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"I'm lucky they kept pushing," he said. "I'm lucky my teachers kept pushing. Because education made all the difference in my life. And it's going to make an even greater difference in your lives." The message appeared to take hold. "I like the fact that he told us that he's the same as us, that he came from where we came from, and that we can still succeed," said 18-year-old Christopher Redmond, who says he plans to study pharmacy. Obama seemed to enjoy the moment as much as the students. He surprised them with a personal visit as they waited in a curtained off space for the commencement exercises to begin. They greeted him with shrieks while some seemed overcome and wiped away tears. "You've now become role models for all the young people coming in behind you," said the president. Just beyond the Cook Convention Center where Obama spoke, the Mississippi River stretched three miles across to Arkansas. Its typical breadth is half a mile. Before addressing the graduates, Obama met privately with families
affected by the flooding. White House press secretary Jay Carney said Obama met for about 35 minutes with flood victims, local officials and first responders. Nanny Williams, an unemployed mother living with her daughter and granddaughter, described being flooded out of her house, forcing her family into a community shelter, Carney said. Another woman, Rose Hunt, told the president that prayer spared her house, which became a refuge for her son, who had to abandon his home. The river crested at Memphis last week, just inches short of the record set in 1937. Some low-lying neighborhoods were inundated, but the city's high levees protected the rest.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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