[Congressional Record Volume 148, Number 83 (Thursday, June 20, 2002)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5846-S5847]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BETHEL REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOL DRILL TEAMS
Mr. MURKOWSKI. Mr. President, I rise today to honor a group of
Alaska High School students from Bethel, Alaska who recently won the
National Championship in Drill Team/Color Guard competition held in
Daytona, Florida, May 3rd.
It is not unusual for a U.S. Senator to rise on the Senate floor and
honor a national championship team from their
[[Page S5847]]
home state. What is unusual in this case is that a Drill Team, Color
Guard, JROTC unit from such a remote community won the national
championship.
You see, Bethel is a moderate-sized town by Alaska standards, but
small by anyone else's definition. Located along the Kuskokwim River in
Southwest Alaska--roughly 400 miles west of Alaska's largest town,
Anchorage--the community has a current population of 5,471. The Bethel
Regional High School contains 250 students, smaller than some classes
in many high schools. The school draws mainly Yupik Eskimo students
from dozens of smaller villages such as Akiachak, Akiak, Tuluksak,
Napakiak, Kasigluk and Tantutuliak to name just a few. The majority of
the team, 11 of 13 members, are Alaska Natives.
It is truly heart warming to see students from a small Alaska town do
so well in the national competition. At Daytona, the Bethel team
competed against more than 70 schools from across the nation, as well
as against Department of Defense schools from Japan to Puerto Rico.
Practicing drill formations in Alaska's ``Bush'' is a bit more
difficult than in Southern California or Florida. Teams need to
practice indoors, a lot, since the average January temperature is 6
degrees Fahrenheit. It also is a tad dark in winter, Bethel getting
only about five and one-half hours of daylight a day in winter.
But more challenging practice conditions didn't stop the students
from Bethel Regional from competing and winning in the national
competition. Let me mention the members of the Unarmed Regulation
Inspection Drill Team that finished first in their competition: Curtis
Neck, Michael Carroll, Wallen Olrun, James Miles, Christina Smith, Paul
Anvil, Justin Lefner, Mark Charlie, Kimberly Cooper, Jocelyn Tikiun,
Jason Noatak, Michael Glore and Lisa Typpo. The team was led by
Commander Dexter Kairaiuak.
I'd like to also name the members of the Color Guard that finished in
fourth place in its individual competition: Nation Colors, Commander
Curtis Neck, State Colors Dexter Kairaiuak, Nation Guard Michael
Carroll and State Guard Wallen Olrun.
The Unarmed Regulation Drill Team, containing the same members as the
championship inspection team, also competed and took 12th place in its
competition. The 10-member Unarmed Exhibition Drill Team took third
place in the national competition. It included: Commander Curtis Neck,
Michael Carroll, Wallen Olrun, Dexter Kairaiuak, Christina Smith, Lisa
Typpo, Justin Lefner, Mark Charlies, Kimberly Cooper and Jocelyn
Tikiun.
I also want to publicly thank Army Instructor MSG (Retired) Barbara
W. Wright, who was the Army Instructor and Coach of the team this year.
She did a wonderful job training her students and helping them to their
championship and deserves the thanks not just of the students and their
parents, but of all Alaskans for her dedication and commitment. I also
want to thank the chaperones who accompanied the students to the
competition: Major (RET) Carl D. Bailey, assistance coach; Mr. Scott
Hoffman and Mrs. Donna K. Dennis.
To be national champions at any endeavor requires long hours of
practice and sacrifice. It requires dedication and true commitment. I
know all members of the U.S. Senate will join me in honoring these
students and their faculty advisors for a job very well done. All
Alaskans--all Americans--honor you today for your hard work and your
accomplishments.
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