[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 29 (Tuesday, March 1, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1028-S1029]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                        TRIBUTE TO DAVID KEARNS

  Mr. ALEXANDER. Madam President, in Rochester, NY, today and tomorrow, 
family and friends are celebrating the life of David Kearns, who died a 
few days ago at age 80.

[[Page S1029]]

  David Kearns was the former chief executive officer of the Xerox 
Corporation who, during the 1980s, led that corporation to win back the 
copying market from the Japanese. Along the way, he found time to 
become America's most effective business leader who was a champion of 
education reform, especially for pushing new technology into schools. 
He served as Deputy Education Secretary under the first President Bush 
while I was the Secretary of Education in 1991, 1992 and 1993.
  I remember first meeting David Kearns in 1990, when I was president 
of the University of Tennessee and had my office in Knoxville. He came 
into my office, and on the way he said hello to every single person in 
the outer office, and every single other person he met while I was 
there. And he remembered every single one of their names. I didn't 
forget that, and they didn't forget him. When David Kearns left the 
University of Tennessee from that visit I bought his book about 
education reform and read it.
  Later that year, President Bush called me and asked me to become his 
Education Secretary. I asked the President if I could put together my 
own team, subject to his approval, and then if we could put together 
our own plan, subject to his approval. Those were two of the smartest 
questions I ever asked, because that meant I didn't have to go through 
the White House staff to get the team cleared or the policy cleared. I 
could go directly to the President. And as soon as I had that 
permission, I called David Kearns and asked him if he would be willing 
to be the Deputy Secretary of Education in the U.S. Department of 
Education.
  I knew it would be hard to persuade him to do so. He was at the peak 
of his career. He had just retired as one of America's best known 
business leaders. His friends said: Why in the world would you go into 
the government and subject yourself to all that abuse and take a 
secondary position in a minor department? I asked President Bush to 
call David Kearns and recruit him, and he did, appealing to his 
patriotism. They both served in World War II.
  David had such a passion for education, he came on board, and it was 
terrific that he did. It was a privilege to work with such an 
accomplished executive. Employees in the Department of Education loved 
having him around. Having him there helped recruit a distinguished team 
of leaders for the Department and we put together what we thought, over 
2 years, was a pretty impressive program working with President Bush.
  Some of the ideas sound very familiar today, especially to former 
Governors. One idea was break-the-mold schools. Today we call them 
charter schools, or start-from-scratch schools. The thought was to have 
one in each congressional district--535 of them--funded by $1 million 
of seed money from the Federal Government.
  To support those schools, we created a new American Schools 
Development Corporation, and with David's leadership raised $70 million 
in private capital for that. That attracted hundreds of design teams 
from around the country with ideas for how to create better schools. 
President Bush hosted a number of America's business leaders at Camp 
David to help make that happen.
  We worked with Diane Ravitch to create an effort to implement 
standards for the national education goals that President Bush had 
helped to set in 1987 with the Nation's Governors. These were the goals 
for math, science, history, English, and geography, and we took 
important steps toward that. Today, the common standards States are 
adopting owe some of their beginnings to those efforts.
  We established commissions to look at extending the school day. We 
pushed for technology in the schools. The President proposed in 1992 a 
GI bill for kids, which would give scholarships to poor kids so they 
could choose any school, public or private or religious, so they could 
have more of the same choices of good schools that kids with money had.
  By the time we left in 1993, every State in America had their own 
version of America 2000--it was Tennessee 2000 or New Hampshire 2000 or 
Kansas 2000--moving toward the educational goals community by 
community. None of that would have happened without David Kearns' 
enthusiasm, skill, and leadership.

  In 1992, during a riot over Rodney King in Los Angeles, President 
Bush sent David to represent him. David had a strong background in 
civil rights. While he was there, he telephoned me and said: This is 
the hardest phone call I have ever had to make. I have cancer. He had 
just discovered he had cancer of the sinus. When he came back, he had 
an operation and the operation gradually destroyed his eyesight.
  That was 20 years ago, but it didn't stop David Kearns. During that 
time, he created the Kearns Center for Leadership at the University of 
Rochester, where he graduated and served as trustee for many years. 
Then to help him get around, because he couldn't see, or could barely 
see, he invited a young man each year to go with him and help him see 
and do what he needed to do. For those young men--nearly 20 over the 
last 20 years--that has been a remarkable opportunity to be in the 
presence of one of America's great mentors at an early stage in their 
lives.
  Everyone who knew David Kearns admired him and loved him. A few days 
ago, I spoke with Shirley Kearns, David's wife of 56 years, and 
reminded her of what she already knows: how much David's friendship 
meant to me. Honey and I will be thinking of them today and tomorrow in 
Rochester. We will be thinking about Shirley, their 4 daughters, 2 
sons, and 18 grandchildren.
  For me, one story sums up David Kearns' life better than others. I 
think back to 1995, when I was in Utah. I was trying to persuade 
Republicans that I was their natural nominee for President of the 
United States. I wasn't successful in that, but I was enthusiastic 
about it. I had made to a Republican group what I thought was an 
especially good speech. During the speech, I talked about my work in 
the U.S. Department of Education and I talked about David Kearns--about 
his leadership and about how he helped do all the things I have just 
mentioned. After the speech, an enthusiastic Republican lady came up to 
me and said: That was a wonderful speech. Thank you very much, I said. 
Now I know who should be President, she said. Well, thank you, I said. 
She smiled and said: David Kearns. That was the opinion that she and I 
and almost everyone who met him had of David Kearns, whose 80 years in 
this country have been very special.
  I thank the Presiding Officer, and I yield the floor.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from North Carolina.
  Mr. BURR. Madam President, are we in morning business?
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. We are.
  Mr. BURR. I thank the Presiding Officer.

                          ____________________