Senate Journal: Page 80: Friday, January 17, 2003
The Des Moines Gay Men’s Chorus performed "The Promise of
Living" by Aaron Copeland.
The oath of office was administered to Governor Thomas J. Vilsack
by Chief Justice Louis A. Lavorato, assisted by Mrs. Christie Vilsack.
President Kramer presented Governor Thomas J. Vilsack who
delivered the following inaugural address:
My fellow Iowans:
I came to Iowa in August 1970.
It was because of a girl.
I was 19, in college, and in love.
This girl invited me to come here and meet her family.
I got in my car and drove for 13 hours. I crossed the Mississippi at Burlington-it
was the first time I had ever been that far west-and before I left, I had fallen in love for
the second time.
The first time, of course, was with the girl.
The second time was with the state.
Your state. My state. Our state.
I was, naturally, predisposed to have nice thoughts about Iowa. After all, a state
that produced as smart, as pretty, as wonderful a girl as Christie Bell had to be a
pretty special place.
But I was instantly taken by Iowa’s beauty, by her people, and by her land. I
started noticing the rivers, the trees, the fields, the prairie flowers. I noticed the colors.
I thought to myself, the state is as pretty as the girl.
On my first evening in Iowa those 33 years ago, Christie and her family took me to
a potluck supper in a cabin on the banks of the Skunk River in Henry County. I saw
there two things-really my first two impressions of Iowans. I saw a sense of pride-pride
in the quality of the pies and the stews and the dishes that folks brought to the
potluck. And I saw a sense of community-a joy of being together, a wisdom shared
between old and young, a caring about those things we should care about, a concern
about those things we should be concerned about, and most of all, a simple gratitude of
being able to be among friends and one 19-year-old stranger.
But that’s the wrong word. I never felt like a stranger from the moment I crossed
that bridge at Burlington. For me, that bridge spanned more than Mississippi. It
brought me to a new life as well as a new land-one where small towns are more than a
place to live. I’ve learned that they represent a lifestyle and values worth preserving-
Iowa values-hard work, self-reliance, family, community.

© 2003 Cornell College and
League of Women Voters of Iowa
Comments about this site or page?
sjourn@legis.iowa.gov.
Please remember that the person listed above does not vote on bills. Direct all comments concerning legislation to State Legislators.
Last update: Tue Jan 21 15:50:00 CST 2003
URL: /DOCS/GA/80GA/Session.1/SJournal/00000/00080.html
jhf