[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1998, Book I)]
[May 21, 1998]
[Pages 824-825]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



[[Page 824]]


Remarks at a Reception for the Sons of Italy Foundation
May 21, 1998

    Thank you very much. I thought they were all talking, so I made them 
come up here. [Laughter] But I thank Secretary Cuomo and Paul Polo and Phil 
Piccigallo for making me feel so 
welcome. I got here in time to hear Steve Forbes talking, and I appreciate his warming the crowd up. 
[Laughter] That's the most high-class warm-up act I've had this year. 
[Laughter]
    Ambassador Foglietta, Ambassador 
Salleo; Regis Philbin, thank you for welcoming me; and to my good friend, Tony 
Bennett, welcome. I'd like to also congratulate 
tonight's honoree, Philip Guarascio, and 
thank all of you for giving me a chance to come by and share a few 
moments of your 10th anniversary.
    For over 90 years, the Sons of Italy has been a community 
organization in the truest sense. For 10 years, you've given out this 
National Education and Leadership Award, finding what I think is one of 
the very finest ways you could ever express your pride and your ethnic 
heritage and your devotion to the next generation.
    I asked before I came on the stage if I could have an opportunity to 
personally congratulate the scholarship recipients here tonight, and I 
hope that I can do this, because they, after all, represent not only 
your commitment but all our futures.
    The Italian-American tradition of work and family, faith and 
community is just as alive today as it was when the Sons of Italy first 
began to meet. As President, I have tried to pursue policies that embody 
those values, values that led so many Italian-American families to such 
great success in America.
    We've got a lot to be thankful for tonight: the lowest unemployment 
in 28 years; the lowest welfare rolls in 27 years; the lowest inflation 
in 32 years. But we all know that we've got a lot to do and that we 
can't stop until we can see the values that embody the Sons of Italy 
alive and well in every neighborhood in America. I'd like to say a 
special word of thanks to Secretary Cuomo 
for his extraordinary work in trying to make sure that we get that done.
    I'm told that tonight everybody who is here can claim to be Italian. 
I see my favorite Italian with an Irish name, Senator Leahy, out here. [Laughter] It's shameless. He's the only 
man I know who can show up at every Irish and every Italian event, claim 
to be one of you, and always be telling the truth. It seems an unfair 
advantage even in America. [Laughter]
    Tonight I know you're also celebrating the life of Frank 
Sinatra. I had, as one of the many perks of 
becoming President, the chance to get to know Frank Sinatra a little and 
to appreciate on a personal level what people all over the world 
appreciated in his music and his movies. I think it's important tonight, 
because of what you stand for, to note that while we have lost his 
remarkable voice, we have also lost a generous spirit of a man who 
raised more than a billion dollars for charity and left a lot as well, 
and really did, as I said a couple of days ago, always manage to do it 
his way.
    I want to thank you for everything you do, but especially, in 
closing, I want to say that, if you look ahead to the 21st century, we 
will be living in an economy that is increasingly based on ideas, but 
our ability to take advantage of it will rest more and more on the 
strength, the depth, and the character of our soul, on whether we can 
learn to live together across all the lines that divide us to find a 
home among people who aren't exactly like us but, down deep inside, have 
more in common with us than what divides us.
    Tomorrow, in the land of my ancestors, Ireland and Northern Ireland, 
the people will be voting on whether to discard decades of war and 
hundreds of years of conflict to chart a new path for peace for their 
children. We are working hard to preserve a peace in Bosnia among people 
of different religious traditions. We see on the Indian subcontinent new 
tensions among people of different religious and ethnic groups. We 
struggle still to make peace in the Middle East at a time when computers 
have made instantaneous the transfer of money and information and ideas 
across the globe.
    If we are to make the most of the education that you have worked so 
hard to give to the children of Italian immigrants, then we truly must 
work just as hard to embody the values by which you have lived and 
through which

[[Page 825]]

you have found a true home in the United States.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 8:42 p.m. in the National Building Museum. 
In his remarks, he referred to Paul S. Polo, president, and Philip R. 
Piccigallo, national executive director, Sons of Italy Foundation; 
Malcolm S. (Steve) Forbes, Jr., publisher, Forbes magazine; Thomas M. 
Foglietta, U.S. Ambassador to Italy; Ferdinando Salleo, Italian 
Ambassador to the United States; entertainer Regis Philbin, who 
introduced the President; singer Tony Bennett; and Philip Guarascio, 
vice president and general manager, advertising and marketing, North 
American Division, General Motors Corporation.