Barack Obama

December 9, 2009

President Obama’s Speech to Students Part 1

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President obama’s Speech to Students Part 1

Duration : 0:9:59

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September 14, 2009

Sarah’s Response to President Obama’s Speech

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This is 9 year old Sarah’s response to President Obama’s speech to students, shared on September 8, 2009.

Duration : 0:1:36

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September 9, 2009

President Obama’s Message for America’s Students

The President gives a speech directly to Americas students welcoming them back to school. He emphasizes their hope and potential but makes clear they will need to take responsibility for themselves and their education to reach that potential. September 8, 2009. (Public Domain)

Duration : 0:18:59

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Pres. Obama National Address to Students

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Pres. obama delivered a national address to students across the country to talk to them about the importance of education. He spoke to a group of students at Wakefield High School in Arlington, VA.

Duration : 0:20:16

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Obama Speech to Students Draws Conservative Ire

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Some conservatives say President Barack Obama is overstepping the bounds of federal involvement in schools and trying to advance a political agenda with a September 8 address to the nation’s students. (Sept. 3)

Duration : 0:1:59

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Obama’s school speech: Pep talk or propaganda?

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President obama is planning to deliver a message to school kids on Tuesday about working hard and staying in school, but critics accuse the President of imposing a political agenda on children. Do you think that this is merely a pep talk to students or is it propaganda? Who should decide whether or not the Presidents speech is shown in school: educators, parents, or students? Do you think the public is overreacting or is its reaction justified?

Duration : 0:2:10

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June 26, 2009

Bronx students discuss Obama’s race speech

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Students at the Bronx High School of Performance and Stagecraft respond to Barack Obama’s 3/18/08 speech on racial reconciliation in America.

Duration : 0:13:20

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May 19, 2009

Michelle Obama Moved By London Students

The world needs strong young women to pave the way for the future, an emotional US First Lady michelle obamobama has told schoolgirls in London.

Michelle Obama visited a girls school in Islington, north London. She was treated to a musical performance by the pupils, and found time to thank her hosts afterwards.

Mrs Obama was close to tears as she addressed the excited crowd at the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson School in Islington, north London.

She told them: “We are counting on every single one of you to be the best that you can be.”

Mrs Obama is in the UK with husband Barack for the G20 summit.

Her visit to the North London school was greeted with much excitement by pupils and she sat smiling, riveted, as Year 11 pupil Grace Hollowell and the school’s junior choir performed the Whitney Houston hit Believe.

Mrs Obama, a mother of two girls herself, smiled and watched intently throughout the other performances, which also included a modern-day staging of The Tempest, and a presentation on the school’s new Learning To Lead scheme.

‘Strength and dignity’

The First Lady high-fived one pupil after the performance before she took to the podium for her speech.

As she addressed the crowd, Mrs Obama choked up, saying: “Wow. I can’t follow that. Let me tell you, I am just very touched and moved by all of you.”

In a brief speech to about 100 pupils she she spoke of her working class upbringing in the Southside of Chicago, saying she was “an example of what is possible when girls from the very beginning of their lives are loved and nurtured by people around them”.

She went on: “I was surrounded by extraordinary women in my life who taught me about quiet strength and dignity.

“You too can control your own destiny, please remember that.

“Whether you come from a council estate or a country estate, your success will be determined by your own confidence and fortitude.

“It won’t be easy, that’s for sure, but you have everything you need. Everything you need you already have right here.

“We are counting on you, we are counting on every single one of you to be the best that you can be.

“We know you can do it, we love you, thank you so much.”

“Phenomenal woman’

Mrs Obama also spoke of the “special relationship” between the US and the UK, based on a common language and shared values.

She said she had met Britain’s “most extraordinary women” on her first official visit as First Lady, including the Queen and Chancellor Alistair Darling’s wife Maggie, who she called a “true firebrand”.

She described Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s wife Sarah as a “phenomenal woman who has been charming and delightful”.

Earlier in the day, the partners of G20 leaders heard a reading by Harry Potter author JK Rowling, at an event hosted by her friend Sarah Brown.

They visited Covent Garden’s Royal Opera House, where Ms Rowling entertained them with excerpts from her new novel, The Tales Of Beedle The Bard.

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May 14, 2009

Michelle Obama, London’s leading lady

From the Queen to high school teens, first lady michelle obama won hearts and minds across London, making a particularly emotional connection in a British classroom on Thursday.

While the men got on with the business of digging us out of our economic and political hole yesterday, the developed world’s second most important embly were left to concern themselves with issues of a more artistic bent.

The conundrum of how to be a modern first lady was apparent when the G20 spouses gathered at the Royal Opera House for a cultural interlude followed by lunch.

My role as “compere”, on Sarah Brown’s invitation, offered me a glimpse of what this group of intelligent, capable women get up to while their husbands are busy attempting to solve the problems of the known universe.

Academics, economists, lawyers, businesswomen: the qualifications in the room made for a highbrow coffee morning. It was disappointing not to find a few more husbands of presidents and prime ministers in the mix, but clearly miracles don’t occur over mere decades in politics.

And politics was definitely not on the menu. Kids and how to cope with the demands of this heavily judged but unpaid job were a pervading theme of the conversation.

Sarah Brown, dressed as soberly as Michelle Obama sparkled, still managed to shine, performing her hostess duties in head-girl style: supporting the shy, standing back for the gregarious, and generally displaying the level-headed backroom diplomacy for which she is becoming appreciated. Brown was the facilitator, but the star was Mrs obama.

She arrived resplendent in green and turquoise, accepting the attendant fuss with good humour and a discernible slice of healthy cynicism. Distributing hugs and handshakes wherever she moved, she looked like a woman trained in the art of being centre of attention.

When I asked if she’d been prepared for the hysterical reception they had received everywhere, she replied with a girlish grin that nobody could be prepared for such an experience.

Yet conversations such as the one the day before – when she attempted to excite the Obama girls with details of her visit to the Queen, and they preferred to tell mum about their April Fool’s antics at home – kept life in perspective. Her mission, she said, was to make sure her daughters, who will still be young when they depart the White House, are equipped for life beyond the bubble.

Another conspiratorial smile radiated from the First Lady’s face when we “girls” were asked to move into the auditorium. A description she confided that you loathe in your thirties, and embrace with great enthusiasm after 40.

Michelle’s arrival elicited gasps from the kids in leotards and an unmistakable buzz among her fellow “spouses”. Yet she seemed remarkably relaxed for someone who had just arrived in a convoy of cars with a full secret service platoon in her wake.

Over our “light lunch”, Svetlana Medvedeva, wife of the Russian president, and I attempted a discussion, through her translator, about our love of books. She was proud to reveal that Marx’s Das Capital is again a bestseller in Russia, and says real readers, among whom she clearly numbers, are rereaders. She cited Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita as a novel offering fresh insights at each stage of our reading lives.

On my right was the less earnest presence of the Thai prime minister’s wife, Pimpen Vejjajiva, a professor of mathematics, who confided that her Eton educated husband is a fan of roast beef and Yorkshire pudding, a meal she rustles up for him once a month.

What was most apparent at this once-in-a-lifetime gathering is that, whatever we think of the Masters of the Universe, they have extremely good taste in women. The spouses included grandmothers and mothers, career women and career wives – all engaging with the complicated challenges of taking a back seat while in most cases being qualified to ride upfront.

Maybe one of these days we’ll see women like these at the summit, and a few more boys at the sideshow.

Duration : 0:3:7

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