 If I could carry your adjourn with me, I could maybe threaten our lives with a little ammunition, giving them a flu if they didn't knuckle under me. Well, Mr. Bennett, thank you for seeing me. We will leave in an hour for a nine-country visit to restart in Ottawa and we go on to London, New York, Turkey, Italy, Paris, Brussels, and the Hague. And my object, as you well know, is to represent your views about terrorism. I will try to explain to our friends how strongly you feel about terrorism as being discouraged and becoming worse. The next guest is Ken Cushinger, manager of the Community Prevention Tribe. The next guest today is Secretary William Bennett, Secretary of the Department of Education. The next guest is Dr. James Garner, the Associate Superintendent for Instruction of the East Drug Association. The next person is Mr. Robert Wood. Students, ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States. Students, they ask us, why should life reflect upon the life of Dr. King and certain aspects of him that often get overlooked? Many of us think of Dr. King as only the general warrior. When many of the allies of the civil rights movement blamed the violence that often attended civil rights movement on Dr. King, Dr. King answered to his now famous letter from a Burmian jail where he said that due form except to address the economic conditions facing poor blacks would not benefit him from the fruits of the civil rights movement as much as others. If Dr. King were alive today, he would be challenging all of us, particularly Black America, to lead you to do the wrong things. But no government, no school, no teachers can do for you and give you that which you do not want for yourself, for and as not that I introduce the President of the United States. Thank you all very much. Thank you very much for the special hello to you today as your fine school. I just wanted to come by and say a few words about the man for whom your school is named. I have a much greater honor than a few things from his life and the things that he believed in and thought for justice. The listeners told us already. I can't help but feel there are some lessons we can all remember together. The community felt the injustice he felt, and we really felt the dreams that he shared. You can see them in his words in the way he used them. We've all been hearing a lot of quotations about the community in the past few days, and our school and most things. I think at some time, the one that really shook you up in the days after his death, the drum majorist felt it leads the band. He said that I was a drum major for righteousness, and all of the other shallow things will not matter. I won't have any money to live here. I'm sure which things are mine. Our country is different and better because that this is out. And that's not just a phrase. Our country is different and better. That's a literal truth. Our country won before we won. They won their great battle because America had a conscience that they could appeal to. Now you know what a conscience is. It's that thing that tempted the old people or evil. And that in America, there should be no second-class citizens. Our national conscience told us to change and start to be fair. And we listened and changed, and we started to be fair. Ultimately, the great lesson that might lead to the engineer's life was this. Business, and we can't rest until all the prejudice is gone forever. But we're a better, freer place than I thought to you. As the future belongs in America. Use that freedom to make a better life. You know what I hope? The dream I have for each of you there is a one day in the future. And you're all going to welcome back here and visit his birthday. And maybe something up here will be making a speech. Down in the line together, he played center, and I played right guard. And in those days, you didn't have an offense of the defense. You played both ways. You stayed in the game until it was over. And he and I became, as I say, the closest to friends down there in the middle of the line where things got rough and tough. And one day we played a team. Look, I looked across once and saw Berkeen's little team where he was biting already an injured knee before the game. And this guy found out about it using his dirty tactics to further hurt that knee. Berkeen was biting his hip to not show the pain. And in the huddle, we were some man. All of his teammates, we wanted to go after the fella. We couldn't go away without telling him we were so different today. Those of us who were a part of that revolution. Happy new year to you. Thank you. Thank you, sir. Greetings. Oh, hi. Nice to see you. Welcome, sir. Selected. Just a fine job. Mr. President, this is Hank Trahewn. You're here to vote. I'm sorry. It's good to see you. You seem to look like a college girl. But she's 5, 6, 7 years old. Good luck. Get the business done. Well, I'm just teetering. I'm in a very serious condition. He sent his regards to you and his thanks for the help and his regrets that he couldn't be here. Oh, I'm sorry you couldn't come. Well, I'm sorry for what we've been doing here. I won't tell you. I'm in here. I'm coming back on Christmas. Well, I know, but this bill I think is so important to your 1083. And by 1993, this should bring about the situation where all of our states will have made the arrangements necessary for the disposing of radioactive nuclear waste. So I'm delighted to have a chance to sign it. I sense it took three minutes to get it signed. You know, we've been working on this thing for 4 or 5 years. It was finally got it through. And it looks like it's going to be the last moment there. Hill and some staffer couldn't get together in Simpson. We got them all and approved to him office. And by two hours, they were finally got together. And I'm so glad we get this last station paste. And this was a pretty good administration getting it done. Thank you so much. I appreciate you signing it. I appreciate you coming like this president. But again, I said the best president since I've been in Washington. Let's come here and see you tonight. I hope we can get some things done this coming year. I hope so too. Let's just see it. You sit up here and get some pictures. We've got one group of still photographers. We'll bring in your pictures before we start. All right. That's good. You may remember each other's families. They were seeing each other face to face for the first time in their lives. They were friends for both of the years. They sounded like they were religious or anything. I don't know what you know. I always think they're going to come in last summer. Anyone who wants to get them, they can get them this time of year. Bring them to the community to check on them. They're never safe. They need better and faster till the end of the year. We've advocated partnership in the private sector. And so we thought that we would have to do that partnership. Also, our partners with the schools here in the 1st and 6th graders. I was both there yesterday in the King Junior School. You know, any time you want your past 40, you find yourself telling the stories. You're jelly beans. I never gave a chance to mention that. He's a third grader as a 10th grader. He produced as a part of the field report. This is great.