shirt that goes with the school. That's nice.
The President. Stand up, and let's look at that T-shirt.
Hillary Clinton. That's really nice. How about fourth-graders? Where
are the fourth-graders? You have a lot of responsibility, I know. How
about fifth-graders? Fifth-graders--great. I can see we get more and
more as we move up the classes. And then, how about sixth-graders?
Well, thank you. This is really an exciting opportunity to help
start a school, which is what all of you are doing, and to try to make
sure it gets on the right track. So I want to thank you for doing that.
It's a big responsibility.
I once was in the first class of a new school when I was in high
school, and you really have a lot of chances to set the standards for
everybody who comes after you. So thank you for doing that.
The President. Are you excited about starting a school?
Students. Yes.
The President. Someday all of you will know more about me than I do.
[Laughter]
Hillary Clinton. I know. We wanted to be sure if you had any
questions for us, you'd have a chance to ask, okay? My goodness! We
won't be able to answer every question. [Laughter]
The President. Let's take--shall we start in grades, going
backwards? A sixth-grader. Go ahead.
Q. How do you deal with criticism?
The President. How do I deal with criticism? Better on some days
than others. [Laughter] I think the important thing about criticism is
to try to take it very seriously; that is, can we learn from criticism?
Benjamin Franklin, one of our Founding Fathers, said, ``Our critics are
our friends for they show us our faults.'' And since no one is perfect,
your critics can help you learn to do better. But it's important not to
take criticism personally. That is, a lot of times people try to hurt
you personally, and you can't let that happen.
So if someone criticizes you, ask yourself, ``Is it true what
they're saying?'' And if it's true, then say, ``Well, I'm going to try
to improve. I'm going to try to do better.'' Don't let anybody put you
down as a person. Too much criticism today is designed to hurt people
personally and to hurt them in the eyes of other people. That's wrong.
But criticism itself can be very good.
Hillary Clinton. That's a good question, because I would bet that as
all of you who are on the student council and are ambassadors make
decisions, you will get some criticism. You'll have friends who will
say, ``Why did you do that?'' or ``I don't like you anymore,'' or ``I
don't agree with that.'' So that was a very good question to ask.
Of course, the best way to handle criticism is to remember the
Golden Rule. You all remember the Golden Rule?
Students. Yes.
Hillary Clinton. From church and Sunday school? If you can treat
other people the way you want to be treated, then you can learn from
criticism, but not get pulled down by it, not be upset by it.
The President. And you should think about that, too, not only how
you deal with criticism but if you're going to criticize. If you want to
be a critic, that is, if you see something in school you don't like or
you see someone doing something you don't like, think about how you're
going to say that so they will be able to listen and hear you, but you
won't be hurting them.
So you go up and say, ``You're doing something I disagree with. I
think you're a good person, but I don't agree with what you're doing.
Here is what I think you should do.'' Do it like that, instead of
saying, ``I don't
[[Page 15]]
like you anymore. You're not a good person. Goodbye.'' [Laughter] You
see what I mean? So you can do it. It's important to receive criticism,
but it's also important to give it in a good spirit.
Is there a fifth-grader with a question? Let's see, go ahead.
Q. Why is it important to swear in when you become President?
The President. To swear in?
Q. Yes.
Hillary Clinton. When you become President.
The President. That's a very good question. Because when the
President swears the Oath of Office, when he puts his hand on the Bible
and swears before God and all the American people to uphold the
Constitution and laws of the United States, that increases the
obligation the President feels inside, in his heart, to do the job. All
the American people see the President making that promise, and they
then, no matter who they voted for--whom they voted for--come together
as a people and see that the President is now the President. And that
seals the decision of the election and makes it more than an election,
it makes it a matter of law and also makes it a matter of conviction to
the American people. It's a very important symbolic thing.
Is there a fourth-grader with a question?
Q. Why didn't you let your goal down of being President?
Hillary Clinton. I'm sorry, we couldn't hear you.
Q. Why didn't you let your goal down of being President?
The President. I didn't. What do you mean? I don't understand the
question, I'm sorry. Say it again.
Q. Why didn't you let your goal down of being President?
Hillary Clinton. Oh, how did he have the goal of being President all
the time he was growing up, and why didn't he give up or why didn't he
quit?
The President. Oh, why didn't I give up on my goal of being
President? Is that what you're asking? That's a very good question.
There are some days when I still ask myself that. [Laughter] That's a
very good question.
Well, when I started running for President and I started having the
elections, you know, to run--because you have to go and run in a lot of
different States to get the nomination of your party, and then you run
in the general election--there were a lot of times when I got
discouraged, and a lot of difficult things happened.
But I was able to hold on to the goal by always remembering why I
wanted to be President, that I wanted to help people like you have a
better future. I wanted to help your parents have more jobs and better
opportunities. I wanted to help our country solve its problems and take
advantage of all the wonderful opportunities that are out there for us.
So whenever I would get really discouraged and really down, I would
always remember why I was doing the work.
And you should remember that, because if you set a goal for
yourself, particularly if it's a high goal and especially if you can't
do it tomorrow, if it takes next week or next month or next year or
years ahead, a lot of things will happen in life to discourage you.
People will criticize you. You will honestly make mistakes. There will
be times when you wonder whether you're smart enough or strong enough or
sometimes even whether you're good enough to achieve your goal. And you
just have to keep remembering in your mind and in your heart a good
thing you want to do--why do you want to achieve this goal?--and keep
that deep inside. And if you do that, then you won't be discouraged. You
can take all the disappointments and just keep right on going.
Okay? That's a very good question.
Is there a third-grader with a question? Go ahead.
Q. What made you want to become the President?
The President. I wanted to become the President because I thought
the President has a unique opportunity. There's no job like it in the
United States. In a way, there's no job like it anywhere in the world.
And I thought at this time in our history, in the history of the United
States, the President had a unique opportunity and a unique
responsibility to try to make our economy strong again, to try to
improve our education system, to try to make sure our country could
[[Page 16]]
lead the world to be a more peaceful place, to be a more free place, to
be a more prosperous place, and to also secure for you the American
dream, the dream that if you work hard, if you obey the law, if you
develop the abilities God gave you, you can do anything you want to do,
you can be anything you want to be.
And I wanted to make sure that you had that dream. That's the dream
I had when I was your age, and I wanted to make sure you had it. That's
why I ran for President.
Hillary Clinton. And we hope all of you have dreams and goals, too.
The President. You don't have to have the same dream I did or the
same dream Hillary did, but you should have your own dream. Always you
should be thinking about: What do I want to do when I grow up? What do I
want to do when I'm in high school? What do I want to do in grade school
here? How do I want to be treated as a person, and how do I want to
treat other people?
Think about how you want your life to be, and then go out and do
what you think about. You can do it. It's not easy, and you'll mess up
now and again. We all do. Everybody's not perfect; no one is perfect.
But you have to have your dreams.
Is there a second-grader with a question? Go ahead.
Q. Why is the White House in Washington, DC? Why did they build it
in Washington, DC?
The President. That is a great question: Why is the White House in
Washington, DC? Well, when our country got started, there were 13
States. Now how many are there?
Students. Fifty.
The President. Fifty, that's right. There were only 13 when we
started. And these States were very jealous of one another. That is, the
main thing they had in common, the 13 States, was that they all wanted
to be independent of Great Britain. And the Revolutionary War was fought
to make them free of Great Britain, and they all joined together in this
fight. But for a long time they couldn't agree on what their
relationship to each other would be. That is, would all these States be
more or less independent and just get together every now and then to do
certain things, or would they join together in one country with one
government?
Well, finally they decided they would join together in one country,
with a National Government, but the States would keep their separate
governments, and they would have control over how many cities and
counties they had in each State. Well, they needed a Capital for the
National Government, but they didn't want to give the Capital to any
particular State, see, because they had all been very jealous of each
other. They all had been independent. And each State, even little
Delaware or Rhode Island, thought they were as important as big New York
or Pennsylvania. So no one wanted to give the Capital to any particular
State.
So they set aside a piece of land where Washington is now and
created the District of Columbia as an independent entity, a creation,
if you will, of the National Government, and put the Capital there. And
they put the White House there. And those were the first two big
buildings in Washington, DC, the Capitol of the United States and the
President's house, where the President lives and works.
Hillary Clinton. And we hope you can all come visit us.
The President. Would you like to come see it?
Students. Yes.
Hillary Clinton. We'd love to show you.
The President. Well, I hope you can come someday.
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