WASHINGTON (AP) — President
Barack Obama is practically weepy at the thought of his daughter Malia
going off to college, a milestone many months away that is already on
his mind.
She has been seen touring the University of California at Berkeley and the Palo Alto, California, campus of Stanford, where another president's daughter, Chelsea Clinton, attended college.
In a commencement
address to high school graduates in Worcester, Massachusetts, Obama said
he's practicing for what's coming in two years. "So I'm trying to get
used to not choking up and crying and embarrassing her. So this is sort
of my trial run here."
Obama said during a question-and-answer
session with the chief executive of Tumblr, a social media site, that
his daughter, like young people in general, should shop around for a
college."We tell her, 'Don't assume that there are 10 schools that you have to go to, and if you didn't go to those 10, that somehow things are going to be terrible,'" he said. "There are a lot of schools out there."
Malia
goes into the 11th grade this fall at the private Sidwell Friends
School in Washington. The Sidwell parent's guide to college counseling
suggests that juniors take the PSAT test in October, visit colleges as
time allows, take the SAT exam in March and set up a family meeting with
a college counselor in late spring, among other steps.
Michelle
Obama is also thinking about her daughter's departure. In a
commencement-eve address to Topeka, Kansas, high school seniors, the
first lady said: "Days like this make me think of my own daughters, so
forgive me if I get a little teary."
Chelsea
Clinton and her mother, Hillary Rodham Clinton, toured some colleges
together, at times attracting a horde and at other times going
unnoticed. Then-President Bill Clinton never joined them, mainly because
of the disruption that would have been caused by the large entourage
that follows a president in public.
The
prevalence of social media and cellphone cameras practically guarantees
that Malia's college search will be even more documented than Chelsea
Clinton's 17 years ago. In September 1997, more than 200 journalists
showed up to cover her first day at Stanford.
Bill
Clinton and his wife, who was Obama's first secretary of state, were
shocked when their only child chose to attend college some 3,000 miles
away. Her parents were educated at East Coast universities — Georgetown
for him and Wellesley for her — before they met at Yale Law School. And
they thought Chelsea would follow their path.
In her syndicated newspaper column, Hillary Clinton wrote about her dread at having to say goodbye to Chelsea.
Malia's
journey into the next phase of her life will be a similarly emotional
time for Obama, who grew up without his dad. He talks about his desire
to be a "present" father for Malia and Sasha, 13, and how living in the
White House enabled the family to spend more time together than ever
before. The Obamas lived in Chicago when the girls were born, but he was
often away in Springfield, Illinois, when he was a state senator, or in
Washington representing Illinois as a U.S. senator.
Children
already seem to grow up too fast, but it "happens more suddenly for a
president and a president can feel cheated," said Doug Wead, who
interviewed 19 children of presidents for his book, "All the Presidents'
Children." ''The president is feeling some angst over this, and rightly
so."
Already this summer,
Malia has worked in Los Angeles as a production assistant on the set of
"Extant," a new CBS sci-fi thriller starring Halle Berry and produced by
Democratic Party donor Steven Spielberg. She's also learning how to
drive.
Perhaps compounding emotions for the Obamas is that they,
too, will follow Malia out of the White House shortly after she starts
college.
His presidency ends in January 2017, a few months after she departs
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