[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 64 (Wednesday, May 11, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H3165-H3166]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RESILIENCE OF THE CITY OF MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Tennessee (Mr. Cohen) for 5 minutes.
Mr. COHEN. Madam Speaker, I represent the Tennessee Ninth
Congressional District, which is Memphis. Memphis has been in the news
quite a bit these past few weeks, and partly it's been for a bad
reason: a flood, the greatest flood since 1937 on the Mississippi
River. There has been a massive flow of water across lands and into our
downtown and other areas, and it's affected a lot of people. I have
toured the damage. There are at least 1,500 people whose homes have
been lost. They are in shelters. They have lost possessions.
{time} 1020
But the city of Memphis is coming together with a lot of volunteerism
to help those people, and the Federal Government, through FEMA and the
Corps of Engineers, is doing all it can to protect property and protect
people and offer them shelter and food. And because it's a disaster
area, we'll be helping them get back on their feet once again. It's a
tragedy for those people and a tragedy for a lot of other people up and
down the river.
But the fact is the city of Memphis is open and open for business,
and most of the city of Memphis is not affected by the flood. Contrary
to what you might see on the news, the entire city is not underwater.
The business sections, most of the city, are totally dry, and people
are going to work, flying Federal Express planes all over the world to
deliver packages. International Paper and all the businesses that are
there are fully operational.
Our Memphis Grizzlies are still alive and playing tonight in the NBA
Western finals, and the people of Memphis are filling the FedEx Forum
when they play and cheering them on and bringing the city together in
the spirit that Memphians have come together for years.
The city of Memphis has had problems over the years. A yellow fever
epidemic in the 1870s almost destroyed the city, but it didn't. The
city came back and came back even stronger.
The assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King on the 4th of April,
1968, was an awful moment in our city history and one we had to
overcome. But the city did. And on that site, the Lorraine Motel, has
been built a great civil rights museum, the National Civil Rights
Museum, like a phoenix from the ashes telling the story of the civil
rights movement and the movement out of slavery and out of Jim Crow
into an era where an African American could and has been elected
President of these United States.
The city of Memphis and the people have an indomitable spirit. They
have come back from problems in the past and will continue to do so.
Yesterday, the city of Memphis received great news when President
Obama announced that of all the schools that applied in this Nation in
the Race to the Top program to be recognized and to be honored by his
presence as the commencement speaker for graduation, that Booker T.
Washington High School, a high school created in the 1800s, a Jim Crow
school, an African American school in the 1800s, which has done
spectacularly well in academics, increased their graduation rate from
the fifties into the 81st percentile, best in the State on algebra
scores and other scores, and great improvement and shown innovation,
was chosen as the school in the country to have the President come to
their graduation. He will speak at the Booker T. Washington High School
graduation next Monday in Memphis. It will be his
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first visit to Memphis, and the city of Memphis has looked forward to
his visit. I look forward to his visit, and have encouraged the
President to come to Memphis, and I hope he'll come more times after
that.
But for those students and other students who need to have
inspiration and hope, particularly at this time when there is flood and
many people have been dispossessed, it's so important that the
President be there and give those students hope and encourage them to
continue to make good grades and to lift themselves up.
Many of the students at Booker T. Washington lived in housing
projects, Cleaborn Homes, which was recently demolished to make way for
a HOPE VI project, the fifth of six in the city of Memphis, which has
gotten rid of projects but given people private residences or
apartments and a better way of life. Those students saw their homes
destroyed, but they've worked hard in their school and stayed at Booker
T. Washington High School and will be honored by the President's visit.
They, like everybody else in Memphis, cheer for the Memphis
Grizzlies, and the Grizzlies cheer towel is one that I bring you today.
``Believe Memphis.'' Believe Memphis has carried the Grizzlies, an
eighth-seeded team, to the championship game. The city believes. The
city is strong. We urge you to come to Memphis, have some ribs, have
some music and enjoy our hospitality.
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