February 12, 1985
By the President of the United States
of America
A Proclamation
The value of the free enterprise system in America is confirmed when the products of our
research, our industry, and our agriculture improve the quality of people's lives not only in
America, but throughout the world. And the genius of American business has been to make the
wealth of its factories and farms accessible to all.
For thirty-eight years, the Distributive Education Clubs of America have introduced high school
and college students to the challenges, skills, and responsibilities of delivering the products of our
free enterprise system to those who use them. Now numbering some 150,000 members in all 50
States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico, the Distributive Education Clubs of America
are helping to prepare a cadre of professionals with the spirit of enterprise, the civic responsibility,
and the complex skills needed to assure that America's strength in marketing keeps pace with the
vast expansion of technology and the increasingly sophisticated needs of people in all parts of the
world.
To give special recognition to the valuable contribution the Distributive Education Clubs of
America are making to maintaining our Nation's economic strength and to introducing young
Americans to the opportunities and rewards of free enterprise, the Congress, by Senate Joint
Resolution 36, has designated the week of February 10, 1985, through February 16, 1985, as
``National DECA Week'' and authorized and requested the President to issue a proclamation in
observance of that week.
Now, Therefore, I, Ronald Reagan, President of the United States of America, do hereby
proclaim the week beginning February 10 through February 16, 1985, as National DECA Week,
and I call upon all government agencies, interested organizations, community groups, and the
people of the United States to observe this week with appropriate programs, ceremonies, and
activities.
In Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this twelfth day of February, in the year of our
Lord nineteen hundred and eighty-five, and of the Independence of the United States of America
the two hundred and ninth.
Ronald Reagan
[Filed with the Office of the Federal Register, 11:11 a.m., February 13, 1985]