From @lex-luthor.ai.mit.edu:jcma@REAGAN.AI.MIT.EDU Thu Jun 3 23:33:12 1993 Date: Thu, 3 Jun 1993 19:45-0400 From: The White House <75300.3115@compuserve.com> To: Clinton-News-Distribution@campaign92.org Subject: Arlington National Cemetary: Remarks by the President 5.31.93 THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary ______________________________________________________________ For Immediate Release May 31, 1993 REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT AT MEMORIAL DAY CEREMONY AT ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY Arlington National Cemetery Arlington, Virginia 11:30 A.M. EDT THE PRESIDENT: Distinguished leaders of the Armed Services, the Defense Department, the Cabinet, the Congress, the leaders of our veterans organizations here, to all the veterans and their families who are here, and to all those here who are family members of veterans buried in this cemetery or in any other place around the globe. And to my fellow Americans: We come together this morning, along with our countrymen and women in cities across the land to honor those who died that we might live in freedom, the only way that Americans can ever truly live. Today we put aside our differences to better reflect on what unites us. The lines so often drawn between and among us, lines of region or race or partisanship, all those lines fall away today as we gaze upon the lines of markers that surround us on these hallowed hills. The lines of difference are freedom's privilege. The lines of these markers are freedom's cost. Today Americans all across our land draw together in shared experience and shared remembrance. And whether it is an older veteran in Florida, or a teenager in New Mexico, or a mother in Wisconsin, all today will bow their heads and put hand to heart. And without knowing each other, still we will all be joined in spirit, because we are Americans and because we know we are equal shareholders in humanity's most uplifting dream. Today, as we fly the American flag, some will recall the pledge we began to recite daily as youngsters in grade school, with solemn faith and awkward salute; some of us even before we learned the difference between our right and left hands. Others will remember the flag waving over public gatherings, large and very small. But on this day, in this serene and solemn setting, conscious of the past, conscious, too, of the perils all too present, what we see most vividly in that flag are the faces of American soldiers who gave their lives in battle; and the faces of this generation of young servicemen and women, very, very much alive, still training and preparing for possible conflicts tomorrow. From the first militiaman downed at Lexington to today's END11:36 A.M. EDT