Tillbaka till svenska Fidonet
English   Information   Debug  
UFO   0/40
UNIX   0/1316
USA_EURLINK   0/102
USR_MODEMS   0/1
VATICAN   0/2740
VIETNAM_VETS   0/14
VIRUS   0/378
VIRUS_INFO   0/201
VISUAL_BASIC   0/473
WHITEHOUSE   2964/5187
WIN2000   0/101
WIN32   0/30
WIN95   0/4289
WIN95_OLD1   0/70272
WINDOWS   0/1517
WWB_SYSOP   0/419
WWB_TECH   0/810
ZCC-PUBLIC   0/1
ZEC   4

 
4DOS   0/134
ABORTION   0/7
ALASKA_CHAT   0/506
ALLFIX_FILE   0/1313
ALLFIX_FILE_OLD1   0/7997
ALT_DOS   0/152
AMATEUR_RADIO   0/1039
AMIGASALE   0/14
AMIGA   0/331
AMIGA_INT   0/1
AMIGA_PROG   0/20
AMIGA_SYSOP   0/26
ANIME   0/15
ARGUS   0/924
ASCII_ART   0/340
ASIAN_LINK   0/651
ASTRONOMY   0/417
AUDIO   0/92
AUTOMOBILE_RACING   0/105
BABYLON5   0/17862
BAG   135
BATPOWER   0/361
BBBS.ENGLISH   0/382
BBSLAW   0/109
BBS_ADS   0/5290
BBS_INTERNET   0/507
BIBLE   0/3563
BINKD   0/1119
BINKLEY   0/215
BLUEWAVE   0/2173
CABLE_MODEMS   0/25
CBM   0/46
CDRECORD   0/66
CDROM   0/20
CLASSIC_COMPUTER   0/378
COMICS   0/15
CONSPRCY   0/899
COOKING   33421
COOKING_OLD1   0/24719
COOKING_OLD2   0/40862
COOKING_OLD3   0/37489
COOKING_OLD4   0/35496
COOKING_OLD5   9370
C_ECHO   0/189
C_PLUSPLUS   0/31
DIRTY_DOZEN   0/201
DOORGAMES   0/2065
DOS_INTERNET   0/196
duplikat   6002
ECHOLIST   0/18295
EC_SUPPORT   0/318
ELECTRONICS   0/359
ELEKTRONIK.GER   1534
ENET.LINGUISTIC   0/13
ENET.POLITICS   0/4
ENET.SOFT   0/11701
ENET.SYSOP   33945
ENET.TALKS   0/32
ENGLISH_TUTOR   0/2000
EVOLUTION   0/1335
FDECHO   0/217
FDN_ANNOUNCE   0/7068
FIDONEWS   24159
FIDONEWS_OLD1   0/49742
FIDONEWS_OLD2   0/35949
FIDONEWS_OLD3   0/30874
FIDONEWS_OLD4   0/37224
FIDO_SYSOP   12852
FIDO_UTIL   0/180
FILEFIND   0/209
FILEGATE   0/212
FILM   0/18
FNEWS_PUBLISH   4436
FN_SYSOP   41706
FN_SYSOP_OLD1   71952
FTP_FIDO   0/2
FTSC_PUBLIC   0/13613
FUNNY   0/4886
GENEALOGY.EUR   0/71
GET_INFO   105
GOLDED   0/408
HAM   0/16074
HOLYSMOKE   0/6791
HOT_SITES   0/1
HTMLEDIT   0/71
HUB203   466
HUB_100   264
HUB_400   39
HUMOR   0/29
IC   0/2851
INTERNET   0/424
INTERUSER   0/3
IP_CONNECT   719
JAMNNTPD   0/233
JAMTLAND   0/47
KATTY_KORNER   0/41
LAN   0/16
LINUX-USER   0/19
LINUXHELP   0/1155
LINUX   0/22112
LINUX_BBS   0/957
mail   18.68
mail_fore_ok   249
MENSA   0/341
MODERATOR   0/102
MONTE   0/992
MOSCOW_OKLAHOMA   0/1245
MUFFIN   0/783
MUSIC   0/321
N203_STAT   930
N203_SYSCHAT   313
NET203   321
NET204   69
NET_DEV   0/10
NORD.ADMIN   0/101
NORD.CHAT   0/2572
NORD.FIDONET   189
NORD.HARDWARE   0/28
NORD.KULTUR   0/114
NORD.PROG   0/32
NORD.SOFTWARE   0/88
NORD.TEKNIK   0/58
NORD   0/453
OCCULT_CHAT   0/93
OS2BBS   0/787
OS2DOSBBS   0/580
OS2HW   0/42
OS2INET   0/37
OS2LAN   0/134
OS2PROG   0/36
OS2REXX   0/113
OS2USER-L   207
OS2   0/4786
OSDEBATE   0/18996
PASCAL   0/490
PERL   0/457
PHP   0/45
POINTS   0/405
POLITICS   0/29554
POL_INC   0/14731
PSION   103
R20_ADMIN   1123
R20_AMATORRADIO   0/2
R20_BEST_OF_FIDONET   13
R20_CHAT   0/893
R20_DEPP   0/3
R20_DEV   399
R20_ECHO2   1379
R20_ECHOPRES   0/35
R20_ESTAT   0/719
R20_FIDONETPROG...
...RAM.MYPOINT
  0/2
R20_FIDONETPROGRAM   0/22
R20_FIDONET   0/248
R20_FILEFIND   0/24
R20_FILEFOUND   0/22
R20_HIFI   0/3
R20_INFO2   3249
R20_INTERNET   0/12940
R20_INTRESSE   0/60
R20_INTR_KOM   0/99
R20_KANDIDAT.CHAT   42
R20_KANDIDAT   28
R20_KOM_DEV   112
R20_KONTROLL   0/13300
R20_KORSET   0/18
R20_LOKALTRAFIK   0/24
R20_MODERATOR   0/1852
R20_NC   76
R20_NET200   245
R20_NETWORK.OTH...
...ERNETS
  0/13
R20_OPERATIVSYS...
...TEM.LINUX
  0/44
R20_PROGRAMVAROR   0/1
R20_REC2NEC   534
R20_SFOSM   0/341
R20_SF   0/108
R20_SPRAK.ENGLISH   0/1
R20_SQUISH   107
R20_TEST   2
R20_WORST_OF_FIDONET   12
RAR   0/9
RA_MULTI   106
RA_UTIL   0/162
REGCON.EUR   0/2056
REGCON   0/13
SCIENCE   0/1206
SF   0/239
SHAREWARE_SUPPORT   0/5146
SHAREWRE   0/14
SIMPSONS   0/169
STATS_OLD1   0/2539.065
STATS_OLD2   0/2530
STATS_OLD3   0/2395.095
STATS_OLD4   0/1692.25
SURVIVOR   0/495
SYSOPS_CORNER   0/3
SYSOP   0/84
TAGLINES   0/112
TEAMOS2   0/4530
TECH   0/2617
TEST.444   0/105
TRAPDOOR   0/19
TREK   0/755
TUB   0/290
Möte WHITEHOUSE, 5187 texter
 lista första sista föregående nästa
Text 3013, 202 rader
Skriven 2006-07-13 23:34:20 av Whitehouse Press (1:3634/12.0)
Ärende: Press Release (0607135) for Thu, 2006 Jul 13
====================================================
===========================================================================
Remarks by Mrs. Bush at the Opening of America@yourlibrary
===========================================================================

For Immediate Release
Office of the First Lady
July 13, 2006

Remarks by Mrs. Bush at the Opening of America@yourlibrary
Stralsund Children's Library
Stralsund, Germany



10:45 A.M. (Local)

MRS. BUSH: Thank you very much. I want to especially thank you, Mr.
Gawenda, for the warm welcome to this beautiful country, and also the
welcome this historic library.

I also want to recognize the Lord Mayor of Stralsund. The Mayor is here
with me, and his wife, Mrs. Lastovka. Thank you all very much for joining
me today.

Mrs. Stadler, the head of the children's library is here, as well. And
thank you very much for being with us.

And also joining us, and she may be new to you, is the President -- or is
getting ready to be -- the President-elect of the International Federation
of Library Associations, and a board member of the German Library
Association, Claudia Lux.

And then our Ambassador, the wife of the Ambassador from the United States
to Germany, Sue Timken. Thank you, Sue, for joining us.

And also joining us are members of the United States embassy staff, who are
responsible for America@yourlibrary being here in Stralsund, and I want to
thank them very much, as well.

And of course, and especially, the students who have joined us today. Thank
you very, very much for welcoming me here to your city.

I'm delighted to be here today to open America@yourlibrary in Stralsund, in
partnership with the United States embassy. This children's library, this
beautiful library where we are now, will now serve as a valuable resource
for information about the United States of America.

Books in this America@yourlibrary collection tell the story of the United
States, describing my country's history, unique culture, and diverse
society, and also, as you can tell from some of these on the bottom, a lot
about American sports.

American authors will also visit here in Stralsund to talk about the
literature that children in the United States enjoy. And information about
study abroad programs will help Stralsund's young people see firsthand the
historical sites and cities that they can read about in these books.

Reading is a wonderful way to develop new interests, to perform better in
school, and to have fun. But the benefits of reading extend far beyond the
library or the classroom. As the people of Stralsund know very well,
reading and being able to learn and discuss ideas freely is a basic
requirement for a healthy democratic society.

The United States and Germany are allies and friends today because our
countries both treasure freedom and share a deep love of learning. But
around the world, more than 800 million people cannot read; almost 100
million of them are children.

Developed countries with high literacy rates, like Germany and the United
States, share a responsibility to help increase literacy, particularly in
the world's developing countries.

To help governments ensure that children and adults in their countries
learn to read, we'll host a White House Conference on Global Literacy in
New York this September during the United Nations General Assembly.

With the help of the United States Department of Education, the United
States State Department, USAID, and UNESCO, we'll provide a forum where
U.N. member states can examine literacy programs that work, and learn how
to implement these programs in their countries. And I welcome Germany's
contributions to this international effort.

Thank you all very much for welcoming me here. May the ties of friendship
that form between Germany and the United States be strengthened as a result
of America@yourlibrary. (Applause.)

* * * * *

MRS. BUSH: Okay, who has a question?

Q Welcome, Mrs. Bush. What is your first impression of Stralsund?

MRS. BUSH: We've had a really wonderful first impression. This is a
beautiful city. We're staying on the Baltic at a beautiful hotel where we
landed last night, and then we helicoptered into Stralsund today. And it's
so beautiful, really lovely.

Q What are the positive and negative things about being the First Lady?

MRS. BUSH: Well, there are a lot of positive things about being First Lady.
First, I get to do things like this. I get to visit beautiful countries all
around the world and meet with really fascinating heads of state, like your
Chancellor, Angela Merkel, who I've had the chance to meet twice in the
United States, and now have the opportunity to visit in her home
constituency. Those are the best things.

And of course, in our country, I get to do the same thing -- travel all
around the United States, meet people everywhere in my country who are
doing really great things. That's fun and interesting.

Q In what ways do you support children?

MRS. BUSH: What ways do I support children? I do a lot of different work in
the United States that has to do with literacy, because I am a librarian
and a school teacher. That's what I did for a career. So I do a lot of work
that has to do with education, with schools in the United States, with
libraries in the United States.

Right now I'm working on a particular project to restock libraries on the
Gulf Coast after the hurricanes last summer that destroyed a lot of schools
and destroyed a lot of school libraries.

I also talk about human rights worldwide, about women's issues, about the
issues of women's rights in the Middle East -- Afghanistan, especially. I
meet with a lot of women from Afghanistan, women leaders in Afghanistan.
Those are both issues that I talk about, at home and as I travel abroad.

So I'll be hosting this Conference on Global Literacy with UNESCO next year
-- next September during the United Nations General Assembly. And the
conference will be for world leaders and policy-makers from all around the
world to come and learn ways we can increase literacy rates worldwide,
especially in developing countries where there are low literacy rates.

Q I know that you've got a teacher's degree.

MRS. BUSH: That's right.

Q So what subjects did you teach?

MRS. BUSH: I taught elementary school, so I taught all subjects in
elementary school -- children who are age eight to ten years old. So I
taught math and reading and science and social studies -- even P.E.,
physical education. (Laughter.)

But what I liked best was the reading part, and the literature part. So I
went back to graduate school and got a graduate degree in Library Science,
and then ran the school libraries after that.

Any other questions?

Q Have you got any connections to famous superstars? (Laughter.)

MRS. BUSH: Let's see. No, not really. We've had a number of, obviously,
actors and actresses to the White House. I'm trying to think of who you
would know as a famous superstar.

We did just take Prime Minister Koizumi from Japan to Graceland, the home
of Elvis Presley. I don't know if you all are too young to know who Elvis
Presley is, but he was a very famous American rock and roll singer -- the
first one, really.

Q What kind of books do you read?

MRS. BUSH: Oh, what kind of books do I read? I read a lot of fiction. I
like fiction best. But I also read biography. I read biographies about
American leaders, other Presidents and their families who lived in the same
house we live in right now, lived in the White House. So I like to read
both history, biography and then fiction. I enjoy literature. Poetry, I
love that.

Q Do you sometimes help your husband to make political decisions?

MRS. BUSH: Sometimes. We talk about a lot of different issues, and there
are a lot of issues that he works on that I'm also really interested in,
like women's rights that I talked about earlier, and education issues in
the United States, I'm particularly interested in. So we talk about those
issues.

Q What did you think about the match of the U.S.A. soccer team in the world
championship? (Laughter.)

MRS. BUSH: Well, I guess we did not do very well, but we did play Germany,
and I think that's when we lost, isn't it, the last time when we were out.

You know, Americans really don't know that much about soccer. And the World
Cup still was very interesting to Americans. Americans watched. We watched
the games when the U.S. played, but we also watched the finals between
France and Italy at the White House. My husband and I watched those games
together.

But Americans really are just learning about soccer. It's a new sport to
the United States. I guess you can tell it's a new sport by the way our
team plays. (Laughter.)

Okay, well, thank you all very much. It was great to get to meet you all.

END 11:07 A.M. (Local)
===========================================================================
Return to this article at:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2006/07/20060713-5.html

 * Origin: (1:3634/12)