[Congressional Record Volume 165, Number 43 (Monday, March 11, 2019)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1754-S1755]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                        Tribute to Dick Williams

  Mr. ISAKSON. Mr. President, I will be very brief for the Senator from 
Delaware so I am not taking up too much time.
  I am here to do something very special. One of the great things we 
get to do is to pay tribute to people who do great things in our State. 
We don't brag about journalists as much as we should. They think we are 
saying bad things about them, but they are great. They make the country 
better. The fact that we have an accountable media makes us all great. 
There are superstars within the media who deserve acknowledgment, 
particularly when they retire from the job. In Georgia, that has been 
the case.
  Dick Williams, in Atlanta, GA, announced on Sunday that after 53 
years in print, television, and radio journalism, he is going to 
retire. Dick has covered me over many years. He has been known as a 
conservative columnist, but he has gone after me as many times as he 
has been for me. He plays it straight down the middle unless it has to 
do with basketball--and he loves basketball. He has been chosen to 
referee in the conference championship for the State's high schools and 
has been a great sportsman for Georgetown University, for which he 
recruits athletes. He himself went to Georgetown.
  Rebecca, his wife, was in the Georgia House as a reporter when I was 
in the Georgia House years ago. She is a talented house person who went 
on to ABC. She and Dick got married, and they have two children. They 
live in Brookhaven, GA, which is a new city that was created by the 
Georgia Legislature to allow independence for a lot of our cities that 
had been trapped inside the metro area.
  His wife has been a reporter of journalism, and Dick has been a 
reporter of journalism. Then Dick bought the Dunwoody Crier. The 
Dunwoody Crier is one of those weekly publications--neighborhood 
newspapers--that everybody loves because it has their kids' pictures in 
it, because you can get a story about your wedding in there, and 
because Dick also writes in there some poignant columns that one would 
never read anywhere else.
  When he wrote for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, he wrote for a 
newspaper that was owned by Eugene Patterson, by Ralph McGill, and by 
many talented writers. He was in the same category of spokesman and 
writer as those two gentlemen, who were giants, with McGill's having 
won a Pulitzer Prize.
  Dick is one of the most favorite people I have ever known who 
reported on politics because he was always doing it for the right 
reasons. There are projects that have happened in our State today 
because Dick Williams took the power of the press not to trash 
something but to build up the facts that allowed it to pass. A lot of 
times, that doesn't happen, but when Dick saw a good deal, he would go 
for it, and when he saw a bad deal, he would go for it. Either way, you 
could take his word for it all the time because he was what is known in 
the profession as a straight shooter.
  Dick Williams is a very special individual to me and my family. He 
did 1,700 shows called ``The Georgia Gang.'' Every Sunday, at 8:30 in 
the morning, for 30 minutes, every politician in Georgia watches 
channel 5 in Atlanta because that is ``The Georgia Gang.'' If you make 
it by that, your week is going to be pretty good because they haven't 
skewered you for something stupid that you did, but if you don't make 
it by that, you are going to have a tough week.
  Dick Williams is the kind of journalist all of us love--accurate, 
articulate, smart, and caring about what he

[[Page S1755]]

does and the effect it may have. It is a real pleasure for me to stand 
on the floor of the U.S. Senate and say, Dick, thank you for the 1,700 
great 30-minute shows you have done in your past. Thank you for all of 
the straight calls you made on the basketball court. Thank you for 
marrying Rebecca, who is a wonderful woman. Thank you for welcoming 
Lori Geary as your replacement every Sunday morning at 8:30. I now 
know, when I get up on Sundays, I will be going to church not with Dick 
Williams but with Lori Geary.
  God bless you, Dick. Thanks for your contribution to Georgia.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Jersey.