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(HUEBNER) JK Suggestions for Toast at Dinner For President Park of Korea The first time I met President Park, he was an officer in the Korean Army, and I was Vice President of the United States. The second time I met him, he had become Chief of State, but meanwhile, I had become a private citizen. Now, on this occasion, we come together as Presidents of our countries. I can assure you that the same sense of common purpose and shared endeavor which our countries and our governments have experienced for so many years also characterizes our conversations during this visit. President Park noted on a previous visit that every time he comes to the United States, he comes from a "different" Korea. And the point he makes is an important one. For few nations on earth have changed as dramatically as Korea has changed during the past several years. The people of your country, Mr. President, have produced this rate of change, because they have held on to a strong sense of national pride and identity through all vicissitudes, despite the invasions and the captivities to which they were sub- jected over the centuries. Clearly, yours is a proud and deter- mined people. It has come through a great deal, and it has much to be proud of. Hand in hand with economic revival has come a new inter- national role for Korea. "The time has come, President Park declared a few years ago, "for us to move into international