[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 186 (Tuesday, December 6, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H8139-H8140]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CUBS GREAT RON SANTO ELECTED TO HALL OF FAME
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Madam Speaker, in case you were wondering, that noise
you heard from above yesterday morning was an old third baseman
clicking his heels. Finally, on Monday morning, Ron Santo was inducted
into the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
Now, most people knew Ronnie as the nine-time All-Star and the five-
time Golden Glove winner, one of the top hitters of his era, and the
third baseman on the Top 10 list in every statistical category. And
many people knew Ronnie as the lovable voice of the Chicago Cubs, with
whom we cheered every home run, moaned every dropped fly ball, and
laughed at life's most
[[Page H8140]]
human moments in the booth, including a burning hairpiece.
But for many years on the field, people didn't know that while
racking up 342 home runs and hitting more than 1,300 RBIs, Ronnie was
struggling with diabetes. That's because Ronnie accomplished all of
this from the roster, not the disabled list, despite his physical
struggles.
Ronnie wanted to be a great player, not a great player ``under the
circumstances.'' He fought hard on the field for his team, and
courageously in private for his health. He raised $60 million and a lot
of hope for juvenile diabetes research and inspired many to persevere
against the odds.
Ronnie died too soon, exactly 1 year ago this week. I wish he had
lived to see this, but I know that he and Harry are sharing an Old
Style together and toasting to their favorite team. Here's to number
10, Ron Santo. Go Cubs.
____________________