UConn Firsts: First Visit from a US President
Gerald Ford had been out of the White House for nearly 10 years when he spoke to a packed Jorgensen Center for the Performing Arts on Sept. 23, 1986, but that occasion was nonetheless the first visit to UConn by someone who had served as President of the United States. Ford, a Michigan congressman who became vice president after the resignation of Spiro Agnew in 1973, would become the country’s 38th president the following year, after Richard Nixon’s resignation. At UConn, Ford addressed issues of the day – the Soviet Union, the apartheid regime in South Africa, the federal budget – and joked about his “Saturday Night Live” portrayal as a clumsy oaf. “I knew I was a fairly decent athlete, and most of those critics were much less capable,” said Ford, a star linebacker on two national champion University of Michigan football teams in the 1930s. “I enjoy a good laugh.” Subsequent presidential visits included Bill Clinton in 1991, for the dedication of the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center; George H.W. Bush in 1997, as commencement speaker; and Joe Biden in 2021, for the rededication of what is now the Dodd Center for Human Rights.
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