[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 154 (2008), Part 7]
[House]
[Pages 9663-9668]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




        RECOGNIZING THE 100TH BIRTHDAY OF LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON

  Mr. SCOTT of Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I move to suspend the rules and 
agree to the concurrent resolution (H. Con. Res. 354) recognizing the 
100th birthday of Lyndon Baines Johnson, 36th President, designer of 
the Great Society, politician, educator, and civil rights enforcer.
  The Clerk read the title of the concurrent resolution.
  The text of the concurrent resolution is as follows:

                            H. Con. Res. 354

       Whereas August 27, 2008, marks the 100th birthday of Lyndon 
     Baines Johnson;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson was born in Stonewall, Texas, to 
     Samuel Ealy Johnson, Jr., a Texas representative, and Rebekah 
     Baines, on August 27, 1908;
       Whereas upon graduation, Lyndon B. Johnson enrolled in 
     Southwest Texas State Teachers' College, where he vigorously 
     participated in debate, campus politics, and edited the 
     school newspaper;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson had several teaching positions 
     throughout Texas, including at the Welhausen School in La 
     Salle County, at Pearsall High School, and as a public 
     speaking teacher at Sam Houston High School in Houston;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson went to work as a congressional 
     assistant at the age of 23;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson served the 10th Congressional 
     District in the Texas House of Representatives from April 10, 
     1937, to January 3, 1949;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson became a commissioned officer in 
     the Navy Reserves in December 1941;
       Whereas during World War II, Lyndon B. Johnson was 
     recommended by Undersecretary of the Navy James Forrestal to 
     President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who assigned Johnson to a 
     three-man survey team in the southwest Pacific;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson was conferred the Silver Star, 
     which is the military's third highest medal, by General 
     Douglas MacArthur;
       Whereas in 1948, Lyndon B. Johnson was elected to the 
     Senate at the age of 41;
       Whereas in 1951, Lyndon B. Johnson was elected Senate 
     minority leader at the age of 44 and elected Senate majority 
     leader at the age of 46, the youngest in our history;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson was elected Vice President at the 
     age of 52, becoming president of the Senate;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson's congressional career and his 
     leadership spanned the stock market crash, the Great 
     Depression, World War II, the nuclear age, the Cold War, the 
     space age, and the civil rights movement, some of the most 
     turbulent years in American history;
       Whereas Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson was appointed as 
     head of the President's Committee on Equal Employment 
     Opportunities, through which he worked with African Americans 
     and other minorities;
       Whereas an hour and 38 minutes after the assassination of 
     President Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson was sworn in as 
     President aboard Air Force One;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson was a bold leader;
       Whereas as President, Lyndon B. Johnson believed that 
     government could guarantee human rights, could lift people 
     out of poverty, and provide access to quality education and 
     health care throughout the Nation;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson was an idealist, a force of 
     nature, and had the energy and determination and leadership 
     to turn those dreams into reality;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson was a ``can-do'' President 
     because no matter how difficult and daunting the task at 
     hand, he never rested until it was completed;
       Whereas in 1964, the Johnson Administration passed the 
     landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964, which banned de jure 
     segregation in the Nation's schools and public places;
       Whereas the Johnson Administration passed the Voting Rights 
     Act of 1965, which outlawed obstructive provisions that were 
     rendered impractical and impartial to potential voters;
       Whereas in January of 1965, the Johnson Administration 
     introduced the Great Society, which included provisions for 
     aid to education, Medicare, urban renewal, beautification, 
     conservation, the development of depressed regions, a wide-
     scale fight against poverty, and the removal of obstacles to 
     the right to vote;

[[Page 9664]]

       Whereas in 1967, President Johnson nominated Thurgood 
     Marshall as the first African-American to serve on the 
     Supreme Court;
       Whereas during Johnson's presidency, the National 
     Aeronautics and Space Administration made spectacular steps 
     forward in space exploration when 3 astronauts successfully 
     orbited the moon in December 1968;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson died at 4:33 p.m. on January 22, 
     1973, at his ranch in Johnson City, Texas, at the age of 64;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson was posthumously awarded the 
     Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1980;
       Whereas Lyndon B. Johnson is honored, venerated, and 
     revered for his drive to establish equality for all 
     Americans, illustrated in the momentous legislation passed 
     during his Administration;
       Whereas Congress recognizes the 100th birthday of Lyndon B. 
     Johnson, the 36th president;
       Whereas Congress extols the contributions of Lyndon B. 
     Johnson to the United States and his commitment to the War on 
     Poverty through the Economic Opportunity Act;
       Whereas Congress commends Lyndon B. Johnson for 
     establishing the Medicare Act of 1965 that has helped 
     millions of Americans; and
       Whereas Congress requests that the President issue a 
     proclamation calling upon the American people to observe the 
     Centennial Celebration of Lyndon B. Johnson and his ``can-do 
     spirit'' with appropriate ceremonies, programs, and 
     activities: Now, therefore, be it
       Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate 
     concurring), That the Congress--
       (1) reaffirms its support for the Civil Rights Act of 1964 
     and the Voting Rights Act of 1965;
       (2) recognizes the significance of the Voting Rights Act of 
     1965; and
       (3) honors Lyndon B. Johnson for his work as a civil rights 
     enforcer.

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to the rule, the gentleman from 
Virginia (Mr. Scott) and the gentleman from Iowa (Mr. King) will each 
control 20 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Virginia.


                             General Leave

  Mr. SCOTT of Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all 
Members have 5 legislative days to revise and extend their remarks and 
include extraneous material on the bill under consideration.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the 
gentleman from Virginia?
  There was no objection.
  Mr. SCOTT of Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may 
consume.
  Mr. Speaker, August 27 will mark the 100th anniversary of the 
birthday of Lyndon Baines Johnson, the 36th President of the United 
States. President Johnson served his home State of Texas and this 
Nation during some of the most tumultuous and extraordinary years of 
our history. From the Great Depression, to the New Deal, to World War 
II, to the Civil Rights Era, President Lyndon Johnson shaped the events 
and left this Nation more prosperous, more just, and more free.
  Joining the House in 1937, his life embodied the values of the New 
Deal, progressive values that sought to secure for all Americans 
President Franklin Roosevelt's Four Freedoms: Freedom of speech and 
expression, freedom of worship, freedom of want, and freedom from fear. 
In his own Presidency, the programs of the Great Society were the most 
ambitious of any administration before or since the New Deal.
  In his 1964 State of the Union Address, President Johnson launched an 
unconditional war on poverty. As a former teacher, he understood the 
central importance of education. And so he said, ``It is our primary 
weapon in the war on poverty, and the principal tool for building a 
Great Society.''
  Among his key accomplishments in the field of education were Project 
Head Start, still one of the most successful education programs; the 
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965; and the Higher 
Education Act of 1965. As a son of Texas' Hill Country, he also 
understood the importance of economic security. He told the Nation, 
``The second prong on the attack on poverty is to protect individuals 
and their families from poverty when their own earnings are 
insufficient because of age, disability, unemployment, or other family 
circumstances.''
  The programs he launched included the Social Security Amendments of 
1965 and 1967; the Revenue Act of 1964, which lowered the withholding 
tax on middle-income workers from 18 percent to 14 percent; the Minimum 
Wage Bill of 1966, which broadened the Federal minimum wage and 
overtime pay protection and lifted the minimum wage from $1.25 to $1.60 
per hour; the School Breakfast Program; the Special Milk Program; and 
the Food Stamp Program of 1964, which this House recently voted to 
expand by a bipartisan veto-proof margin.
  The third weapon in the War on Poverty was job creation. President 
Johnson once said, ``Our American answer to poverty is not to make the 
poor more secure in their poverty but to reach down and to help them 
lift themselves out of the ruts of poverty and move with the large 
majority along the high road of hope and prosperity.'' The programs 
included the Job Corps; the College Work Study Program; the 
Neighborhood Youth Corps; the Work Experience Program; and the Manpower 
Act.
  Some of the greatest accomplishments were, of course, the Civil 
Rights Era. More than any other President, he was a guiding force 
behind the enactment of civil rights legislation that changed our 
Nation forever. Following bloody Sunday in Selma, Alabama, President 
Johnson addressed a joint session of Congress to urge the passage of 
the Voting Rights Act. He told the Nation then that, ``What happens in 
Selma is part of a far larger movement which reaches into every section 
and State of America. It is the effort of American Negroes to secure 
for themselves the full blessings of American life. Their cause must be 
our cause, too. Because it's not just Negroes, but really it's all of 
us, who must overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice.'' 
He closed with the rallying refrain of the civil rights movement by 
saying, ``And we shall overcome.''
  Among his historic accomplishments were the Civil Rights Act of 1957, 
where, as leader of the Senate, he ushered through the first civil 
rights bill since Reconstruction; the Civil Rights Act of 1964; the 
Voting Rights Act of 1965, which this Congress recently extended for 
another 25 years; and the Civil Rights Act of 1968. These landmark 
measures guaranteed the right to vote for millions of Americans who had 
been disenfranchised for generations, and outlawed discrimination in 
public accommodations and in housing, and outlawed discrimination in 
employment.
  President Johnson also made history when, in 1967, he appointed his 
Solicitor General, Thurgood Marshall, who, as the NAACP legal director 
from 1939 to 1961 had already argued many cases before the Supreme 
Court, including Brown v. Topeka Board of Education, to be the first 
African American Supreme Court Justice.
  Mr. Speaker, the life and accomplishments of President Johnson should 
inspire all of us to rededicate ourselves to the mission to which he 
devoted so much of his energies, to free all Americans from want, from 
fear, and from discrimination. This resolution is a fitting recognition 
of his accomplishments and his lasting inspiration.
  I want to thank the gentlelady from Texas (Ms. Jackson-Lee) for 
bringing this to the floor today, and I urge my colleagues to support 
it.
  I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. KING of Iowa. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may 
consume.
  Mr. Speaker, I rise in support of House Concurrent Resolution 354, 
honoring the birth of former President Lyndon B. Johnson. This 
resolution accompanies the LBJ Foundation's upcoming centennial 
celebration.
  Lyndon Johnson was born on August 27, 1908, in central Texas, not far 
from Johnson City, which his family helped settle. He endured rural 
poverty in his younger years, working his way through Southwest Texas 
State Teachers College, now known as Texas State University, San 
Marcos.
  President Johnson's well-known commitment to civil rights began early 
in his political career. When he was elected to Congress, Johnson 
worked to get black farmers and school children equal treatment in his 
congressional district, and in 1938, secured Federal funding for 
housing in Austin, Texas, for those who lived in poverty.

[[Page 9665]]

  After six terms in the House, Johnson was elected to the Senate in 
1948. In 1953, he became the youngest minority leader in Senate 
history. The following year, he became the majority leader.
  During his 24 years in Congress, Johnson garnered unprecedented 
experience in the passage of legislation, experience that materialized 
into the many civil rights laws he signed as President. When Lyndon 
Johnson took office following the tragic assassination of President 
John F. Kennedy, he spearheaded passage of the 1965 Higher Education 
Act, which quadrupled the number of African American college students 
within a decade. He did the same with Medicare and Medicaid 
legislation, and within another decade, African American infant 
mortality was reduced by half.
  Johnson also played a crucial role in ending the de jure segregation 
in America by signing the landmark 1964 Civil Rights Act into law, 
which banned discrimination in employment. As a proud Republican, I 
stand here, Mr. Speaker, I remind you and this body that that was with 
a majority of Republican votes in the House and in Senate that passed 
the Civil Rights Act in 1964, and President Johnson truly worked in a 
bipartisan fashion across the aisle and could not have passed that 
without bipartisan support and a majority of Republicans in the House 
and Senate.
  After Martin Luther King, Jr.'s voter registration campaign in Selma, 
Alabama, President Johnson said that even one American's 
disenfranchisement, ``undermines the freedom of every citizen.'' In 
that spirit, he signed the 1965 Voting Rights Act. His efforts allowed 
more African Americans to vote, and to run for office.
  As a result of President Lyndon B. Johnson's historic efforts in the 
fight to end racial segregation, we now live in a more representative 
America. I urge my colleagues to join me in supporting this resolution.
  I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. SCOTT of Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I yield such time as she may 
consume to the gentlelady from Texas (Ms. Sheila Jackson-Lee), the 
author of the resolution.
  Ms. JACKSON-LEE of Texas. I thank the distinguished gentleman from 
Virginia and I thank him for his words of tribute, as I thank the 
distinguished gentleman from Iowa for his words of tribute, two 
distinguished gentlemen, and of course the chairman and ranking member 
of the full committee, Mr. Conyers and Mr. Smith.
  I rise today with great enthusiasm to be able to commemorate this 
year, the 100th birthday of President Lyndon Baines Johnson. I am glad 
that Mr. King offered the fact that much of the legislation that was 
monumental, there was bipartisan support. That was a talent of Lyndon 
Baines Johnson. He managed to craft a legislative agenda as a President 
that was remarkable, I would say unbelievable, and he did it by 
reaching across the aisle.
  So I rise today in support of H. Con. Res. 354, commemorating 
President Lyndon Baines Johnson on the occasion of his centennial 
birthday celebration. I am proud to offer this legislation and to note 
that the President's official birth date is August 27, 1908. This will 
give us the opportunity to commemorate his legacy from this time until 
the month of August. The Lyndon Baines Johnson Foundation is 
celebrating, however, the remarkable life and Presidency of this great 
man beginning today and the celebration will culminate with his family 
members and fellow former cabinet members and staff and supporters and 
Members of Congress, House and Senate, on this Wednesday, when the 
Senate will pass this concurrent resolution honoring President Johnson.
  It is an honor to recognize President Lyndon Baines Johnson, not 
simply because he was President, but because he represented an era, 
because he convened a time in America that was troubled. But he was a 
true champion of civil rights for all Americans and he led the Nation 
during very turbulent political times, from the Civil Rights movement, 
the deaths of President John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, and Dr. Martin 
Luther King, and the Vietnam War.
  But he was a teacher by profession in Texas. He proudly served the 
10th Congressional District in the United States House of 
Representatives. He was a commissioned officer in the Navy and 
valiantly served in World War II. He was a renaissance man, he was a 
whole man, he was an American person, an American man, if you will. 
During World War II he was conferred the Silver Star, the military's 
third highest medal, by General Douglas MacArthur.

                              {time}  1645

  He was a United States Senator and served as both minority and 
majority leader. He holds the current distinction of being the youngest 
Senate majority leader at the age of 46. He was also Vice President, 
head of the Committee on Equal Employment Opportunities, and President 
of the United States.
  As President, as was noted, he nominated historically the first 
African American, the first minority to be nominated to the Supreme 
Court, Thurgood Marshall, who, of course, we all know argued that 
premier and prominent case civil rights legacy, Brown v. Board of 
Education, to the United States Supreme Court. All the world took note 
that this southern President from Texas could nominate an African 
American to the Supreme Court. That was Lyndon Baines Johnson.
  He was truly a great Texan and a great patriot and a great American. 
He was a devoted husband to Lady Bird Johnson, and we acknowledged her 
passing sadly this year, and, of course, a father to his two beloved 
children, Luci Baines Johnson and Lynda Johnson Robb. History shows us 
that beside this giant of an a man, this historic legend, there were 
three great women.
  President Johnson never forgot his beginnings in Texas. My 
predecessor in Congress, the incomparable Honorable Barbara Jordan of 
the 18th Congressional District in Texas, developed a good working 
relationship with President Johnson, and he appointed her to serve on 
the Commission on Income Maintenance in 1968.
  In addition, after the 1965 Voting Rights Act was created, she along 
with many African Americans ascended to the United States Congress, for 
the Honorable Barbara Jordan had run before and had lost. With the 
Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the redistricting that came about, she 
was able to be elected to the United States Congress, along with Andy 
Young, and the rest is history, as we have seen the numbers of African 
Americans and Hispanics come to the United States Congress, creating a 
more equal balance because of this legislation.
  Of course, Barbara Jordan in 1968 amended the Voting Rights Act of 
1965 by adding Spanish language. Later Barbara Jordan would serve as a 
professor at the Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs at the 
University of Texas and she would accept an appointment to the Lyndon 
Baines Johnson Centennial Chair in National Policy at the university.
  As a teacher, Johnson believed segregation condemned the South to 
educational and economic backwardness. I think it is important to note, 
as I said earlier, he was a son of the south. This was a very difficult 
stance to take. He took it out of his heart. He did not agree with 
segregation, and coming to the United States Congress and Senate, it 
freed him to do what was right.
  In 1937, Johnson was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives as 
a liberal New Dealer allied with Democratic President Franklin Delano 
Roosevelt. Johnson commemorated his legislative life in tribute to 
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, I truly believe, because he led on the War 
on Poverty.
  Johnson successfully championed civil rights when he successfully ran 
for the U.S. Senate in 1948. Even then, as I said, as a son of the 
south, he was unashamed of his belief against segregation. In 1957, 
when a civil rights bill came before Congress, Johnson favored the bill 
and worked hard behind the scenes to win its passage. He moved from one 
side to the other, persuading southern Democrats and northern liberals 
to compromise. The Civil Rights Act of 1957, the first civil rights 
legislation to pass since reconstruction, was

[[Page 9666]]

 signed by President Eisenhower in September 1957. Civil right was 
bipartisan in this body, and President Johnson knew that.
  In 1960, John F. Kennedy invited Johnson to join the Democratic 
presidential ticket as his running mate. Some would say there could not 
be two more different individuals. But what a match, what a wonderful 
match. And they went on to victory. As they went on to victory, they 
showed the world that different viewpoints can be united.
  When Johnson met Dr. Martin Luther King a few days after Kennedy's 
assassination, Dr. King told Johnson that racial tensions could no 
longer be tempered by compromise. Johnson appreciated King's powers of 
persuasion and decided to utilize his experience to pass the 1964 Civil 
Rights Act. Dr. King and President Johnson continued to work closely to 
pass the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Fair Housing Act.
  It was difficult times. There were agreements and disagreements. But, 
lo and behold, the great and wonderful hopeful dream of Dr. Martin 
Luther King did his work and asked that President Johnson do his work, 
and together they did their work for America.
  Reminiscing on the trials and triumphs on her young years in the 
White House, his daughter Luci Baines Johnson stated that her legacy 
from the White House days were ``a thousand friendships, a deep and 
abiding love of country and public service, a passion for learning, and 
the recognition that getting in life is truly to be found in the giving 
and the belief that I should try to live each day as if it is my 
last.''
  President Johnson signed these bills into law, as I indicated: the 
Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act and the Open Housing Act. 
President Johnson started Head Start, Job Corps and Medicare, among 
many others. And if you look at his time in Congress and his time as 
President, you will find not just a Presidency, but you will find an 
era.
  It is amazing the bills that President Johnson passed. I simply want 
to take note of them and will place into the Record two pages of 
legislation under the auspices and the administration of Lyndon Baines 
Johnson that included so many bills, the Kennedy Cultural Center, the 
Urban Mass Transit, Food Stamps, housing acts, Head Start and others. , 
the Kennedy Cultural Center, the Urban Mass Transit, Food Stamps, 
housing acts, Head Start and others.
  We understand we are going into a hot summer, a summer where youth 
are looking for jobs. President Johnson offered Job Corps, Youth Jobs, 
Medicare for those who are up in years, and, of course, he declared the 
War on Poverty, the first President to do so. He developed 40 programs 
to eliminate poverty, and his programs were intended to improve the 
living conditions of all Americans.
  Of course, he was a great educator. His daughter Lynda Robb once 
stated, ``But daddy wasn't as interested in the numbers of laws he 
helped enact as he was in the number of lives that he helped to 
enrich.''
  I just want to show this body some of the pictures that show the 
working relationship with major civil rights leaders that worked 
closely with the President on these civil rights laws. It shows the 
passion that he had, that he was a-hands-on President.
  As he met with Dr. Martin Luther King, this picture shows him giving 
the pen which he signed the 1964-1965 bill, and as well the signing 
ceremonies that took place during that time. This, of course, shows 
Barbara Jordan and Vernon Jordan who stood with the President on many, 
many issues.
  Let me close by simply acknowledging one of the greatest moments I 
think this Congress had a chance to witness, and that was the 
President's speech to Congress as he dealt with this question of the 
Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act. As he spoke to the Speaker 
and to the Members of Congress, he said, ``I speak tonight for the 
dignity of man and the destiny of democracy. I urge every member of 
both parties, Americans of all religions and of all colors from every 
section of this country to join me in that cause. At times history and 
fate meet at a single time in a single place to shape a turning point 
in man's unending search for freedom. So it was at Lexington and 
Concord. So it was a century ago at Appomattox. So it was last week in 
Selma, Alabama.''
  The President opened up his words by suggesting that we could do this 
together. These are his final words.
  ``So I ask you to join me in working long hours, nights and weekends, 
if necessary, to pass this bill. And I don't make that request lightly. 
For from the window where I sit, with the problems of our country, I 
recognize that outside this Chamber is the outraged conscience of a 
nation, the grave concern of many nations, and the harsh judgment of 
history on our acts.'' And, of course, he said ``We shall overcome.''
  Mr. Speaker, I would say to you that President Lyndon Baines Johnson 
was the President of the United States, but he represents the 
compilation of all the dreams and aspirations of many who could not 
speak for themselves. He embraced the civil rights leaders. He 
understood as a son of the South that he could make a difference. He 
reached across the aisle and counted every vote. He knew how tough it 
was going to be to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and then 
ultimately after the violence of Selma, the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
  He opened the doors to many of us. I stand here as a true testimony 
to all that he has done. All of us who have had the doors of education 
opened, the doors of political process opened, the doors of poverty 
removed, opened and then shut, owe that to President Lyndon Baines 
Johnson.
  I started by saying that he is not just a President, but it is an era 
which we should remember. Joseph Califano said it is not a President 
that should be forgotten, but should be remembered. I ask my colleagues 
to support this legislation, and I ask them to do so enthusiastically.
  Mr. Speaker, I include the list of legislation mentioned earlier:

         Landmark Laws of the Lyndon B. Johnson Administration


                                  1963

       College Facilities, Clean Air, Vocational Education, Indian 
     Vocational Training, and Manpower Training.


                                  1964

       Inter-American Development Bank, Kennedy Cultural Center, 
     Tax Reduction, Presidential Transition, Federal Airport Aid, 
     Farm Program, Chamizal Convention, Pesticide Controls, 
     International Development Association, and Civil Rights Act 
     of 1964.
       Campobello International Park, Urban Mass Transit, Water 
     Resources Research, Federal Highway, Civil Service Pay Raise, 
     War on Poverty, Criminal Justice, Truth-in-Securities, 
     Medicine Bow National Forest, and Ozark Scenic Riverway.
       Administrative Conference, Fort Bowie Historic Site, Food 
     Stamp, Housing Act, Interest Equalization, Wilderness Areas, 
     Nurse Training, Revenues for Recreation, Fire Island National 
     Seashore, Library Services, and Federal Employee Health 
     Benefits.


                                  1965

       Medicare, Aid to Education, Higher Education, Four Year 
     Farm Program, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 
     Housing Act, Social Security Increase, Deaf-Blind Center, 
     College Work Study, and Rail Strike Settlement.
       Voting Rights, Fair Immigration Law, Older Americans, 
     Heart, Cancer, Stroke Program, Law Enforcement Assistance, 
     National Crime Commission, Drug Controls, Mental Health 
     Facilities, Health Professions, and Medical Libraries.
       Vocational Rehabilitation, Anti-Poverty Program, Arts and 
     Humanities Foundation, Aid to Appalachia, Highway Beauty, 
     Clean Air, Water Pollution Control, High Speed Transit, 
     Manpower Training, and Presidential Disability.
       Child Health, Regional Development, Aid to Small 
     Businesses, Weather-Predicting Services, Military Pay 
     Increase, GI Life Insurance, Community Health Services, Water 
     Resources Council, Water Desalting, and Assateague National 
     Seashore.
       Whiskeytown National Recreation Area, Delaware Water Gap 
     Recreation Area, Juvenile Delinquency Control, Arms Control, 
     Strengthening U.N. Charter, International Coffee Agreement, 
     and Retirement for Public Servants.


                                  1966

       Food for India, Child Nutrition, Department of 
     Transportation, Truth in Packaging, Model Cities, Rent 
     Supplements, Teachers Corps, Asian Development Bank, Clean 
     Rivers, Aid-to-Handicapped Children, Redwoods Park, and 
     Flaming Gorge Recreation Area.
       Food for Freedom, Child Safety, Narcotics Rehabilitation, 
     Traffic Safety, Highway Safety, Mine Safety, International 
     Education, Bail Reform, Tire Safety, New GI Bill, and Minimum 
     Wage Increase.

[[Page 9667]]

       Urban Mass Transit, Civil Procedure Reform, Federal Highway 
     Aid, Military Medicare, Public Health Reorganization, Cape 
     Lookout Seashore, Water Research, Guadalupe National Park, 
     Revolutionary War Bicentennial, and Fish-Wildlife 
     Preservation.
       Water for Peace, Anti-Inflation Program, Scientific 
     Knowledge Exchange, Cultural Materials Exchange, Foreign 
     Investors Tax, Parcel Post Reform, Civil Service Pay Raise, 
     Stockpile Sales, Participation Certificates, Protection for 
     Savings, Flexible Interest Rates, and Freedom of Information.


                                  1967

       Education Professions, Education Act, Air Pollution 
     Control, Partnership for Health, Social Security Increases, 
     Age Discrimination, Wholesome Meat, Flammable Fabrics, Urban 
     Research, and Public Broadcasting.
       Outer Space Treaty, Modern D.C. Government, Vietnam 
     Veterans Benefits, Federal Judicial Center, Civilian-Postal 
     Workers Pay, Summer Youth Programs, Food Stamps, Selective 
     Service, Urban Fellowships, and Consular Treaty.
       Safety At Sea Treaty, Narcotics Treaty, Anti-Racketeering, 
     Product Safety Commission, Small Business Aid, and Inter-
     American Bank.


                                  1968

       Fair Housing, Indian Bill of Rights, Safe Streets, 
     Wholesome Poultry, Food for Peace, Commodity Exchange Rules, 
     U.S. Grain Standards, School Breakfasts, Bank Protection, and 
     Defense Production.
       Corporate Takeovers, Export Program, Gold Cover Removal, 
     Truth-in-Lending, Aircraft Noise Abatement, Auto Insurance 
     Study, New Narcotics Bureau, Gas Pipeline Safety, Fire 
     Safety, and Sea Grant Colleges.
       D.C. School Board, Tax Surcharge, Better Housing, 
     International Monetary Reform, International Grains Treaty, 
     Oil Revenues for Recreation, Virgin Islands Elections, San 
     Rafael Wilderness, San Gabriel Wilderness, and Fair Federal 
     Juries.
       Candidate Protection, Juvenile Delinquency Prevention, 
     Guaranteed Student Loans, D.C. Visitors Center, FHA-VA 
     Interest Rate Program, Health Manpower, Eisenhower College, 
     Gun Controls, Biscayne Park, and Heart, Cancer, and Stroke 
     Programs.
       Hazardous Radiation Protection, Colorado River Reclamation, 
     Scenic Rivers, Scenic Trails, National Water Commission, 
     Federal Magistrates, Vocational Education, Veterans Pension 
     Increases, North Cascades Park, International Coffee 
     Agreement, Intergovernmental Manpower, Dangerous Drugs 
     Control, and Military Justice Code.

  Mr. Speaker, I rise today in support of H. Con. Res. 354, 
commemorating President Lyndon Baines Johnson on the occasion of his 
centennial birthday celebration. I am pleased to have the opportunity 
of being the original author of this resolution along with 59 House 
sponsors.
  I note that the President's official birthdate is August 27, 1908. 
However, the Lyndon Baines Johnson Foundation is celebrating the 
remarkable life and presidency of this great man beginning today, and 
the celebration will culminate on this Wednesday when the Senate will 
pass its resolution honoring President Johnson. I would like to thank 
my staff for the hard work on this resolution.
  It is an honor to recognize President Lyndon Baines Johnson. He was a 
true champion of civil rights for all Americans, and he led the Nation 
during very turbulent political times from the Civil Rights Movement, 
the deaths of President John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, and Dr. Martin 
Luther King, and the Vietnam war.
  He was a teacher by profession in Texas. He proudly served the 10th 
Congressional District in the United States House of Representatives. 
He was a commissioned officer in the Navy and valiantly served in World 
War II, and was conferred the Silver Star, the military's third highest 
medal, by General Douglas MacArthur. He was a United States Senator and 
served as both Minority and Majority leader. He holds the current 
distinction of being the youngest Senate majority leader at the age of 
46. He was also Vice President, head of the Committee on Equal 
Employment Opportunities, and President of the United States.
  As President, he nominated Thurgood Marshall as the first African-
American to serve on the United States Supreme Court.
  He was truly a great Texan. He was a devoted husband to Lady Bird 
Johnson and a father to his two beloved children: Luci Baines Johnson 
and Lynda Johnson Robb. These women give new meaning to the old adage, 
behind every great man is a great woman. History shows us that beside 
this giant, this historic legend, there were three great women.
  President Johnson never forgot his beginnings in Texas. My 
predecessor in Congress, the incomparable Honorable Barbara Jordan of 
the 18th Congressional District in Texas, developed a good working 
relationship with President Johnson and he appointed her to serve on 
the Commission on Income Maintenance in 1968. Later, she would serve as 
professor at the Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs at the 
University of Texas and she would accept an appointment to the Lyndon 
Baines Johnson Centennial Chair in National Policy at the University.
  As a teacher, Johnson believed segregation condemned the South to 
educational and economic backwardness. In 1937, Johnson was elected to 
the U.S. House of Representatives as a liberal New Dealer allied with 
Democratic President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Johnson successfully 
championed civil rights when he successfully ran for the U.S. Senate in 
1948.
  In 1957, when a civil rights bill came before Congress, Johnson 
favored the bill and worked hard behind the scenes to win its passage. 
He moved from one side to the other, persuading southern Democrats and 
northern liberals to compromise. The Civil Rights Act of 1957, the 
first civil rights legislation to pass since Reconstruction, was signed 
by President Eisenhower in September 1957.
  In 1960, John F. Kennedy invited Johnson to join the Democratic 
presidential ticket as his running mate. Johnson pushed the more 
liberal Kennedy to go further and faster on civil rights.
  When Johnson met with Dr. Martin Luther King a few days after 
Kennedy's assassination, Dr. King told Johnson that racial tensions 
could no longer be tempered by compromise. Johnson, who appreciated 
King's powers of persuasion, decided to utilize his experience to pass 
the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Dr. King and President Johnson continued to 
work closely to pass the Voting Rights of 1965 and the Fair Housing 
Act.
  Reminiscing on the trials and triumphs on her young years in the 
White House, his daughter Luci Baines Johnson stated that her legacy 
from the White House days were ``a thousand friendships, a deep and 
abiding love of country and public service, a passion for learning, the 
recognition that the getting in life is truly to be found in the giving 
and the belief that I should try to live each day as if it is my 
last.''
  Over a quarter century ago, while delivering the commencement address 
at Howard University on June 4, 1965, President Johnson posed this 
question: ``. . . what is justice?'' His response was ``It is to 
fulfill the fair expectations of man.''
  Throughout his life and administration, President Johnson sought 
justice for all Americans. His administration produced the greatest 
outpouring of legislation in America's history. Laws were enacted to 
end discrimination and to fight poverty, to provide medical care to the 
old and to extend educational opportunities to the young. In addition, 
acts were passed to clean the air and water and reverse the pollution 
of decades, to preserve precious land for public recreation and to 
protect the natural beauty of the continent. Legislation protected the 
consumer in the marketplace and enabled art, music and theater to be 
brought to all parts of America.
  President Johnson signed into law the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the 
Voting Rights Act of 1965, and the Open Housing Act of 1968. These Acts 
removed the barriers that restricted African Americans from using 
restaurants, restrooms, theaters, and other public accommodations; 
assured all citizens their constitutional right to vote; and provided 
African Americans and other minorities with the freedom to decide where 
they would live.
  President Johnson started Head Start, Job Corps, and Medicare, among 
many other landmark pieces of legislation and programs. With his Head 
Start initiative, 4 and 5-year old children from disadvantaged families 
attended classes and were provided with nourishing meals and medical 
attention, and a chance to learn in schools.
  Job Corps taught young men and women trades and vocational skills 
that would enable them to lead productive lives.
  His Medicare initiative provided health care to all Americans over 
65. With the passage of the Medicare Act, the threat of financial doom 
was lifted from senior citizens, and also from the sons and daughters 
who might also otherwise have been burdened with the responsibility for 
their parent's care.
  His undertaking on the War on Poverty was expansive. He developed 40 
programs to eliminate poverty, and his programs were intended not just 
to improve living conditions but to enable people trapped in the 
perpetual cycle of poverty the opportunity to lift themselves up out of 
poverty and improve their own conditions.
  President Johnson also added a prodigious number of laws that 
extended education to young people. ``More than 60 education laws were 
part of the vast number of legislative measures that made up the Great 
Society,'' his daughter, Lynda Robb once stated. ``But Daddy wasn't as 
interested in the number of laws he helped enact as he was in the 
number of lives those laws help enrich.'' Luci Baines Johnson stated, 
``Nothing meant more to my father than education.''

[[Page 9668]]

  Today we celebrate the life of President Lyndon Baines Johnson. He 
has given America many legislative victories. Importantly, his 
legislation had important elements of self-help that provided the 
people it was intended to serve with the opportunity to work to improve 
their own condition. Indeed, President Johnson ensured that all 
Americans would be assured their constitutional freedoms and that all 
Americans would enjoy the triumph against oppression and injustice. As 
President Johnson rightly said, quoting Winston Churchill on another 
triumph for freedom, ``it is not the end. It is not even the beginning 
of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning. That 
beginning is freedom and the barriers to that freedom are tumbling 
down.
  President Johnson's administration made tremendous strides in the 
garnering of civil rights of all Americans. Let us be reminded that the 
barriers to freedom are still tumbling. Indeed, it is not yet the 
beginning of the end. But it is the end of the beginning. The nation 
owes the end of the beginning to the leadership, foresight, and 
effectiveness of President Lyndon Baines Johnson. President Johnson and 
his administration have started the Nation on its trek to assure civil 
rights and freedoms to all, but the battle is not yet won, and we must 
continue to march on, in the courageous spirit of President Johnson, 
until victory is won, and all people are free.
  In his very eloquent speech to the full Congress, President Johnson 
echoed Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s famous words, ``We Shall 
Overcome.'' President Johnson's delivered his speech on March 15, 1965, 
a week after deadly racial violence erupted in Selma, Alabama, as 
African Americans were attacked by police while preparing to march to 
Montgomery to protest voting rights discrimination.
  In his speech, President Johnson challenged the members of Congress, 
by stating ``I want this to be the Congress--Republicans and Democrats 
alike--which did all these things for all these people. Beyond this 
great chamber--out yonder--in fifty states are the people that we 
serve. Who can tell what deep and unspoken hopes are in their hearts 
tonight as they sit there and listen? We all can guess, from our own 
lives, how difficult they often find their own pursuit of happiness, 
how many problems each little family has. They look most of all to 
themselves for their future, but I think that they also look to each of 
us.''
  This speech was historic not only in what it asked of Congress, but 
also, what it asked of the American people. I encourage everyone to 
read the text of this historic address in its entirety.
  I will close with the words that President Johnson delivered in his 
historic commencement speech on June 4, 1965 before Howard University:
  ``The Scripture promises: `I shall light a candle of understanding in 
thine heart, which shall not be put out.' Together, and with millions 
more, we can light that candle of understanding in the heart of all 
America. And, once lit, it will never again go out.''
  President Johnson has lit the candle, let us today continue to carry 
it and make sure that it will never go out.
  Mr. KING of Iowa. Mr. Speaker, I would yield back the balance of my 
time and urge adoption.
  Mr. SCOTT of Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my 
time.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on the motion offered by the 
gentleman from Virginia (Mr. Scott) that the House suspend the rules 
and agree to the concurrent resolution, H. Con. Res. 354.
  The question was taken; and (two-thirds being in the affirmative) the 
rules were suspended and the concurrent resolution was agreed to.
  A motion to reconsider was laid on the table.

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