[Congressional Record Volume 154, Number 126 (Monday, July 28, 2008)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7570-S7571]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO GRAHAM NEWELL
Mr. SANDERS. Mr. President, the State of Vermont has lost one
of its greatest teachers, Graham Newell. I wish to honor this
remarkable man, an important figure in our State's history in
government as well as throughout its system of education.
A seventh generation Vermonter who grew up in the Northeast Kingdom
of Vermont, Newell returned to Vermont to teach after earning his
degree in classics from the University of Chicago. For eight decades he
was the quintessential educator, beginning and ending at his beloved
St. Johnsbury Academy and teaching history and social sciences to
college students for many years as well, serving as a professor and
chair of the Social Sciences Department at Lyndon State College.
Graham Newell was a man who so highly regarded the field of education
that he entered politics to be its champion in the State legislature.
First elected to the Vermont House in 1953, and later elected to the
Vermont Senate, he served as the chairman of both the House and Senate
Education Committees. Throughout his tenure in the legislature in
Montpelier, Graham Newell worked tirelessly to ensure educational
opportunities for students with disabilities. Indeed, Vermont's special
education bill preceded comparable legislation on the Federal level
[[Page S7571]]
by 20 years. He was also instrumental in the formation of the Vermont
State College system and he authored a fair dismissal bill for
educators.
Although Graham Newell was a Vermont delegate to the Republican
National Convention in 1956 and 1964, he was one of the great
practitioners of a long Vermont tradition of nonpartisan politics. He
became involved in government reform, serving on the Little Hoover
Commission that reorganized Vermont's State agencies, and he was
appointed by President Kennedy to the National Advisory Commission on
Inter-Governmental Relations. A founding member of the American Civil
Liberties Union of Vermont, he championed a strict separation of church
and State by opposing public busing for parochial schools.
As the resident Vermont historian at Lyndon State, he was responsible
for naming all of its buildings after notable Vermonters. And, in a
wonderful instance of turnabout is fair play, St. Johnsbury Academy
recently honored him by renaming its foreign languages building Newell
Hall.
Above all he valued equality and equal opportunity, principles that
no doubt derived from his Vermont upbringing, his long study and
admiration for Roman history and from his work in education.
Graham Newell taught Latin at St. Johnsbury Academy well into his
nineties, long after he retired from his professorship at Lyndon State
College. The indelible mark he made on the communities of St. Johnsbury
and Lyndonville will not soon be forgotten. These communities need only
look to the countless students whose lives he touched to see the effect
he had on them.
Mr. Newell earned countless awards as an outstanding educator,
historian and model citizen, including being named the Vermont Chamber
of Commerce's Man of the Year in 2005.
It is exemplary citizens such as Graham Newell who have earned
Vermont its reputation for civic leadership and principled politics,
for sound reasoning in government, and for rising above partisan
labels. Today, we honor his memory by recognizing his great
commitments: to responsible citizenship, to superior education for all,
to teaching, and to public service, and to shaping a future that will
be worthy of our past.
____________________