[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 145 (1999), Part 3]
[House]
[Pages 3612-3621]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




 HONORING MORRIS KING UDALL, FORMER UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE FROM 
                                ARIZONA

  Mr. KOLBE. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that the Committee on 
House Administration be discharged from further consideration of the 
concurrent resolution (H. Con. Res. 40) honoring Morris King Udall, 
former United States Representative from Arizona, and extending the 
condolences of the Congress on his death, and ask for its immediate 
consideration in the House.
  The Clerk read the title of the concurrent resolution.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the 
gentleman from Arizona?
  There was no objection.
  The Clerk read the concurrent resolution, as follows:

                            H. Con. Res. 40

       Whereas Morris King Udall served his Nation and his State 
     of Arizona with honor and distinction in his 30 years as a 
     Member of the United States House of Representatives;
       Whereas Morris King Udall became an internationally 
     recognized leader in the field of conservation, personally 
     sponsoring legislation that more than doubled the National 
     Park and National Wildlife Refuge systems, and added 
     thousands of acres to America's National Wilderness 
     Preservation System;
       Whereas Morris King Udall was also instrumental in 
     reorganizing the United States Postal Service, in helping 
     enact legislation to restore lands left in the wake of 
     surface mining, enhancing and protecting the civil service, 
     and fighting long and consistently to safeguard the rights 
     and legacies of Native Americans;
       Whereas in his lifetime, Morris King Udall became known as 
     a model Member of Congress and was among the most effective 
     and admired legislators of his generation;
       Whereas this very decent and good man from Arizona also 
     left us with one of the most precious gifts of all--a special 
     brand of wonderful and endearing humor that was distinctly 
     his;
       Whereas Morris King Udall set a standard for all facing 
     adversity as he struggled against the onslaught of 
     Parkinson's disease with the same optimism and humor that 
     were the hallmarks of his life; and
       Whereas Morris King Udall in so many ways will continue to 
     stand as a symbol of all that is best about public service, 
     for all that is civil in political discourse, for all that is 
     kind and gentle, and will remain an inspiration to others: 
     Now, therefore, be it
       Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate 
     concurring), That the Congress--
       (1) has learned with profound sorrow of the death of the 
     Honorable Morris King Udall on December 12, 1998, and extends 
     condolences to the Udall family, and especially to his wife 
     Norma;
       (2) expresses its profound gratitude to the Honorable 
     Morris King Udall and his family for the service that he 
     rendered to his country; and
       (3) recognizes with appreciation and respect the Honorable 
     Morris K. Udall's commitment to and example of bipartisanship 
     and collegial interaction in the legislative process.

     SECTION. 2. TRANSMISSION OF ENROLLED RESOLUTION.

       The Clerk of the House of Representatives shall transmit an 
     enrolled copy of this Concurrent Resolution to the family of 
     the Honorable Morris King Udall.

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. LaHood). The gentleman from Arizona (Mr. 
Kolbe) is recognized for 1 hour.
  Mr. KOLBE. Mr. Speaker, I yield 30 minutes of my time to the 
gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Pastor), pending which I yield myself such 
time as I may consume.
  Mr. Speaker, I am honored to be here today to introduce and to call 
up this resolution honoring a great American

[[Page 3613]]

and certainly a great Arizonan. There really could be no better homage 
to Mo Udall than if I could stand up here for a few minutes and take 
the time to simply lampoon myself.
  But the risk of that kind of self-exploration would probably be too 
much. I might actually learn the truth about myself, for example, and 
turn to something more noble like perhaps running numbers or selling 
ocean-front parcels in Tucson. That was the kind of thing that Mo would 
say.
  Mr. Speaker, Mo was a mentor and a close friend of many of us. 
Certainly, he was a friend of mine and a political idol as well. I have 
tried hard to follow in Mo's footsteps in southern Arizona's 
congressional district. Much of what he represented, I now represent. I 
certainly have learned extensive lessons in what it means to be second-
best, because no one could ever best Mo Udall. So now I know what it is 
like to be taken off the bench to replace Mark McGwire, to sing backup 
to Pavarotti, to be Mike Tyson's sparring partner.
  It is one of the humble honors of my career that I have the 
opportunity to offer this resolution that will help affix Morris King 
Udall's name to our memories and to those of generations to come.
  Mr. Speaker, if I could have a vote in my district for every time 
that he made one of us smile or laugh, I would be winning all of my 
elections unanimously. Mo was loved by the public. He was loved by the 
press, by his colleagues, and by his family, many of whom are here 
today.
  There was a reason for that. It was because Mo Udall was true to Mo. 
He could stand for hours and he could tell one-liners. And by making 
himself the brunt of his own humor, he could reach those MBA arms of 
his right into our consciences and wrest away any pretensions that we 
might have, or self-righteousness.
  Mo made us see our foibles, not by moralizing or yelling at us. He 
did not say ``Change those wretched ways.'' Rather, he made us laugh at 
ourselves, even against our will, and he forced, and I do mean forced, 
us to see the smallness of ourselves. He forced us to see our 
blindness, our pettiness, the vanity we sometimes have, our egomania.
  Coming from a conservative State like Arizona, Mo Udall defied easy 
or politically opportune choices. He voted his conscience. He voted it 
whether the topic was racial equality back in the 1960s, the dire need 
for government to assume better stewardship of its public lands, or the 
sacrifice of American lives in Vietnam. He spoke out on those issues.
  But no one in our country, Johnny Carson, Bob Hope, Jack Benny 
included, could keep a straight face like Mo could. With that humor, he 
carried a very serious and a profound message and that humor helped to 
enlighten the ignorant, satirize the comforted, and make us take 
inventory at every moment of the beauty and fragility of our lives.
  Even as his health waned, Mo was passing on a message of hope to us: 
Help those of us whose bodies are imprisoned by Parkinson's and other 
such illnesses to recover. Even when he was unable to speak to us, Mo 
and his loyal and extraordinary family brought about policy changes in 
the health field that few might have imagined possible.
  For those in this body who have had the opportunity to be touched by 
Mo, today is an appropriate occasion to remember a man who brought 
civility through humor into the political process.
  For those who were not fortunate enough to have known this man, they 
have missed an icon. But they should seek solace in knowing two things. 
The political process in the United States of America has been deeply 
enriched by the contributions, and because of the contributions of Mo 
Udall, there is a secure place in public service for those willing to 
take a step back and look at their own shortcomings.
  Mr. Speaker, today, along with many members of the delegation and 
members of the family who now serve in this body, we will be 
introducing a bill which would rename the Coronado National Forest, 
which lies in southern Arizona and which encompasses eight wilderness 
areas. I can think of no more fitting tribute to this great towering 
man who was so instrumental in establishing those wilderness areas, and 
so many other wilderness areas, than to call that beautiful National 
Forest the Udall National Forest. I welcome the support of my 
colleagues in this effort.
  Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. PASTOR. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
  Mr. Speaker, first of all, I want to thank the distinguished 
gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Kolbe) for introducing this resolution and 
allowing us time to pay tribute to a great American.
  Mr. Speaker, it is a great honor for me to be here today and to 
manage this resolution that pays tribute to Morris K. Udall, who many 
of us here knew and remember fondly as ``Mo.''
  Mo's retirement from the House of Representatives in 1991, following 
30 years of distinguished service in this body, was a great loss for 
the State of Arizona, for the environmental and Native American issues 
he championed, and for the cause of civility and humor in public life. 
His death last December after a long struggle with Parkinson's disease 
was a great personal loss for the Udall family, to whom I offer my 
deep-felt condolences.
  Mo earned an uncommon respect and loyalty among his colleagues here 
in the House and those who knew him across this great Nation. He was 
able to distinguish between political opponents and enemies and 
maintain friendships across the ideological spectrum. He built bridges 
of goodwill that allowed him not only to pass prolific wilderness and 
historic preservation agendas but to resist the partisan animosity that 
erodes public faith in Congress.
  He was a source of pride to the Arizonans he represented and a source 
of pride to many Americans. Mo had the courage to lose and yet was 
never defeated. He challenged the status quo, even within this 
institution, encouraging a debate that brought vitality and progress to 
our public discourse. He was willing to keep standing up after being 
knocked down, and to be and to champion the underdog, and yet to 
maintain a courageous optimism.
  Mr. Speaker, he faced personal adversity in his struggle with 
Parkinson's disease with the uncommon grace we had come to expect of 
Mo.
  Mo's legacy will live in the retelling of his famous anecdotes, in 
the CAP water that my granddaughter drinks in Arizona, in the 
wilderness lands preserved for generations of Americans yet to come. 
Perhaps it will live in the work of his son and his nephew drawn to 
public service and newly elected to this body.
  In remembering and learning from Mo's example, be it perseverance or 
bipartisanship, we can all contribute to a legacy of decency, optimism, 
and honorable public service that Mo Udall has left to this country and 
to this House.
  Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.

                              {time}  1230

  Mr. KOLBE. Mr. Speaker, I yield as much time as he may consume to the 
gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Hayworth) from the 6th Congressional 
District. In doing so, I would note that he is one of those Members who 
did not serve with Mo Udall. But none of us who come from Arizona have 
not been touched by his great works.
  Mr. HAYWORTH. Mr. Speaker I thank the gentleman from Arizona for 
yielding to me.
  Mr. Speaker, while it is true I did not have the opportunity to serve 
concurrently with Mo Udall, the fact is, evidence of his service in 
this institution abounds, not only in family members who have joined us 
in the 106th Congress and family members who are here to celebrate Mo's 
memory, but also in constituents from my district.
  I had the privilege, Mr. Speaker, of coming to this Chamber this 
afternoon with young people from the Navaho nation, from Pinon, Shonto, 
who are here to learn more about Washington. Their presence here and 
the comments of a colleague from this floor just the other day in an 
informal setting really, I

[[Page 3614]]

think, served to provide a tribute to Mo Udall, because a congressional 
colleague said, ``You folks from Arizona really stick together.''
  Indeed, as we look at the rich legislative legacy offered by Mo 
Udall, it is worth noting that members of my party, John Rhodes, Barry 
Goldwater, others got together to ask, ``What is good for Arizona and 
good for America?'' Now lest my colleagues think that we sing from the 
same page of the hymnal on every occasion, of course not. But we 
champion those differences.
  That is what Morris K. Udall embodied, an ability to clearly and 
candidly express differences, unafraid. He was able to use the gift of 
humor to make those observations all the more eloquent, although, even 
today, I might take issue with some of those observations. We champion 
that freedom when we remember Mo Udall.
  Many Americans remember that, in the wake of his quest for the White 
House in 1976, he authored a book entitled, ``Too Funny To Be 
President.'' It was that typical self-deprecating wit even inherent in 
that title.
  But if he might have been too funny to be president in his own words, 
he was not too humorous to not be an effective legislator and to offer 
the people of Arizona and the people of America a clear, consistent 
philosophy, though not one of unanimity on all points, one that he had 
the right to champion, and he championed so very well.
  I made mention of the fact that two kinfolks of the Udall clan are 
now here in the Congress of the United States. I have a staffer back 
home who is part of the Udall family. The joke is that Mo and Stu took 
a left turn out of Saint John's, and some of my folks took a right turn 
out of the Round Valley, and that was the beginning of some of the 
political differences as reflected on these sides of the aisle.
  But, Mr. Speaker, it is worth noting, and I thank the two senior 
members of my delegation, the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Kolbe) and 
the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Pastor), for taking this time to 
remember Morris K. Udall, his life, his legacy, and the challenges he 
would confront even as we confront today.
  Mr. PASTOR. Mr. Speaker, it is an honor for me to yield 3 minutes to 
the gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Jackson-Lee).
  Ms. JACKSON-LEE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, I thank the distinguished 
gentleman from Arizona for his kindness and also for his eloquent 
remarks.
  Mr. Speaker, I grew up with Congressman Mo Udall. In growing up with 
him, I was fully comfortable with the fact that the environment was 
well protected and the integrity of this body was well protected.
  Congressman Udall was a man who always managed to rise above the 
limitations that were placed upon him and succeeded triumphantly. As a 
child at age 7, he lost his right eye in an accident, but he still 
managed to excel in athletics. In high school, he was co-captain of the 
basketball team. I must say, Mr. Speaker, I saw him as the tall, tall, 
I was going to say Texan, but I will give that name to Arizonian, 
because I looked to him as a tall Member of this body.
  He also played quarterback, the position that requires the most 
vision on the football team. Academically, he was a model student. He 
was a valedictorian and student body president.
  As we all know, his all-around excellence continued well after high 
school. In 1942, he entered the U.S. Army Corps, despite his limited 
vision. He played professional basketball for the Denver Nuggets and 
passed the Arizona bar exam with the highest score in the State.
  He was elected to Congress in 1961, replacing his brother, Stewart, 
who had taken a position as the Secretary of Department of Interior 
offered to him by President Kennedy. His love for this country, the 
public lands ran in the family. He had a passion, a sense of humor, and 
civility.
  Just as when he was younger, Congressman Morris Udall proved he could 
achieve despite politics and pass important and much-needed 
legislation. The Congressman was a floor whip supporting the passage of 
the 1964 Civil Rights Act and would begin to craft the history of this 
country. Particularly for those who were least empowered, the Civil 
Rights Act of 1964 comes to mind. Let me personally thank him on behalf 
of my community.
  Serving as chair on the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, he 
was an earlier champion of environmental causes, fighting early to 
protect our natural lands in areas as diverse as the canyons of Arizona 
and the forests of Alaska.
  He stood up for the rights of American Indians, our Native Americans, 
and advocated for laws that would help them rather than further hurt 
them. As a civil servant, Congressman Udall always managed to keep the 
focus on what is best for the public. Along with President Carter, he 
enacted civil service reforms, and he was a chief sponsor of Campaign 
Finance Reform Act. He was ahead of his time.
  Morris Udall was a strong family man. He was a good son and brother 
and uncle and father. Many would tell me that I have no way of knowing 
that, but I tell my colleagues, we have proof in it in this House 
today.
  Let me say that I am delighted that his son, the gentleman from 
Colorado (Mr. Mark Udall), and his nephew, the gentleman from New 
Mexico (Mr. Tom Udall), came in as a double-whammy, being elected this 
time to the 106th Congress. If there ever would have been someone who 
had a humorous statement to make of that, it would have been Mo Udall. 
He liked double-whammies. He would have called that a slam dunk.
  As I conclude, Mr. Speaker, let me simply say I hope this testimony 
today, his tribute, will compel us to support finding a cure for 
Parkinson's Disease, and I wholeheartedly support this resolution to 
acknowledge the loss of a dear friend, a great colleague, and great 
American. God bless him and God bless his family.
  Mr. Speaker, I rise today to speak on behalf of H. Con. Res. 40, 
which honors the life of former Congressman Morris K. Udall.
  Congressman Udall was a man who always managed to rise above the 
limitations that placed upon him, and succeed triumphantly.
  As a child, at age seven, he lost his right eye in an accident, but 
he still managed to excell in athletics. In high school, he was co-
captain of the basketball team, and he played quarterback--the position 
that requires the most vision--on the football team. Academically, he 
was a modest student--he was valedictorian and student body president.
  And as we all know, his all-around excellence continued well after 
high school. In 1942, he entered the U.S. Army Air Corps despite his 
limited vision. He played professional basketball for the Denver 
Nuggets, and passed the Arizona bar exam with the highest score in the 
State.
  When he was elected to Congress in 1961, replacing his brother, 
Stewart, who had taken a position as Secretary of the Department of the 
Interior offered to him by President Kennedy, he immediately became 
known for his passion, humor, and civility.
  Just as when he was younger, Congressman Morris Udall proved that he 
could achieve despite politics, and pass important and much-needed 
legislation.
  Congressman Udall was a floor whip supporting the passage of the 
Civil Rights Act of 1964--something I would like to personally thank 
him for. Serving as Chair of the Committee on Interior and Insular 
Affairs, he was an early champion of environmental causes, fighting 
early on to protect our natural lands in areas as diverse as the 
canyons of Arizona and the forests of Alaska.
  Representative Udall stood up for the rights of American Indians, and 
advocated for laws that would help them rather than further hurt them.
  As a civil servant, Congressman Udall always managed to keep the 
focus on what is best for the public. Along with President Carter, he 
spearheaded efforts to enact civil service reforms, and he was the 
chief sponsor of the first-ever Campaign Finance Reform Act.
  Most of all, Morris Udall was a strong family man. He was a good son, 
a good brother, a good uncle, and a good father. Many would tell me 
that I have no way of knowing that--but I tell you--we have proof of it 
here in the House. Congressmen Mark  and Tom Udall have already proven 
themselves as more-than-capable Members of Congress, and look forward 
to working with both of them in the future.

[[Page 3615]]

  We lost a good friend on December 12th of last year. Yet I am glad to 
see his spirit live on. I hope that we can pass this resolution and 
work in this Congress with the manner of Morris K. Udall--above the 
limitations of partisanship and politics, and with a keen sense of what 
is best for the people we serve.
  Mr. KOLBE. Mr. Speaker, I yield as much time as he may consume to the 
distinguished gentleman from New York (Mr. Gilman), the chairman of the 
Committee on International Relations, which was one of Mo Udall's other 
great loves.
  Mr. GILMAN. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman for yielding to me. I 
thank the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Kolbe) for introducing this 
resolution, giving us the opportunity to pay tribute to a great leader.
  Mr. Speaker, Morris ``Mo'' K. Udall was an outstanding Member of this 
body and an even greater man. His untimely death last year was a 
tremendous loss to this Nation. He is one of the most loved, most 
respected and most accomplished Members of Congress in this generation.
  When Mo Udall was diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease in 1980, many 
had never heard of that devastating illness. Mo's 18-year struggle with 
Parkinson's Disease illustrated his courage and his serenity which 
inspired his many coworkers, friends and family.
  During Mo's 30 years of service in this body, Mo will be most 
remembered for his achievements on behalf of the environmental 
community. I had the distinct honor and privilege of working with Mo, 
not only as a member of our Committee on International Relations, but 
as a member of the Subcommittee on Postal Services and the Subcommittee 
on Civil Service, as we tried to reform both the Postal Service and the 
Civil Service.
  Many of us admired Mo's willingness and the quality in which he took 
part in the Presidential campaign in 1976. Yes, even many of my 
Republican constituents were pleased to support Mo Udall in that 
campaign.
  It is fitting that the 105th Congress passed the Morris K. Udall 
Parkinson's Research Act of 1997 and that this Congress is committed to 
working towards finding the cause and cure for Parkinson's Disease, 
motivated primarily by Mo Udall.
  As a member of the congressional working group on Parkinson's 
Disease, my colleagues and I will continue to do the work that was 
inspired by Mo in finding an eventual cure for that disease.
  I am pleased to join my colleague, the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. 
Kolbe), in proposing that the Coronado Forest in Arizona now be renamed 
the Mo Udall Forest. What an appropriate monument to an outstanding 
public servant.
  Mr. PASTOR. Mr. Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to the distinguished 
gentlewoman from Hawaii (Mrs. Mink).
  Mrs. MINK of Hawaii. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman for yielding 
me this time. I am perhaps one of the few Members of this Congress that 
had the wonderful opportunity of serving with Mo Udall.
  I came to the Congress in 1965, and Mo was already here. I had the 
opportunity to serve with him on the Committee on Interior and Insular 
Affairs. After several years, I became the chair of the Subcommittee on 
Mines and Mining. I had a 5-year ordeal in trying to fashion the 
surface mining legislation.
  Mo was always there, constantly working to help us develop a 
consensus within the subcommittee in a very, very controversial area. I 
remember coming to the floor with the legislation and spending weeks in 
the debate during the discourse of perhaps 50 or 60 amendments.
  Mo Udall's legacy to this country is enormous, not only in the fields 
in which he labored in the Committee on Foreign Affairs and in the 
Committee on the Postal Service and in the Committee on the Interior, 
but he left a legacy of tremendous honesty, integrity and dedication to 
the basic principles of this country; and that is fairness, that is a 
love of the natural resources, a sense of pride and a conscious 
obligation to preserve and protect that which we have here within our 
boundaries.
  Mo Udall was always on the floor fighting for equity, asking this 
body to be fair in its deliberations, making sure that both sides had 
an even chance to express their views on legislation. He was an 
inspiration. I have always looked to Mo.
  Even though he is gone, Mo will always remain, in my view, as one of 
the greatest legislators to come to serve in the Congress, whose 
history, whose legacy will always remain here, not just in the books of 
the Congress, but in the service, in the legislation and in the manner 
in which he represented the constituents of the great State of Arizona.
  It was an honor to serve with him. I want to pay tribute to the 
gentleman from Colorado (Mr. Mark Udall) and the gentleman from New 
Mexico (Mr. Tom Udall), who will be taking his place, and express my 
deepest condolences to the family on the great loss that this Nation 
has suffered by his untimely death.
  Mr. KOLBE. Mr. Speaker, I yield such time as he may consume to 
gentleman from the Arizona (Mr. Salmon), a very distinguished Member of 
the Arizona delegation, but also I know he knew Mo Udall personally and 
has profited from that knowledge of knowing him.
  Mr. SALMON. Mr. Speaker, Mo Udall used to call himself the one-eyed 
Mormon Democrat, and I guess I would be the wide-eyed Mormon 
Republican. I think that is one of the things that we had in common.

                              {time}  1245

  Let me first of all say that Mo Udall came from good stock. It is no 
surprise that Mo Udall always won his elections with a very, very large 
margin. But then Mo Udall was related to over half of Arizona, so I do 
not think he really ever had too much of a challenge.
  In fact, I think if I tried to one-up the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. 
Kolbe), I would change that resolution and say, why should we stop 
there, let us just change the name of Arizona to Udall Country and we 
will all be Udallians. That would probably be a better suggestion. Then 
I got to thinking about it. A few months ago I made probably an avant-
garde proposal to put Ronald Reagan's face on Mt. Rushmore. Maybe I 
should swap that and put Mo Udall's face on Mt. Rushmore. I think a lot 
of people would probably get behind that right here and now, because Mo 
Udall was the kind of guy that inspired us to become better.
  I look at the things we go through in life. Sometimes they are hard 
to bear. This last year it has not been a pleasant time being in the 
Congress. We have been through some very, very tough times. America has 
been through some very, very tough times. And I thought to myself over 
and over during the process, ``Where are you, Mo Udall? I wish you were 
here right now. We could use your humor, we could use your love, we 
could use your patriotism.''
  Because one of the things that Mo Udall recognized, and I think all 
of us really need to stand back and remember, is that before we were 
Republicans, before we were Democrats, we were Americans first. Mo 
Udall understood that, and he understood that regardless of who gets 
the credit for it, we are going to do the right thing.
  I got to know very intimately Mo's sister, Inez Turley. She was my 
history teacher, and she had the most profound impact upon my life of 
any teacher I have ever had. She truly loved the subject of world 
history that she taught. She cared about her students and she oozed 
love and concern. I know there are family members here today, and I 
want them to know that their sister, their aunt, their cousin, whoever 
she might be to them, I loved her and she had a profound impact upon my 
life and I will never forget her. In her later years she also taught 
Sunday school, and my mom and dad and I were all members of her class, 
and she inspired us and made us want to be better people.
  The Udall legacy is one that, not just Mo Udall, but the entire Udall 
clan is something that I think has benefitted all of Arizona. I am 
proud to call them my friends, my neighbors, my brothers and my 
sisters, and God bless Mo

[[Page 3616]]

Udall. We thank him for all he meant, not only to Arizona but to 
America.
  I hope, Mo, as we go forward, you will smile down on us with your wit 
and help us to remember not to take ourselves too seriously, but to 
remember that, above all, the most important thing that we can do is to 
serve.
  Mr. PASTOR. Mr. Speaker, I yield 3 minutes to the distinguished 
gentleman from Massachusetts (Mr. Markey).
  Mr. MARKEY. Mr. Speaker, I met Mo Udall in Malden Square, my 
hometown, in January of 1976. I was a State representative, and I 
endorsed him for President out of a collection of people whom I did not 
know, but I felt that Mo Udall had the instincts and the grace and the 
intelligence to be a great President.
  He came to my hometown and I met him at an event, and he shuffled me 
into the back seat of his car and I drove around with him for a day 
listening to him talk and watching him influence every single person 
who he met, whether he was just shaking their hand or giving a speech. 
But the effect was uniform and permanent, and I was one of the people 
who was affected by him.
  My predecessor in Congress announced the next month that he was not 
going to run for reelection, and I ran and I won. Much to my surprise, 
within the year I was a member of the Interior Committee with Mo Udall, 
this man whom I held in awe as the chairman of the committee, even 
though I sat at the very bottom rung of all of the committee seats.
  And over the years the experience has become too numerous to mention, 
but we always encouraged Mo, in 1980 and 1984, to please run for 
President. And he would say that he was considering it because the only 
known cure for Presidentialitis was embalming fluid. And so he was 
always considering it, and we were encouraging him to consider it 
because he was someone who would have been a great President.
  I remember in 1979, I think that the gentleman from California (Mr. 
George Miller) and the gentleman from Minnesota (Mr. Bruce Vento) were 
with us, and we went up to Three Mile Island in a bus to check out the 
accident. And we pulled in with a bus, up within 10 feet of those 
looming, eerie cooling towers, with radioactivity permeating every 
inch, and we were going to go inside. And Mo, deadpanned, as we were 
sitting there looking at this facility, looked at each of us and said, 
``Men, I hope you each wore your lead-lined jock strap today. This 
could be serious.'' And so we went in laughing, even with our 
apprehension, because this was Mo's way of taking even the most serious 
moment and ensuring that he had found the lighthearted way of looking 
at it.
  As my colleagues know, we each vote with a card, and the card is 
something that registers our vote. We put it in a machine and then, in 
this accommodation between the Daughters of the American Revolution and 
technology that was cut in this chamber in the early 1960s, our names 
all flash up on the side of the wall. And 15 minutes after the vote 
begins, they all disappear and the chamber goes back to how it was in 
1858. And when each of us vote, our vote is recorded up there, yea or 
nay.
  Well, every time I walked in the door for 15 years I looked up to see 
how Mo Udall had voted, because I knew that Mo Udall would cast the 
correct vote, the right vote, and I could measure myself by whether or 
not I had the political courage or wisdom to vote the way he did at 
that time. But I was not the only one who did that, Mr. Speaker. Scores 
of other people came in the chamber each time, during all the time I 
was in Congress, and looked up at that wall to find out how he had 
voted.
  In those final years, when he had Parkinson's, this terrible disease 
which traps the mind inside a body that will not function the way it 
wants, that mind, that sense of humor, that insight was still inside of 
him and still speaking, still talking to us, even though it was 
hampered by this physical ailment that ultimately took him. And I think 
one of the things that we can do for Mo over the next year is to make 
sure that for the Parkinson's patients, for the Alzheimer's families 
that saw this huge cut in home health care in the 1997 balanced budget 
amendment, that cut by 20, 30 or 40 percent the amount of home visits 
that these spouses can have as relief from this disease as they try to 
care for their families, is that we can make sure that we restore all 
that money; that we give to these families what they need in order to 
give the dignity to their family member that they love so much. And in 
Mo Udall's memory, I think that that would be a worthy objective for us 
to try to achieve this year.
  Mo, without question, was one of my idols. I revered him and I loved 
him and I am going to miss him dearly, and I thank my colleagues so 
much for holding this special order.
  Mr. KOLBE. Mr. Speaker, I yield such time as he may consume to the 
gentleman from Minnesota (Mr. Vento), who did serve on the Interior 
Committee with him and knows very well the legacy of Mo Udall.
  Mr. VENTO. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. 
Kolbe), a good friend, for yielding me this time in true bipartisan 
spirit here. Mo would be proud of us today in terms of our working 
together on many tough topics. And certainly I want to rise in strong 
support of this concurrent resolution that my colleagues, the gentleman 
from Arizona (Mr. Pastor) and the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Kolbe), 
have joined together on with other members of the Arizona delegation.
  Frankly, Mo Udall did not just belong to Arizona, he was one of our 
great treasures and one of our great mentors as a national legislator 
in this Congress. And, clearly, his long illness and his final passing 
this December is something that I think haunts all of us when we think 
about the terrible disease that wracked his body. But I suspect he 
suffered on through all of that just to make certain there were two 
Udalls that were elected to Congress to take his place and to pass the 
torch along to. Indeed, I am sure they, in their own way, will be 
making their mark in this institution, and I congratulate them on their 
victories and look forward to working with them, as I did with their 
uncle and father, Mo Udall.
  If it were not for Mo Udall, many of us would not be able to get up 
and give very many speeches, because in much of the content of our 
speeches we could be accused of using and reusing his stories. One of 
the great ones, that I always thought came across pretty well, was when 
he referred to two types of Members of Congress: ``Those that don't 
know; and those that don't know they don't know.''
  I think he probably put us in our place as it relates to the size of 
our ego, which does not necessarily grow with the size of what we know. 
One tends to exceed the other. But I think it reminds us of the fact of 
what the real process is that we work on around here. I often lately 
have been quoting and saying that our job in Congress is not so 
difficult, all we have to do is take new knowledge and new information 
and translate it into public policy. Of course, the fact is most of us 
do not hold still long enough to stop and listen to what is being said 
sometimes to properly process it.
  I am glad that plagiarism does not apply to political statements or 
we would all be guilty of the same. But in imitating and following in 
the footsteps of Mo Udall, in a modest way, myself and my other 
colleagues working on environmental issues on a nonpartisan basis, I 
think we really reach for the highest ideal in terms of public service. 
I am very proud of that, and the lessons I have learned from him and 
the quotations that I have borrowed from him and the progress that we 
have made.
  Almost every issue that came before this Congress during his service 
in the Congress, serving on what we call two minor committees on the 
Democratic side, Post Office and Civil Service and Interior and Insular 
Affairs, serving on these two minor committees, he made a major impact 
in terms of the friendships that he made and in terms of the work that 
he did and the legislation that he wrote. Today is the foundation. We 
stand on those shoulders.

[[Page 3617]]

  Our goal today is to, of course, look ahead further, to do a better 
job, to build on that record of progress. And certainly in this 
resolution I want to state my respect, my affection and my love for 
this great American from Arizona who we all benefitted from and who is 
our great mentor. I am glad to give him the credit and the recognition 
that is provided in this resolution, and again ask everyone to support 
it, and thank my colleagues for offering it.
  Mr. PASTOR. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume to 
thank my colleague, the gentleman from Minnesota (Mr. Vento), for 
informing me of which category I fall in. It is the latter rather than 
the former. So I want to thank him.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield 4 minutes to the gentleman from California (Mr. 
George Miller), the ranking member of the committee on which Mo served 
as chairman for many years.
  Mr. GEORGE MILLER of California. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman 
for yielding me this time, and I thank the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. 
Kolbe) for bringing this special order to the floor, as well as the 
gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Pastor).
  We obviously are paying tribute to a great American and a legend in 
terms of his membership of this House, Mo Udall. He was one of the few 
Members of Congress that ever was able to enjoy a national constituency 
because of the issues that he struggled with and the leadership that he 
provided. He was able to change the face of his home State, Arizona; to 
change the economics of that State because of his interest in western 
water policy and his involvement there.
  We sit in a Nation today where the eastern most point is named Point 
Udall and the western most point is named Point Udall. And in between 
Mo Udall fought titanic struggles, titanic struggles over the public 
lands of the United States, in the lower 48, in Alaska, to make sure 
that, in fact, the great environmental assets of this Nation were 
protected and preserved for future generations.
  He took lands that were going to be subjected to dynamiting and 
desecration and he fought to save those lands. These were not easy 
battles when he fought them. These were titanic struggles against 
powerful mining companies and powerful oil companies and powerful 
timber companies, and he was there in the forefront. He did not fight 
for 1 year, he fought for many years. He fought until he had succeeded. 
And, now, many areas of this country enjoy a better economy, they enjoy 
protection of their rivers, their forests, their public lands because 
of Mo Udall.
  Native Americans enjoy much greater involvement in the government of 
this Nation, in their ability to govern themselves, to have much more 
say over how this government treats them and involvement in the 
policies accorded them.

                              {time}  1300

  Those are the gifts that he gave this Nation. But he also gave this 
body and gave the political system in this country the gift of his 
humor and his wit. He would treat his enemies and his friends alike. He 
would answer them with gentle humor very often, subtly pointing out the 
failure of their arguments and the failure of their point of view, but 
he did it in such a fashion that he took to heart the idea that in 
politics, you ought to try to disagree without being disagreeable, 
clearly a change from what we experience today. But that was the gift 
that he gave us and that is why so many of us enjoyed being around him.
  I was fortunate enough to succeed Mo as chairman of the House 
Interior Committee and when I did, we named the hearing room for him. 
We thought it was fitting when you look back on his environmental 
legacy, his legislative legacy that clearly it was a tribute that he 
deserved, somewhat modest compared to his legacy, but I think it is one 
that is quite properly deserved.
  I also think that it must have been enormously satisfying prior to 
Mo's passing away to know that his son Mark would be serving in 
Congress and his nephew Tom would be here with him. I only wish that he 
would have known that they had been selected on the Interior Committee, 
the Interior Committee that he gave so much standing and dignity to.
  Finally, you cannot end a discussion of Mo Udall without a Mo Udall 
story. Of course the one he told most often on himself was the business 
of when he was campaigning in New Hampshire, he went into a barber shop 
and he announced, ``I'm Mo Udall, I'm running for President,'' only to 
be greeted by the response, ``Yeah, we were just laughing about that 
this morning.'' That is exactly how he so disarmed audiences all over 
this country, who came sometimes with preconceived notions but they 
left the room loving him. He fought a titanic struggle in Alaska, a 
huge struggle over the preservation of public lands. He was not well-
liked in Alaska. They told him never to come back, that he was not 
welcome there. I had the opportunity to travel with him on his last 
trip to Alaska and the reporters asked him at the end of the trip, 
after we had visited the State and many of the areas that were in 
controversy, and a reporter asked him, ``How did the people of Alaska 
treat you, Congressman Udall, this trip, compared to when you were here 
before?''
  He says, ``Oh, it's much better now. They're waving good-bye with all 
five fingers. It's much better now.'' That was from a man that it was a 
true pleasure to serve under in the Committee on Resources that clearly 
was a member of this House.
  Mr. KOLBE. Mr. Chairman, I yield such time as he may consume to the 
gentleman from American Samoa (Mr. Faleomavaega).
  Mr. FALEOMAVAEGA. Mr. Speaker, I personally want to thank the 
gentleman from Arizona for allowing me such time to share my thoughts 
with my colleagues and certainly with the American people concerning 
this great American.
  Mr. Speaker, I first met Congressman Udall in 1975 when I became a 
staffer for the House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs. He 
became chairman of the committee in 1977 and used this position very 
effectively in support of our Nation's environmental needs. During his 
30-year career in the House, he was known for his considerable 
legislative accomplishments, his unfailing grace, and was respected by 
all those who knew him.
  Mr. Speaker, known as one of the more liberal Members of the House, 
his ideas were opposed by many but have since come to be recognized as 
part of our national evolution. His legislative accomplishments were 
noteworthy: Strip mine control legislation, protection of millions of 
acres of Federal lands as wilderness, revision of Federal pay system, 
establishment of the Postal Service as a semiprivate organization, 
reform of the Civil Service to promote merit pay, more flexibility for 
Federal managers, and the enactment of the first meaningful laws 
governing the financing of Federal campaigns.
  Mr. Speaker, earlier in his career he was a professional basketball 
player, lawyer, county attorney, lecturer and cofounder of even a bank. 
He ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1976.
  Mr. Speaker, Mo Udall ran for the Speaker of this institution against 
Representative John McCormick in 1969. Like another of my heroes, the 
late Congressman Phil Burton, Mo Udall lost his race for a leadership 
position and then devoted his efforts to legislative work. As a Nation 
we continue to benefit from Congressman Udall's work on broad 
environmental issues and Congressman Burton's work for our national 
parks.
  I am honored, Mr. Speaker, to have considered Mo Udall a true friend 
and am further honored to make this tribute to him. This resolution 
recognizes his achievements and he will live on in the memories of 
those who knew him for decades to come.
  Mr. Speaker, Mo Udall's legacy will be remembered by Members of this 
institution and for the past years, for now and even for future 
generations to come, millions of Americans will come to enjoy the 
beauty of our national parks, our rivers, our national refuges and 
wildernesses all because one man made a difference, struggling very 
hard

[[Page 3618]]

in very difficult times to pass national legislation to preserve these 
national treasures. Mo Udall's name will never be forgotten.
  Mr. Speaker, one of the things that I admired most about this great 
man, this great American, is that he truly had a love and affection for 
the Native American people. I recall, Mr. Speaker, in the movie 
``Dances with Wolves,'' if you remember that one incident where Kevin 
Costner was walking along the riverside or the meadows with this Indian 
chief and this Indian chief turned to Kevin Costner and said, ``You 
know, my most, if there is anything that I want to be in my life, was 
to become a true human being.''
  I would like to say on behalf of all the Samoans living here in the 
United States, I pay a special tribute to Mo Udall. He was truly a 
human being.
  Mr. PASTOR. Mr. Speaker, I yield 4 minutes to the gentleman from Guam 
(Mr. Underwood).
  Mr. UNDERWOOD. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman from Arizona for 
yielding me this time and certainly to stand in strong support for 
H.Con.Res. 40, honoring former Congressman Morris Udall.
  It is an honor for me to appear here today and to support and 
commemorate the accomplishment of Congressman Udall, especially as a 
representative from one of the U.S. territories. As my colleagues have 
so eloquently stated already numerous times, Mr. Udall, Mo Udall, was 
instrumental in improving the political process of this body and indeed 
of the entire Nation. We have also heard many stories about how he was 
a proponent and a champion for preserving the environment and that not 
only do we enjoy that today but future generations will enjoy that as 
well.
  His influence, though, extends way beyond the coast, the East Coast 
and the West Coast of the United States. Sometimes Members of Congress 
come here and basically they try to simply represent the constituencies 
that brought them here. Other times some Members of Congress come here 
and they try to represent broader national values, an effort on their 
part to speak to broader values which speak to the essence of what we 
are as a Nation. Very rarely do we get a person like Mo Udall who not 
only spoke to the broader national values but he spoke to them by 
taking on the cause of constituencies not his own, constituencies that 
could not possibly benefit him politically in any way.
  And so it is in that spirit that I as a representative of a 
territory, a nonvoting delegate, stand here today to bring some 
recognition to his work with the territories. I want to pay special 
honor to his work in bringing about the Compacts of Free Association 
between the United States and the Republic of Palau, a time when the 
political environment in Palau was very hazardous, very unstable. 
Congressman Udall tempered the emotions and helped generate House 
support for the Compacts of Free Association in Palau, and as a result 
of that, he shepherded that compact to its final fruition.
  Congressman Udall was also instrumental in getting the Puerto Rico 
Self-Determination Act passed by the House on a voice vote. In Guam's 
case, he was very instrumental in bringing about a meeting in 1983 with 
House leadership and administration officials to discuss Guam's 
political status. Based on that meeting there was a later meeting in 
Albuquerque, and this led to what is known in Guam as the Spirit of 
Albuquerque, in which a commonwealth draft act was presented. Although 
that draft act has not come to pass this House in all these years, Mo 
Udall was there in the beginning.
  In an ironic way, Mo Udall fell to the disease of Parkinson's 
disease, a constellation of diseases which occur on Guam at 17 times 
the national rate, most often known in Guam as litiku bodek. In his 
honor and in his memory, we should make sure that this funding for 
research on this disease as a way to prevent it from occurring in 
future generations and dealing with those who are afflicted by it today 
should be passed and should be dealt with in a very supportive way by 
this body.
  I also want to draw attention to something that the gentleman from 
California (Mr. George Miller) mentioned earlier. The easternmost part 
of the United States is in the Virgin Islands and that is named after 
Stewart Udall. The westernmost part of the United States is in Guam and 
there is a tiny rock out there that the people of Guam have decided to 
honor Mo Udall by naming it after him. So from the easternmost to the 
westernmost, the Udall name is there forever.
  Mr. KOLBE. Mr. Speaker, I yield such time as she may consume to the 
gentlewoman from New York (Mrs. Maloney).
  Mrs. MALONEY of New York. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman for 
yielding me this time. I thank the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Kolbe) 
and the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Pastor) for organizing this 
resolution in honor of Mo Udall.
  I never met Mo Udall. The only way I knew him was by reading about 
the issues that he stood for, the actions that he took in Congress, and 
as a leader. I always admired him. In 1976, long before I was ever 
elected to city, State or Federal Government, as a public citizen I 
endorsed him and even sent him a check when he ran for President, 
because I liked what he was doing on a national level, and I wanted his 
leadership to be felt even more in our country. I never served with him 
as many of my colleagues are sharing their stories and memories, but 
when I joined this body, it was hard to go to a caucus meeting or a 
large meeting where his name was not referred to, where my colleagues 
quoted him or referred to the actions that he achieved or the goals 
that he stood for. He was greatly admired by those who worked and 
served with him.
  I consider it a great honor, and I am sure he would, too, that his 
son and nephew have joined this body and will be working along the same 
principles and goals that he did. Today there are a number of important 
tributes to Mo Udall. There is a memorial service at 2, there is a 
dinner tonight honoring him, and there is probably no greater way to 
honor him and his work than by a living tribute. This morning, in a 
bipartisan spirit, as we are today on this floor, the gentleman from 
Michigan (Mr. Upton) and myself and many others have started a 
Parkinson's task force in honor of Mo Udall and others who have 
suffered from this terrible disease. We hope to achieve a cure within 
10 years. The current director of the National Institutes of Health 
says that it is achievable. Last year, $100 million was authorized for 
Parkinson's disease research. We need to work together to make sure 
this money is appropriated so that we can find a cure for Parkinson's 
so that others will not suffer in their final days as he did.
  Mr. PASTOR. Mr. Speaker, I yield such time as he may consume to the 
gentleman from Colorado (Mr. Udall), a new Member and also Mo's son.
  Mr. UDALL of Colorado. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman from 
Arizona for yielding me this time. I want to begin by acknowledging 
that a number of my family members are in the gallery up here and on 
behalf of them and all of our family around the country, I want to 
extend our deep appreciation to a number of people.
  First let me begin by thanking the entire Arizona delegation, 
starting with Mr. Kolbe and Mr. Pastor, and including Mr. Salmon, Mr. 
Hayworth, Mr. Stump and Mr. Shadegg for their cosponsorship of this 
resolution today. I also want to thank all my father's colleagues and 
now my colleagues who have come out and taken the time today to speak 
during this resolution. We are very grateful for that and for the 
memories and the stories and, of course, the humor that you have shared 
with us today.

                              {time}  1315

  I also want to thank my colleague, the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. 
Kolbe), for bringing this piece of legislation forward that would 
rename this magnificent national forest in Arizona after my father. I 
cannot think of anything that would make him more proud and more happy.
  Those of my colleagues who spent time with my father know that when 
he was out of doors and he was breathing that sweet air and looking at 
those

[[Page 3619]]

faraway vistas, that he was never happier and never felt more alive 
than he did in those kinds of situations. So, this is truly an 
important and great symbol of what my father stood for.
  Mr. Speaker, I feel a little awkward talking at great length about my 
father. I think that is in some ways an important job that my 
colleagues here and his friends and my family can undertake. But I did 
want to share a couple of thoughts, not only as a Member of this body 
as an elected official but as my father's son.
  I spent the last year running for office in Colorado, and I was 
asked, as we all are, why would I want to do this, why would I want to 
undertake such a challenge involving the fund-raising stresses and the 
separation from your family and the lost sleep and the epithets that 
are hurled our way as somebody who is campaigning for office, and I had 
three answers:
  The first is that I care deeply about some of the issues facing our 
country, as I think do all the Members of Congress, whether it be 
education or the environment or health care, and those are important to 
me, but they were not the most important thing.
  The second thing was that I had a deep commitment to public service, 
and I was mindful of my father's thoughts that we do not inherit the 
earth from our parents, but in fact we borrow the earth from our 
children. And, in addition, he loved to say:
  ``Hey, America ain't perfect, but we're not done yet.''
  Those sentiments also drove me. That was the second reason I ran.
  But, ultimately, when I thought about it, it was something more 
personal than that. What it was was that my father inspired me, and he 
inspired me by what he did and by how he carried himself, but he also 
inspired me because he went out every day with the idea that he was 
going to inspire other people, and that commitment on his part inspired 
me to want to emulate the kinds of commitments and the kinds of things 
that he achieved in his life.
  So, Mr. Speaker, I would ask all of us in this body to remember that 
as we move ahead, and I think in the end we honor my father's memory 
and we honor his achievements by continuing to try to inspire others 
around us and, finally, by carrying that torch of civility as high and 
as brightly as we possibly can. We heard a lot about my father's great 
belief in civility today.
  Again, I thank all of my colleagues on behalf of my family.
  Mr. PASTOR. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
  Mr. Speaker, those of us from Arizona have known of the contribution 
of public service, beginning with the Udalls as they came into Arizona, 
were at the forefront of providing leadership in St. Johns and other 
parts of Arizona and when they came into the valley.
  The district was first represented by Stewart Udall very ably. He 
became the Secretary of Interior, was succeeded by Morris K. Udall, and 
my colleagues heard of the great contributions they gave, not only to 
Arizona, to District 2, but to all America.
  Mr. Speaker, Mo Udall was an inspiration not only to his son and to 
his nephew and to his family, but he was an inspiration to all of us, 
because we knew that if there was a wrong that needed to be corrected, 
that Mo was there, and he inspired us to continue that effort. If there 
was a need to preserve a piece of land, a forest, he inspired us to 
continue that effort, not only for ourselves, but for future 
generations. I know that Mo, his legacy will continue in the future 
because of what he did, and that was to make this country a better 
place to live for not only our generation but for future generations.


                Announcement by the Speaker Pro Tempore

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Sessions). The Chair will remind all 
Members not to refer to occupants of the gallery.
  Mr. KOLBE. Mr. Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from 
Michigan (Mr. Bonior).
  Mr. BONIOR. Mr. Speaker, I thank my friend for yielding this time to 
me, and I apologize for not being here in a more timely manner.
  I just want to thank the gentleman from Arizona and my dear 
colleague, the chief deputy whip, the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. 
Pastor), for his bringing this issue of importance to us on the floor 
today. It is important because Mo Udall was a very special person, 
loved by virtually everybody that I knew that served with him in this 
institution.
  Mr. Speaker, I had the great honor of working with him on the Alaska 
lands bill. It was one of the first things that I involved myself in 
when I came to the Congress on the Merchant Marine Committee. He, of 
course, was a giant, one of the giants together with his brother, 
Stewart, in the environmental movement in this country, chairman of the 
Interior Committee, and it was a magnificent effort on Alaska that will 
live in the memory of this country for centuries.
  Mr. Speaker, he was just a joy to work with.
  The other bill I worked with him on was the Civil Service bill in 
which he showed great leadership, great patience with a very young 
Member of Congress at that time, and his kindness, his humor, will 
always be remembered.
  I just want to say to Mark, his son, and to Tom, his nephew, and to 
the family how much I have been enriched by his presence and his life.
  I will tell my colleagues one quick story, if I might, on his 
popularity. Nobody knew him from Adam in my congressional district. In 
1976, he ran for President, came to Michigan, was a big underdog to 
Jimmy Carter. The unions, heads of the unions, the head of the auto 
companies, front page of the Detroit papers had endorsed Carter. He 
came into that State and taught a message that responded to the common 
individual and did very, very well. I think, if he did not win, he lost 
by a half a percent. I think he may actually have won Michigan that 
year. But he won my district with 62 percent, and that is significant, 
because 4 years earlier George Wallace won my district by the exact 
same amount. It shows, as my colleagues know, he had a way of reaching 
people in a very special way with his humor, with his passion, with his 
commitment, and he will always be remembered in my mind as certainly 
one of the giants that ever walked into this well.
  Mr. Speaker, I thank both of my colleagues from Arizona, and I thank 
my friend from Colorado for bringing this today.
  Mr. PASTOR. Mr. Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to the gentlewoman from 
California (Ms. Pelosi).
  Ms. PELOSI. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman for yielding this time 
to me and our colleague, the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Kolbe).
  Mr. Speaker, as a representative of San Francisco in the Congress, I 
wanted to speak because many of the people in our region, even though 
we were not represented officially by Mo Udall in the Congress, 
certainly have considered him a leader on many of the issues of concern 
to our area. He had political alliances with the Burton family in San 
Francisco, and now that I represent San Francisco I wanted to speak for 
my constituents in honoring Mo Udall.
  I think that any of us who served with Mo would say that one of the 
great privileges of our political lives was to be able to call him a 
colleague. He served with such great intellect and, of course, humor, 
as we have all heard. He was a teacher to us in many ways, as a 
colleague; and he was a teacher, of course, in his later years with the 
dignity with which he faced his challenge.
  We are very fortunate. I know that Mo was very pleased with the 
gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Pastor) coming to Congress to serve the 
great State of Arizona; and I also know, we all know, what a thrill and 
what a joy it was to Mo to have his son, Mark, and his nephew, Tom, 
serve in this Congress. What a perfect way for his life to end, to see 
the tradition of greatness and dignity live on in this body, and Lord 
knows where the tradition will go from here.
  I wanted to make one point about the environment, however, because, 
as we all know, Mo was born in desert country, but he fell in love with 
the snow-capped Alaska wilderness and its vast

[[Page 3620]]

beauty that was so unlike his roots. After a trip there, Mo spent a 
good portion of his service in Congress dedicated to the protection of 
the great Alaskan wilderness.
  He was responsible for the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, which 
transferred 55 million acres of land to the Alaska natives; and he was 
successful in imposing a prohibition on energy development in the 
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. I bring this up because my 
constituent, Dr. Edgar Wayburn, worked with him on that.
  I know my time has expired. I will submit the rest of my statement 
for the Record, but I say of Mo it was not only that he represented his 
area so well, he was a leader for our entire great country.
  Morris K. Udall--Mo to everyone--was a giant in this Congress and in 
all aspects of his life. After dedicating a lifetime to protecting our 
national treasures, he became one.
  Born in the desert country, he fell in love with the snow-capped 
Alaska wilderness and its vast beauty that was so unlike his roots. 
After a trip there, Mo Udall spent a good portion of his service in 
Congress dedicated to the protection of Alaska's great wilderness.
  He was responsible for the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act which 
transferred 55 million acres of land to Alaska's natives and he was 
successful in imposing a prohibition on energy development in the 
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
  I am pleased to note that one of my constituents, 92-year-old Dr. 
Edgar Wayburn of the Sierra Club, worked tirelessly with Chairman Udall 
to protect these lands. Mo Udall's contributions to protecting our 
environment and preserving the American landscape reached far beyond 
Arizona, and his work has touched all our lives and the lives of our 
children.
  In Congress, we will continue to work to honor Mo's memory and seek 
passage of the Morris K. Udall Wilderness Act to provide permanent 
protection to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. In the last 
Congress, this legislation had 150 cosponsors. It is the most 
appropriate means to honor this great Congressman and environmentalist.
  You might think a person would lose their sense of humor after 
suffering defeat--not so for Mo Udall. Success eluded him in his run in 
the Presidential primaries of 1976 and in his two runs at election for 
House Speaker.
  Mo never abandoned His humor--if you're running for leadership, 
``you've got to know the difference between a cactus and a caucus.''
  We are particularly fortunate to have Mo's son, Mark, serving in 
Congress to carry on the Udall tradition with his cousin, Tom. Mark has 
stated about his father, ``He taught me that humor is essential to the 
workings of a strong democracy. He taught me to take your work 
seriously, but not yourself too seriously.'' I am pleased to serve with 
the new ``Udall Team'' in Congress.
  Mo Udall imparted great lessons to all of us. On Vietnam, ``I am 
unhappy because we are involved in this war at all. As far as I am 
concerned, it is the wrong war in the wrong place at the wrong time.'' 
On environmental stewardship, ``We hear a lot of talk about our 
American heritage and what we'll leave our children and grandchildren. 
The ancient Athenians had an oath that read in part: `We will transmit 
this city not only not less, but greater and more beautiful than it was 
transmitted to us.' ''
  Mo Udall may have lost many battles, and his greatest last battle 
against Parkinson's Disease, but he was a winner for our nation and 
leaves a legacy of outstanding leadership, a model for all of us 
serving in Congress. Before his death, Mo was honored with the 
Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1996.
  Our country is blessed by his life, from 1922 to 1998, and from his 
work on behalf of the environment, civil service reform, campaign 
finance and myriad other initiatives to improve people's lives. Mo 
Udall was a captivating individual who is remembered by his engaging 
wit, his humility, his perseverance and incomparable accomplishment.
  Mr. KOLBE. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
  In closing this, and ``debate'' is not the right word for it, closing 
these discussions, these eulogies, these wonderful statements that have 
been made here today and before yielding back the balance of my time, 
let me just say to my colleagues that I think the words that have been 
spoken here on the floor give only a very partial sketch of this 
wonderful person who we all knew as Mo Udall because he was such a 
giant, there really are not enough colors in the palette to paint this 
wonderful person.
  It is hard to think what about Mo Udall I would want most to 
remember, whether it is his legacy of the environment, the courage that 
he had of speaking out on Vietnam back in the 1960s, what he did for 
Native Americans. But I think I would choose to think of the civility 
that he brought to this body, Mo Udall's sense of humor, his self-
deprecation. He was an individual who never took himself so seriously 
that he lost sight of where he came from or where he was going, and I 
think that really is the legacy that all of us in this body would do 
well each day and each week and each year to remember. If we do, we 
will not only be better as human beings, but this will be a better 
body, and this will be a better country.
  Mr. Speaker, I would like to remind my colleagues and all others who 
either knew Mo Udall or did not know him but loved him and know of what 
he has done that this afternoon, in just 30 minutes, at 2 o'clock in 
the Cannon Caucus Room, there will be a memorial service to honor him.
  Mr. STUMP. Mr. Speaker, in the history of those who have served in 
the House, relatively few names will appear to date as Members from the 
State of Arizona. Those who have served may be few in numbers, but they 
have made a difference in this House and on behalf of our State.
  Such was certainly the case of Arizona's Mo Udall. The demeanor with 
which we conduct our business in this House will forever be influenced 
by Mo. We can disagree, but Mo demonstrated time and again that humor 
will insure that we do not have to be disagreeable.
  It is no secret that politically, Mo and I were on opposite sides of 
the political spectrum, but when it came to Arizona, we could work 
together as well as any two Members. His legacy in Arizona is really 
twofold. We both came from a generation that saw Arizona boom from a 
State of small communities in rural environment to aggressive growth in 
full-fledged urban areas. What made Arizona attractive to so many from 
around the country, the lifestyle and the uniqueness and beauty of the 
environment, were the focus of Mo's work in Arizona. While he worked 
tirelessly to protect Arizona's grandeur and protect it for future 
generations, he was also instrumental in insuring that Arizona had the 
resources she needed to support a growing population and economy. 
Protection through wilderness areas, and water through the Central 
Arizona Project. Such were the dichotomies of Mo Udall.
  Mo earned people's respect through listening, hard work, humor, and 
compromise. He certainly earned mine.
  Mr. RAHALL. Mr. Speaker, I join my colleagues today in paying tribute 
to Mo Udall, and would note that two Udalls, Mark and Tom, are Members 
of the 106th Congress and are carrying on the legacy set by Mo and his 
brother Stewart.
  There are those today who will speak about Mo Udall, the gentleman 
from Arizona. Mo Udall, the Presidential candidate. Mo Udall, the 
powerful chairman of the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs and 
his vast legislative accomplishments. Mo Udall, the man.
  I share the sentiments of my colleagues in these matters. As a 
freshman Member of Congress I began serving on the Interior Committee 
in 1977, the year Mo became its chairman. Under Mo's leadership, the 
years that followed were extremely productive for the committee. Many 
of Mo's legislative initiatives were enacted into law, such as the 
Alaskan Lands Act. Under Mo Udall's guidance the committee produced a 
legendary amount of wilderness and park legislation that will stand as 
testimony to the will and foresight of this great man.
  Others will speak to those issues. I will speak to but one of Mo 
Udall's legislative achievements; one that left its mark on the lives 
of every citizen of this Nation's coalfields: The landmark Surface 
Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977.
  Mr. Speaker, for many years leading up to the enactment of this law, 
the gentleman from Arizona saw what was occurring in the Appalachian 
coalfields of this Nation due to unregulated surface coal mining. By 
the 1970's, it became increasingly clear that the proliferation of 
acidified streams, highwalls, refuse piles, open mine shafts, and other 
hazards associated with past coal mining practices could not be 
ignored.
  It was on February 26, 1972, that a coal waste dam located on Buffalo 
Creek in Logan County, WV, collapsed causing a flood of truly horrible 
proportions in loss of life, injuries, property damage, and people left 
homeless.
  This disaster, coupled with mounting concerns over the failure of 
several States to properly regulate mining, ensure reclamation

[[Page 3621]]

and the development of surface coal mining in the semiarid West for the 
first time raised the level of public attention to the plight of 
coalfield citizens adversely affected by certain coal mining practices 
from a local, to a truly national, level.
  The Congressional debates of the mid-1970's, and bills passed only to 
be vetoed, set the stage for Mo Udall's introduction of H.R. 2 on the 
opening day of the 95th Congress in 1977.
  As a newly elected Representative from West Virginia, I was honored 
to serve on the Interior Committee at this time, at the very time when 
Mo Udall took the leadership reins of the Committee, at the very time 
when after years of struggle it looked likely that a federal strip 
mining act would pass muster. I was given a great compliment when Mo 
Udall chose this freshman Member from West Virginia to serve on the 
House-Senate Conference Committee on H.R. 2, and stood in the Rose 
Garden with President Carter and Mo Udall when the bill was signed into 
law as the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977.
  This law has served the people of the Appalachian coalfields well. It 
has made the coalfields of this Nation a much better place in which to 
live. The vast majority of the coal industry is in compliance with the 
law, and countless acres of old abandoned coal mine lands have been 
reclaimed under the special fund established by the act.
  Mo Udall's original insight and foresight have proven correct and we 
are very much indebted to him. When God made the mountains of my home 
State of West Virginia, he made a special breed of people to preside 
over them. We are born of the mountains and hollows of our rugged 
terrain. Our State motto is ``montani semper liberi''--mountaineers are 
always free. Although Mo Udall is from the southwest, from Arizona, he 
understood us. He understood the true beauty of our hills and hollers. 
He is, in my mind, an honorary West Virginian. And his years of 
diligence in not only gaining the enactment of the 1977 law, but in 
pursuing its implementation, will be long remembered by all West 
Virginians.
  Now, if Mo was here, I can imagine what he would say. He would tell 
the story about a young man at a banquet. This young man was getting an 
award and he was flustered and he said, ``I sure don't appreciate it, 
but I really do deserve it.''
  Mo turned over responsibility on the committee for the surface mining 
act to this gentleman from West Virginia, his chairman of the 
Subcommittee on Mining and Natural Resources. As I undertake my duties 
in this regard, the words Mo spoke on the 10-year anniversary of the 
enactment of the 1977 law ring in my ears: ``The act was, and is, more 
than a piece of legislation. It is a vehicle of hope for those who live 
and who will live in America's coalfields.'' Mo left some big shoes to 
fill.
  Mr. Speaker, I cannot conclude without making note of one other 
mining initiative. Mo understood what was occurring in the coalfields. 
But he also understood the abuses that took place in the West, in 
hardock mining for copper, gold, silver and other such minerals under 
the Mining Law of 1872.
  It was also in 1977 that the effort to reform the Mining Law of 1872 
came to a head. Mo Udall, a reform supporter, however, found that the 
press of Committee business and other considerations would cause this 
particular initiative to be shelved for the time being.
  Ten years later, in 1987, as his Mining Subcommittee chairman I 
resurrected the issue and today, mining law reform legislation is being 
actively considered by the Congress. Mo, I will do my best to use the 
same judgment, same humor, you would bring to the debate. Mo Udall, 
this one piece of unfinished business, once completed, is for you.
  God bless you, Mo Udall.
  Mr. KOLBE. Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time, and I 
move the previous question on the concurrent resolution.
  The previous question was ordered. The concurrent resolution was 
agreed to.
  A motion to reconsider was laid on the table.

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