[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 146 (2000), Part 10] [Extensions of Remarks] [Page 13853] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]THE PASSING OF A GREAT PUBLIC SERVANT: JAMES C. KIRIE ______ HON. HENRY J. HYDE of illinois in the house of representatives Tuesday, July 11, 2000 Mr. HYDE. Mr. Speaker, on June 19th of this year my dear friend James C. Kirie died. He was 89 years old and had lived a full and productive life of service to his community, his State and Nation. The Chicago Sun-Times printed the following article about Jim's life: [From the Chicago Sun-Times, June 20, 2000] James Kirie; First Held Office at 21 (By Curtis Lawrence) For nearly 70 years, Leyden Township Democratic Committeeman James C. Kirie did what was seemingly the only thing he knew to do--commit his life to public service. ``If I had my life to do over again, and I was to weigh my life against being in politics or not being in politics, I think I would do exactly what I did,'' Mr. Kirie once told the late University of Illinois at Chicago Professor Milton Rakove. Mr. Kirie died Monday morning at Evanston Hospital, two weeks after he was stricken by a heart attack. He was 89. The son of Greek immigrants, Mr. Kirie dropped out of high school to work in his family's River Grove restaurant. During the Great Depression, he resumed his education and graduated from Leyden High School, then later enrolled at Elmhurst College. Seeking a way to earn money for tuition, Mr. Kirie applied to run for village clerk in River Grove. He was nominated and elected in 1932. ``I was only 20 and had to wait until my 21st birthday to take office,'' he told Sun-Times columnist Steve Neal in 1991. ``If I hadn't needed a job to pay for my college expenses, I doubt if I would have entered politics.'' In addition to his position as the Democratic committeeman, he was the president of the 25th Avenue Building Corporation, and was investment officer of the Cook County Circuit Court clerk when he died. During the 1930s, Mr. Kirie fought organized crime by closing down brothels and gambling establishments. After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Mr. Kirie was among the first elected officials to enlist in the Army. He took part in the Normandy invasion. In the 1950s, after testifying before a U.S. Senate rackets committee, Mr. Kirie's home and the restaurant he owned were bombed. He later sponsored legislation for a state wiretapping law. Mr. Kirie was slated for the Metropolitan Sanitary District, now the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, in 1970. He served three six-year terms. He was a major sponsor of the metro Chicago's Deep Tunnel project. In 1991, the water reclamation plant in Des Plaines was named in his honor. Mr. Kirie is survived by two daughters, Barbara Kirie Stewart and Circuit Court Judge Dorothy Kirie Kinnaird, and two grandchildren, James Burke Kinnaird and Katherine Anne Kirie Kinnaird. Mr. Speaker, Jim will be missed by his loving family and by his countless friends and admirers, among whom I am proud to count myself. ____________________