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THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release
September 16, 1993
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT CONGRESSIONAL HISPANIC CAUCUS DINNER
The Washington Hilton
Washington, D.C.
8:30 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. Thank you a l l ,
ladies and gentlemen, for that wonderful welcome. And, thank you,
especially, my good friend, Congressman Serrano, for that warm
introduction and for not t e l l i n g them that you are, after a l l , much
faster than I am. (Laughter.)
I also have to t e l l you, I j u s t l e f t my daughter at
home. She's home working on her homework. H i l l a r y ' s s t i l l working
on health care. (Laughter.) She summoned me. She said, "Dad, when
you get the monkey s u i t on, come i n and l e t me look at you."
(Laughter.) She always checks to see i f I've taken a l l the shaving
cream off my face. I was so proud of her because she i s working on
her accelerated Spanish course. (Applause.) When I heard Joe up
here introducing me, I thought I should go ahead and confess that I
asked my daughter i f she would l e t me learn along with her. And she
said, " I doubt i f you can keep up, Dad, but you're welcome to t r y . "
(Laughter.)
I am deeply honored to be here tonight with the Hispanic
Congressional Caucus I n s t i t u t e . Since the time t h i s i n s t i t u t e was
founded and I was Governor of Arkansas, I have admired your work.
Your programs are helping to pass the baton to a new generation of
leaders, grooming them i n the h a l l s of Congress and i n federal
agencies, and encouraging them to pass along what they've learned to
others. I t ' s important work for young people and for our country. I
want to say thank you for that. One day, i t w i l l produce a President
of the United States. (Applause.)
I want to compliment the I n s t i t u t e ' s Executive Director,
Rita Elizondo. Her hard work may help to — (applause) — her hard
work may help to inspire other children to pursue the l o f t y
achievements of those whom you honor tonight. E l l e n Ochoa the f i r s t
Hispanic woman i n space, and L u c i l l e Becerra Roybal.
(Applause.)
L u c i l l e Becerra Roybal, who has done so much to set an example for
everyone i n bringing urgent change to our country at the grass roots
level.
(Applause.)
I would also l i k e to honor and acknowledge Mrs. Roybal's
husband, former Congressman Edward Roybal, and t h e i r daughter who has
followed so well i n her footsteps, Congresswoman L u c i l l e RoybalAllard.
(Applause.)
There are a few people here from our administration
tonight. I'd be remiss i f I did not acknowledge them. F i r s t of a l l ,
our b r i l l i a n t Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Henry
Cisneros and h i s wife, Mary Alice. (Applause.) And I want to say a
public and personal thank you to Henry Cisneros for what he did t h i s
week to prove that we're s t i l l behind the enforcement of c i v i l rights
in housing i n t h i s country. (Applause.)
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I want to acknowledge the presence of our outstanding
Secretary of Transportation, Federico Pena and h i s wife, E l l e n .
(Applause.) Unlike me, they may be faster runners than Congressman
Serrano. Nelson Diaz, the General Counsel at HUD; Aida Alvarez, the
Director of the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight at
HUD; Norma Cantu, the Assistant Secretary for C i v i l Rights at the
Department of Education. (Applause.) Fernando Torres-Gil, the
Assistant Secretary for Aging at HHS. Maria Echaveste, who runs the
wage and hour division at the Department of Labor. (Applause.) Joe
Velasquez, the Deputy Assistant to the President for P o l i t i c a l
A f f a i r s ; I s a b e l l e Tapia, the Deputy Assistant to the President for
Scheduling and Advance. (Applause.) Patti S o l i s , the Deputy
Assistant to the President who directs the scheduling for the F i r s t
Lady. L i l l i a n Fernandez, my Special Assistant i n the House Liaison
Office. (Applause.) And Carolyn Curiel, who i s with Communications
and Speechwriting, and helped me write a l l the things that I may not
be able to say properly tonight.
I want to say a special word of thanks, too, to a former
member of our s t a f f — the Assistant to the President for
Intergovernmental Relations, Regina Montoya, who went home to Dallas.
But she's here with us tonight. I thank her for her service.
(Applause.)
The people now who serve i n t h i s administration, from
the White House to the Cabinet departments, to people who serve on
Capital H i l l , to people who are full-time public servants, have set
an example that w i l l be important to the whole country. A l l the
people who are now i n the unprecedentedly large Hispanic Caucus i n
the Congress can now honestly hope to represent the hopes, the dreams
of the Hispanic people of the United States, and equally important,
perhaps, to ensure that we make Hispanic Americans f u l l partners so
that we move forward and do i t together.
I had an awesome experience e a r l i e r t h i s week, as a l l of
you know and some of you have already commented on. When I hosted
the Prime Minister i f I s r a e l and the Chairman of the Palestine
Liberation Organization i n signing an h i s t o r i c peace agreement that,
i f you had asked j u s t one month before, probably 90 percent of the
American people and 90 percent of the informed opinion i n the world
would say could never come to pass. (Applause.)
I t was an amazing thing, you know, once I realized i t
was going to happen. And they wanted to come here to Washington to
consummate the signing and make sure that the President didn't forget
that the signing was the beginning, not the end, of the process. And
then, trying to work out how these two men who had fought each other
l i t e r a l l y for decades, who had put t h e i r whole l i v e s into s p i l l i n g
the blood of one another's family and friends and a l l i e s , how they
could somehow undergo t h i s transformation to see each other as
problems, but not as necessary enemies.
Someone said — I don't want to claim credit for that
phrase — that t h i s whole thing happened because, for some reason, at
t h i s magic moment i n our history, those people looked at each other
and saw enemies no more, but only problems. Problems can be solved.
Progress can be made. Enemies don't t a l k to each other. (Applause.)
Tonight, I want to t a l k to you from the heart for j u s t a
moment about p o s s i b i l i t i e s . Because what that moment reminded me of,
again, i s that i f we can imagine i t , i t can happen. I f we can
somehow engage the thorniest problems, i f we can somehow unlock the
ears and the hearts of the toughest adversaries, i t can happen.
Tonight, I ask you, my fellow Americans, to think about
what i t i s we would l i k e our children and our grandchildren to say we
did with t h i s moment i n history, a moment i n which many, many good
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things are happening and many, many bad things are happening at a
bewildering rate of speed.
The Cold War comes to an end, when the Berlin Wall drops
and the Eastern European countries abandon communism and Russia
abandons communism, revealing their whole new set of problems,
economic problems, s o c i a l problems, religious and ethnic c o n f l i c t ,
but s t i l l to be sure, taking away the threat of nuclear annihilation.
We see people hungering in Latin America for democracy and seizing
i t , and trying to build free economies where free people can work
hard and be rewarded for their labors, trying to escape from the dark
years of p o l i t i c a l repression and economic depression.
We see so much to be hopeful about. Here in t h i s
country, we see the wonders of technology opening up worlds we would
never have imagined. That's a l l true. But we also see a world in
which none of the r i c h countries can figure out how to create jobs.
A world in which most Americans are working harder than they were 10
years ago for roughly the same wages in r e a l dollar terms they were
making 2 0 years ago to pay more for education and health care and in
taxes, wondering whether ever they w i l l be able to pass along to
t h e i r children the dream that they had as children.
We have to face the fact that, in spite of the fact that
people look to us a l l over the world to make peace, they wish us to
go in and stop the starvation and the oppression in other countries,
we of a l l the countries in the world have the highest percentage of
people in prison because we are so violent.
We have c i t i e s where the average age of murderers i s now
under 16, where teenagers carry weapons that are better than those
police o f f i c e r s have. So we have t h i s anomalous situation. I f you
are well off in t h i s country, you have the best health care in the
world; but i f you're one of the 35 million or so who don't have i t ,
you're in a real f i x . I f you work for a l i v i n g and you lose your
job, you might lose your health care. I f your c h i l d ever gets sick,
r e a l l y sick, you may never be able to change jobs without losing your
health care.
We have a government desperately needing more funds to
grow the economy and to deal with the real problems we face at home
and abroad, mired in the operating patterns of 60 years ago. And i t
i s no wonder that so many of us are d i s t r u s t f u l of our government and
afraid of our future, and unwilling to take the kinds of changes that
Americans have always taken in expanding trade beyond our borders, in
reaching out to establish closer t i e s with our neighbors, i n
believing that the future belongs to us and can be bright and broad
and deep i f we do what we should.
So I ask you tonight not to take the shine off a
perfectly wonderful and happy evening. To simply search your heart
and say, i f Itzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat could come here and sign
away the legacy of the l a s t four or five decades of hatred, to t r y to
make a new beginning, can we not also make a new beginning i n t h i s
time of sweeping change?
(Applause.)
My dreams for t h i s country are not very complicated. I
believe that, in a time of change, you can do two things: You can
hunker down and turn away from i t and hope i t ' l l go away — and that
works about one time in 100. About once i n 100 i t ' l l work. Or you
can say there has to be a way I can make t h i s change, my friend.
There has to be a way that the most basic t r a d i t i o n a l values I
harbor, to have a good family l i f e , to l i v e i n a safe community, to
see my work rewarded, to give my children a good education, there has
to be a way for me to enhance those values and hopes and dreams i n
the face of a l l t h i s change.
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What i s i t I must do to do that? And i f I ever do
anything, whether you agree with i t or not and you want to know why
in the world did that fool do that, a l l you have to do i s to remember
what I j u s t told you, because I believe i n t h i s time of momentous
change. I t i s my job not to turn away from i t and hunker down, but
to embrace i t with gusto and figure out how to preserve those basic
values by making the changes that w i l l make a l l these trends our
friend and not our enemy. (Applause.)
I do not pretend for a moment that I am always right or
that I have a l l the answers. Indeed, sometimes I am so perplexed i t
i s almost heartbreaking. But I know that the people who walk the
dusty roads of South Texas or the hard streets of the South Bronx,
the people who were i n the Adelante Con Clinton army that got me 70
percent of the Hispanic vote i n the l a s t election hired me to change
things i n t h i s country. (Applause.)
And so I ask you to be part of that change. Everything
that we have done i s a part of that. The Motor Voter b i l l i s
important. Why? Because i t makes i t easier for more people to vote
who aren't represented. (Applause.) Why should you t r u s t people in
p o l i t i c s to make changes i f you're not a part of electing them?
The family leave law i s part of that. Why? Because in
a world i n which more than half the mothers of children under five
are i n the work force, we have to make i t possible to be a successful
parent and a successful worker. We cannot force people to choose.
(Applause.)
The economic program was part of that. Why? Because i t
i s criminal for us to leave another decade where we quadruple the
national debt and we load i t onto our kids, and then the Congress, 10
years from now, comes to town and they have no money to spend on
education, no money to spend on the economy, no money to spend on new
technology, no money to spend defending the country, no money to
spend on anything except paying checks — more money for the same
health care, writing checks for retirement, and writing checks on
interest on the national debt. There w i l l be no a b i l i t y to create
the future unless we do something to release the burden of the debt.
The economic program was also important because, for the
f i r s t time i n history, we changed the tax laws so that millions of
families, including millions of Hispanic families, can be told i f you
work 40 hours a week and you have a child i n your home, you w i l l no
longer be i n poverty. The tax system w i l l l i f t you out of poverty,
not drive you into i t . That was a profoundly important thing.
(Applause.)
But there i s more work to be done. We began today the
formal campaign to t r y to pass a drastic reform of the health care
system. Look at the Americans without health care. Look at the
Americans i n p e r i l of losing t h e i r health care. Look at the
businesses going broke or at least not able to hire anybody else
because they can't afford the cost of health insurance for extra
employees, so they work t h e i r present employees overtime or work part
time people because they can't pay for health insurance. Look at the
number of people who l i v e i n our c i t i e s who don't have access to
public health f a c i l i t i e s that ought to be open around-the-clock and
that ought to be engaging i n primary and preventive care. Look at
the number of children who are born with low birth weight. Look at
a l l these things and ask yourself how i n the world can we j u s t i f y
continuing a system which costs our people forty percent more than
any other people on earth pay and does l e s s with i t because we i n s i s t
on funneling money into things that have nothing to do with the
health of the American people and everything to do with undermining
the future of t h i s economy. I t e l l you, we cannot do i t .
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We are spending more money every year on the same health
care. And I'm having trouble preserving funding for the space
station, something which provides high tech employment to Hispanic
Americans from Texas to Florida to California, and made possible
future astronauts l i k e E l l e n Ochoa. (Applause.) Why? Because we
have not faced our obligations.
So I ask you to join me i n t h i s great effort to provide
affordable health care to a l l Americans. We can do i t and we must do
it.
(Applause.)
Now, I ask you too — and I know — you know, one of the
worst things you can do at a dinner i s t a l k about something where
people at the dinner disagree. But I have to do t h i s on the NAFTA
issue. (Applause.) And I want to t e l l you why. And I don't want to
change — I don't care i f I change a single mind tonight, but I want
you to think about t h i s . I want you to think about — now, wait a
minute. Wait a minute. You a l l can a l l speak and argue with each
other when I'm gone. That's what I want you to do. (Laughter.) I
want you to think about t h i s : The argument against the treaty i s
that i t w i l l lead to the movement of American jobs to Mexico because
t h e i r wages are lower than ours. That's true. That's the argument,
right?
There are 2100 companies now i n the Maquilladora area.
I governed a state where people shut down and moved t h e i r plants to
Mexico — and I knew the people who l o s t t h e i r jobs. The only thing
I want you to know i s I would not knowingly do anything to make more
people l i k e that. So you say, why i s t h i s nut doing t h i s i f he's had
personal experience? I ' l l t e l l you why. Because i f we beat t h i s
thing, they can keep on doing that.
I ' l l give you another thing that I think i s important.
Because of the immigration laws passed before I became President, two
and a half million Hispanics w i l l have the opportunity to become
legal c i t i z e n s of t h i s country. I believe that immigration has
enriched and strengthened America. (Applause.) But the r i s i n g tide
of i l l e g a l immigration in states l i k e California i s sparking a
disturbing h o s t i l i t y to the diversity that i s c l e a r l y the future of
America. (Applause.) And I hear people i n California say "Well, I'm
against t h i s because of a l l t h i s i l l e g a l immigration problem." What
I want to t e l l you i s anybody who wants to go to Mexico for low wages
can go regardless — irregardless of NAFTA. I f we don't r a i s e
incomes i n Mexico and incomes i n America by strengthening our t i e s ,
the i l l e g a l immigration problem w i l l get worse, not better. And then
you w i l l have more of t h i s highly destructive, emotional,
counterproductive feeling r i f l i n g throughout our p o l i t i c a l system.
And I don't think that's good. I think America ought to revel i n i t s
diversity. We ought to embrace our d i v e r s i t y . When people go to Los
Angeles County they ought to be happy that there are 150 different
r a c i a l and ethnic groups there, not worried about somebody else who
might show up tomorrow. (Applause.)
And we have to figure out — so we should produce the
policy. Whatever i t i s , we should pursue the policy that w i l l reduce
i l l e g a l immigration, keep legal immigration going, and make Americans
feel better about the diversity. Because without i t , we'll never be
what we ought to be moving into the 21st Century. (Applause.)
And l e t me say one l a s t thing. A r i c h country i n the
world we're l i v i n g i n only grows richer — a r i c h country only grows
richer by expanding i t s economic contacts beyond i t s borders. And we
do not have the option to do what our friends across the P a c i f i c and
Japan did to build t h e i r economy. They don't even have the option of
doing i t anymore. They're going to have to quit — which i s to s e l l
everything to other people and not buy any of t h e i r s t u f f . We don't
have that option.
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So when I look at what's happening i n the world and I
see that Asia i s the fastest growing part of the world and Latin
America i s the second fastest growing part of the world, and Latin
America i s j u s t here handy and s t a r t s on the south of our border with
Mexico, the reason I want to do t h i s over the long run i s I want to
keep the movement to democracy, I want to keep the movement for
economic growth, I want Americans to prosper by helping our friends
and neighbors i n t h i s hemisphere to build a stronger world. I think
over the long run i t w i l l protect America's economic future.
(Applause.)
You don't have to agree. You don't have to agree. But
I ask you i f you disagree, don't win j u s t because people are scared
today, because we a l l know they're scared of losing t h e i r jobs. We
a l l know people are alienated. But somebody's got to explain to me
how people would be more l i k e l y to move t h e i r jobs to a place where
they can move t h e i r jobs now i f a l l they want to do i s chase lower
wages, when the wages w i l l be coming up, the environmental standards
w i l l be coming up, and people w i l l be buying more American products.
I believe i t i s i n the interest of t h i s country, again, not to turn
away from the change but to embrace i t — not because i t w i l l be
easy, not because nobody w i l l be hurt, but because on balance we'll
be better. We s h a l l not — we can never make i n a world i n which we
l i v e , which i s always imperfect — we cannot make the perfect
solution the enemy of the better solution. That i s why I have
embraced t h i s course and why I hope others w i l l as well.
Now l e t me j u s t say one or two other things. I am
excited about the upcoming referendum i n Puerto Rico. Whatever
they're for, I'm for. (Applause.) And I hope you are. I am excited
about the prospects we have been given to promote democracy from
Russia to the Middle East to H a i t i . I am excited about the promise
of change. I am profoundly disturbed about the problems we have.
The only thing I ask you to do i s even i f you disagree
with me, never run away from the problems. I don't understand why in
the United States of America, when we've got the violence we've got
in our c i t i e s we can't pass the Brady b i l l i n the Congress and take
these assault weapons out of the hands of teenagers. (Applause.) I
don't understand why we can't do that. (Applause.) I don't
understand why we don't have an education and training system that
from the moment someone loses t h e i r jobs — because now people don't
normally get the jobs they l o s t back. They have to find another job
— i s no longer an unemployment system, but i s a reemployment system.
And from the get-go, from the f i r s t day, from the f i r s t week, people
are told here are the new jobs of the future and here are funds to
t r a i n for them. I don't understand that. But i f you w i l l help me
and you leave me i n , I ' l l f i x those two problems, because you w i l l
f i x them, not me. We'll do i t together.
And I could give you example after example after example
of t h i s . The thing I always love about being i n the presence in any
form or fashion of the Hispanic culture i s that i t i s so l i f e affirming. I t i s so passionate. I t i s so r e a l . I t i s so
straightforward. I t e l l you, my friends, think about that event l a s t
Monday. Think about the passion, the feelings, the strength you
have, what you worry about for your children and what you want for
the future, and say i f they can make peace, how can we i n America
walk away from our challenges? We're going to walk into them. We're
going to conquer them. And the Hispanic i n America are going to lead
the way — lead the way i n partnership with our administration and on
every s t r e e t and i n every community of t h i s country. I love what we
can do, but I am troubled by the fact that we're not doing i t . Let's
seize every day we have to make the most of i t . And always remember
that peace agreement i n the Middle East as a spur to us to make t h i s
country what i t ought to be for our children.
Thank you, and God bless you a l l . (Applause.)
END
8:50 P.M.
EDT
�THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release
September 15,
1993
NATIONAL HISPANIC HERITAGE MONTH, 1993
BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
A PROCLAMATION
One of our Nation's greatest strengths i s i t s vast
d i v e r s i t y . The mosaic of races, e t h n i c i t i e s , and r e l i g i o u s
groups that comprise America provides us with a powerful energy
and an a b i l i t y to see the world from many viewpoints. Since our
country's inception, Hispanic Americans have always been an
integral part of t h i s great mosaic. Indeed the history,
culture, and traditions of America are greatly influenced by the
contributions of those individuals who have t h e i r origins in
Spain and Latin America.
While the impact of the Hispanic culture i s manifest in
our Nation's customs and traditions, t h i s legacy continues on
beyond the pages of history. Today, Hispanic Americans continue
to make important contributions to our society. I t would be
impossible to think of American Government, business, industry.
Armed Forces, agriculture, science, sports, and the a r t s without
noting the presence and f u l l participation of Hispanic
Americans. E l l e n Ochoa, who has served America proudly as our
f i r s t Hispanic woman astronaut; Cesar Chavez, whose l i f e l o n g
passion and commitment uplifted the l i v e s of m i l l i o n s of
a g r i c u l t u r a l workers; Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
Henry Cisneros and Secretary of Transportation Federico Pefta;
Master Sergeant Roy P. Benavidez, who won the Medal of Honor for
his service in Vietnam; and millions of other Hispanic Americans
whose hard work keeps our Nation moving — a l l of these
p a t r i o t i c Americans draw their heritage from the r i c h Hispanic
culture.
Many of the traditions that Americans hold so dear are
deeply rooted in the Hispanic American values of a strong sense
of family, devotion to religious b e l i e f s , and dedication to
l i b e r t y and democracy. Committed dearly to these precious
ideals, Hispanic Americans are helping a l l of us to uphold the
legacy of our democratic society.
America i s an ongoing experiment — an unfinished work.
There i s much for a l l of us s t i l l to accomplish i n order to
ensure a brighter and more peaceful world for our children. I
know that Hispanic Americans, always conscious of the t r a d i t i o n s
of t h e i r forebears, w i l l continue to work with Americans of
every r a c i a l , religious, and ethnic background to confront our
Nation's health, housing, educational, and human rights
concerns. The principles that are such a part of the Hispanic
American t r a d i t i o n w i l l serve a l l of our people well as we
s t r i v e to address the challenges that the future holds for us.
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�To commemorate the Hispanic American contributions to our
Nation, the Congress, by Public Law 90-498 of September 17,
1968, as amended, has authorized and requested the President to
issue annually a proclamation designating the month beginning
September 15 and ending October 15 as "National Hispanic
Heritage Month."
NOW, THEREFORE, I , WILLIAM J . CLINTON, President of the
United States of America, do hereby proclaim the month beginning
September 15, 1993, and ending October 15, 1993, as National
Hispanic Heritage Month. I c a l l upon the people of the
United States to observe t h i s month with appropriate programs,
ceremonies, and a c t i v i t i e s .
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto s e t my hand t h i s
f i f t e e n t h day of September, i n the year of our Lord
nineteen hundred and ninety-three, and of the Independence of
the United States of America the two hundred and eighteenth.
WILLIAM J . CLINTON
#
#
#
�
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Office of Press and Communications - Philip J. “P.J.” Crowley
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National Security Council
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<a href="http://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/items/show/36076">Collection Finding Aid</a>
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2011-0516-S
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This collection consists of White House press releases from the files of P.J. Crowley. Crowley served as Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs and Senior Director of Public Affairs the National Security Council from 1997–1999. The press releases are arranged by subject or, as in the case of the Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents, by date.
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Clinton Presidential Records: White House Staff and Office Files
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William J. Clinton Presidential Library & Museum
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370 folders in 33 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
Hispanic
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
National Security Council
Office of Press and Communications
Philip "PJ" Crowley
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
2011-0516-S
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
Box 8
<a href="http://catalog.archives.gov/id/7585702"></a>
<a href="http://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/items/show/36076">Collection Finding Aid</a>
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
7585702
42-t-7585702-20110516s-008-005-2015
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: NSC Cable, Email, and Records Management System
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
William J. Clinton Presidential Library & Museum
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Adobe Acrobat Document
Medium
The material or physical carrier of the resource.
Preservation-Reproduction-Reference