mr. burrismr. president?i see my colleague is here. i don't know whether we are in an alternating situation or not, i would like to speak about five minutes. as you -- would that be all right? mr. brown: yes. mr. sessions: i see my colleague, senator durbin -- the presiding officer: the senator from alabama. mr. sessions: my colleague from illinois is such a fine lawyer and excellent senator. i just would respectfully talk about some of the ideas he respected. one, he raised a question of brown v. board of education where the supreme court held that separate was not equal. and that somehow this is a justification for a judge setting policy. they thought it wasn't good policy. but i would see it differently, mr. president. i would see brown v. board of education as the supreme court saying that the constitution of the united states guarantees every american equal protection of the laws and they found that in segregated schools, some people were told they must go to this school solely because of their race, some people must goes to this