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   2415/5187
WIN2000   0/101
WIN32   0/30
WIN95   0/4288
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   32896
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   0/2056
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   33903
ENET.TALKS   0/32
ENGLISH_TUTOR   0/2000
EVOLUTION   0/1335
FDECHO   0/217
FDN_ANNOUNCE   0/7068
FIDONEWS   24125
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   4408
FN_SYSOP   41678
FN_SYSOP_OLD1   71952
FTP_FIDO   0/2
FTSC_PUBLIC   0/13599
FUNNY   0/4886
GENEALOGY.EUR   0/71
GET_INFO   105
GOLDED   0/408
HAM   0/16070
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   0/22092
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   926
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   1121
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   3218
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   0/13270
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   0/340
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 3626, 151 rader
Skriven 2006-11-13 23:31:08 av Whitehouse Press (1:3634/12.0)
Ärende: Press Release (0611132) for Mon, 2006 Nov 13
====================================================

===========================================================================
President Bush Attends Ceremonial Groundbreaking of the Martin Luther King,
Jr. National Memorial
===========================================================================

For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
November 13, 2006

President Bush Attends Ceremonial Groundbreaking of the Martin Luther King,
Jr. National Memorial
National Mall
Washington, D.C.

President's Remarks view

˙˙˙˙˙ In Focus: African-American History

10:07 A.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you all very much. I'm honored to join you today in
today's ceremony. I'm proud to dedicate this piece of our Nation's Capital
to the lasting memory of a great man.

We have gathered in tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King, to the ideals he
held and to the life he lived. Dr. King showed us that a life of conscience
and purpose can lift up many souls. And on this ground, a monument will
rise that preserves his legacy for the ages. Honoring Dr. King's legacy
requires more than building a monument; it required the ongoing commitment
of every American. So we will continue to work for the day when the dignity
and humanity of every person is respected, and the American promise is
denied no one.

This project has been over a decade in the making, and I thank those who
have worked to bring about this day. I particularly want to thank my
predecessor, the man who signed the legislation to create this memorial,
President Bill Clinton. (Applause.) It sounds like to me they haven't
forgotten you yet. (Laughter.) He's become, as you know, my fourth brother.
(Laughter.)

I want to thank Harry Johnson. I appreciate the members of my Cabinet who
are here. I welcome the members of Congress. I thank my Mayor, Tony
Williams, who is here. I'm proud to be with the members of the King family.
I thank the representatives of the community and civil rights groups who
have joined us. I thank the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Memorial
Project Foundation board members and executive cabinet. Most of all, thank
you all for coming. (Applause.)

Our Declaration of Independence makes it clear that the human right to
dignity and equality is not a grant of government. It is the gift from the
Author of Life. And Martin Luther King considered the Declaration one of
America's great, as he called it, "charters of freedom." He called our
founders' words, "a promise that all men -- yes, black men, as well as
white men -- would be guaranteed the unalienable right of liberty, life,
and the pursuit of happiness."

Throughout Dr. King's life, he continued to trust in the power of those
words, even when the practice of America did not live up to their promise.
When Martin Luther King came to Washington, D.C. in the summer of 1963, he
came to hold this nation to its own standards, and to call its citizens to
live up to the principles of our founding. He stood not far from here, on
the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. With thousands gathered around him, Dr.
King looked out over the American capital and declared his famous words, "I
have a dream."

His dream spread a message of hope that echoed from his hometown of Sweet
Auburn, Georgia, to the pulpit of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, to the
Edmund Pettus Bridge. An assassin's bullet could not shatter the dream. Dr.
King's message of justice and brotherhood took hold in the hearts of men
and women across the great land of ours. It continues to inspire millions
across the world.

As we break ground, we give Martin Luther King his rightful place among the
great Americans honored on our National Mall. The King Memorial will span a
piece of ground between the Jefferson and Lincoln Memorials. And by its
presence in this place it will unite the men who declared the promise of
America and defended the promise of America with the man who redeemed the
promise of America. (Applause.)

The memorial will reflect the arc of Dr. King's life, his search for
justice, and the enduring beauty of his words. The memorial will include a
wall where visitors can read passages from Dr. King's sermons and speeches
through a stream of water. And on the banks of the Potomac, visitors will
walk from the Mountain of Despair to the Stone of Hope, where Dr. King's
image is rendered.

Today we see only these open acres, yet we know that when the work is done,
the King Memorial will be a fitting tribute, powerful and hopeful and
poetic, like the man it honors. As we break ground, we remember the great
obstacles that Dr. King overcame and the courage that transformed American
history. The years of Martin Luther King's life were tumultuous, difficult,
and an heroic time in the life of our country. Across our nation, African
Americans faced daily cruelties and pervasive wrongs. In 1955, a woman,
Rosa Parks, challenged these wrongs on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama, when
she refused a driver's order to give her seat to a white man. Her act of
defiance inspired a young Baptist minister and changed our nation forever.

Within days of Rosa Parks' lonely protest, Dr. King helped organize a
boycott that captured the attention of our country. When Dr. King's
leadership -- with Dr. King's leadership, the boycott forced America to
confront the glaring contradiction between the sign on the bus and the
words of our Declaration of Independence. And on this date, exactly 50
years ago, the Supreme Court ruled the segregation of public buses
unconstitutional. And so today we celebrate the courage that won victories
and helped spark one of the greatest movements for equality and freedom in
American history.

Eventually, the civil rights movement would succeed in persuading Congress
to pass sweeping legislation that represented a new founding for our
nation. On July 2, 1964, President Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act at
the White House. As of that date, no longer could weary travelers be denied
a room in a hotel, or a table at a restaurant on account of their race. And
no longer could any American be forced to drink from a separate water
fountain, or sit at the back of the bus just because of their race.

Dr. King liked to say that our Civil Rights Act was written in the streets
by citizens who marched for the idea that all men are created equal. He was
right; yet there is no doubt that the law came as it did when it did
because of the courage and leadership of Martin Luther King.

As we break ground, we recognize our duty to continue the unfinished work
of American freedom. America has come a long way since Dr. King's day; yet
our journey to justice is not complete. There are still people in our
society who hurt, neighborhoods are too poor. There are still children who
do not get the education they need to fulfill their God-given potential.
There's still prejudice that holds citizens back. And there's still a need
for all Americans to hear the words of Dr. King so we can hasten the day
when his message of hope takes hold in every community across our country.

We go forward with the knowledge that the Creator who wrote the desire for
liberty in our hearts also gives us the strength and wisdom to fulfill it.
We go forward with trust that God, who has brought us thus far on the way,
will give us the strength to finish the journey. And we go forward with the
confidence that no matter how difficult the challenge, if we remain true to
our founding principles, America will overcome.

Dr. King was on this Earth just 39 years, but the ideas that guided his
work and his life are eternal. Here in this place, we will raise a lasting
memorial to those eternal truths. So in the presence of his family, his
coworkers in freedom's cause, and those who carry on his legacy today, I'm
proud to dedicate this ground on behalf of the American people as the site
of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial. May God bless you all. (Applause.)

END 10:17 A.M. EST

===========================================================================
Return to this article at:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2006/11/20061113-2.html

 * Origin: (1:3634/12)