-
https://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/files/original/c07c218e7f4f95db40742f5ba2283d1b.pdf
9f18a160f73b3add3acbe4f191ed10b0
PDF Text
Text
,I,.
�THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Internal Use'Only
October 1993
REMARKS BY THE FIRST LADY
AN INTERVIEW WITH CONGRESSWOMAN MARJORIE MARGOLIES-MEZVINSKY
(D-PENNSYLVANIA, 13th District)
Map Room
Q
But anyway, I'm writing a book for my kids, for the
next generation. The important thing for me, I think, is
that
to leave a few lessons.
MRS. CLINTON:
And then I
(inaudible), Marjorie.
And we never had enough role models for all the
Members of Congress. We had no role models like you, you
know, who are out there. I'm so excited. The best thing was
when she's up here before ENC.
I mean, I was just there
(inaudible) -- (laughter).
Q
(Inaudible.)
MRS. CLINTON:
It was so wonderful.
Q
But we have role models. So what are we talking
about, and what's happening? What made (inaudible) become
very (inaudible).
MRS. CLINTON:
Q
But (inaudible) role models.
I think that's so important.
And we are not tearing up -- everyone (inaudible),
even the men in Congress who have -- how to train (inaudible)
-- you know, I mean, it was pathetic (inaudible) .
(Laughter)
I mean, Ray Thornton (D-AR) is not my favorite
person this person this month -- or last month -- or
.'
�2
August 6th. But I (inaudible) for the most part people who
want to come back. And my feeling about the women is that we
really want to do -- that's not true at all, but pretty much.
But I -
MRS. CLINTON:
What kind of proportion?
Q
Well, and that's what's -- and that all of the
freshmen women, save one, voted for the budget, even in -
that's what I really want. And it has to do with women. It
has to do with not possessing your seat.
MRS. CLINTON:
Yeah.
Q
Not -- and it has to do with really seriously
thinking about what our legacy is to our children. It has to
do with looking at issues in Congress -- and then I'm going
to stop talking -- but I was looking at issues like a
(inaudible) -- there have been 363 men in Congress, and 163
women since it's inception. And when you talk about day
care, when you talk about -- talk about limy wife," and, you
know, "My wife's at home taking care of the kids" as a Member
of Congress. I mean, it's not -- it's not true anymore. And
where they say, I think, stop.
(Inaudible) percent -
(inaudible) percent of women are staying home taking care of
children, and (inaudible).
So that's in capsule, because (inaudible) -- I
mean, (inaudible) out there what we think are some of the
challenges that I would get in there.
What are some of the (inaudible) after that book
(inaudible). I mean, it's really an extraordinary experience
that you knew that (inaudible). But it's okay. There's so
much (inaudible).
MRS. CLINTON:
(Inaudible) that you cared more for
the country than (inaudible)
Q
(Inaudible.)
MRS. CLINTON:
- institution and the politics of
it.
Q
And still I think we thought it was the right thing
to do.
MORE
e
�3
MRS. CLINTON:
Yeah.
Q
And a lot of us like you
I mean, like you guys,
you and your husband, so that we felt that we came
(inaudible) with one -- your success was very important to
us.
But it has a lot to do with -- with being a woman
and not necessarily with our possessing a job, which is very
- and I don't know if it's true or not, but my feeling is
that we - we are less what we do than men are.
MRS. CLINTON: I think that's right.
there's a wonderful (inaudible).
Q
And hasn't it
Are we close enough?
MRS. CLINTON:
AIDE:
(inaudible).
Yeah, yeah.
Both of them.
MRS. CLINTON:
And are we rolling?
All of three of them are
Oh, this is the (inaudible).
I will find it for you, Marjorie. There's a
wonderful line that I've heard about how, you know, men are
inclined to work at their life; women want to make a life. I
mean, you know, it's just -- it's a difference in the whole
way (inaudible) to start thinking. You can get that record.
Q
find it.
Q
I will.
MRS. CLINTON: You know where it is? It's -- I'll
It's a quote from Campbell, the mythologist.
Oh, let's hear it here.
(Inaudible)
MRS. CLINTON:
(Inaudible.)
Yeah, yeah.
wonderful line. So we'll find it for you.
Q
It's a
Oh, okay.
MRS. CLINTON:
till 10:30 they said.
Well, I have just a (inaudible) -
MORE
�4
Q
Oh, okay. From what you've been able to assess
thus far from Congress, what difference do more women in
Congress make?
MRS. CLINTON: I think that women bring their life
experience to Congress in ways that, at least up until now,
men, as a whole, have not. They come knowing what it's like
to balance family and work. They come feeling the pull of
being both a nurturer and a breadwinner. They have a perhaps
more hopeful sense of what we can do together to try to
support families and children, because they have had support
in one way or the other in their own life.
And I think back about some of the stories you've
told me or other women -- other freshmen women have told me
about how in the pit of depression and worst times of their
lives in the past, there was somebody there to help them.
And they're giving back. I mean, it's a way of giving back.
Because anyone who makes it to Congress, particularly as a
woman, has to have a certain level of drive and has to be
willing to put up with a lot. But most of the women that I
see are there because they're motivated by something bigger
than themselves. So I think it has made a big difference.
Q
Leslie Byrne (O-VA) the other night said that she
really thought that women were there to really connect -
connect (inaudible) -- connect, you know, to the next point
on the board more than she thought that men were. And her
feeling was that -- that somebody (inaudible) -- and I feel
this, too -- and I know women do it, too, so it's not
(inaudible) exclusive, but only vote to come back. And she
(inaudible).
MRS. CLINTON: I agree with that. I would also say
that if we woke up tomorrow and we ended violence in our
cities, and our children were all going to good schools, and
women were respected, and there was equal opportunity, and it
was the kind of world that we've all talked about and have
worked hard for, I think most of us would breathe a big sigh
of relief and, you know, go back to doing whatever it is we
wanted to do, whether it is, you know, the personal private
sector or the professional public sector. We wouldn't feel
any great need to sort of stay in politics.
I don't know that that's true for most of the men,
because for too many of them it is a game. I mean, it's the
game that's more important than the outcome. And I really am
MORE
�5
(inaudible). And the power -- yeah, exactly, the wielding of
-- the wielding of the power and the fUn of the chase and the
hunt and the, you know, sort of rituals that go along with
the game.
I would be -- I mean, I would love to live in a
world where I could walk down any street at any time of the
day or night, where I could take my daughter anywhere, where
I could say good-by to my daughter in the morning, and she
could get on a bike with friends and come back at night -
you know, the kind of world that a lot of us grew up in and
took for granted, which has been stripped away by all of the
troubles and the struggles we face in this country.
And I wouldn't care who got the credit. I wouldn't
care who was in the Congress. I mean, all that stuff would
be irrelevant to me if we could achieve what I think the
women that I talk with and relate to in the Congress want to
achieve, which, you know, as corny as it may sound, is a
better life for ourselves and our family.
Q
(Inaudible) sitting on the other side of the
(inaudible) and she said -- I'll never forget (inaudible),
but she said, "Your next project should be violence." And I
MRS. CLINTON:
Q
I love it.
She's right.
I get so (inaudible).
I want to get back to the game.
MRS. CLINTON:
MID-hmm.
Q
One of my feelings about men being able to put up
with this kind of nonsense is when they're not being
(inaudible) having to put up with this kind of nonsense
(inaudible) -- I mean, if you look at the football teams,
there's always the -- the nephew of the coach on the team.
The team kind of knew that they'd have to put up with this
(inaudible).
(Laughter)
And we, unfortunately, in a way, have never learned
to like that way. We haven't looked at life as a kind of end
game, that -- now, I think it helps in -- in the humanitarian
sense, but I don't think it helps us in the game.
MORE
�6
MRS. CLINTON:
MID-hmm.
And it's a big struggle as to how much you give in
to the game as it's played and how much you try to change the
game. And there are equally good reasons for pursuing each
strategy at different points in your life and depending upon
what you're trying to achieve.
And I think a lot of it does get back to what you
were just saying. Team sport has only recently become widely
available to lots of young women. And there is a difference
in being raised where you are engaged in solitary or very
personal activities with only a few people -- as most young
girls always used to play, you know, with two or three best
friends, and pursuing piano or ballet and doing something in
a solitary way, compared to team sports, where, you know, you
win some and you lose some, you're all in it together. You
kind of look at each others' strengths and weaknesses. You
figure out how to maneuver through all of that.
And next year you may be playing on his team.
Q
MRS. CLINTON: That's right. And I remember the
first I watched some little girls play softball. They were
just stunned that they might have to be on opposite teams of
their best friends, you know. And that's something little
boys would relish. I mean, that would make the friendship
even s~ronger, you know, to taunt your best frlend because he
struck 'out or something. Little girls would be afraid that,
you know, your best friend would burst into tears.
Ii
•
So I think there's a difference in life experience,
which is beginning to even out as more young girls are
engaged in team sports and have those opportunities. But
you're right, from a very early age, there are differences in
experience that, you know, kind of prepare one for different
ways of dealing with life later on.
Q
Were there any different questions that women asked
than men didn't ask when you were in the committees? I mean
MRS. CLINTON: Oh -- I
If I remember right, I was asked
I was asked about diagnostic and
women -- you know, the frequency
MORE
mean, take your committee.
about reproductive rights.
clinical tests available for
of the mammogram. I was
�7
asked the question that started with talking about what one's
mother thought about this whole endeavor.
Yeah, I mean, there was a different texture in the
questioning. And, you know, your question that we finally
got around to finishing with Chairman Dingell -- (laughter)
-- you know, had a slightly different take on it than the
other approaches that I had heard about. It -- yeah, so it
was.
And I don't think it was just -- I don't think it
was just Democratic women, because if you remember,
Marge Roukema (R-NJ) gave poignant anecdotes about the
immigrant woman in the hospital and, you know, the barber who
couldn't afford the treatment. And there was a much more
personal awareness of what it is we're trying to accomplish
in the quest and (inaudible).
Q
I want to get back to what I said before, that all
of the freshmen women, save one, voted for -- all of the
freshman Democratic women voted for -- with the exception of
Pat Danner (D-MO), voted for your
your husband's, the
President's budget bill.
Give me your assessment of that.
really, really hard (inaudible) districts.
you feel (inaudible)? Or-
Many of us are in
How -- what did
MRS. CLINTON: Well, what I felt was real pride,
because it was gutsy vote for a lot of people. And it was a
vote that put the country first and put the whole political
problems on a stronger footing.
And the reason a lot of the men gave for voting
against it was so transparent, so intellectually empty. And
most women -- you know, it was an emotional vote. You told
me that, you know, a lot of women went later into the
Red Room and just, you know, broke down. I mean, I -- I,
watching it, felt the same way.
But I would have done exactly the same thing. I
could not have lived with myself. I don't know how you get
up and look in the mirror and live with that kind of
intellectual and political dishonesty. I mean, for people to
say they voted against it even though they had voted for it
the first time with the Btu tax because it had a gas tax,
when the original version had a 7 cent a gallon gas tax
MORE
�•
8
beside the Btu package.
I mean, that -- that is just beyond
my understanding. It is so weak.
And I think most women knew what was at stake. I
mean, if we hadn't had that vote, we would today not have a
,budget. It would be after the budget deadline. We would all
be sitting there, and this country would be going down the
tubes. Instead, it was finished. And we could then build.
And now we're on the brink of health care, we're
dealing with tough issues like crime and violence and NAFTA
and a lot of other things that are very difficult. But in
the absence of that kind of courage, we wouldn't have gotten
there. And I think that it also is a vote that most people
are going to not only be able to survive but be able to wear
the badge of courage. And I think that's, you know, the way
it's going to work out.
Q
I would not be (inaudible) with the next -- tell me
how much more time we have.
MRS. CLINTON:
Q
Okay.
Probably about 10 minutes.
I don't know if you saw it the next day.
MRS. CLINTON:
I
did.
Q
I did not see it (inaudible), to tell the truth. I
mean, I have to tell you that. Two (inaudible) that -- I
walked into the -- I may have told you this.
I walked into
the congressional (inaudible) that night, and the first thing
that happened to me was I saw two Republican (inaudible)
going down. And then I talked to you (inaudible). And then
I got down to the floor and was watching the screen, and two
Democrats said that they were going to change their votes.
And they suspected -- I found out later that there were going
to be about 20 Democrats (inaudible). So it wouldn't have
been -- and it turned out to be accurate (inaudible).
I
mean, you've got to be.
(Inaudible) thing to do. And
(inaudible) .
I was so angry by it, annoyed by it, that it got
into the record. And I stood there saying, "Bill made me
(inaudible)." And then I looked at th~ playback of what
happened. And I had no idea of what was going on around me.
I mean, all the stuff that I had read about, I just didn't
know.
I mean, I had no idea that (inaudible).
I didn't know
MORE
�9
that. I mean, I was just thinking of what I had to do when
they came through, "We need your vote." And they actually
said, "Ray won't do it."
And then the next thing I see this tape, and I saw
all of these men standing there going, "Bye-bye, Margie." I
was so incensed at the immaturity of it. I was so angered by
the kind of worst of fraternity ethic -- which (inaudible)
the anecdotes that-- I mean, for eVerything that one can
think of (inaudible) -- I mean, everything that I hated about
fraternities on campuses and the meanness and the
meanspiritedness -- I mean, sitting there with Pat Williams
(D-MT), nobody went, "Bye-bye, Pat.1I I don't know if you saw
it. But I mean -
MRS. CLINTON:
Q
(Inaudible) saw it.
But what's your reaction, as a woman?
MRS. CLINTON: Well, I have two reactions to it,
because, you know, I could object with a brief, brutal
Q
Really?
MRS. CLINTON: -- attack, you know, after a year or
two. I don't think people attack you unless they're afraid
of you. And I consider it actually a compliment. You know,
they don't spend their time thinking of (inaudible). Do you
know how good that is?
Q
(Inaudible. )
(Laughter)
MRS. CLINTON: You know, thinking of ways to
torment people that they aren't scared of. And I think there
was some of that going on. These are the kinds of boys on
the playground when I was a little girl who were scared I
might beat them if I played with them, so they want to go
preempt a (inaudible) -
Q
And they knew you were smarter than they were.
MRS. CLINTON: Yeah, but even then, it was just
I think it was just this sort of pathetic display about
how
Q
Of insecure
MORE
�•
10
MRS. CLINTON: Yeah, of insecurity, how they're
going to kind of try to protect themselves because they're
not sure they're as good as what their competition is.
But that is my first reaction. I thought it must
be -- you know, I didn't know whether you knew what was going
on, because I've been in those situations, and you're so
focused, you know, you kind of shut the world out.
But I thought, you know, I really hope that she
doesn't think anything about this except "I'm going to make
it, and you're going to be sorry for this," because that's
what struck me.
The second thing is that it's a real indication of
the disrepair of our political system and how too many of the
people who are currently in it aren't there to build this
country. They're not there to solve our problems,
(inaudible). They're either there, as you point out, just to
get themselves reelected or to pursue a very narrow political
or personal agenda. And they can't stand up to any big
challenge.
They're great on the rhetoric, they're great on the
games that they play, but when push comes to shove and you've
got to put yourself on the line, they're not likely to be in
a foxhole with -- and so they're basically weak. And that
kind of weakness is displayed in this sort of immature,
insecure behavior that you see.
But out in the country -- yeah, it is -- but we're
-- you know, we're turning it around, and we're going to keep
turning it around. And we're not going to let them get away
with it. We're going to call them, and we're -- you know,
the Democrats for too long have let some of this behavior go
unchecked. And a lot of decent Republicans have as well.
It's not confined to anyone party. We've got a lot of
weaklings and immature and insecure people as well.
But I think that the important focus for all of us
now is to ask, what does any of this have to do with your
life or the lives of your friends and neighbors? And anybody
who asks those bigger questions has to be a little bit
ashamed of themselves if they respond to this kind of
bullying. And I think those are the questions we have to
keep asking.
MORE
�•
11
Q
Do you in any way think that it is our
responsibility? I mean, I have a real problem with this.
I
don't think it's my responsibility to change these guys. But
I think that we've got to redirect the Congress' mission.
MRS. CLINTON:
I do, too. And -- I don't think you
can change them, because they have too much invested. And
besides -- I mean, they're grown men, and they have these
immature characteristics and behavior.
Q
But we have nurtured that tendency to do that. And
when we sit there -- and what will we do with these guys?
MRS. CLINTON: No.
You've got to -- you have to
just constantly be thinking about how to either work with
them or work around them. You're not responsible for raising
them.
You're not responsible for improving their table
manners.
Q
(Laughter.)
MRS. CLINTON: You are responsible for yourself and
for representing your constituents as you think is best for
them, even if they sometimes need to be brought along about
why you did something.
I mean, that's the -- I mean, you know, the people
who I admire in politics are the people who stay in touch
closely enough to be able always to relate to the folks they
represent but to lead them, not to be evidence of their worst
tendencies, but to try to bring out their best, and to
continually challenge them to see the world more broadly and
to understand'it more deeply. And that's -- to me that the
only reason to be in politics.
I mean, who wants to live
like this if you're not trying to help change the county? I
mean
Q
What do you think are the largest frustrations of
women trying to do -- are we -- I really don't think that
we're better or worse.
I just think we're different.
MRS. CLINTON: I think it rests in a very different
set of expectations about human behavior and the
possibilities for change in the political system.
I mean, it
is very frustrating when people keep dragging the
conversation down to the lowest common denominator, when they
MORE
�12
forget that there are real people with real problems and real
struggles that we're trying to represent.
So I think it all sort of looks back to what you
were saying about the game. I mean, it is just -- that's the
big frustration, is that if you care about the issues, it's
not a game, because there are too many movies running in your
head of all these people that you care about and that you've
seen and that you've worked with. And you see them, and you
know that you're trying to change conditions so that they can
help themselves, and other people don't get it at all. So
that's, to me, the greatest frustration.
Q
What (inaudible) -- I mean, seeing us there -
(inaudible). And how do you -- how do you (inaudible)? What
-- I know that you really don't have an agenda for us, and we
are such disparate Members, but, I mean -
MRS. CLINTON: I have been thrilled by it.
I mean,
I cannot tell you how wonderful it is to go to meetings and
see women like you there and to know that we share the same
kind of life experiences even though the particulars may
differ and that we're involved in what we're doing for
largely the same kinds of reasons. It is thrilling.
And I just want women to bring a new level of
honesty and commitment and challenge to this whole political
enterprise and to speak with the same kind of clear voices
that we do in private and public -- I mean, to bring all of
that out into the political arena and not to be cowed by what
the "old boy" sort of expectations are, but to just talk,
talk, talk about what's important and keep it front and
center. And I really believe that it will make a difference.
Q
Do you know that you're setting the pace for us? I
mean, do you -- do you realize that -- I mean, that when you
lead, we all say, "Yes."
(Laughter)
MRS. CLINTON: I can say it for you all.
I watch
you on TV, or I watch you on C-Span doing something. I feel
the same way.
I mean, it's thrilling.
I think there's such
a sense of support in it, that is really sustaining to me.
I
didn't know that I would have -- you know, going to the
Women's Caucus and talking about health care issues, which
was one of the very first things I did, was so reinforcing
for me.
MORE
�13
Q
What was it like?
MRS. CLINTON: Oh, it was just wonderful.
I mean,
it was -- you know, there had been some thought given as to
what the agenda should be, because there had been task forces
developed for caucus members to work on -
Q
Rape and violence.
MRS. CLINTON:
Q
Rape and violence.
And reproductive freedom.
MRS. CLINTON: Right, yeah. And, you know, that's
thrilling to me, because these are issues that haven't been
on the political radar screen before. And I just -- I'm very
-- I'm very excited about where we are in all this.
I think
we have to keep pushing. I think that you can never let up,
because there are so many attitudes that still have to be
changed.
Q
One of the things that I decided, which is -
(inaudible) we are at 11 percent, and we truly are being
treated like 11 percent of the body. And I think at some
point we've got to -- and I don't know how to do it, but I
know we're trying to figure it out -- I mean, a hydra
(phonetic) is a perfect example. But we do represent 52.5
percent of the population, and that at some point we've got
to say these are the issues and these are new issues. We
absolutely have to, because everybody should (inaudible).
That's the difference.
I mean, we've got to redefine what
they think family issues are and they think are only women's
issues and say -- I mean, your mother and your sisters and
your wives and your daughters -
MRS. CLINTON:
That's right.
That's right.
Well, I think though that that's something that
that the more organized your voice can be about that, the
more likely you can make that impression. And I see it
happening. I see -- I mean, as hard as it may be for you to
believe now, I see a greater sensitivity to a lot of
positions that were there just a year ago.
AIDE:
Okay.
Just give her one more.
MORE
�•
14
MRS. CLINTON: I think the way that a lot of the
leadership talk now about issues and the way that committee
members talk about the women on their committee, you know,
it's just different. And it -- you know, it's not maybe
where it should be, but at least it is evolving in the right
direction (inaudible).
And in the Senate, you know, the number of women
there now, even though still small, several of the women are
fairly well respected by the Congress and are beginning to
make a difference, and they're standing up on certain issues.
And, I mean, you know
Q
(Inaudible) they want.
AIDE: I'll tell you
you hav e anything you want?
I saw the cook come in.
I have a real quick one.
Q
have a run in public?
Do
When do you think we'll
MRS. CLINTON: Hmm.
I think I said in an interview
a couple of months ago, I think by 2010 -- sometime -- what
year is it now? Sometime in the next 15 or so years.
Q
you one?
I have three quick questions to ask you.
MRS. CLINTON:
May I ask
Sure.
AIDE;
Just -- then (inaudible).
And then we need
Okay.
Thank you for the interview.
to go.
Q
MRS. CLINTON:
going to come out?
Q
Oh, it was fun, great.
In April.
(The interview was concluded.)
* * * * *
•
When is this
�
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
Lissa Muscatine - Press Office
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
First Lady's Office
Press Office
Lissa Muscatine
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/36239" target="_blank">Collection Finding Aid</a>
<a href="http://catalog.archives.gov/id/7431941" target="_blank">National Archives Catalog Description</a>
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
2011-0415-S
Description
An account of the resource
<p>Lissa Muscatine first served in the Clinton Administration as a speechwriter. Within the First Lady’s Office, she served as Communications Director to the First Lady.</p>
<p>Lissa Muscatine’s records consist of materials from First Lady Hillary Clinton’s Press Office, highlighting topics such as health care, women’s rights, the Millennium Council, Hillary Clinton’s 2000 Senate campaign, and deal extensively with press interviews given by the First Lady; her domestic and foreign travel; and speeches and remarks, on a wide variety of topics, given by her before and during her time as First Lady. The records include interview transcripts, press releases, speeches and speech transcripts.</p>
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
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Adobe Acrobat Document
Extent
The size or duration of the resource.
1,324 folders in 27 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
FLOTUS Press Office Interview Transcripts Volume II 10/93 - 01/28/94 [Binder]: [October 93 Margolies-Mezvinsky, Rep. Marjorie]
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
Box 2
<a href="http://clintonlibrary.gov/assets/Documents/Finding-Aids/Systematic/2011-0415-S-Muscatine.pdf" target="_blank">Collection Finding Aid</a>
<a href="http://catalog.archives.gov/id/7431941" target="_blank">National Archives Catalog Description</a>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
First Lady's Office
Press Office
Lissa Muscatine
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
2011-0415-S
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
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Adobe Acrobat Document
Medium
The material or physical carrier of the resource.
Reproduction-Reference
Date Created
Date of creation of the resource.
11/26/2012
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
2011-0415-S-flotus-press-office-interview-transcripts-volume-ii-10-93-01-28-94-binder-october-93-margolies-mezvinsky-rep-marjorie
7431941