Dale Bumpers

Dale Bumpers

Dale Bumpers U.S. SENATOR FROM ARKANSAS TRIBUTES IN THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES E PL UR UM IB N U U S S. Doc. 105±32 Tributes Delivered in Congress Dale Bumpers United States Senator 1974±1998 ÷ U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE ★ (STAR PRINT) 52±572 WASHINGTON : 1998 Compiled under the direction of the Secretary of the Senate by the Office of Printing and Document Services CONTENTS Page Biography .................................................................................................. vii Proceedings in the Senate: Tributes by Senators: Boxer, Barbara, of California .................................................... 45 Burns, Conrad, of Montana ....................................................... 18 Byrd, Robert C., of West Virginia ............................................. 14 Cochran, Thad, of Mississippi ................................................... 1 Daschle, Tom, of South Dakota ................................................. 11, 23 Dodd, Christopher J., of Connecticut ....................................... 41 Domenici, Pete, of New Mexico ................................................. 7 Ford, Wendell H., of Kentucky .................................................. 22 Hutchinson, Tim, of Arkansas .................................................. 2 Feingold, Russell D., of Wisconsin ............................................ 31 Ford, Wendell H., of Kentucky .................................................. 22 Harkin, Tom, of Iowa ................................................................. 29 Jeffords, James M., of Vermont ................................................ 4 Kempthorne, Dirk, of Idaho ...................................................... 20 Lautenberg, Frank R., of New Jersey ...................................... 8, 17 Leahy, Patrick J., of Vermont ................................................... 43 Levin, Carl, of Michigan ............................................................ 6 Lott, Trent, of Mississippi ......................................................... 36 Mikulski, Barbara A., of Maryland .......................................... 47 Nickles, Don, of Oklahoma ........................................................ 4, 14 Sessions, Jeff, of Alabama ......................................................... 28 Thurmond, Strom, of South Carolina ....................................... 5 Farewell address of Senator Bumpers ............................................. 48 Order for printing of individual Senate documents ....................... 56 Proceedings in the House: Tributes by Representatives: Berry, Marion of Arkansas ........................................................ 59 Articles and Editorials: Seniority Bites, Roll Call .................................................................. 63 Bumpers Presses on Toward Legacy of Changes on Hill, The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette .......................................................... 64 Senators Extol Bumpers' Candor, Constancy, The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette ........................................................................... 67 It's Bumpers Big Day, The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette ................ 70 Amid Tears, Bumpers Says He'll Quit in 1998, The Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN) .................................................................. 71 Bumpers Calls an End to Political Career, The Arkansas Demo- crat-Gazette .................................................................................... 72 Exodus From Politics, The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette ................ 75 What Dale Bumpers Says, He Believes, The News and Observer (Raleigh, NC) ................................................................................. 80 Bumpers Retirement Statement, The Arkansas Democrat-Ga- zette ................................................................................................. 81 [ v ] BIOGRAPHY First elected to the U.S. Senate in 1974, U.S. Senator DALE BUMPERS is serving his fourth term as a Democratic Senator from Arkansas. He was reelected in 1992 with more than 60 percent of the vote. Before joining the U.S. Senate, BUMPERS served two terms as Governor of Arkansas, where he reorganized State gov- ernment and trimmed the number of State agencies from 69 to 13; doubled the number of State Parks; started the State Kindergarten Program and launched an initiative that dou- bled the number of doctors trained at Arkansas' only medical school. Before entering politics, BUMPERS lived in his home town of Charleston, where he practiced law; operated a small hardware, furniture, and appliance store; raised cattle; and pursued several other business interests. During those years, BUMPERS was active also in community affairs, serving as city attorney, school board president, and president of the Chamber of Commerce. After serving in the U.S. Marine Corps for 3 years in the South Pacific during World War II, Senator BUMPERS re- turned to continue his undergraduate work at the University of Arkansas, and later received his law degree from North- western University. BUMPERS is married to the former Betty Flanagan of Charleston. They are the parents of three children, Brent, Bill, and Brooke, and they have six grandchildren. A champion of the taxpayer and a foe of government waste, Senator BUMPERS fought for a balanced budget long before it became a publicized national issue. He led the suc- cessful battle to cancel the $12 billion Superconducting Super Collider, and he is continuing his efforts to ground the $100 billion space station, a boondoggle he contends offers few, if any, scientific benefits. While supporting a strong but not bloated defense, Senator BUMPERS has fought to elimi- nate Star Wars, a pipe dream that would make the heavens a battlefield and cost citizens hundreds of billions of dollars for an illusion of security; and the F±22, an unneeded fighter plane that sports a price tag of $180 million each. [ vii ] From his position as the ranking member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, BUMPERS also fights policies that attack the common good. Calling it ``the biggest ongoing scam in America,'' Senator BUMPERS has, for 9 years, sought to stop the giveaway of America's public lands. Since 1872, mining interests, many of them foreign- owned, have paid as little as $2.50 an acre for mineral-rich public lands and extracted billions of dollars worth of gold, silver, platinum and palladium while paying not a penny in royalties to American taxpayers. ``Mining companies get the gold and the taxpayers get the shaft,'' he says of this stag- gering abuse of public assets. Also, he has fought for nearly 20 years to bring competi- tion to the operation of concessions in National Parks, which, because of preferential treatment for contracts, rake in about $700 million a year but offer taxpayers a meager 2.4 percent return on the use of their land. Senator BUMPERS was one of only three Senators to vote for the 1981 Reagan budget cuts but against the reckless 1981 tax cuts. Had a majority adopted his positions, Federal budget deficits would have been eliminated by 1985. A student of history with a profound respect for the intel- ligence, ideals and vision of the country's founders and a healthy skepticism of passing fads in economic and social theory, Senator BUMPERS is hesitant to change the Constitu- tion, which he calls a ``sacred document.'' As a Senator from a rural State and the top ranking Dem- ocrat on the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Agri- culture, DALE BUMPERS has fought to protect family farmers, to expand rural housing and to promote rural development, especially the water and sewer programs that improve the quality of life and help bring jobs to rural areas. A dedicated environmentalist, Senator BUMPERS believes we must preserve America's natural heritage and warns that America's fate may hinge on stopping and preventing threats to our air, land, water and habitats. And he has played a crucial role in protecting the integrity of national historic sites, such as the Manassas Battlefield in Virginia. Senator BUMPERS and his wife Betty have long been na- tional leaders in protecting the health of children by promot- ing childhood immunization. Their efforts have helped Amer- [ viii ] ica reach a record high level of immunizations. Since 1991, Mrs. Bumpers and Rosalyn Carter have been actively in- volved in ``Every Child by Two,'' a program dedicated to fully immunize every American child by the age of two. In January, 1997, Senator BUMPERS became the highest ranking Democrat Member of the Senate Energy and Natu- ral Resources Committee, and also in 1997 introduced the first comprehensive legislation of the 105th Congress to de- regulate the electricity industry, which could save consumers billions of dollars. He also sits on the powerful Senate Appro- priations Committee and is a member of the Small Business Committee. During his tenure in the Senate, BUMPERS has kept in close touch with the people of Arkansas, making more than 100 appearances in the State annually. Senator BUMPERS has received numerous awards and hon- ors. In April 1996, because of his tireless efforts on behalf of research projects for the University of Arkansas, the Univer- sity's Board of Trustees renamed the College of Agriculture the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences. In a poll by The Hill newspaper in 1994, Senate staff members chose him as the second best-liked Democratic Sen- ator, just behind the majority leader. Admired for his unshakable

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