[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 96 (Thursday, June 19, 2014)]
[House]
[Page H5501]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING MARVIN TEIXEIRA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Nevada (Mr. Amodei) for 5 minutes.
Mr. AMODEI. Mr. Speaker, tomorrow in Carson City, Nevada, there will
be a memorial service for former Mayor Marv Teixeira. Marv called
Carson City home for about 50 years, coming from the bay area as the
IBM typewriter--I know that is a phrase that is foreign to many of
you--as the IBM typewriter salesman in the State capital of Nevada.
During those decades, Marv set a blistering pace as a member of the
community: husband, coach, businessman, public servant, lobbyist, and
kind of a self-appointed Carson City gadfly.
Before he became what we friendly referred to him as the ``mayor for
life,'' he was the unofficial youth sports czar for Carson City. He
coached recreation league basketball, coached Little League baseball,
founded the Pop Warner football league in Carson City. In this later
role as the founder of the Pop Warner football league, he had the
distinction of molding a then young Dean Heller, now a United States
Senator from Nevada, into the football athlete that Senator Heller
didn't become.
Once he was elected mayor of Carson City, his Portuguese charm was on
full display. If he called you ``pal'' during a board of supervisors
meeting, you weren't a pal. He called for motions to adjourn when the
agenda was completed by announcing, ``We are out of Schlitz.''
He fancied himself a top-tier lobbyist for Carson City, both at the
State level and here in the Nation's Capital, because if lawmakers
didn't do what he thought should be done, he simply questioned your
intelligence and, in a fatherly way, advised you to do what he wanted
you to do, and please be quick about it.
Finally, Marv understood that he was both good-looking and a sharp
dresser. In this role, he taught me an invaluable lesson as a public
servant: when you are at functions, the proper thing to wear was not a
tie, that you should wear a turtleneck; because, invariably, if food
was being served at these functions and you happened to drip something
down the front, you could, as Marv demonstrated to me on one occasion
at a function, simply go to the men's room, turn the turtleneck around,
put your sport coat back on, and come back as if nothing ever happened.
Carson will miss our mayor for life. When you go by the bypass, the
hay barn as we like to call it, or Governors Field, think of our mayor
for life, Marv Teixeira.
Rest in peace, Your Honor; and thank you, Coach.
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