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Withdrawal/Redaction Sheet
CliI~ton
DOCUMENT NO.
AND TYPE
.
Library
SUBJECTffITLE
DATE
RESTRICTION
001. letter
To Carol Rasco from Paul Berry (partial) (I page)
07/09/93
P6/b(6)
002. letter
To Carol Rasco from Paul Marchand (partial, p. 2) (I page)
0811 1/93
P6/b(6)
COLLECTION:
Clinton Presidential Records
Domestic Policy Council
Carol Rasco (Regrets/Invitations)
ONBox Number: 4594
FOLDER TITLE:
Carol H. Rasco Regretted Invitations Jan. - Dec. '93 #2 of3 [9]
20 i 0-0 198-S
ryl028
RESTRICTION CODES
Presidential Records Act - ]44 U.S.C. 2204(a)]
Freedom of Information Act -]5 U.S.C. 552(b)]
National Security Classified Information ](a)(I) of the PRA]
Relating to the appointment to Federal office ](a)(2) of the PRA]
Release would violate a Federal statute ](a)(3) of the PRAI
Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential commercial or.
financial information ](a)(4) of the PRA]
P5 Release would disclose confidential advice between the President
and his advisors, or between such advisors]a)(5) of the PRA]
P6 Release would constitute a clearly unwarrantcd invasion of
personal privacy ](a)(6) orthe PRA]
b(l) National security classified information ](b)(I) of the FOIA]
b(2) Release would disclose internal personnel rules and practices of
an agency ](b)(2) of the FOIA]
b(3) Release would violate a Federal statute ](b)(3) of the FOIA]
b(4) Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential or financial
information ](b)(4) of the FOIA]
b(6) Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy ](b)(6) of the FOIAI
b(7) Relcasc would disclose information compiled for law enforcement
purposes ](b)(7) of the FOIAI
b(8) Release would disclose information 'concerning the regulation of
financial'institutions ](b)(8) of the FOIAI
b(9) Release would disclose geological or geophysical information
concerning wells ](b)(9) of the FOI~]
PI
P2
P3
P4
C. Closed in accordance with restrictions containcd in donor's deed
of gift.
PRM. Personal record misfile defined in accordance with 44 U.S.C.
2201(3).
RR. Document will be reviewed upon request.
�SEP -7 REC'O
36 Church Road
Easton, Connecticut 06612-1412 \
August 31, 1993
Ms. Carol Rasco
Domestic Policy Advisor
The White House
Washington, DC
Dear Carol,
I read, with delight, the article about you in the "Washington Post" of August
24th. I always find it enjoyable to read about acquaintances who have done
well.
I wanted to let you know that I will be, in Washington from September' 26 -,l0
at the NationafAssociation ofPrivaieResidential Resources (NAPRR)
meeting where, I understand, you'll be speaking: I'd love to get together for a
drink (no agenda) if you could fit it into your schedule.
I look forward to seeing you in any event.
I can be reached during the day at 203/324-9258 x 328 or nights at 203/452
1556.
\j]i
Y,
Dan Rosen
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36 Church Rd.
Easton, CT 06612-1412
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Ms. Carol Rasco
Domestic Policy Advisor
The White House
Washington, DC
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�September 17, 1993
TO:
CHR
FROM:
Pat
Re:
Technology Demonstration
Carol,
Regarding your inquiry yesterday reo a "technology"
invitation, I located this in the '''regrets'' file.
We had regretted to Lisa Lane of SAlC on September 9.
�TECHNoloGY LEAdERS iN
HEAlTH CARE SYSTEMS
SOlUTioNS iNViTE YOU ...
AND OUR PARTNERS
BEll ATUWriC
HEAlrHcARE SYSTEMS
,
.
.
REAl#wORld dEMONSTRATioN of
WHAT HiGH TECHNOloGY CAN do
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER
3:00-8:00 P.M.
CATERED RECEPTION
C~~~JTER CORp.
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22, 1993
VIPS
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SPEAKER'S LOBBY
INDEPENDENCE AVENUE, CAPITOL HILL
This is your sample health care
Smarlcard. Your photo will beadded
at the demonstration. Please bring it
withyou to the Speaker's Lobby
W
For more information ~t
Usa Lane al (703) 824-?S8t57
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An Employee,OwMd Company
�EAdERS
iN
HEAlTH CARE SYSTEMS
SOlUTioNS TO TodAY'S PREssiNG HEAlTli CARE INFoRMATioN MANAGEMENT PRoblEMS
StatLAN Oacis™, the breakthrough clini
cal information system from Bell Atlantic
Healthcare Systems Healthcare Systems, is designed 10
improve the quality and cost of patient
care by gathering, integrating, and synthesizing all data generated all episodes of
care over alifetime of treatment. Contracted for or installed at more than 70 health
care enterprises, the system integrates multiple legacy systems through the
Gateway++, acommunications mediator. Oacis re-engineers the tongitudinal
patient record using aservice-oriented data repository, revolutionary displays, and
intuitive navigational tools,
@Bell Atlantic
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Blue Cross and Blue Shield of South
Carolina is an acknowledged national
BlueCrossBlueShield
leader in both managed health care and
or South Carolina
the administration of government health
insurance programs In 1994, the 4,OOO-employee mutual insurance company will
process more than half of all CHAMPUS claims worldwide for the Department of
Defense and will handle Medicare claims and related services for the Health Care
Financing Administration for 33 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico,and
the Virgin Islands, The company manages South Carolina's largest and only state
wide provider networks and provides afull array of other managed care activities,
DataCard Corporation, acompany based
in Minneapolis, Minnesota, is the
world's leader in plastic card equipment,
products, and services. Founded in
1969, DataCard quickly became the recognized leader in credit card systems. The
technology it developed for the financial marketplace migrated naturally into innova
tive health care solutions. Today, multi-technology plastic cards provide the ideal
system foundation for member identification, eligibility verification, and provider
claims adjudication.
to improve the quality and reduce the cost of health care. As akey partner in the
Department of Defense's effort to control military medical costs, SAIC automated
clinical records to improve patient care and save $2.5 billion in operating costs dur
ing the 1990s. By 1996, the Composite Health Care System (CHC$) will serve more
than 9million people at approximately 700 military medical facilities throughout the
world. Functioning as atestbed for Computer Patient record development and out
comes research, CHCS will continue to contribute to health care reform. SAIC devel
ops and engineers custom software, builds telecommunications networks, maintains
equipment, provides outsourcing services, and applies expertise in re-engineering
the health care business environment.
A'
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Sun servers, workstations, and open
architecture offer avariety of options in
Computer Corporation
health care computing. Computing
AS"."",,,,,.,,,, e".",
needs are constantly evolving and
expanding given the special complexity of health care financing, which involves
funding from public and private sources in addition to insurance programs, such as
Medicare and Medicaid. Sun's open architecture is the most cost-effective solution
for continuous growth and flexibility. Sun offers the ability to function in any health
care environment through the connectivity, modularity, and scalability of SPARCTM's
RISC architecture. Sun's SolarisTM UNIX operating system improves the interoper
ability of patient care applications and reduces the cost of health care management
through distributed networking. The freedom of open systems has proved more
cost effective than centralized proprietary systems
Sun Mtcrosystems
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InterSystems' Open M/SOl combines M
Technology with ANSI-Standard SOL to
•••WlIiI_itWl... present afamily of data base products
ranging from afeature-rich, standards
based Mdevelopment environment to an advanced relational data base manage
ment system and application generator. The Open M/SOl toolset offers SAle and its
clients the simplicity and efficiency of afully integrated environment Specifically
designed to handle complex applications in acost-effective manner for the data
intensive medical information environment, this capability facilitates enterprise-wide
connectivity through advanced client-server architecture. Toolset architecture
includes the Relational Server, which uses SOL to interface the CHCS data bases
with popular off-the-shelf software extending from spreadsheets to graphical inter
faces and executive information systems.
~~
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Science Applications International
Corporation (SAIC), the nation's largest
employee-owned research and developAn Employee-Owned Company
ment firm, offers diversified, high-technology services to the public and private sectors. At its Center for Health Care
.. Technology, SAIC tests and integrates clinical capabilities with information systems
Texas Instruments, Incorporated, headquartered in Dallas, Texas, is ahighINSTRUMENTS ..., technology company with sales or man
ufacturing operations in more than 30
countries. TI products and services include software productivity tools, computers
and peripheral products, semiconductors, defense electronics systems, custom
engineering and manufacturing services, eleclrical controls, metallurgical materi
als, and consumer electronic products. With its productivity software tools, TI
provides the capability to build integrated information systems for the health care
industry. These tools are basic to TI's framework for enterprise engineering, a
strategy that encompasses products and services for business process re
engineering, application development, clienVserver architecture, and electronic
data interchange.
TEXAS
-'itA
VIPS, Incorporated, an employee-owned
company headquartered in Towson,
Maryland, specializes in the design,
development, implementation, and main
tenance of health care claims processing systems through the effective integration of
information management systems and technology. VIPS' Medicare claims process
ing system is used by 11 carriers in 15 states and encompasses approximately 32%
of the national Medicare Part Bclaims volume. VIPS' expanded client/server appli
cation environment brings exponential benefits in productivity, flexibility, cost effi
ciency, and user control over the data that drive the health care industry. SMART
offers workstation data analysis and tracking for Medicare Secondary Payer cases.
VIPS' new product, 'STARS', uses the latest technology to benefit the areas of
Focused Medical Review, Utilization Review, Fraud and Abuse Detection, Outcomes
Analysis, and other aspects of program/benefits integrity
�T
ECHNOloqy lEAdERS
bECOME PARTNERS
TO dEMONSTRATE
HOW SHAREd HEAlT
iNfoRMATioN iMPROV
PATiENT CARE AT siGNifi;
•
CANT COST SAVINGS
Come witness firsthand how high technology can be applied
to greatly improve and make cost-effective our nations
health care system. Join in discussions with technology
leaders on their vision ofashared automated information
systems infrastructure for health care reform.
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Carol H. Rasco
Executive Office of the President
-- ~ As'"sistlmt to the President for Domestic P~licy'
.The White House
1600 PeniiSylvania 'Ave~' NW
Washington, DC 20503
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Carol Rasco
Domestic Policy
The White House, West Wing
Washington, DC 20500
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�Withdrawal/Redaction Marker
Clinton Library
DOCUMENT NO.
AND TYPE
001. letter
SUBJECTfflTLE
DATE
To Carol Rasco from Paul Berry (partial) (I page)
07/09193
RESTRICTION
P61b(6)
COLLECTION:
Clinton Presidential Records
Domestic Policy Council
Carol Rasco (Regrets/Invitations)
OAiBox Number: 4594
FOLDER TITLE:
Carol H. Rasco Regretted Invitations Jan. - Dec. '93 #20f3 [9]
20 I0-0 J98-S
rylO28
RESTRICTION CODES
Presidential Records Act - 144 U.S.C: 2204(a)1
Freedom of Information Act -15 U.S.c. 552(b)J
National Security Classified Information l(a)(I) of the PRAI
Relating to the appointment to Federal office l(a)(2) of the PRAJ
Release would violate a Federal statute l(a)(3) of the PRAI
Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential commercial or
financial information l(a)(4) of the PRAI
P5 Release would disclose confidential advice between the President
and his advisors, or between such advisors la)(5) of the PRAJ
P6 Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy l(a)(6) of the PRAI
b(l) National security classified information [(b)(t) of the FOIAJ
b(2) Release would disclose internal personnel rules and practices of
an agency I(b)(2) of the FOIAI
b(3) Release would violate a Federal statute l(b)(3) of the FOtAj
b(4) Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential or financial
.
information J(b)(4) of the FOIAI
b(6) Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy l(b)(6) of the FOlAl
b(7) Release would disclose information compiled for law enforcement
purposes l(b)(7) of the FOtAJ
b(8) Release would disclose informatiou concerning the regulation of
financial institutions J(b)(8) ofthe FOIAI
b(9) Release would disclose geological or geophysical iuformation
concerning wells l(b)(9) of the FOIAJ
PI
P2
P3
P4
C. Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in donor's deed
of gift.
PRM. Personal record misfile defined in accordance with 44 U.S.C.
220i(3).
RR. Document will be reviewed upon request.
�•
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LUPUS
,
Foundation of America, Inc. '
June 18,1993
The Honorable Carol H. Rasco
Director
Domestic Policy Council
The White House
Washington, DC 20500
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Dear ,Ms. Rasco:
I have recently agreed to help a most worthwhile cause, The Lupus Foundation
of America.
Lupus is a chronic disorder of the immune system. Normally, the immune
system protects an individual from infection. In autoimmune diseases, like lupus, the
immune system becomes hyperactive and attacks one's own healthy tissues and cells.
Today, more than 500,000 Americans suffer from lupus: Although lupus can
afflict anyone, it occurs 10 times more frequently in women between the ages of 14
and 45. Currently, there is no cure for lupus. Powerful medic~tions, which ofte~'cause
serious side effects, are used to control this debilitatingdis~ase: Unfor,tunately,' qver .
5,000 individuals die from lupus each year. Many of these deaths could be prevented
by early diagnosis and treatment.
'
This year's Lupus Gala in Washington, D.C., will be held on Tuesday,
September 14th and I a~ pleased to be serving as Chairman. I would be very gratllt!..'11.~"""'"
you would consider serving as a member of the Dinner Committee for the Gala .
.
The Gala will raise needed funds to provide supportive services for people
suffering from lupus, support lupus awareness programs, and to continue research into
the cause and cure for lupus.
I would·a redate it if
Foundation at 01-670-9292 b
ugust 1st, in
name to this worthwhile effort.·
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4 Research Place. Suite 180, ROCKville. MD 20850-3226 (301) 670-9292 •
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(800) 558-0121
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Washington, DC 20500
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september S, 1993
Carol Rasco
Assistant to the President for
Domestic Policy
Second Floor, West Wing
The White House
Washing-ton, DC 20500
Dear Carol J
1
I have reoeived word today from the White House
t
Schedulinq Office that neither the President nor the First
Lady can participate in our National Convention on october 7
in Providence, Rhode Island. Needless to say, we are
j
greatly disappointed that the leadership of The Arc'will not \
be able to hear from them first-hand about the
'
Administration's health care and lonq term services
proposals. Given that our convention falls within t.wo '!Jeeks
of the President's unveilinq of his proposal, this wQuld be
f
a terrific opportunity to provide national/visibility on thai
disability perspeotivQ of the reform initiative.
l
Reiteratinq my invitation t~ you on August 11, r again
urqeyou to oonsid~r serving as the keynote spaaker at our
oonf'erence. We expeot between 1, 500 and :2 I 000 l"dars of
'The Arc at our annual, convention, moct. of whom are parents
of persons with mental ro.tardation. The keynot:e addregg is
aohadulad for approximately 1:30 p.m. on Thursday, October
7, 1993 in Providence J Rhode. Island.
l!our"'moving meslHi.ge4 to
~r9nts
ana siff-advocatea ,w1th mental retardation as
articulated in your spe~¢h at The Arc of Maryland, conference
in June, ooupled with some ~:pecifics on the health care and
lon9 term ~ervices refOrm proposals, would be the hit of our
convention.
Since our'convention i\5 now less than a month away, a
"
prolUpt reosponse to this invitation would. be greatly
appreciated. ' I sincerely hope your hectic schedule will
.allow you to participate with this major event:. Thank you
tor your consideration.
sincerely,
P~ax-1and
a national organi:u;J.tion.on mental retardation
form.arly Ao&o<>iatinn tor Retardod
Citi~"n..
oj' tlw Untoo.d Si:at<n!
��IPHOTOCOPY
eC:;ERVA110Nl
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i'Arc
Governmental Affairs Office
1522 K Street, N.W., Suite 516
Washington, D.C. 20005
(202) 785-3388/ FAX (202) 467-4179
TOO (202) 785-3411
August 11.
Carol Rasco '
Assistant to the President for
Domestic Policy
Second Floor, West Wing
The White House
Washington, D.C.
20500
Dear Carol,
This letter is in response to your kind invitation to me tendered
in Ocean City at The Arc of Maryland's conference to meet in the near
future to discuss key mental' retardat ; on I;\nd deve 1opmenta 1
disabilities issues. Hopefu~~y! you~ ~cheduJe will permit such a
meet i ng soon. I'll ca 11 your' oflf ice next week ,to tr.y to set up a time
and date.
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Since we met, the Cl inton' A'dministration h'as, garnered some very
hi gh marks and ~'strong' ~upport from The Arc and the d i sabi 1 i ty
community. The'Pre:sident's appointmemts.'ofo~tstanding folks like
Judy Heumann and Bobby'S~mpson at ~ducation and Bob Williams at HHS
are terrific ,and..wi';"l pay, off 'for all. Hi's historic meeting with the
disability cbmmuni'ty"on~J~'iy 27 and 'Attorney General Reno's a day
earlier received good national press and really 'opened the doors,
symbo 1 i ca 11y and off i cia 11 y, to the commuf,ii ty:",
"
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Despi te strong support by the _disabi 1', ty commun i ty for the
President's budget, the ~timu1us bill and' th~ reconciliation bill,
many of my colleagues and I belleve the disability community has been
seriously shortchanged in each of these vital proposals. Further,
it's clear to us that the Congress is paying much greater attention to
this Administration's budget proposals than they have in the previous
dozen years. Thus, it is vital that the President's budget
priorities, given the bleak environment, reflect disability concerns.
This requires much thought and intervention throughout the
Administration. I would. very much like to discuss this further with
you.
"-
On another matter, The Arc has invited the President and the
First Lady to address our National Convention in early October in
Providence, Rhode Island. Given the timing of the release of the
health care reform initiative, our convention would be a great
opportunity for one of them to highlight the disability-related
aspects of the proposal. ,To date, I have not heard from the White
House,scheduling office regarding our invitation. Fully recognizing
a national organization on mental retardation
formerly Association for Retarded Citizens of the United States
�Withdrawal/Redaction Marker
Clinton Library
DOCUMENT NO.
AND TYPE
002. letter
. DATE
SUBJECTrrITLE
To Carol Rasco from Paul Marchand (partial, p. 2) (1 page)
08/11/93
RESTRICTION
P6/b(6)
COLLECTION:
Clinton Presidential Records
Domestic Policy Council
Carol Rasco (Regrets/Invitations)
OAlBox Number: 4594
FOLDER TITLE:
Carol H. Rasco Regretted Invitations Jan. - Dec. '93 #2 of3 [9]
2010-0198-S
ryl028
RESTRICTION CODES
Presidential Records Act - 144 U.S.C. 2204(a)1
Freedo,m of Information Act - 15 U.S.C. 552(b)1
PI
P2
P3
P4
b(l) National security classified information [(b)(I) of the FOIAI
b(2) Release would disclose internal personnel rules and practices of
an agency [(b)(2) ofthc FOIAI
b(3) Release would violate a Federal statute [(b)(3) of the FOIAI
b(4) Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential or financial
information [(b)(4) of the FOIAI
b(6) Release would constitute a clearly unwarrantcd invasion of
personal privacy [(b)(6) of the FOIAI
b(7) Release would disclose information compiled for law enforcement
purposes [(b)(7) of the FOIAI
b(8) Release would disclose information concerning the regulation of
financial institutions l(b)(8) of the FOIA]
b(9) Release would disclose geological or geophysical information
concerning wells [(b)(9) of the FOIAI
National Security Classified Information [(a)(I) of the PRA[
Relating to the appointmcnt to Fedcral office [(a)(2) of the PRAI
Release would violate a Federal statutc [(a)(3) of the PRAI
Release would disclose trade seerets or eonfidential commercial ,or
financial information [(a)(4) of the PRAI
P5 Release would diselose confidential advice between the President
and his advisors, or between such advisors [a)(5) of the PRAI
P6 Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy [(a)(6) of the PRAI
C. Closed in accordancc with restrictions containcd in donor's deed
of gift.
PRM. Personal record misfile defined in accordance with 44 U.S.C.
2201(3).
RR. Document will be reviewed upon request.
�, '
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Caro 1 "Rasc'O
August 11, '1993
page 2
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the i nt~nse cO'mpet:ttiQn amonggroUpsat:la war ld,>and n~~ip0~l, e~ent,s f,0,t,'
th'ei,r:" ti me, 1 knpw we may n9t'be/:abl~ tp g~t~ ei'the.r:C)(~,I;1,em,.,,>I;f; "t;:,ha,t,"
should Qccur, we would be, deligh'te'd't6i1'a.ve, you,as ourkeyn'Ote , " "
speaker. '~Iknowth;s "fsan<;i~,k~~rcJ~flyto; rvite"Yoy., ' , I apo,1991 ze ,
..for:-that,but,',Ialso ,know yourexce,lJ eht;":,mess,age,to 'p"ar,entp,and" s.el f:-,':\
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INGTON, D.C.
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Assistant to the President for
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Second Floor, West Wing
The White House
Washington, DC 20500
Dear Carol,
I have received word today from the White House
Scheduling Office that neither the President nor the First
Lady can participate in our National Convention on October 7
in Providence, Rhode Island. Needless to say, we are
greatly disappointed that the leadership of The Arc will not
be able to hear from them first-hand about the
Administration's health care and long term services
proposals. Given.. that our convention falls within two weeks
Sf 'th~~~feiid~~£~s unveiling of his proposal, this would be
a terrific opportunity to provide national visibility on the
disability'perspective of the reform-initiative.
Reiterating my invitation to you on August 11, I again,
urge you to consider serving as the keynote speaker at our
conference. We expect between 1,500 and 2,000 leaders of
The Arc at our annual convention, most of whom are parents,
of persons with mental retardation. The keynote address is
scheduled for approximately 1:30 p.m. on Thursday, October
7, 1993 in Providence, Rhode Island. Your moving message to
parents and self-advocates with mental retardation as
articulated in your speech at The Arc of Maryland conference
in June, coupled with some specifics on the health care and
long term services reform proposals, would be the hit of our
convention.
Since our convention is now less than a month away, a
prompt response to this invitation would be greatly
appreciated.
I sincerely hope your hectic schedule will
allow you to participate with this major event. Thank you
for your consideration.
Sincerely,
pe~nd
a national organization on mental retardation
formerly Association for Retarded Citizens of the United States
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WASHINGTON, DC 20500
a national organization on mental retardation
formerly Association for Retarded Citizens of the United States
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Wimock lnterl}ational Institute for AgricuItural Development
is a private, nonprofit organization that works to reduce poverty and hunger
by helping people lea~n to help themselves through increased agricultural
productivity, economic developm~nt"and sound environmel)tal management.
Projects 'operate in more than 40 countries including the United States,
Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Latin America, the Caribbean; Centra.l Europe,
and the New Independent States of the former Soviet Union.
Winrock, headquartered on Petit Jean Mountain 70 miles northwest
of Little Rock, Arkansas, also operates offices in Arlington, Virginia;
Abidjan, C6te d'Ivoire; and Manila; the Philippines,
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Robert L. Thompson assumed hIS dulles as presIdent of Wmrock InternatlOnal July 1,
1993, Previously he was the Dean of Agriculture at Purdue University, a position he held
since 1987.
f:. noted edu~ator, lecturer, and author on international agric~lltura(policy, Thompson
has worJ<ed to promote sustainable agricultural development around the world for more
tha n 25 yea rs.
' .
.
A graduate of Cornell University, Thompson earned his masters ilnd doctor of
philosophy degrees from Purdue University. '
He is a fellow of the American Agricultural Economics Association, is a former
Assistant Secretary for Economics for the U.s. Department of Agriculture, and was senior
Staff Economist for the President's Council of Economic Advisers. He serves on the
International Policy Council on Agriculture, Food, and Trade and the National Advisory
Council of Minorities in Agriculture, Natural Resources, and Related Sciences.
.
,
, THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF
WINROCK INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR AORICULTUR.I,L DEVELOPMENT
CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO A RECEPTION TO IN1RODUCE ITS NEW LEADER
ROBERT
&
PRESIDENT
L. THOMPSON
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
MONDA Y,SEPTEMBER
20, 1993 .
5:30 - 7:30 P.M.
THE HiSTORIC SEWALL-BELMONT HOUSE
144 COj\JS'TfTUTION AVENliE, N.E.
WASHINGTON, D.C
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PLEASE RSVP TO GONER GERY
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703-525-9430, EXTENSION 604
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�UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
EDUC~TION
OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY
FOR EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH AND IMPROVEMENT
Ms. Carol Rasco
Member
National Education Goals Panel
Assistant to the President for
Domestic Policy
The White House, West Wing
Washington, DC ·.20500
Dear Ms. Rasco:
I am inviting y6u to participate in a major Department'of Education
conference, sponsored by Secretary of Education Richard W. Riley, on
assessment in.. mathematics and science education. The. purpose of the
conference is to bring to the attention of local, State, and Federal
policymakers recent findings and current thinking on issues regarding
educational assessment, and to give them access to examples of'
mathematics and science assessments from across the country.' The
conference will be held at the.Doubletree Hotel in the Washington, DC,
suburb of Arlington, Virginia, September. ·20 a.nd' 2:1'" 19.93.
,
.
This will be the third Secretary's conference organized by the
Department's Office of Educational Research and Improvement (OERI) in a
series designed to inform policymakers who must address issues .involved
in restructuring American mathematics and science education to assure'
success for all students. The first conference, held-in 1991, was
organized around' "world class" standards for science and mathematics.
curricula and their effect on. elementary and secondary school curric.ulum
development. The 1992 conferenqe dealt with instructional materials and
professional development that could enable schools to adopt more
demanding standards.
..
The focus of these conferences has been on mathematics and science'
education not only because having a citizenry educated in these subjects
is critical to the Nation's future, but also because work on developing
rigorous standards in mathematics and science education has progressed
further than in other subjects. Mathematics and science education can
thus be used to demonstrate the direction for systemic change needed in
education overall.
~
YoU will be hearing soon from OERI staff regarding ~ore information
about the agenda, as well as details about conference arrangements. I
encourage you to mark your calendar and ma.ke plans now to join us in
September to advance the dialogue on transforming mathematics and
science education in America's schools. I look forward to seeing you
then.
~A)~ncer~'y,'
.
.
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Sharon P. Robinson
Assistant Secretary
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Ms. Carol Rasco
Member
National Education Goals Panel
Assistant to the President for
Domestic PoHcy
The White House, West Wing
Washington, DC 20500
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�Family .
Impact
Seminar
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Theodora Ooms, Director
1100 17th Street, NW • Suite 901 • Washington, DC 20036· Phone (202) 467-5114 • FAX (202) 223-2329
September 2,
1993
Ms. Carol Rasco
Asst. for Domestic,Policy
The White House
1700 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.
washington DC 20503
Dear Ms. Rasco:
We invite you to participate in our next breakfast seminar for policy
staff and researchers to be held on Friday, September 17. Our topic
will be:
Data Integration and Evaluation: Essential Components of
Family-Centered Systems Reform
The ~eminar will be held from 8:30 a.m. - 11.DO a.m. in the Hart
Senate Office, Building, Room 708. continental breakfast will be
served at 8.30 a.m. The meeting will begin promptly at 9.00 a.m.
The emerging new paradigm of child and family services emphasizes
service coordin~tion and integration, focuses on the whole child and
family, and insists that programs must be "outcome" driven.
However,
it is not well understood that achievement of these goals requires
investment in greatly improved and linked data systems and
innovative, multi-disciplinary program evaluations.
Many state and local.reform initiatives are struggling to put these
systems in place and. design methods for measuring outcomes for the
child, family, 3.:r;,d.cO!rcrlu::'!i ty. N0~.,compL1terized information
technology makes it ~6ssi~le to collect, link, store, and' ~nalyze
data in increasingly complex ways.
Improvement in data management is
increasingly being viewed as a basic tool for improving service
delivery. While some progress is being made in all these areas,
numerous barriers stand in the way.
In general, the rhetoric of
reform far outstrips current capacity to implement and assess the
results of system change.
,
,
Recent federal legislation places a stronger emphasis on
weII-designed evaluation. However, the fields of information systems
and program evaluation are rapidly changing and highly complex and'
technical. Evaluation designs appropriate for focused, categorical
programs are no longer adequate to capture the complexities of
comprehensive, evolving services designed for the whole family.
The policy unit ofthe American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy Research and Education Foundation
�At this seminar, three panelists will draw en their experience with
different referm initiatives te previde an .overview .of seme .of the
key issues and que stiens ,that are impertant ferpelicymakers and
,.others :te unders'tand.
Fer example: What are' the main challenges and
barriers states and lecal agencies face in integrating data bases
acress pregrams? What kinds .of eutcemes can be assessed with
different kinds ef'evaluatien methedelegies? Hew can the federal
" gevernment, best help state and lecal gevernments impreve their data'
management capacities and ,carry, .out useful pregram evaluatiens?
.
.
'
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Heather B.Weiss is directer .of the Harvard Family Research
Preject and auther .of several beeks en evaluatien. She will present
an evervie,w .of the challenges .of evaluating family-centered,
. integrated pregrams and .of the merits and pitfalls .of different kinds
of appreaches.:Weiss will alse discuss strategies fer statewide
evaluatien and cemment en initial plans te evaluate the ambitieus
'Children's Initiative funded by the Pew Charitable Trust.
.0
o Elyse Kaye is vice-president .of James Bell Asseciates and has
been invelved in evaluating numereus past and engeing, federally
funded service integratien initiatives. She will summarize seme .of
the key findingi .of these demenstratiens, emphasizing the
cemplexities .of censtructing interrelated infermatien systems.
Building en these lessens, she will suggest ways in which federal
pelicy can be mest helpful.
'
o Donna Stark, state directeref Maryland's Ch~ldren and Family
Services RefermInitiative, will describe the challenges, successes,
and preblems enceuntered in designing and implementing an integrated
data system and evaluatien .of ,Maryland's statewide referm
initiative. She will identify seme .of the barriers, highlighting
these that are a result .of federal mandates.
In additien, she will
describe HOMEBASE, the seftware program designed fer case managers to
use te impreve service deliveryte families and is alse used in the
.overall evaluatien.
This, seminar 'is ,the fifth in .our series ,en 'integrated,
'family-centered,: s~xvices!:'eforrn. We encourage yeu to bring yeur
questiens,ideas, and experiehces te ~hare in the half h6ur
discussienperied.
In case we must netify yeu .of a ~ast min~techange .of reems, it is
impertant that yeu register fer the seminar by calling Tedd OWen' at
202-467-5114.
Sincerely,
~~
OIl4J'
Theedera,Oems
P.S. Parking'is available at Unien Statien. The clesest Metre step
is Unien Statien en the Red Line. Walkseuth en First street t ewards
the Capitel., Turn left en Censtitutien Avenue.
The Visiter's
entrance te the Hart Senate Building is midway dewn the bleck en the
left. ' "
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TURNER PICTURES "'1(/ NE\X! LINE CINEMA
/,l'fJent
GJETTYSBlJRG
\florld Premiere
dlytlil!!Yr;QaeiJ.eJi1dellJ:~~
5:00 P,ivL CocktClilJ
6:00 P,AI. Screenillg ,
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The Ntll;()II£lIThetifre
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COlllplh!letlftlr), Valel
.uP IN THE LOBBY OF TI-IE NATIONAL THEATRE ON
MONDAY, OCTOBER 4TH- W:OOAM TO 6:00 PM
For additional informarion, please call Susan O'Nei II ar 3011229-13l4
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Parking
�Based on Michael Shaara'a Pulitzer Prize winning novel The Killer Angels, Gettysburg dramatically
depicts the three most courageous days in American history as experienced by the leaders of the
Confederate and Union armies. The film renders the human dimension of the war with passion and
power--from the fierce disagreements of Generals Longstreet and Lee, the brilliant Confederate leaders,
to the Union's General Buford who forsaw the devastation ahead. Thefilm recounts the personal story
of Colonel Chamberlain's determination to stand the ground on a rocky hill called Little Round Top.
With painstaking attention to authenticity, Gettysburg culminates with a full-scale recreation of
Picken's Ch~ge, the battle which has become legend.
Starring: Tom Berenger ("Lt. Gen. Longstreet"), Jeff Daniels ("Lt. Col. Chamberlain"), Sam Elliott
("Brig. Gen. Buford"), Martin Sheen ("Robert E. Lee"), Kevin Conway ("Sgt. Kilrain"), and C. Thomas
Howell CLt. Chamberlain"), Presented by Mace Neufeld/Robert Rehme, Executive Produced by
Moctesuma Esparza and Robert Katz. Written and Directed by Ronald EMaxweli.
TED TURNER
; !
Chairrl'l4n oj/ht BlJtIfd
Turntr Brrxuk.nti"g SyJfml, inc.
SEP - 7 REC'a
ROGER G. KENNEDY
and
THE ASSOCIATION FOR
PRESERVATION OF CIVIL WAR SITES
cordially invite yo; to the
WORLD PREMIERE
GETTisBno
Monday, October 4, 1993
The National Theatre
Pennsylvania·Avenue,.N. W
Washington, D.C.
Cocktail Reception
5:00 P.M.
'Screening
6:00P.M.
Please respond by enclosed card
GALA DINNER
10:30 P.M.
Freedom Plaza
Invitation non transferable
Business Attire
�.THE ASSOCIATION FOR THE PRESERVATION OF CIVIl, WAR SITES
.
(APCWShs a ri~n~profit I~hd trust devo~ed' exClusively to protecting America's vanishing Civil War
battlefields. Incoq:iorated· in 1987, the Association is supported by memb~rs and contributors n~tionwide in its'
. efforts tQ acquire ,deeded interes~ in historically significant properties. The APCWSpurchases land directly and
awards grants and ptovides technical assistance to local preservation groups. Once it acquires historic real estate, the.
Association donates its holdings to government agencies such as state or national parks, or works with local partners
to provide public access and education.
.
In 1992 Turner Pictures made a gift to the AP(:WS on behalf of the reenactors who donated their time
and expertise during the filming of GETTYSBURG. In 1993 the APCWS earmarked a significant portion of this
contribution to purchase 40 acres in Virginia's·Shenandoah Valley on the Tom'sBrook Battlefield. Turner Pictures
has designated the remaining funds to assist the Association with an on-going $2.3 million campaign to save 750
a~res of the Malvern Hill and Glendale battlefields near Rich~ond. the largest private-sector fundraising effort for. .'
Civil War battlefields in American hisrory.
TURNER PICTURES PRF.SENTS.·
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ANEW LINE CINEMA RELEASEOFA MACE NEUFELDIROBERT REHME PRF.SENTATIONOFAN ESPARZAIKATZPRoDuCTION
AFILMIlYRONALD F. MAXWELL TOM BERENGERJEFF DANIELS MARTIN SHEEN ".GETIYSBURG"
MAXWELL CAULFIELD KEVIN CONWAY C. THOMAS HOWELL RICHARD JORDAN JAMES LANCASTER
AND STEPHEN LANG 1$ PICKETISPEClALAPPEARANCE.BY SAM ELLIOTT 1$ GENERALjOHNBUPOruJ
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MUSIC BY RANDY EDELMAN OOTINGBY TOY TODD, C.SA PRODUCTIONDF.S!GNER CARY WHITE EDlTFJlByCORKY EHLERS
DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY KEES VAN 06STRUM Bl$EDONTIlENOI'EL ".THE KILLER ANGELS". BY MICHAEL SHMRA
SCREENPlAYBY RONALD F. MAXWELL PRODUCEDIlY ROBERT KATZ MOCTESUMA ESPARZA DtREGfEDBY RONALD F. MAXWELL
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GETTYSBURG
WORLD PREMIERE
Monday, October 4. 1993
Ms.
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Ra.sco
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.0 will attend the screening and gala.
® will not attend the screening and gala.
Person to rall regarding tickets:
Name
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Please respond by
Friday, September 24, 1993
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The Honorable CarobRasco
Assistant to the President for
Domestic Policy
The White House
Washington, DC 20500
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Carol Rasco - Regrets and Invitations Series
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Domestic Policy Council
Carol Rasco
Regrets and Invitations Series
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1993-1997
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a href="http://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/items/show/36308" target="_blank">Collection Finding Aid</a>
<a href="https://catalog.archives.gov/id/7763318" target="_blank">National Archives Catalog Description</a>
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
2010-0198-S
Description
An account of the resource
Carol Rasco's Regrets and Invitations Series details the numerous requests for Rasco’s participation in and attendance at various events, parties, and speaking engagements, and her regrets primarily due to scheduling conflicts. The records include memos, letters, schedules, itineraries, calendars, and notes.
Provenance
A statement of any changes in ownership and custody of the resource since its creation that are significant for its authenticity, integrity, and interpretation. The statement may include a description of any changes successive custodians made to the resource.
Clinton Presidential Records: White House Staff and Office Files
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Clinton Presidential Library & Museum
Extent
The size or duration of the resource.
128 folders in 16 boxes
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Carol H. Rasco Regretted Invitations Jan. - Dec. '93 #2 of 3 [9]
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Domestic Policy Council
Carol Rasco
Regrets and Invitations Series
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
2010-0198-S
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
Box 168
<a href="http://clintonlibrary.gov/assets/Documents/Finding-Aids/Systematic/2010-0198-S-Regrets-Invitations.pdf" target="_blank">Collection Finding Aid</a>
<a href="https://catalog.archives.gov/id/7763318" target="_blank">National Archives Catalog Description</a>
Provenance
A statement of any changes in ownership and custody of the resource since its creation that are significant for its authenticity, integrity, and interpretation. The statement may include a description of any changes successive custodians made to the resource.
Clinton Presidential Records: White House Staff and Office Files
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Adobe Acrobat Document
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Clinton Presidential Library & Museum
Medium
The material or physical carrier of the resource.
Reproduction-Reference
Date Created
Date of creation of the resource.
2/14/2014
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
2010-0198-Se-carol-h-rasco-regretted-invitations-jan-dec-93-2-of-3-9
7763318