Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Wednesday, Dec. 18
The Indiana Daily Student

world

President urges calm in face of challenges

Bush suggests careers of service, volunteering to ease aftermath

ATLANTA -- President George W. Bush urged an uneasy nation Thursday night to meet "our great national challenge" to protect America against future terrorist attacks by volunteering for community service and watching for suspicious activity. \n"Our citizens have new responsibilities," the president said in his address. "We must be vigilant, inspect our mail, stay informed on public health matters."\n"We will not give in to exaggerated fears or passing rumors," Bush said. "We will rely on our good judgment and our common sense."\nBush spoke in the Georgia World Congress Center before a ticketed audience of 5,000 people, mostly public servants -- police, postal workers, firefighters, soldiers. They cheered and applauded the president. \n"There is a difference between being alert and being intimidated, and this nation will not be intimidated," Bush said. \nNearly two months after the hijacker attacks in New York and Washington, the president said the United States will emerge stronger. \n"None of us would ever wish the evil that has been done to our country, yet we have learned that out of evil can come great good. During the last two months, we have shown the world America is a great nation,"he said. \nThe address was billed as an update on the war in Afghanistan, the anthrax scares at home and the new responsibilities of government and all Americans. He also outlined actions the government has taken to strengthen homeland security. \n"Our great national challenge is to hunt down the terrorists and strengthen our protections against future attacks; our great national opportunity is to preserve forever the good that has resulted,"Bush said. "Through the tragedy, we are renewing and reclaiming our strong American values."\nHe said the country is different -- "sadder and less innocent; strong and more united" -- than before the attacks. \nHe spoke in Atlanta, chosen because it is home to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the nation's leading disease control facility. \nRecognizing in polls a desire by Americans to get involved in the fight against terrorism, the president suggested ways people can serve their country. He urged people to head into "careers of service,"such as firefighting or police work. \nHe said people should volunteer to work in hospitals and other places on the front lines of terrorism response, such as military installations. \nFriday, Bush was announcing a "dramatic increase" in the use of National Guard personnel for airport security, including the stationing of Guardsmen at airport boarding gates, an administration official said. \n"Many ask what can I do to help in our fight? The simple answer is all of us can become a September 11th volunteer by making a commitment to service in our own communities,"Bush said. \nBush announced that the national service groups created by former President Clinton in 1993, AmeriCorps and Senior Corps, would provide more than 20,000 government-subsided volunteers to help police, fire and public health departments and "free up"the professionals for work on the front lines of homeland defense. \nBush also created a task force on citizen preparedness, which will have 40 days to give him recommendations on helping Americans prepare their homes, neighborhoods, schools and workplaces for the potential consequences of any future attacks. \n"One way to defeat terrorism is to show the world the true values of America through the gathering momentum of millions of acts of responsibility and decency and service,"he said. \nBush asked states to help develop a modern civil defense service. The program would be modeled after volunteer firefighter programs, which provide trained, equipped firefighters. \nThe president had little progress to report during his planned Georgia World Congress Center address. The chief suspect in the Sept. 11 hijackings, Osama bin Laden, remains free in Afghanistan despite the pounding by American bombs, and investigators remain baffled by the anthrax attacks. \nStill, Bush confidently predicted victory in the terrorism fight.

Get stories like this in your inbox
Subscribe