[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000, Book I)]
[June 15, 2000]
[Pages 1151-1153]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks to United States Dream Academy Participants
June 15, 2000

    The President.  Thank you. Well, good afternoon.
    Audience members.  Good afternoon.
    The President.  First, I want to say, Principal Jones, thank you for having us here. My great friend 
Representative Eleanor Holmes Norton--
there is not a better Member of Congress than Eleanor Holmes Norton; you 
should be very proud of her. I thank all the representatives of the DC 
government that are here.
    Can you hear me? Is this on?
    Audience members.  Yes.
    The President.  No, it's not on, but you can hear me anyway? 
[Laughter] Whoever controls this, turn it up! [Laughter] Turn the sound 
up. That's a little better.
    Let me say a special word of appreciation to my long-time friend 
Wintley Phipps. You heard the story of how I 
met him. I'm glad his family is here today. And I guess you're all his 
family, in a way. But when I met him in Alabama a long time ago, he may 
not have known who I was, but once I heard him sing and I saw the 
expression on his face, I knew I'd never forget him again for the rest 
of my life.
    I want to thank the U.S. Dream Academy and all of you who are its 
partners; a special word of appreciation to the staff, the students, the 
teachers at the Ferebee Hope Community Services Center and Elementary 
School. I thank you all for helping these children through this 
wonderful program to realize their dreams and their God-given potential.
    Eleanor Roosevelt once said this: ``The future belongs to those who 
believe in the beauty of their dreams.'' We are here today because 
Wintley Phipps believed in the beauty of his 
dream, believed that all children, given the right support, could 
realize their dream. That's why he founded the Dream Academy, to give 
children who have fallen behind a chance to catch up and soar ahead and 
to pay special attention to children whose parents were incarcerated.
    You know, I used to tell people all the time, when they said to me 
when I was a Governor, ``Why are you for all these education programs in 
the prisons and all these training programs and all these treatment 
programs?'' And I said, ``Well, first of all, 90 percent of those folks 
are going to get out some day, and we want them to be good citizens. And 
secondly, if they'd had these things in the first place, a lot of them 
wouldn't be in there.''
    And so I want to thank the people associated with this Academy for 
helping give nearly three-quarters of the students at Ferebee a chance 
to live their dreams. I want to thank the parents who are involved. I 
want to thank everybody who give these children the learning 
environment, the personal attention, the academic tools they need. I 
want to thank you for teaching

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not only academic subjects but character building and the importance of 
maintaining good health.
    I worry about how many kids in our schools in disadvantaged 
neighborhoods never get a chance just to learn about the basics of good 
health. I've seen all these physical education programs and music 
programs and art programs cut out of our schools over the last decade 
because of financial problems they've seen, and I thank you for giving 
these kids a whole education and a chance to be whole people.
    And of course, I want to say a special word of thanks for having an 
Internet-based curriculum. These children need to be part of the 
information society. I have seen the power of the Internet in the 
poorest villages of Africa and India and Latin America. I have talked to 
children all over the world on the Internet, and no child in America 
should be without its blessing.
    You know, the entire Encyclopedia Britannica is now on the Internet. 
In schools in the poorest parts of this country, schools where they have 
no building as nice as this one, if they have an Internet connection and 
a printer, they can have textbooks as good as anyone else, thanks to the 
miracles of modern technology. These children deserve it, and all of the 
children of America deserve it. And so I thank you.
    Now, what I would like to say, especially for the benefit of the 
members of the press who are here covering this, is that this is not 
just a feel-good program. It works. In the last year, math and reading 
scores are up sharply. Suspensions are down. Class attendance is up, 
which shows that more and more of these young people understand the 
importance of going to school, staying in school, and doing well in 
school. This works.
     I thank Wintley for pointing out that 
this program receives funding from the Department of Labor. And I'm 
happy to report that another $200,000 will be granted over the next 2 
years because of what you're doing. I know you've gotten money from 
energy companies, from the NFL, from other places, and I want to thank 
all the people who have given you private money, as well.
    I think we ought to be thinking about how we can make sure these 
kinds of opportunities are available to all of our children. I think 
that means that, as Wintley goes national, 
the National Government ought to go with him and help him all across the 
country. But it also means that we have to continue our efforts for 
smaller classes, for better school buildings, to make sure all our 
classrooms are hooked up to the Internet, to make sure every child who 
needs it has access to an after-school or a summer school program, to 
make sure that all kids have access to preschool programs, to make sure 
every low-performing school has the resources it needs to turn around. 
Because I believe that intelligence is evenly distributed throughout the 
human race, opportunity is not, and we need to give them a chance to do 
it.
    I believe every child from a disadvantaged neighborhood should have 
access to a mentor who can say to that child, ``Look, if you take these 
courses and do this well, you can go to college. Here's the proof of it. 
Here's the money. Here's the scholarships. Here's the loan. Here's the 
aid.'' We need to make sure that all kids can do it, and then when 
they're of age, we need to make sure the doors of college are open to 
all of our people. Money should never keep anybody from going to school.
    One of the things that I'm proudest of is that since I've been 
President, we've had the biggest expansion of college aid since the GI 
bill 50 years ago. And if we get the provision passed that I've asked 
this Congress to adopt, we'll allow every family to deduct up to $10,000 
of college tuition from their income tax every year, and that will be 
good.
    One other thing I'd like to say: I'm sure you never have it here, 
but I've noticed in my own home that the children sometimes know more 
than the adults, even the teachers, about the technology. I'm sure 
you've never seen that here. [Laughter] But we just have provided over 
$120 million to make sure that nearly 600,000 teachers are properly 
trained to make the most of this Internet technology, because I think 
that's important.
    What I came here today to say is this: Number one, I am grateful to 
God that somehow 10 years ago I ran into Wintley Phipps, who didn't know who I was, but I determined I'd never 
forget who he was. Number two, I am grateful to him and to all of you 
who have done the U.S. Dream Academy. Number three, I want to support 
you, but I believe what you do for these children, somebody should do 
for every child in the United States.
    And finally, again, I want to say to the American people through our 
friends in the press,

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this is not just a feel-good program; this works. Every person who ever 
amounted to anything in life did so with a dream. We need to make all of 
our kids believe they can dream and that their dreams are just as worthy 
as anybody else's dreams and that, if they're willing to work at it, 
their dreams are just as possible as anyone else's dreams.
    Thank you, and God bless you all.

 Note:  The President spoke at 6:15 p.m. in Mitchell Hall Auditorium at 
Ferebee Hope Elementary School. In his remarks, he referred to Lester 
Jones, principal, Ferebee Hope Elementary School; and gospel singer 
Wintley Phipps, founder and director, United States Dream Academy, a 
pilot program designed to help children of imprisoned parents acquire 
basic learning skills, incorporating mentoring and on-line academic 
support. The President also referred to NFL, the National Football 
League.