Response From The Office Of The President





Latin. always faithful: motto of the U.S. Marine Corps





Date: Sat, 25 Apr 1998 00:21:51 -0400 (EDT)
From: [email protected] Add to Address Book
Subject: Re: Inbound-White_House_WWW_MAIL => PRESIDENT
To: Rebecca Hamric

Thank you for writing to President Clinton via electronic mail. Since June 1993, the President has received over 2.3 million messages from people across the country and around the world. Online communication has become a tool to bring government and the people closer together.

Because so many of you write, the President cannot personally review each message, though he does receive samples of his incoming correspondence. The White House Correspondence staff helps him read and respond to the mail. All responses are mailed via the U.S. Postal Service. This is the only electronic message you will receive from whitehouse.gov. No other message purporting to be from the President or his staff with an address at whitehouse.gov is authentic. If you have received such a message, you have received a "spoof."

We appreciate your interest in the work of the Administration.

Sincerely,

Stephen K. Horn
Director, Presidential E-mail
The Office of Correspondence

P.S. Please read on - you may find the following information useful.

-- Regardless of the number of messages you may send, you will receive only one autoresponder message per day.

-- The only personal addresses at whitehouse.gov are the following:

[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]

Please write to Mrs. Gore and to White House staff by regular mail.

The address is:

The White House, Washington, D.C., 20501 (Mrs. Gore), 20502 (all WH Staff)

-- On October 20, 1994, President Clinton and Vice President Gore opened a World Wide Web home page called "Welcome to the White House: An Interactive Citizens' Handbook," and it remains one of the more popular spots on the Web. The White House home page provides, among other things, a single point of access to virtually all government information available on the Internet. Children especially enjoy the "White House for Kids" feature -- look for your tour guide, Socks, the First Cat. "Welcome to the White House" can be accessed at:

www.whitehouse.gov

-- White House documents and publications are available on the World Wide Web (see above) and by E-mail. To receive instructions on retrieving documents by E-mail, please send a message to the following address:

[email protected]

In the Subject line, type "hello" (without quotes); you may leave the body of the message blank. The instructions will be sent to you automatically.

-- The White House Public Access E-mail FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) document is available at the following address. Send an E-mail message (no text necessary) to:

[email protected]

Among other things, the FAQ lists alternate sources of government information, e.g., the Congressional E-mail projects. (This FAQ address is an autoresponder only; any comment sent to this address will not be acknowledged.)

This letter was received via electronic mail from the office of President Bill Clinton
on 24 April 1998
I am awaiting a response to my specific questions by US mail.












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