[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 148 (2002), Part 15]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page 21171]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




  TRIBUTE TO RICHARD TUISKU ON THE OCCASION OF HIS INDUCTION INTO THE 
           MICHIGAN ASSOCIATION OF BROADCASTERS HALL OF FAME

                                 ______
                                 

                            HON. BART STUPAK

                              of michigan

                    in the house of representatives

                      Wednesday, October 16, 2002

  Mr. STUPAK. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to pay special tribute to a 
person whose voice is the sound of news for generations of radio 
listeners in Michigan's Upper Peninsula Copper Country. Mr. Speaker, I 
rise to honor Richard Tuisku, known to his listeners as Dick Storm, on 
the occasion of his recent induction into the Michigan Association of 
Broadcasters Hall of Fame.
  Richard Tuisku was born 59 years ago in a small town called Toivola 
in Houghton County Michigan. He graduated from Michigan Technological 
University in Houghton and also went to broadcasting school in 
Minneapolis, Minnesota. In 1962 he began his broadcasting career at 
WSWW in Platteville, Wisconsin, using the name Dick Storm because he 
thought his Finnish last name, Tuisku, would be too difficult for his 
co-workers and listeners to pronounce correctly.
  He chose the radio name ``Storm'' because it is a reasonably close 
English word for his given last name, Tuisku, which roughly translates 
to blizzard in Finnish. Two years later Dick Storm moved back to the 
Upper Peninsula and began working at a radio station in Hancock. He 
changed jobs but still did news at WCCY an AM/FM combo station in 
Houghton. Copper Country radio audiences have been getting their news 
from Dick for almost forty years.
  In 1994 he and a partner purchased the Houghton AM/FM stations he 
worked at and they are now WCCY AM and WOLV FM. Despite being an owner 
of the stations, Dick continues to work six days a week doing the news 
and hosting a weekly public affairs program.
  Dick is not the only public spirited member of the household. Mary 
Tuisku, his wife, served as mayor of Hancock from 1990 until 1995.
  In recognition of his many years of radio news and public affairs 
broadcasting, Dick was inducted into the Michigan Association of 
Broadcasters Hall of Fame in the summer of 2002.
  Mr. Speaker, many people complain when they have to get up early to 
go to work, Dick Storm has been getting up before dawn for forty years 
to do radio news. I ask you and my House colleagues to join me in 
saluting a legendary broadcaster and a long time friend of mine, 
Richard Tuisku (a/k/a Dick Storm) on the occasion of his induction into 
the Michigan Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame.

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