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President's Remarks to the People of Hungary
President George W. Bush speaks from Gellert Hill in Budapest, Hungary, Thursday, June 22, 2006. "From this spot you could see tens of thousands of students and workers and other Hungarians marching through the streets," said President Bush in his remarks about the 1956 Hungarian uprising. "They called for an end to dictatorship, to censorship, and to the secret police. They called for free elections, a free press, and the release of political prisoners. These Hungarian patriots tore down the statue of Josef Stalin, and defied an empire to proclaim their liberty." White House photo by Paul Morse

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