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Originally Processed With FOIA(s): FOIA Number: S; 1999-0472-F S FOIA MARKER This is not a textual record. This is used as an administrative marker by the George Bush Presidential Library Staff. Record Group/Collection: George H.W. Bush Presidential Records Collection/Office of Origin: Speechwriting, White House Office of Series: Speech File Backup Files Subseries: Chron File, 1989-1993 OA/ID Number: 13800 Folder ID Number: 13800-005 Folder Title: San Antonio Drug Summit 2/26/92 [OA 7568] Stack: Row: Section: Shelf: Position: G 26 22 3 4 (Duggan/Simon) February 25, 1992 Draft Two Summit PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: DRUG SUMMIT DINNER TOAST SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1992 7:25 P.M. Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen: Barbara and I are honored to have you join us here tonight. It is a particular pleasure to welcome to the United States six good friends and neighbors -- the presidents of Mexico, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, foreign min. of Veneynela Ecuador and Bolivia. I am delighted that we have gathered in my home state of Texas and in this gracious city of San Antonio. For centuries, San Antonio has stood as an important cultural crossroads of the Americas. 11 We meet at a time of great hope for all the people of the Americas. \ In almost every nation in the hemisphere, people enjoy self-government and respect for human rights. \ We're making steady progress to improve our peoples' quality of life through more open trade and investment, by creating more jobs. That is why I am committed more strongly than ever to completing the North American Free Trade Agreement with Mexico, Canada and the United States. And building upon that, we will realize the vision I call the Enterprise for the Americas Initiative -- for robust trade and investment from the Arctic Ocean to the Straits of Magellan. 11 During our meetings this week in San Antonio, we will refine and intensify our common efforts against the menace of drugs. Each of our nations is making progress: Bolivia has lowered the amount of coca cultivation. Peru has overcome terrorist threats to halt the growth of coca cultivation. Ecuador is moving against money launderers and traffickers on its territory. Colombia has jailed its most violent drug traffickers and is seizing record quantities of drugs. Venezuela is clamping down on those attempting to use its territory to ship drugs to Europe. Mexico has reduced cultivation of both opium poppies and marijuana while seizing record amounts of drugs. For each of our nations, the ultimate stakes are the same: the battle against drugs is truly a war -- a struggle for the minds, bodies and souls of our young people. \ In the United States, we're stepping up treatment and prevention programs -- and we're toughening our prosecution and punishment of drug kingpins. 11 We're seeing results on the demand side as well. \ In the United States over the past six years, we've reduced the number regular of current users of cocaine by two-thirds. Adolescent use of all types of illegal drugs is down in every category -- among the rich and the percentage poor, among young people of all races. The number of high school seniors using illegal drugs is the lowest since we began measuring. 11 We must do more. \ Drug abuse and drug violence threatens to destroy our children and everything else we hold dear. \ At risk is the civilization we share: \ our common inheritance and our common future. 11 Let us renew our resolve. \ Let us strengthen our commitment. \ As we work to advance the quality of life in our hemisphere in so many ways, let us win a lasting victory in the war against drugs. 11 May God bless you and all the peoples of the Americas. And may I raise a glass in honor of our distinguished guests and the important mission all of us share. # # # SENT BY:Xerox Telecopier 7020 ; 2-25-92 ; 9:09AM ; 4562983- 6218;# 1 Staff for Joe- to 3 pm today Okstaff w/wharges (Duggan/Simon) February 21, 1992 Draft One An Summit PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: DRUG SUMMIT DINNER TOAST SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS [date] [time] Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen: Barbara and I are honored to have you join us here tonight. It is a particular pleasure to welcome to the United States six good friends and neighbors -- the presidents of Mexico, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, and the foreign Minister of ven ezuela. Ecuador and Bolivia. I am delighted that we have gathered in my home state of Texas and in this gracious city of San Antonio. For centuries, San Antonio has stood as an important cultural crossroads of the Americas. 11 We meet at a time of great hope for all the people of the Americas. \ In almost every nation in the hemisphere, people enjoy self-government and respect for human rights. \ We're our peoples' making steady progress to improve overyone's quality of life through more open trade and investment, by creating more jobs. That is why I am committed more strongly than ever to completing the North American Free Trade Agreement with Mexico, Canada and the United States. And building upon that, we will realize the vision I call the Enterprise for the Americas Initiative -- for robust trade and investment from the Arctic Ocean to the Straits of Magellan. 11 During our meetings this week in San Antonio, we will refine and intensify our common efforts against the menace of drugs. Each of our nations is making progress: Bolivia has lowered the SENT BY:Xerox Telecopier 7020 ; 2-25-92 ; 9:10AM ; 4562983- 6218:# 2 amount of coca cultivation. Peru has overcome terrorist threats to halt the growth of coca cultivation. Ecuador is moving see against money launderers and traffickers on its territory. NSC Colombia has jailed its most violent drug traffickers and is draft seizing record quantities of drugs. Venezuela is clamping down on those attempting to use its territory to ship drugs to Europe. Mexico has reduced cultivation of both opium poppies and marijuana while seizing record amounts of drugs. For each of our nations, the ultimate stakes are the same: the battle against drugs is truly a war -- a struggle for the minds, bodies and souls of our young people. \ In the United States, we're stepping up treatment and prevention programs -- and we're toughening our prosecution and punishment of drug kingpins. 11 on the demand Side as well. We're seeing results In the United States over the past Pck six years, we've reduced the number of current users of cocaine all types of backs 301- by two-thirds. Adolescent use of illegal drugs is down, An every category among the rich and the poor, among young people of 301- all races The number pereentage of high school seniors using illegal drugs 443-6245 N.1.O.A., press officer Brown O.A.is the lowest since we began measuring. 11 Mona We must do more. \ Drug abuse and drug violence threatens to destroy our children and everything else we hold dear. \ At risk is the civilization we share: \ our common inheritance and our common future. 11 Let us renew our resolve. \ Let us strengthen our commitment. \ As we work to advance the quality of life in our SENT BY:Xerox Telecopier 7020 ; 2-25-92 ; 9:10AM ; 4562983- 6218:# 3 hemisphere in so many ways, let us win a lasting victory in the war against drugs. 11 May God bless you and all the peoples of the Americas. And may I raise a glass in honor of our distinguished guests and the important mission all of us share. # # # al a 85 a it VAN CLIBURN / STATE DINNER SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS / WEDNESDAY, FEB. 26, 1992 -- Thank you for a performance every bit as good as what we enjoyed at the White House two years ago. -- Your talent warmed Russian hearts during the cold war and set a standard that's still difficult to match. -- Your name is still invoked by parents trying to get their children to practice after school. : Like me, you had the good sense to settle in Texas. THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON February 22, 1992 MEMORANDUM FOR BOB SIMON FROM: CAROL AARHUS ca SUBJECT: SAN ANTONIO SUMMIT STATE DINNER TOAST MAJESTIC THEATRE SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS I'm sure this will not differ from what we spoke about over the phone, but here it is officially: O POTUS arrives State Dinner Reception at 7:25 p.m. Foreign Delegations arrive reception 7:30 - 8:10 p.m. POTUS goes to stage (all the tables are set up on the stage in the theatre) at 8:15 p.m. POTUS toasts at 8:20 p.m. -- no reciprocal toasts. Van Clyburn entertains at 9:30 p.m. o On the 27th, POTUS will attend meetings and have press availability at the McNay Art Museum. O Mrs. Bush will attend the State Dinner, but will have a separate schedule throughout the Summit. O Venezuela may not attend the dinner. o Countries involved: U.S., Mexico, Venezuela, Bolivia, Colombia, Peru, Ecuador. That's all for now. I assume you've already got the speech done and in staffing, if not to POTUS. We didn't pass around a call sheet at any of these meetings, but if you have any questions, Tim Simonson is the lead. PROPOSED TOAST TO BE DELIVERED BY THE PRESIDENT AT THE DINNER IN HONOR OF THE SAN ANTONIO DRUG SUMMIT Messrs Presidents and distinguished guests, Barbara and I are honored to have you join us here tonight. It is a particular pleasure to have with us the presidents of six other, sovereign and democratic American republics. file new Co incl Ladies and Gentlemen, these are historic times for our hemisphere. While the collapse of communism in Europe has held the world's eye, too little attention has been paid to the EAI consolidation of democracy in the Americas, too little attention has been paid to the increasing depth of democratic San San Antories Antonio commitment among our peoples. When I was United States is oveol Permanent Representative to the United Nations some 20 years rapportant ,the ago, our hemisphere had more military than civilian cultural crossroods governments. Today in our hemisphere democratic rights are denied only in only Cuba and Haiti. prose San San antonis and/or We must be mindful of how precious our democracies are, for Sonth Teyer democracy's enemies are always present and must always be resisted. Just this month, democracy was challenged in Jimesy Consule Venezuela by people who would have put themselves in power by Gurule force of arms. Naturally, they met with strong opposition from atoog President Perez and his freedom loving citizens. We were all relieved by this reaffimation of democracy. Americans all, north and south, now acknowledge government of the people as the only legitimate form of government in this hemisphere. States, through rigorous law enforcement and aerial spraying programs we have reduced marijuana cultivation. Of course our major success has been in demand reduction: In the past six years we have reduced the number of current users of cocaine by two-thirds. Adolescent use of illegal drugs is down in every category, among all races, rich and poor. The number of high school seniors using illegal drugs is the lowest since we began measuring. So, when we gather here tonight to chart our actions, we need not be daunted by what remains undone, we can look at what we have accomplished and take renewed vigor as we face the days ahead. Before I close, I would like to remind those present that the war on drugs, like any other, has its casualties. Every day, and even as we speak, brave men and women run grave risks to protect our children and our future from drugs and those who deal in them. Before we resume the tasks remaining, let us remember and toast those who have laid down their lives in the cause we mutually support: a drug-free hemisphere. Aside from the first task of assuring the continuation of our democracies, little can be more important than securing the health and well-being of our people from the multiple evils brought about by drug consumption, production and trafficking. Narcotics control is a domestic concern for each of us. We have learned that we cannot be effective at home unless we join together internationally. Here too there has been progress. As late as when I came to office finger pointing and mutual recriminations were almost as common as cooperation and help. "Blame the consumers!" said some. "Blame the producers!" said others. How simplistic those comments were. Today, we know and publicly acknowledge that every nation represented here tonight has problems with consumption, that every nation represented has problems with production, manufacturing, transportation and money laundering. Yes, some of us have more of one or the other, but we all have all problems. But we are all making progress. Bolivia has lowered the amount of coca under cultivation; in spite of a serious problem from Sendero Luminoso, Peru has halted the growth of coca cultivation; Ecuador is moving against the money launderers and traffickers beginning to move into its territory; Colombia has jailed the most violent of its traffickers and is seizing record quantities of drugs; Venezuela has begun to clamp down on those who wish to use its territory as a springboard to send drugs to Europe; Mexico has reduced the cultivation of both opium poppies and marijuana while seizing record amounts of drugs. Here in the United Drafted: ARA/AND: DHamilton Document: SEARAAND 12719 Approved: 'ARA/FO: BAronson BA = r ARA/FO: RSGelbard ARA/FO: JPMclean IPA PA: RBoucher INM: MLevitsky_ RA Dst PA/WHL: JAllison ARA/AND: AWPatterson ARA/MEX: RHoward S/P: VMartinez D: RLikins P: CKelley C: MFoulon THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON DATE: 2/21/92 PLEASE DELIVER THE FOLLOWING PAGES TO: NAME: BOB Simon ORGANIZATION: FROM: CATHY 7ENTON PHONE: X7064 TOTAL NUMBER OF PAGES 3 INCLUDING COVER LETTER. SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS: Several programs an Van Cliburn are attached. IF YOU DO NOT RECEIVE ALL PAGES, PLEASE CALL BACK AS SOON AS POSSIBLE TO (202) 456-7788. RETURN TELECOPY NUMBER: 202/456-6235 L #: SOCIAL OFFICE+ : 2::35PM : 2-21-92 : 7020 Telecoder BY: RCV Dec , 8, 1987 VAN CLIBURN Born in Shreveport, Louisiana, and taught the PROGRAM piano by his mother at age three, Van Cliburn played his first public performance at age four. He made his orchestral debut with the Houston Symphony at age twelve and his Carnegie Hall debut as winner of the National Music Fastival Intermezzo Brahms Award the following year. A graduate of The Opus 118, No. 6 Juilliard School, Van Cliburn won the Edgar M. Leventritt Foundation Award in 1954; he was Stude-Tableau Rachmaninoff the first recipient of the award since 1949. Opus 39, No. 5 Van Cliburn's performances in Moscow are well known. At the first Tchalkousky Competition in Widmung Schumann-Liszt 1958, he won the hearts of the Soviet people and the praise of critics around the world. Van Cliburn L'Isle joyeuse Debussy went on to play several more concerts in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, each one to sold-out houses and tremendous acclaim. He was walcomed back to the United States with a ticker tape parade and rave reviews following his first concert back home. After going on sabbatical in 1978, Van Cliburn moved to Fort Worth, Texas, where ha takes an active role in the international competition named in his honor. N SOCIAL OFFICE- RCV BY:Xerox Telecopier 7020 ; 2-21-92 ; 2:36PM ; VAN CLIBURN Van Cliburn began playing the piano at the age of three with his mother, Rildea Beg O'Bryan cliburn. He made his orchestral debut with the Houston Symphony at age twelve. A graduate of The Juilliard School, Van Cliburn's exceptional talent won international acclaim in 1958 as winner of the First Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow. The last thirty years have been spent in rigorous recording schedules and annual world tours. His recording of Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1 was the first classical album to go platinum, selling one million copies. After a nine year sabbatical beginning in 1978, Van Cliburn moved to Fort Worth, Texas, returning to a full schedule of concert performances. He plays an active role in the international competition nameed in his honor, and contributes much of his time nurturing the careers of young artists. E #: SOCIAL OFFICE+ RCV BY:Xerox Telecopier 7020 ; 2-21-92 ; 2:36PM ; CURRENT BIOGRAPHY 1958 l' machinery CLIBURN, VAN (HARVEY LAVAN, Canada were JR.) July 12, 1934- Pianist the mission" Address: h. 205 W. 57th St., New York 19; ght, January b. Columbia Artists Management, Inc., 113 W. 57th St., New York 19 sed in April II not win a "The impact of Van Cliburn's triumph in the t market un- Moscow International Tchaikovsky Competition livery time, goes far beyond music and himself as an in- stry provide dividual, and is a dramatic testimonial to Amer- competition ican culture with his two hands Van Cli- Mail, April burn struck a chord which has resounded around the world, raising our prestige with artists and music-lovers everywhere." These cast released were the words of New York City's Mayor 7 noted that Robert F. Wagner as he greeted the young duced taxes, Texan concert pianist, Van Cliburn, with an lessened re- official welcome on behalf of New York City I initiated a while there upon his return to the United States. After in the Cana- winning the Tchaikovsky music competition in Moscow, U.S.S.R., on April 14, 1958 and being evidence of proclaimed the "new American Sputnik," Van nerate new Cliburn became the toast of New York and the iic areas of nation. ed the need er into He has been the recipient of prizes, scholar- Richard DeGrab ices" (New ships and awards since he was twelve years old. 29, 1957). In 1954 he made his debut with the New York VAN CLIBURN iament for Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra and received irplus Cana- high praise from the critics. However, it was Philharmonic Orchestra at Carnegie Hall. This under the not until his triumph in Moscow over pianists was the first time in five years that the award at Commu- from all over the world, that he received inter- had been presented. heat. (The national acclaim. His concert with the New York Philhar- try are dis- Harvey Lavan (Van) Cliburn, Jr., was born monic at Carnegie Hall in November 1954 won New York in Shreveport, Louisiana on July 12, '1934. He him highly favorable notices from the New is the only child of Rildia Bee (O'Brian) York music critics. Irving Kolodin of the Sat- n an over- Cliburn, a concert pianist and piano teacher, urday Review (November 27, 1954) called him election of and Harvey Lavan Cliburn, an oil company "the most talented newcomer of the season essive Con- executive. When Van was three years old, his he literally commands the piano as he plays and eats to only mother began giving him piano lessons. By the in many ways the music too. He is far from a he Liberal) time he was six years old, he had made several finished performer as yet but he has, in Churchill public appearances in Shreveport. He continued abundance, the qualities of fervor, audience ap- I a visit to his music studies with his mother after his peal and musicianship which make for distinc- tly deadly" family moved to Kilgore, Texas and until 1951. tion." U.S. inter- He made his debut with the Houston (Texas) Upon his graduation from Juilliard in 1954, automobiles, Symphony Orchestra, as a result of winning with highest honors, Van received the Carl M. essing that the 1947 Texas state prize, and played the Roeder Memorial Award and the Frank Dam- nilitarily to Tchaikovsky Concerto No. 1 in B-Flat Minor. rosch Scholarship. The latter entitled him to weakened While attending Kilgore High School, Van continue his studies at Juilliard as a graduate lip Deane, played the clarinet in the band and was presi- student. However, twenty orchestral commit- 958). dent of the Thespian Club. The romantic com- ments during 1955 kept him from his post- before the posers Liszt, Chopin, Rachmaninoff and Tchai- graduate studies at Juilliard. During 1955 and n the New kovsky were among his favorites. In 1948 he 1956 he toured as a concert pianist throughout won the National Music Festival Award. the United States, appearing in major cities, McLach- The young pianist moved to New York City and receiving 'high acclaim. In the April 20, they have in 1951 to study at the Juilliard School of 1955 issue of Practical English, his picture M. H. Music with the Russian-born teacher Madame appeared on the cover. developed Rosina Lhevinne, wife of the late concert pianist During 1957 Cliburn had several concert en- ming Josef Lhevinne. While studying at Juilliard, gagements. He was inducted in the U.S. Army members Van won the G. B. Dealey Award in Dallas, in the spring of 1957, but was released after archill is a Texas, which included an appearance with the two days because of a blood condition. Shortly of United Dallas Symphony Orchestra in 1952. The same after this, his mother became ill and Van re- the Cana- year he also won the Kosciuszko Foundation turned to Texas to conduct her music classes. he United Chopin Award. His first European tour was scheduled for the In 1953 he won a grant from the Olga Sama- summer of 1958. However, his teacher Madame roff Foundation and also won first place in the Rosina Lhevinne, and other musicians suggested Juilliard Concerto contest. During the follow- that he cancel this tour and enter the first Inter- Dor ing year he was the recipient of the Edgar M. national Tchaikovsky piano competition in 1958 Leventritt Foundation Award, which gave him Moscow, capital of the Soviet Union. Taking the privilege of appearing with the New York their advice, he spent two months in prepara- 95 CURRENT BIOGRAPHY 1958 tion for the competition, practicing from six to Rachmaninoff Third Piano Concerto and Pro- eleven hours a day. kofieff's Classical Symphony. Van Cliburn and The trip to Moscow for Van Cliburn and one Conductor Kondrashin both received enthusias- other U.S. competitor, Joyce Flissler, a violin- tic notices from critics. (See Harriet Johnson's ist, was financed by the Mary Baird Rocke- column in the New York Post, May 20, 1958). feller Foundation and the Institute for Inter- The day after his triumphant homecoming national Education. The U.S.S.R. paid the concert, Van was honored by a ticker-tape expenses of the contestants while they were in parade up Broadway to City Hall where he the Soviet Union and their return by plane. was officially welcomed by New York's Mayor Almost at the outset of the competition in Robert F. Wagner. He was presented with a Moscow, Van Cliburn won the hearts of the city scroll for exceptional and distinguished audiences. Even before the winners were an- service and the Mayor proclaimed May 20 nounced, his performances were sold out and "American Music Day." A luncheon was given he was the toast of Moscow. The chairman of at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel honoring Cliburn the jury which judged the youthful performers and Kondrashin. was Soviet pianist Emil Gilels (see C.B., Van later played in Philadelphia, Chicago, October 1956). Hollywood and Denver. His European summer On April 14, 1958 a formal announcement engagements included concerts at the Brussels was made that Van Cliburn was the winner of Fair in Belgium on July 4th in the United the first prize of the International Tchaikovsky States Pavillion, and then in London, Amster- piano competition. The prize consisted of a dam, and Paris. His first recording for R.C.A. gold medal and 25,000 rubles (about $2,500) Victor, the Tchaikovsky B-Flat Minor Concerto and he was permitted to take home about reached new heights in classical record sales $1,250. The remaining prize money has been by June 1958. banked for him in the Soviet Union. He also played in concerts throughout the Soviet Union Van Cliburn is noted for his modesty and his and made several recordings. He was received warmth and friendliness. He has thick, curly, by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and also blond hair, blue eyes, and is six feet, four by Nikolai Bulganin. inches tall. He has composed some popular and President Eisenhower sent Van Cliburn a classical music which has been played in this congratulatory telegram and invited him to country. Since the beginning of his concert visit the White House in Washington, D.C. career, his personal manager has been William with his parents. The twenty-three year old M. Judd of Columbia Artists Management, Inc. Texan left the Soviet Union with seventeen Van Cliburn is a member of the American pieces of luggage. (He had arrived with three.) Guild of Musical Artists. His church is the Among his gifts was a lilac bush, presented to Calvary Baptist in New York City. him by Russian admirers, to be placed on the References grave of Sergei Rachmaninoff in the Valhalla N Y Post p5+ My 16 '58 por Cemetery in Valhalla, New York. N Y Times p12 Ap 12 '58 Upon his arrival in New York City on May Time 71:63 Ap 21 '58 por 16, 1958 Van Cliburn was besieged with offers. U S News 44:19 Ap 25 '58 por His original schedule to play with the New York Philharmonic was changed from one to four concerts. He signed a contract to record CLYDE, GEORGE D(EWEY) July 21, for the R.C.A. Victor recording company and 1898- Governor of Utah; engineer; educator appeared on the Steve Allen Sunday night tele- vision show over N.B.C. on May 25 and on Address: b. State Capitol, Salt Lake City, Ut.; Edward R. Murrow's Person to Person tele- h. 1747 Browning Ave., Salt Lake City, Ut. vision show over the C.B.S. network on May Elected for a four-year term as Governor of 30, 1958. Utah in November 1956, George D. Clyde, a pro- He was also interviewed by Abram Chasins, Eisenhower Republican, succeeded J. Bracken music critic on radio station WQXR who had Lee, an anti-Administration Republican. Clyde early recognized the young pianist's talent and has urged enactment of the upper Colorado to whom Van Cliburn expressed warm credit River project and advocates state construction for helping him in his career. "The Russians of public projects, greater state aid to education, didn't discover Van Cliburn," Chasins wrote in and increasing the salaries of state employees. the Reporter (May 29, 1958). "They merely At the time of his election he was director of embraced enthusiastically what we as a nation the Utah water and power board, and had regard listlessly what their people value and earlier served as chief of engineers in the U.S. our people ignore. He had won five exact- Soil Conservation Service. For ten years (1935- ing competitions before the Moscow award." 45) he was dean of the School of Engineering His first concert at Carnegie Hall with the and Technology of Utah State Agricultural Symphony of the Air was conducted by Soviet College. conductor Kiril P. Kondrashin and was heard Born at Springville, Utah on July 21, 1898, by a sold-out house on May 19, 1958. The con- George Dewey Clyde is one of the four sons of cert was broadcast over WQXR as well. The Hyrum Smith Clyde, an irrigation farmer, and music critic of the New Yorker magazine Elenore Jane (Johnson) Clyde. He belongs to (May 31, 1958) wrote that he proved to be a an "engineering family," for three of his broth- pianist "in the grand manner." Playing the ers, like himself, became engineers. Clyde served Tchaikovsky Concerto in B-Flat Minor, the as a World War I infantryman in 1917-19. He 96 Cleonides - Coates scendants were important music dealers and pub- Clicquot, French family of organ builders, of whom lishers in Philadelphia up to 1879. His son, John the earliest was Robert Clicquot, builder of the or- Clemm, Jr., was the first organist at N.Y.'s Trinity gan in the Versailles Chapel for Louis XIV (1711), Church. and organs in the cathedrals of Rouen (1689) and Saint-Quentin (1703). His sons Jean-Baptiste (b. Cleonides, Greek writer on music; lived in the first Rheims, Nov. 3, 1678; d. Paris, March 16, 1746) and half of the 2nd century A.D. His treatise Eisagoge Louis-Alexandre (b. c.1680; d. Paris, Jan. 25, 1760) harmonike (Introductio harmonica), based on the were his helpers. The most renowned of the family theories of Aristoxenus, was for a long time as- was François-Henri Clicquot (b. 1732; d. Paris, May cribed to the mathematician Euclid, because it had 24, 1790), who constructed the great organ of Ver- been publ. under Euclid's name by Pena (Paris, sailles Cathedral (installed Oct. 31, 1761) and the 1557) and Meibom (Amsterdam, 1652), although it organ of St. Sulpice, with 5 manuals, 66 stops, and had been printed with the real author's name by a 32-foot pedal (1781). Valla (Venice, 1497). A new critical edition was publ. by K. von Jan in Musici Scriptores Graeci. Clutsam, George H., Australian pianist and com- There is a French trans. by Ruelle (1896); for an poser; b. Sydney, Sept. 26, 1866; d. London, Nov. 17, Eng. trans., see Strunk's Source Readings in Music 1951. As a young pianist, he made tours of Australia, History (N.Y., 1950). India, China, and Japan; settled in London in 1889 and became a professional accompanist; gave con- Clérambault, Louis Nicolas, French composer and certs with Melba (1893). From 1908 until 1918 he was a music critic of the Observer in London; at the organist; b. Paris, Dec. 19, 1676; d. there, Oct. 26, same time wrote music for the stage. 1749. He studied with André Raison; was organist at WORKS: Operas: The Queen's Jester (1905); A various Paris churches. He was a successful com- Summer Night (London, July 23, 1910); After a poser of theatrical pieces for the court: Le Soleil Thousand Years (1912); König Harlekin (Berlin, vainqueur (Paris, Oct. 21, 1721); Le Départ du roi 1912); several musical comedies: Gabrielle, Laven- (1745); etc. He also wrote a number of solo cantatas, der, The Little Duchess (Glasgow, Dec. 15, 1922). His in which genre he excelled; composed much organ greatest popular success was the production of music; some of his organ works are republ. in Guil- Lilac Time, an arrangement of Heinrich Berté's op- mant's Archives des maîtres de l'orgue. His son, Cé- eretta Das Dreimäderlhaus, based on Schubert's sar François Nicolas Clérambault (1700-60), was also melodies; Clutsam's version in English was first an organist and composer. staged in London on Dec. 22, 1922, and had many revivals. Another theatrical medley, arranged from Cleva, Fausto, Italian conductor; b. Trieste, May Chopin's melodies, was Clutsam's musical comedy 17, 1902; d. Athens (collapsed while conducting), The Damask Rose (London, June 17, 1929). Aug. 6, 1971. He studied in Milan; began his conduct- ing career as a youth; in 1920 emigrated to the U.S.; Cluytens, André, noted Belgian conductor; b. Ant- became an American citizen in 1931. He was chorus werp, March 26, 1905; d. Neuilly, near Paris, June 3, master and later conductor of the Metropolitan Op- 1967. He studied piano at the Antwerp Cons. His era until 1942; then was conductor of the San Fran- father, conductor at the Théâtre Royal in Antwerp, cisco Opera Co. (1942-44 and 1949-55); then again engaged him as a choral coach; later he conducted with the Metropolitan (1951 until his death). In 1971 opera there (1927-32). He then settled in France, he was presented with a gold cigarette case by the and became a French citizen in 1932. He served as directors of the Metropolitan on the occasion of his music director at the Toulouse Opera (1932-35); in 50th anniversary as a regular member, since the 1935 was appointed opera conductor in Lyons. In age of 18, of its conducting staff. 1944 he conducted at the Paris Opéra; in 1947 he was appointed music director of the Opéra-Comique. In Cliburn, Van (Harvey Lavan, Jr.), brilliant 1949 he was named conductor of the Société du Con- American pianist; b. Shreveport, La., July 12, 1934. servatoire de Paris, and in 1955 he became the first He studied piano with his mother; then with Rosina French conductor to appear at the Bayreuth Festi- Lhévinne at the Juilliard School of Music in N.Y., val. On Nov. 4, 1956, he made his U.S. debut in Wash- graduating in 1954. He made his debut with the ington, D.C., as guest conductor of the Vienna Phil. Houston Symph. Orch. at the age of 13; appeared during its first American tour. In 1960 he became with the N.Y. Phil. in 1954; toured as a concert pia- chief conductor of the Orch. National de Belgique nist in the U.S. He became suddenly famous when in Brussels, a post he held until his death. Cluytens he won the Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow in was highly regarded as a fine interpreter of French 1958, the first American to score such a triumph in music. Russia, where he became a prime favorite. Upon his return to N.Y. he received a hero's welcome in a Coates, Albert, eminent English conductor, b. St. street parade. In 1964 he made his debut as an orch. Petersburg, Russia (of an English father and a conductor. His playing combines a superlative tech- mother of Russian descent), April 23, 1882; d. Mil- nique with a genuine Romantic sentiment; this nerton, near Cape Town, South Africa, Dec. 11, 1953. style is particularly effective in the music of Tchai- He went to England for his general education; en- kovsky and Rachmaninoff. rolled in the science classes of Liverpool Univ., and 243 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1992 Photo Copy Preservation A11 Peru's Ex-Drug Czar on Cocaine: The Supply Side LIMA September 1990, shortly after finds little echo in-Latin America. Deep- imate intermediaries, capable of negotiat- President Fujimori's commitment, U.S. he was elected president of Peru, Alberto rooted Latin American resentment is ing with governments and business; that support for the decriminalization of coca Fujimori declined to sign a drug-coopera- stirred by the obligation to fight, on their they would participate in creating the new farmers, reports of President Bush's per- tion agreement with the U.S. He felt that own soil, an armed drug war that they do hat our legal institutions to remove the barriers to sonal backing, and similar support from the agreement called for repression of not perceive as theirs. created other opportunities in the market econ- some European governments. and the Peru's coca farmers, who produce two- In October 1990, through the so-called al poli- omy; and, if they eradicated coca, their United Nations triggered, in November thirds of the world's leaf from which crack "Fujimori Doctrine," we appealed to Peru- and a property rights would be legalized. 1991, the drafting of initial plans for pri- and cocaine are made. Such a policy, the hous- vians to consider what drug-crop growing To demonstrate their support-and de- vate investment. president believed, would continue to push had done to Lebanon, Afghanistan, Burma spite intimidation and the assassination of The lesson here is that when market- coca growers into the arms of terrorists and Laos. Peru, like those countries, their principal leader, Walter Tocas-ev- ERSEN economy and private-property institutions and drug traffickers. risked becoming immersed in corruption, Work ery one of the 180 identifiable coca-growing are introduced, coca farmers are willing to I have spent the past 16 months as the and its territory turned into a battleground ity organizations signed commitments to switch and private business will play its president's personal representative ham- for feuding drug lords. switch from coca to other crops, providing part in the war for the environment and mering out a strategy that would allow Within a month; the Fujimori Doctrine's markets could be guaranteed. against drugs. proposal to combat drugs by addressing ing Now that all coca farmers agreed to A visiting economist expressed concern The Americas supply-side concerns had won the support For substitute coca for much less than 1% of that substitution efforts would raise the of four-fifths of Peruvians polled. een the U.S. drug-enforcement budget, with the price offered by traffickers to coca farm- Additionally, the Fujimori Doctrine es- ev- By Hernando de Soto Peruvian people firmly behind the eradica- ers and hence tempt a return to coca. de- tablished a clear distinction between drug tion policy, and the traffickers and terror- "Look," replied a coca grower, "surely a duc- traffickers and coca farmers. First, the ists on the defensive, I looked to anti-nar- successful drug dealer earns more than trafficker has alternatives; the farmer has ially cotics authorities on both sides of the nego- you in Washington. If you don't push ation Peru to make, on the supply side of the il- none. Institute for Liberty and Democracy tiating table and met with blank stares. drugs, it's because you have decent alter- and legal drug problem, a major contribution (ILD) studies have established that gov- These brave men have many imaginative natives, you know drug dealing brings vio- to international-community concerns over ernment regulations prevent coça farmers ome, ideas for bigger and better busts-but no lence and corruption. You don't want to al in- drugs, without embarking on a civil war it from growing and marketing alternative clue about peacefully pulling off what is es- raise your family in hell. Why should I be in re- cannot hope to win. What follows are the crops. Second, coca farmers, unlike traf- sentially a business deal. any different, given the chance?" cornerstones of this strategy. fickers, are poor-annual per-capita in- This was not a surprise. From the be- Coca growers form part of that great ment On the demand side, the U.S. annually come is between $400 and $600. Like ad- ginning we knew that one of the shortcom- Latin American majority, the informal Behold spends at least $20 billion on fighting dicts and the urban poor in developed ings of the war against drugs in Peru was sector. Forced by outdated regulatory and envy! drugs. Within the U.S., law enforcement countries, they are victims of society and its overwhelming reliance on police and political institutions to operate outside the cannot faces the daunting task of finding and ar- drug traffickers. Offered alternatives, they military tools. We were aware that a suc- law, they are barred access to property ot that resting-coast to coast-hundreds of thou- become our allies. cessful partnership of government and pri- rights, business opportunities, contracts sands of pushers whose war chests amount Coca growers in Peru, like people y are vate business was responsible for most and courts. Operating illegally, and with to dozens of billions of dollars a year. around the world, want secure property U.S. triumphs. Therefore, early on we be- no official channels to air their views, they On the supply side, the picture appears rights. The ILD has found that if the farm- ot be- gan promoting the interests of European are ignored until they explode. Until Latin Cor- simpler. With satellites and planes, we ers form alliances with drug traffickers multinational corporations in the coca-sub- governments go beyond standard macro- loved have located the 720,000 acres of coca and guerrillas, it is principally to defend stitution paradigm. No blank stares here; economic formulas, and address the prob- fields in two principal valleys. In the past their property against trespassing and vio- with them, we began to develop plans for lems of their marginalized majorities as eight months, we have identified and be- lent incursions by authorities-a disturbing CHER creating alternatives based on business op- part and parcel of structural adjustment gun negotiations with the local organiza- echo of the role played by the Viet Cong in portunities. programs, market economies and democ- tions and the democratically elected lead- defending Vietnamese farmers against Sai- Our business friends were originally in- racies in the hemisphere will not endure. ers who represent the 250,000 coca farmers gon's blundering interventions. terested in Peru because of the environ- in and their families. Since collectively these All these points finally bore fruit. On mental damage that coca production and farmers earn no more than $160 million a May 14, 1991, enlightened U.S. authorities processing wreaks in the headwaters of the Mr. de Soto resigned on Jan. 28 as Pres- De year from their coca crop, substituting signed an agreement with Peru accepting Amazon. However, when a discreet meet- ident Fujimori's personal representative Oil that income would cost less than 1% of the for the first time that coca growers were ing with coca-farmer leaders was arranged for various issues including drugs. He is Vest U.S. drug budget. not to be considered criminals; that their in 1990, the businessmen also discovered president of ILD, author of "The Other S an The U.S concern with drug addiction organizations would be recognized as legit- sincerity and hard-nosed business sense. Path" and an entrepreneur in Lima. and eld, for- (Duggan/Simon) February 21, 1992 Draft One Summit PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: DRUG SUMMIT DINNER TOAST SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS [date] WEDNES DAY, FEB. 26,1992 [time] Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen: Barbara and I are honored to have you join us here tonight. It is a particular pleasure to welcome to the United States six good friends and neighbors -- the presidents of Mexico, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, Ecuador and Bolivia. I am delighted that we have gathered in my home state of Texas and in this gracious city of San Antonio. For centuries, San Antonio has stood as an important cultural crossroads of the Americas. We gather at a time of great hope for all the people of the Americas. In almost every nation in the hemisphere, people enjoy self-government and respect for human rights. We're making steady progress to improve everyone's quality of life through more open trade and investment, by creating more jobs. That is why I am committed more strongly than ever to completing the North American Free Trade Agreement with Mexico, Canada and the United States. And building upon that, we will realize the vision I call the Enterprise for the Americas Initiative -- for robust trade and investment from the Arctic Ocean to the Straits of Magellan. During our meetings this week in San Antonio, we will refine and intensify our common efforts against the menace of drugs. Each of our nations is making progress: Bolivia has lowered the amount of coca cultivation. Peru has overcome terrorist threats to halt the growth of coca cultivation. Ecuador is moving against money launderers and traffickers on its territory. Colombia has jailed its most violent drug traffickers and is seizing record quantities of drugs. Venezuela is clamping down on those attempting to use its territory to ship drugs to Europe. Mexico has reduced cultivation of both opium poppies and marijuana while seizing record amounts of drugs. For each of our nations, the ultimate stakes are the same: Struggle the battle against drugs is truly a war -- a war for the minds, bodies and souls of our young people. In the United States, we're stepping up treatment and prevention programs -- and we're toughening our prosecution and punishment of drug kingpins. We're seeing results. In the United States over the past six years, we've reduced the number of current users of cocaine by two-thirds. Adolescent use of illegal drugs is down in every category -- among the rich and the poor, among young people of all races. The number of high school seniors using illegal drugs is the lowest since we began measuring. We must do more. Drug abuse and drug violence threatens to dear destroy our children and everything else we hold dera. At risk is the civilization we share: our common inheritance and our common future. Let us renew our resolve. Let us strengthen our commitment. As we work to advance the quality of life in our hemisphere in so many ways, let us win a lasting victory in the war against drugs. May God bless you and all the peoples of the Americas. And may I raise a glass in honor of our distinguished guests and the important mission all of us share. # # # BOB Date To 2/19 Time 11:10 WHILE YOU WERE OUT M CAROL of in San An tonio Phone Area Code Number Extension TELEPHONED PLEASE CALL CALLED TO SEE YOU WILL CALL AGAIN WANTS TO SEE YOU URGENT RETURNED YOUR CALL Message Entertainment card for Summit dinner: Van Cliburu, Pianist. Call Social office for Bio (X7064) Get in touch w/NSC not Operator AMPAD EFFICIENCY® 23-021 CARBONLESS DC joint Statement. press avai labolity FEB-26-1992 21:23 FROM SAN ANTONIO PRESS OFFICE TO MARLIN P.01 THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary (San Antonio, Texas) For Immediate Release February 26, 1992 REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENTS AT DRUG SUMMIT DINNER TOAST Majestic Theater San Antonio, Texas 8:01 P.M. CST THE PRESIDENT: Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen: Barbara and I are honored to have you join us here tonight. It is a particular pleasure to welcome to the United States our good friends and our neighbors from Mexico, Colombia, Peru, Scuador, Bolivia and Venezuela. I am delighted that we've gathered in my home state, Secretary Baker's home state of Texas with the Governor here, the Mayor of this city here -- in this gracious city of San Antonio. For centuries, San Antonio has stood as an important cultural crossroads of the Americas. We meet at a time of great hope for all the people of the Americas. In almost every nation in the hemisphere, people enjoy self-government and respect for human rights. We're making steady progress to improve our people's quality of life through more open trade and investment, by creating more jobs. That's why I am committed more strongly than ever to completing the North American Free Trade Agreement linking the economies of Mexico, Canada and the United States. And building upon that, we will realize the vision I call the Enterprise for the Americas Initiative -- for robust trade and investment from the Arctic Ocean to the Straits of Magellan. During our meetings this week in San Antonio, we will refine and intensify our common efforts against the menace of drugs. Each of our nations is making progress: Bolivia has successfully intensified its law enforcement efforts against cocaine traffickers. Peru has taken important steps to control airstrips used by traffickers to move cocaine to Colombia. Ecuador is moving against money launderers and traffickers on its territory. Colombia has jailed some of its most violent drug traffickers and is seizing record quantities of drugs. Venezuela is clamping down on those attempting to use its territory to ship drugs to Europe and America. Mexico has reduced cultivation of both opium poppies and marijuana by unprecedented amounts, while seizing record amounts of cocaine through Operation Halcon. For each of our nations, the battle against drugs is truly a war. The ultimate stakes are the same: the minds, bodies and the souls of our young people, so many of whom have been hurt or destroyed by the violent world of the drug dealers. In the United States, we're stepping up treatment, prevention and research programs -- and we're toughening our prosecution and punishment of drug kingpins. We're seeing results on the demand side as well. In the United States over the past six years, we've reduced the number of cocaine -- regular users of cocaine by two-thirds. Adolescent use of all types of illegal drugs is down. The number of high school seniors using illegal drugs is the lowest since we began measuring their drug use. MORE FEB-26-1992 21:24 FROM SAN ANTONIO PRESS OFFICE TO MARLIN F.00 - 2 - SAUCH We must do more. Drug abuse and drug violence -- particularly in our inner cities threaten to destroy our children and everything else we hold dear Atorisk is the civilization we share: our common inheritance and our common future. So let us renew our resolve. Let us strengthen our commitment to guarantee all people drug-free communities. And as we work to advance the quality of life in our hemisphere in so many ways, let us win a lasting victory in the yer against drugs. And once again, a warm welcome to San Antonio, Texas. And may God bless you and all the peoples of the Americas. And may I raise a glass in honor of our distinguished guests and the important mission that. all of us share. (A toast is offered.) (Applause.) END 8:07 P.M. CST February 22, 1992 MEMORANDUM FOR BOB SIMON FROM: CAROL AARHUS SUBJECT: SAN ANTONIO SUMMIT STATE DINNER TOAST MAJESTIC THEATRE SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS I'm sure this will not differ from what we spoke about over the phone, but here it is officially: O POTUS arrives State Dinner Reception at 7:25 p.m. Foreign Delegations arrive reception 7:30 - 8:10 p.m. POTUS goes to stage (all the tables are set up on the stage in the theatre) at 8:15 p.m. POTUS toasts at 8:20 p.m. -- no reciprocal toasts. Van Clyburn entertains at 9:30 p.m. O On the 27th, POTUS will attend meetings and have press availability at the McNay Art Museum. O Mrs. Bush will attend the State Dinner, but will have a separate schedule throughout the Summit. o Venezuela may not attend the dinner. o Countries involved: U.S., Mexico, Venezuela, Bolivia, Colombia, Peru, Ecuador. That's all for now. I assume you've already got the speech done and in staffing, if not to POTUS. We didn't pass around a call sheet at any of these meetings, but if you have any questions, Tim Simonson is the lead.