Proclamation by the President - Parents' Day, 2000 (7/22/00)
                              THE WHITE HOUSE
                       Office of the Press Secretary
                             (Okinawa, Japan)

                                                              For Immediate
Release                             July 22, 2000


                            PARENTS' DAY, 2000

                               - - - - - - -

             BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

                              A PROCLAMATION


     Parents play a crucial role in shaping our lives and the life of our
Nation.  They nurture us as infants when we are unable to help ourselves,
protect us as toddlers when we wander into trouble, encourage us as
adolescents when we dream about the future, and guide us as adults as we
face the challenges and opportunities of our own families and careers.  It
is through their care that we learn the invaluable lessons of love, family,
and community; and it is through their selflessness that we come to
understand the joy of making a difference in the life of another.

     Throughout our Administration, Vice President Gore and I have strived
to provide parents with the tools they need to meet their responsibilities.
The Family and Medical Leave Act, which I signed in 1993, has allowed more
than 20 million Americans to take up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave to care
for a newborn or an ailing relative without fear of losing their jobs.  We
have also worked to make child care safer, better, and more affordable for
millions of families, and we have expanded preschool and after-school
programs to give parents more flexibility in balancing the demands of job
and family.  And we have worked hard for parents to make the dream of a
college education for their sons and daughters a reality -- with new HOPE
scholarships, more work-study opportunities, higher Pell grants, and more
affordable student loans.

     Parenting is a lifetime commitment and a lifetime challenge -- it
involves balancing the demands of family, friends, career, and community.
Yet parenting is also one of life?s greatest gifts.  To hold one's sleeping
baby, watch one's children take their first tottering steps and hear them
say their first words, boast with pride about their first home
run or first music recital, and witness firsthand their journey into
adulthood -- these are some of the most precious rewards of parenthood.

     Only when we pass from childhood to adulthood can we appreciate the
value of our parents and the extent of their sacrifices.  For these, we owe
our parents -- whether biological or adoptive, stepparents or foster
parents --  a profound debt of gratitude.  On Parents? Day and throughout
the year, let us pay tribute to America's parents, whose unconditional love
and constant devotion have helped create a bright future for the next
generation.

     NOW, THEREFORE, I, WILLIAM J. CLINTON, President of the United States
of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and
laws of the United States and consistent with Public Law 103-362, do hereby
proclaim Sunday, July 23, 2000, as Parents' Day.  I call upon all Americans
to join together in observing this day with appropriate ceremonies and
activities to honor our Nation's parents.

     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-first day
of July, in the year of our Lord two thousand, and of the Independence of
the United States of America the two hundred and twenty-fifth.



                              WILLIAM J. CLINTON




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