Get your headphones on and listen up to our latest episode. This one is about Former President Bill Clinton’s speech at WTAMU. The transcript for this episode can be found below. Continue reading
Tag Archives: Feature – International People
Warrior 100K Press Conference with Former President Bush
Former President George W. Bush cycled through Palo Duro Canyon for the Warrior 100K race for wounded veterans. During the event, he gave a brief press conference and was interviewed by The Prairie. Watch the report here.
Web Editor’s Note: To read more about Warrior 100K, click here! To check out the rest of our videos, visit our YouTube channel.
100K mountain bike ride honors wounded warriors
April 27 marked the second day of the Warrior 100K mountain bike ride dedicated to the U.S. service men and women wounded during combat.
“There are 19 of us here and it is just a testament to all of us who have overcome these traumatic instances, overcome these obstacles, these barriers to get here,” Melissa Stockwell, a First Lieutenant of the U.S. Army and member of the Board of Directors for the Wounded Warrior Project, said. “Having President Bush here as our leader and just support riding with us and being there at the finish line is what America is all about, and I think we are all extremely proud Americans with our injuries and with what we have overcome.”
Stockwell said Palo Duro Canyon is a beautiful place with well-maintained routes, an opinion shared by many of the participants at the bike ride.
“This is absolutely beautiful,” said John P. Szczepanowski, Gunnery Sergeant with the U.S. Marine Corps and a wounded warrior program coordinator. “Mathew [one of his colleges] and I are both from San Diego so we came out here and witnessed some of these Texan’s hospitality. It is just something I will never forget.” Continue reading
Listen Up! Former President Bill Clinton Speaks at WT
Get your headphones on and listen up to our latest episode. This one is about Former President Bill Clinton’s speech at WTAMU. The transcript for this episode can be found below.
Transcript
Maria: On April 24, former President Bill Clinton spoke at West Texas A&M University, an event that captured the attention of students, faculty and community members.
Brandy Roberts, student body president says the Distinguished Lecture Series donated $100,000 to the Flight 93 memorial on behalf of WTAMU.
Roberts: This donation will aid in finishing the memorial and once completed the West Texas A&M University student body will be honored with a plaque on the memorial visitor’s center. In response to this generous donation Bill Clinton has volunteered his time to be with us today.
Maria: Dr. James Calvi, chair of the Distinguished Lecture Committee introduced Clinton and explained his initiative to raise money for the Flight 93 memorial.
Calvi: Last year along with former president George W. Bush and current speaker of the house John Boehner, President Clinton teamed up to raise money for a memorial for the heroes of United flight 93 which crashed in Shanksville Pennsylvania on Sept 11. 2001.
Maria: Clinton compared what happened in Flight 93, to the Alamo and the battle for Texas independence.
Clinton: It was one of those relatively rare examples in human history when the people that gave you the state that you now treasure made a deliberate collective decision to give their lives for a larger objective. Everybody that goes to battle risks their life, but they knew in advance they were going to perish.
Maria: Flight 93 was targeted to hit the Capitol, which Clinton says is the symbol of the United States freedom and history. He says the difference between the battle for Texas Independence and Flight 93 is that the people on Flight 93 were just ordinary men and women that didn’t sign on for battle.
Clinton: They didn’t know in advance that on that day it might be their last day. And they had to decide in an instant whether they were going to derail that plane knowing that the chances were more than 90 percent that the plane will crash and they will be killed.
Maria: However, he says these people made the same decisions than the Texans in the Alamo.
Clinton: They weren’t professional soldiers and they didn’t have any time to think about it. They instinctively knew this is what they had to do. I don’t know about you, but I think that deserves a National Memorial.
Maria: During his speech, Clinton announced the National Park Foundation matched the $100,000 dollars donated by WTAMU. Clinton also spoke about the current issues the U.S. is facing.
Clinton: I personally think we also are on an unsustainable development track because of the way we produce and consume energy and local resources cannot be sustained.
Maria: He says climate change is real and unavoidable and that the U. S needs to change the way it consumes energy.
Clinton: For 15 years I have been saying this is the best way to create a good economy and create new jobs if you do it in a smart way.
Maria: He says Texas has been a leader in wind energy development, an area that needs further exploration.
Clinton: Number one is free once you pay for the windmill, and number two it is clean. Oh and there is the matter of the third: For every billion dollars you spend on a coal fire plant you get 870 jobs, for every billion dollars you spend on wind energy, if the windmills and the blades are made in America you get 3,300 jobs.
Maria: Clinton says the U.S is a rich country with huge assets.
Clinton: Don’t let people tell you America’s best days are behind. Every single challenge we have is fixable, but requires reform.
Maria: For The Prairie, I am Maria Molina.
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“There will always be something to argue about.” Former president speaks on the importance of cooperation
Former President Bill Clinton spoke at the First United Bank Center on April 24. The former president attracted people young and old, who listened to his remarks on the Flight 93 Memorial, his time as president and the current issues in America and abroad.
“The most interesting thing to me, today is what I think is a disconnect in what works in America in real life and what works in America in politics,” Clinton said. “In politics, what works is division and argument…what works in real life is when we have networks of cooperation with people who know different things, have different skills, and look at problems in different ways.”
Clinton pointed to successful areas of the country, such as Silicon Valley and the rise of computer simulation technology in Florida, but also brought attention to problems such as rising childhood obesity, the energy crisis, and healthcare. Continue reading
President Clinton to speak at WTAMU on April 24
Former President Bill Clinton will discuss the William J. Clinton Foundation and the Clinton Global Initiative at the First United Bank Center on April 24.
The event starts at 8:00 p.m. and the doors will open at 7:30 p.m. The Distinguished Lecture Series committee said they expect the FUBC to reach capacity of 5,500, so attendees are encouraged to arrive early for seating.
Due to President Clinton’s recognized presidency and his future work, the DLS committee sought to recruit him.
“Clinton is a distinguished speaker,” Colton Risinger, a junior Political Science major, said. “Not only is he a former President, post-presidency he has been highly active in humanitarian work through his foundation and still has influence in foreign affairs.”
Not only is the event free to the public, this event has had minimal cost for the University. Continue reading
Miscellaneous: This Week in Photos
Check out the miscellaneous photos for this week! To read the stories related to these articles, click here:
International Expo: This Week in Photos
Check out this week’s photos of the International Expo!
WT’s SIFE hosts Boots and Sandals for refugees
WTAMU SIFE has teamed up with the Diversity program to give refugees from Asia another chance to succeed in life here in Texas. The refugees are mostly from Asian countries such as Saudi Arabia, Congo and Burma. The event, called Boots and Sandals took place on Nov. 18 and created three years ago as an opportunity for refugees to spend time socializing and to have fun with students from SIFE.
“This is what we call ‘awaking the dream’; we incorporate refugees to assimilate the American culture,” said Marco Jimenez, president and CEO of SIFE. “This event is a great time for them to get together and mingle, share the American experience and when we supply food for them and the entertainment, it is very special to them.”
SIFE has been helping refugees for eight years adapt to the American culture through education, financial and living. Continue reading










