[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 85 (Thursday, June 7, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Page S3873]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING THE SPRING PAGE CLASS
Mr. REID. Mr. President, we have worked hard. Not as hard as I would
have liked or not as long hours as I would have liked and not as much
accomplished as I would have liked, but this is the last day for this
group of pages.
These spring pages have been exemplary. I really enjoy walking past
them. They are out there studying. They are sitting here as we speak
now. I wish I could have been a page. I really do. I think it would
have been a great life.
We have done a much better job of making sure they are safe and
happy. When I first came here, the pages lived wherever they could find
a place to live. Now we have wonderful, safe, secure dormitories for
those young men and women. We have a wonderful educational program for
them. It is hard; no one can say it is easy. They learn a lot.
Two of my granddaughters have been pages. It changed their lives.
They came here not having much interest in government. By the time they
left, they had started reading the newspapers--not like the Presiding
Officer and I, they did most of their reading online. But they were
interested in government, and they still are. I guess they are both
seniors now, one at New York University and one at the New School in
New York.
One of my prized possessions in my office is a picture of my first
two grandchildren, these two little girls, Ryan and Mattie. They are in
diapers, and they are hanging onto each other. Then I have a picture
right on the same little table of them in their page uniforms. That is
a wonderful picture for me. It shows the progress of people's lives. It
is really meaningful to me.
I can say this to these pages: This will be an opportunity they will
never forget. They will make friends here who will be friends for the
rest of their lives. The Presiding Officer and I know the friends you
make when you are young are just so important to you as you proceed
through life. I still love to pick up the phone and call some of the
young men and--in fact, I talked to a woman today with whom I went to
school. That is good. That is what life is all about. Make good friends
and maintain that friendship.
Now, they have seen some things in the Senate that I think will be in
the history books forever. We passed the surface transportation bill,
we passed the Violence Against Women Act, we passed the Ex-Im Bank
reauthorization, Iran sanctions bill, FDA Modernization Act, postal
reform--we passed that.
We are in the process of trying to resolve the student loan debate,
but we worked on that. That was something we were able to move on
through this body. We did not pass the paycheck fairness--we did not,
but we have been involved for a long time on the Paycheck Fairness Act.
They have been able to watch all of this, and they can go home and tell
their friends and family that they all relate to this stuff all of the
time because they know now how the foundation of the government works.
They have been here.
So I appreciate personally everything they have done. Senator
McConnell is going to speak to the pages tomorrow. I am not going to be
able to be here. But he will tell those assembled that he is speaking
on our behalf. I appreciate that very much.
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