[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 149 (Wednesday, October 23, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H6760]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IN TRIBUTE TO FORMER CONGRESSMAN MAJOR OWENS
(Ms. KAPTUR asked and was given permission to address the House for 1
minute and to revise and extend her remarks.)
Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, I rise in tribute to our former colleague,
Congressman Major Owens of Brooklyn, New York.
Major and I were elected in the class of 1998 and had the joy of
serving together for several decades. He was a fighter for learning and
perhaps the first librarian ever elected to the Congress of the United
States. He came from Brooklyn, far from where I lived, but his
predecessor, Shirley Chisholm, was the only Member of Congress that in
our first campaign came to campaign for me. I shall never forget that.
Major was a social critic, and he was a voice from a Brooklyn that I
only imagined as a child with the Brooklyn Dodgers. With the old Ebbets
Field torn down, the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles, and baseball changed
forever from a human institution where the players came from that
region to an enterprise where they were traded like chattel.
Major understood the difference, and the work that he did here,
whether it was fighting for learning, fighting for libraries, fighting
for jobs in America, for the training of workers, he handled in a very
measured way. He had a poetic sense about him when he came to the floor
many times in the evening and delivered some of his handwritten lines.
Through his work both in Brooklyn and for our country, he helped to
build a better America, and he left us a better place for his service.
I wish to extend to his family and to his former constituents the
deep sympathy of the people of Ohio. He was an honest man and an
honorable man, and it was a great privilege to serve with him those
many years which seem just like yesterday.
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