{"database": "openregs", "table": "congressional_record", "rows": [["CREC-2002-11-22-pt1-PgE2119-2", "2002-11-22", 107, 2, null, null, "HONORING MORGAN WOOTTEN", "HOUSE", "EXTENSIONS", "HONORING", "E2119", "E2119", "[{\"name\": \"Steny H. Hoyer\", \"role\": \"speaking\"}]", null, "148 Cong. Rec. E2119", "Congressional Record, Volume 148 Issue 152 (Friday, November 22, 2002)\n\n[Congressional Record Volume 148, Number 152 (Friday, November 22, 2002)]\n[Extensions of Remarks]\n[Page E2119]\nFrom the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]\n\n                        HONORING MORGAN WOOTTEN\n\n                                 ______\n\n                          HON. STENY H. HOYER\n\n                              of maryland\n\n                    in the house of representatives\n\n                       Friday, November 22, 2002\n\n  Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, Morgan Wootten has been changing the lives of\nyoung men in the Washington area for the last half century. Last month,\nMr. Wootten, the head basketball coach at DeMatha High School in\nHyattsville, MD, since 1956, announced his retirement.\n  Coach Wootten finished his career with 1,274 wins, 44 consecutive\nseasons with 20 or more wins, 33 Catholic league championships, 16 city\ntitles, and five national championships. Under Coach Wootten, DeMatha\nfinished the season ranked No. 1 in the area, a record 22 times. More\nthan a dozen of his players have gone on to play in the NBA, 150 have\nreceived college basketball scholarships, and more than 20 are\ncurrently coaching basketball at some level. And two years ago, the\nall-time winningest high school basketball coach in America was\ninducted into the basketball Hall of Fame.\n  But numbers do not tell the story of Morgan Wootten, nor the impact\nhe has had on the lives of those young men he has coached at DeMatha.\nHe is most remembered by his players, and the students in his history\nclasses, for the lessons he taught them about life. Coach Wootten\npreached to his players the importance of God, family, school and\nbasketball, in that order. His true value is measured in the\nprofessional and personal success of those he has taught and coached,\nand by the number of former players and students who have remained\nclose to him over the years.\n  Mr. Speaker, President Theodore Roosevelt said that ``To educate a\nman in mind and not in morals is to educate a menace to society.''\nMorgan Wootten has educated several generations of young men in both\nmind and morals, and I offer him my warmest congratulations on is well-\ndeserved retirement.\n\n                          ____________________"]], "columns": ["granule_id", "date", "congress", "session", "volume", "issue", "title", "chamber", "granule_class", "sub_granule_class", "page_start", "page_end", "speakers", "bills", "citation", "full_text"], "primary_keys": ["granule_id"], "primary_key_values": ["CREC-2002-11-22-pt1-PgE2119-2"], "units": {}, "query_ms": 27.931934921070933, "source": "Federal Register API & Regulations.gov API", "source_url": "https://www.federalregister.gov/developers/api/v1", "license": "Public Domain (U.S. Government data)", "license_url": "https://www.regulations.gov/faq"}