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June 5, 1998

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT AT MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 1998 COMMENCEMENT


	     		  


                         THE WHITE HOUSE

                  Office of the Press Secretary
                    (Lincoln, Massachusetts)
______________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                     June 5, 
1998     

	     
                    REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
   AT MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 1998 COMMENCEMENT  
	     
	     
                          Killian Court
        Campus of Massachusetts Institute of Technology		  
 
                    Cambridge, Massachusetts
	     
	     

11:55 A.M. EDT
	     
	     
	     THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, Dr. Vest.  I think you're 
the real thing.  (Laughter.)  Chairman d'Arbeloff, Dr. Gray, 
members of the Corporation, the faculty, especially to the 
members of the Class of 1998 and your families, the Class of 1948 
and 1973, Mayor Duahay, members of the City Council.  I thank the 
Brass Ensemble for the wonderful music before.
	     
	     Let me say I am profoundly honored to be here on the 
same platform with Dr. David Ho, and grateful for the work he has 
done for humanity.  (Applause.)
	     
	     When we met a few moments ago, in President Vest's 
office, with a number of the students and other officials of the 
university, I said you had a good representation of speakers 
today -- the scientists and the scientifically challenged.  
(Laughter.)
	     
	     But my administration has been able to carry on in 
no small measure because of contributions from MIT.  Sixteen MIT 
alumni and faculty members have served in important positions in 
this administration, including at least two who are here today -- 
the former Secretary of the Air Force, Sheila Widnoll, and the 
Deputy Secretary of Energy Ernie Monic.  Four of your faculty 
members and your President have done important work for us.  I 
thank them all.  
	     
	     And I come here today with good news and bad news 
for the graduates.  The good news is that this morning we had our 
latest economic report:  unemployment is 4.3 percent; there have 

been 16 million new jobs in the last five years; there are 
numerous job openings that pay well.  The bad news is that you 
now have no excuse to your parents if you don't go to work.  
(Laughter.)
	     

	     MIT is admired around the world as a crucible of 
creative thought, a force for progress, a place where dreams of 
generations become reality.  The remarkable discoveries and 
inventions of the MIT community have transformed America.  Early 
in your history, MIT was known for advances in geology and 
mining.  By mid-century, MIT pioneered X rays and radar.  Today, 
it's atomic lasers, artificial intelligence, biotechnology.  MIT 
has done much to make this the American century.  And MIT will do 
more to make America and the world a better place in the 21st 
century, as we continue our astonishing journey through the 
information revolution -- a revolution that began not as our own 
did here in Massachusetts, with a single shot heard around the 
world, but instead was sparked by many catalysts -- in labs and 
libraries, start-ups and blue chips, homes and even dorm rooms 
across America and around the world.			    

	     I come today not to talk about the new marvels of 
science and engineering.  You know far more about them than I do.  
Instead I come to MIT, an epicenter of the seismic shifts in our 
economy and society, to talk about how we can and must apply 
enduring American values to this revolutionary time; about the 
responsibilities we all have as citizens to include every 
American in the promise of this new age.

	     From the start, our nation's greatest mission has 
been the fulfillment of our founders' vision -- opportunity for 
all, best secured by free people, working together toward better 
tomorrows and what they called "a more perfect union."

	     Americans believe the spark of possibility burns 
deep within every child, that ordinary people can do 
extraordinary things.  Our history can be understood as a 
constant striving on foreign fields and factory floors, in town 
halls and the corridors of Congress, to widen that circle of 
opportunity, to deepen the meaning of our freedom, to perfect our 
union to make real the promise of America.  Every previous 
generation has been called upon to meet this challenge.  And as 
we approach a new century and a new millennium, your generation 
must answer the call.  
	     
	     You enter the world of your tomorrows at a 
remarkable moment for America.  Our country has the lowest crime 
rates in 25 years, the smallest welfare rolls in 27 years, the 
lowest unemployment in 28 years, the lowest inflation in 32 
years, the smallest national government in 35 years, and the 
highest rate of home ownership in our history.  Such a remarkable 
time, a period of renewal, comes along all too rarely in life, as 
you will see.  It gives us both the opportunity and the profound 
responsibility to address the larger, longer-term challenges to 
your future.

	     This spring I am speaking to graduates around the 
country about three of those challenges.  Last month I went to 
the Naval Academy to talk about the new security challenges of 

the 21st century -- terrorism, organized crime and drug 
trafficking, global climate change, the spread of weapons of mass
destruction.  Next week at Portland State in Oregon I will 
discuss how our nation's third great wave of immigration can 
either strengthen and unite America or weaken and divide it.  And 
I thank Dr. Ho for what he said about immigration and our 
immigrants.  
	     
	     Today, I ask you to focus on the challenges of the 
Information Age.  The dimensions of the Information Revolution 
and its limitless possibilities are widely accepted and generally 
understood, even by lay people.  But to make the most of it we 
must also acknowledge that there are challenges, and we must make 
important choices.  We can extend opportunity to all Americans or 
leave many behind.  We can erase lines of inequity or etch them 
indelibly.  We can accelerate the most powerful engine of growth 
and prosperity the world has ever known, or allow the engine to 
stall.
	     
	     History has taught us that choices cannot be 
deferred; they are made by action or inaction.  There is no such 
thing as virtual opportunity.  We cannot point and click our way 
to a better future.  If we are to fulfill the complete promise of 
this new age, we must do more.  
	     
	     Already the Information Age is transforming the way 
we work.  The high-tech industry employs more people today than 
the auto industry did at its height in the 1950s.  Auto and steel 
industries in turn have been revived by new technologies.  Among 
those making the most use of technology R&D are traditional 
American enterprises such as construction, transportation, and 
retail stores.
	     
	     It's transforming the way we live.  The typical 
American home now has much more -- as much computing power as all 
of MIT did in the year most of the seniors here were born.  It is 
transforming the way we communicate.  On any business day, more 
than 30 times as many messages are delivered by e-mail as by the 
postal service.  And today, this ceremony is being carried live 
on the Internet so that people all over the world can join in.
	     
	     It is transforming the way we learn.  With the DVD 
technology available today, we can store more reference material 
in a 3-inch stack of disks than in all the stacks of Hayden 
Library.  It is transforming the way our society works, giving 
millions of Americans the opportunity to join in the enterprise 
of building our nation as they fulfill their dreams.  
	     
	     The tools we develop today are bringing down 
barriers of race and gender, of income and age.  The disabled are 
opening long closed doors of school, work, and human possibility.  
Small businesses are competing in worldwide markets once reserved 
only for powerful corporations.  Before too long, our children 
will be able to stretch a hand across a keyboard and reach every 
book ever written, every painting every painted, every symphony 
ever controlled.

	     
	     For the very first time in our history,it is now 
possible for a child in the most isolated inner-city neighborhood 
or rural community to have access to the same world of knowledge 
at the same instant as the child in the most affluent suburb.  
Imagine the revolutionary democratizing potential this can bring.  
Imagine the enormous benefits to our economy, our society, if not 
just a fraction, but all young people can master this set of 21st 
century skills.  
	     
	     Just a few miles of here is the working class 
community of East Sommerville.  It has sometimes struggled to 
meet the needs of population that is growing more diverse by the 
day.  But at East Sommerville Community School, well-trained 
technology teachers with equipment and support from Time Warner 
Cable have begun to give 1st to 8th-graders and early and 
enormous boost in life.  First graders are producing small books 
on computers.  Sixth graders are producing documentaries.  The 
technology has so motivated them that almost all the 6th graders 
showed up at school to work on their computer projects over 
winter break.  
	     
	     That small miracle can be replicated in every 
school, rich and poor, across America.  Yet, today, affluent 
schools are almost three times as likely to have Internet access 
in the classroom; white students more than twice as likely as 
black students to have computers in their homes.  
	     
	     We know from hard experience that unequal education 
hardens into unequal prospects.  We know the Information Age will 
accelerate this trend.  The three fastest growing careers in 
America are all in computer related fields, offering far more 
than average pay.  Happily, the digital divide has begun to 
narrow, but it will not disappear of its own accord.  History 
teaches us that even as new technologies create growth and new 
opportunity, they can heighten economic inequalities and sharpen 
social divisions.  That is, after all, exactly what happened with 
the mechanization of agriculture and in the Industrial 
Revolution.
	     
	     As we move into the Information Age we have it 
within our power to avoid these developments.  We can reap the 
growth that comes from revolutionary technologies and use them to 
eliminate, not to widen, the disparities that exist.  But until 
every child has a computer in the classroom and a teacher 
well-trained to help, until every student has the skills to tap 
the enormous resources of the Internet, until every high-tech 
company can find skilled workers to fill its high-wage jobs, 
America will miss the full promise of the Information Age.  

	     We cannot allow this age of opportunity to be 
remembered also for the opportunities that were missed.  Every 
day, we wake up and know that we have a challenge; now we must 
decide how to meet it.  Let me suggest three things.  
	     
	     First, we must help you to ensure that America 

continues to lead the revolution in science and technology.  
Growth is a prerequisite for opportunity, and scientific research 
is a basic prerequisite for growth.  Just yesterday in Japan, 
physicists announced a discovery that tiny neutrinos have mass.  
Now, that may not mean much to most Americans, but it may change 
our most fundamental theories -- from the nature of the smallest 
subatomic particles to how the universe itself works, and indeed 
how it expands.

	     This discovery was made, in Japan, yes, but it had 
the support of the investment of the U.S. Department of Energy.  
This discovery calls into question the decision made in 
Washington a couple of years ago to disband the super-conducting 
supercollider, and it reaffirms the importance of the work now 
being done at the Fermi National Acceleration Facility in 
Illinois.  

	     The larger issue is that these kinds of findings 
have implications that are not limited to the laboratory. They 
affect the whole of society -- not only our economy, but our very 
view of life, our understanding of our relations with others, and 
our place in time.

	     In just the past four years, information technology 
has been responsible for more than a third of our economic 
expansion.  Without government-funded research, computers, the 
Internet, communications satellites wouldn't have gotten started.  
When I became President, the Internet was the province of 
physicists, funded by a government research project.  There were 
only 50 sites in the world.  Now, as all of you know, we are 
adding pages to the Worldwide Web at the rate of over 100,000 an 
hour, and 100 million new users will come on this year.  It all 
started with research, and we must do more.  
	     
	     In the budget I submit to Congress for the year 2000 
I will call for significant increases in computing and 
communications research.  I have directed Dr. Neal Lane, my new 
Advisor for Science and Technology, to work with our nation's 
research community to prepare a detailed plan for my review. 
	     
	     Over the past 50 years our commitment to science has 
strengthen this country in countless ways.  Scientific research 
has created vast new industries, millions of jobs, allowed 
America to produce the world's most bountiful food supplies and 
remarkable tools for fighting disease.  Think of what today's 
investments will yield.  Dr. Ho will unravel the agonizing 
riddles of AIDS.  There will be a cure for cancer; a flourishing 
economy that will produce much less pollution and move back from 
the brink of potentially devastating global warming.  High-speed 
wireless networks that bring distance learning, tele-medicine and 
economic opportunity to every rural community in America.  
	     
	     That is why, even as we balanced our budget for the 
first time in 29 years, we have increased our investments in 
science.  This year I asked Congress for the largest increase in 
research funding in history -- not just for a year, but sustained 

over five years.  It is a core commitment that must be part of 
how every American, regardless of political party or personal 
endeavor, thinks about our nation and its mission.  (Applause.)  
Thank you -- those are the people who received the research 
grants over there.  (Laughter.)
	     
	     I want you to know that we are also working to 
address the threat to our prosperity posed by the Year 2000 Bug.  
I tried and tried to find out what the class hack project was for 
the Class of '98 and I failed.  But I did learn that in the year 
2000, the graduating class is proposing to roll all of our 
computers back by 100 years.  And I am determined to thwart you.  
I will do my best.  (Laughter.)
	     
	     The second thing we have to do is to make sure that 
the opportunities of the Information Age belong to all our 
children.  Every young American must have access to these 
technologies.  Two years ago in my State of the Union address, I 
challenged our nation to connect every classroom to the Internet 
by the year 2000.  Thanks to unprecedented cooperation at 
national, state, and local levels, an outpouring of support from 
active citizens, and the decreasing costs of computers, we're on 
track to meet this goal.
	     
	     Four years ago when you came to MIT, barely three 
percent of America's classrooms were connected.  By this time 
next year, we will have connected well over half our classrooms 
including 100 percent of the classrooms in the nation's 50 
largest urban school districts.  (Applause.)
	     
	     But it is not enough to connect the classrooms.  The 
services have to be accessed.  You may have heard recently about 
something called the e-rate.  It's the most crucial initiative 
we've launched to help connect our schools, our libraries, and 
our rural health centers to the Internet.  Now some businesses 
have called on Congress to repeal the initiative.  They say our 
nation cannot afford to provide discounts to these institutions 
of learning and health by raising a billion dollars or so a year 
from service charges on telecommunications companies -- something 
that was agreed to in the Telecommunications Act of 1996 that 
passed with overwhelming bipartisan majorities in both Houses.  
	     
	     I say we cannot afford not to have an e-rate.  
Thousands of poor schools and libraries and rural health centers 
are in desperate need of discounts.  If we really believed that 
we all belong in the Information Age, then, at this sunlit moment 
of prosperity, we can't leave anyone behind in the dark. 


	     Every one of you who understands this I urge to 
support the e-rate.  Every one of you here who came from a poor 
inner-city neighborhood, who came from a small rural school 
district, who came perhaps from another country where this was 
just a distant dream, you know that there are poor children now 
who may never have a chance to go to MIT unless someone reaches 
out and gives them this kind of opportunity.  Every child in 
America deserves the chance to participate in the information 
revolution.  (Applause.)

	     The third thing we have to do is to make sure that 
all the computers and the connections in the world don't go to 
waste because our children actually have 21st century skills.  
For five years now I've done my best to make education our number 
one domestic priority, creating HOPE Scholarships, expanding Pell 
Grants, to make the 13th and 14th years of education as universal 
as the first 12 are today.  We've passed tax credits, reformed 
the student loan program, expanded work-study, created AmeriCorps 
to open the doors of college to every young person who is willing 
to work for it.

	     We're working to make our public schools the best in 
the world, with smaller classes, better facilities, more master 
teachers and charter schools, higher standards, and end to social 
promotion.  But the new economy also demands that our nation 
commit to technology literacy for every child.  We shouldn't let 
a child graduate from middle school anymore without knowing how 
to use new technologies to learn.  

	     Already, 10 states with an eye to the future have 
made technology literacy a requirement of graduation from high 
school.  I believe we should meet this goal in the middle school 
years.  I believe every child in every state should leave middle 
school able to use the most current tools for learning, research, 
communication, and collaboration.  And we will help every state 
to meet this goal.

	     If a state commits to adopt a technology literacy 
requirement, then we will help to provide the training that the 
teachers need.  I propose to create a team of trained technology 
experts for every American middle school in every one of these 
states, and to create competitions over the next three years to 
encourage the development of high-quality educational software 
and educational web sites by students and professors in 
commercial software companies.

	     All students should feel as comfortable with a 
keyboard as a chalkboard; as comfortable with a laptop as a 
textbook.  It is critical to ensuring that they all have 
opportunity in the world of the 21st century. 

	     Today I pledge the resources and unrelenting efforts 
of our nation to renew our enduring values in the Information 
Age.  But the challenges that we face cannot be met by government 
alone.  We can only fulfill the promise of this revolution if we 
work together in the same way it was launched together, with 

creativity, resolve, a restless spirit of innovation.

	     While this mission requires the efforts of every 
citizen, those who fuel and enjoy the unparalleled prosperity of 
this moment have special responsibilities.  The thriving new 
companies that line Route 128 in Silicon Valley -- I challenge 
them to use their power to empower others, to invest in a school, 
embrace a community in need, endow an eager young mind with 
opportunity; not to rest until every one of our children is 
technology literate.  Many of you are doing such work already and 
many of them are; but America needs all such companies to 
participate.
	     
	     And, finally, to the graduates of the class of 1998, 
I, too, offer my congratulations and, as your President, my 
gratitude for your commitment, for challenges conquered, for 
projects completed, for goals reached and even surpassed.  You, 
your parents and your friends should be very proud today, and 
very hopeful, for all the possibilities of this new age are open 
to you.  You are at the peak of your powers and the world will 
rightly reward you for the work you do.
	     
	     But to make the very most of your life and the 
opportunities you have been given, you, too, must rise to your 
responsibility to give something back to America of what you have 
been given.  As the years pass your generation will be judged and 
you will begin to judge yourselves not only on what you do for 
yourself and your family, but on the contributions you make to 
others -- to your country, your communities, your generation of 
children.  When you turn your good fortune into a chance for 
others, you then will not only be leaders in science and 
industry, you will become the leaders of America.  Twenty-first 
century America belongs to you -- take good care of it.
	     
	     Thank you and God bless you.  (Applause.)

            END                        12:21 P.M. EDT

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