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This is an archive article published on April 16, 2004

Yes ma146;am: Hillary gives Kerry campaigning tips

The New York senator sat on a chair, and the Massachusetts senator sat on the floor at her feet. Hillary Rodham Clinton and John F. Kerry we...

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The New York senator sat on a chair, and the Massachusetts senator sat on the floor at her feet. Hillary Rodham Clinton and John F. Kerry were visiting the Bloomingdale Family Programme on New York8217;s Upper West Side on Wednesday to read a story to a gaggle of young children in the Head Start programme.

And in the process, Kerry picked up some campaigning tips from the former first lady. As Kerry read the 4- and 5-year-olds a South African folk story, Clinton interrupted him with pointers. 8216;8216;John, make sure he can see that!8217;8217; she said. Kerry complied, turning the book around to show the children the illustration. 8216;8216;John, turn around, one more time,8217;8217; Clinton added minutes later. 8216;8216;Can you see?8217;8217; she asked the kids.

Wednesday was the first day Clinton joined the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee on the campaign trail, and at times her star power appeared to rival his. At a town hall meeting at The City University of New York in Harlem, Kerry was asked who he planned to pick as his running mate. The room quickly erupted in chants of 8216;8216;Hillary!8217;8217; On stage, Clinton smiled demurely as Kerry laughed and offered his usual answer that he was keeping the process private. Kerry also headlined a trio of fundraisers in New York on Wednesday. He raised 6.5 million for his campaign, along with another 1.5 million for the Democratic National Committee.

As Kerry and Clinton campaigned together, they acknowledged that they haven8217;t been the closest of friends over the years. During the Democratic primaries, speculation flourished that Clinton and her husband, the former president, had privately urged retired Gen Wesley K. Clark to get in the race, although both remained publicly neutral. But on Wednesday, Hillary Clinton had gracious words for the man who emerged as the Democratic victor.

She told about 400 people assembled in an ornate campus hall that she got to know Kerry better on a trip to Vietnam in 2000, when he was working to normalise relations between that country and the US. She recounted seeing Kerry, who fought in Vietnam, console two young men as a team excavated what they believed was the site where their father, a US fighter pilot, crashed during the war.

Clinton said: 8216;8216;John Kerry has never let his friends down, his crew down, his constituents down, or his country down.8217;8217;

Kerry gave her a long embrace and thanked her for 8216;8216;that extraordinary introduction.8217;8217; Then he tried, somewhat awkwardly, to discuss their relationship. 8216;8216;We knew each other, but we sort of didn8217;t know each other,8217;8217; he said. Kerry then praised Clinton as 8216;8216;one of the best US senators in the entire country.8217;8217; 8212;LAT-WP

 

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