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LRB093 22363 HSS 51563 r |
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| SENATE RESOLUTION
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| WHEREAS, The members of the Senate of the State of Illinois |
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| learned with great sorrow of the death of Vernon Jarrett on |
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| Sunday, May 23, 2004; and |
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| WHEREAS, Mr. Jarrett was a leading African-American |
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| journalist whose reports and columns appeared in the Chicago |
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| Sun-Times, the Chicago Tribune, and the Chicago Daily Defender; |
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| and |
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| WHEREAS, Mr. Jarrett was born in Paris, Tennessee, to two |
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| schoolteachers whose parents were former slaves; he graduated |
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| from Knoxville (Tennessee) College; and |
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| WHEREAS, Mr. Jarrett covered a race riot on his first day |
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| as a reporter for the Chicago Defender in 1946, and was |
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| delighted to see his byline appear alongside those of the |
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| activist W.E.B. DuBois and poet Langston Hughes; from 1948 to |
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| 1951, Mr. Jarrett and composer Oscar Brown Jr. produced "Negro |
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| Newsfront", the nation's first daily radio broadcast created by |
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| African Americans; he also worked for the Associated Negro |
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| Press; and |
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| WHEREAS, Mr. Jarrett became the Chicago Tribune's first |
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| African-American columnist in 1970; he used his editorial voice |
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| as a forum for commentary on the social and economic trends |
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| affecting African Americans and the global concerns of |
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| pan-African politics; in 1983, he took his column to the |
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| Chicago Sun-Times, where he served on the editorial board and |
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| worked until 1994; he was known to be a distinctive voice, not |
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| only for the African-American community, but for all of |
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| Chicago; in his position as a columnist for the Sun-Times, he |
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| was a mentor to any reporter who sought his counsel; and |
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| WHEREAS, Mr. Jarrett produced nearly 2,000 broadcasts on |
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LRB093 22363 HSS 51563 r |
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| WLS-Channel 7; he was a founder of the National Association of |
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| Black Journalists and served as its president from 1977 to |
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| 1979; he was current president of the group's Chicago chapter; |
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| also in 1977, he created the NAACP-sponsored ACT-SO program, or |
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| Academic, Cultural, Technological, and Scientific Olympics; |
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| ACT-SO has awarded more than $1,000,000 in scholarships, |
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| computers, and books to thousands of students; he also served |
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| as a member of the editorial board of the NAACP's 90-year-old |
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| Crisis Magazine; in addition, he was a senior fellow at the |
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| University of Illinois at Chicago and taught history and |
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| journalism at other colleges; and |
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| WHEREAS, In 1998, Mr. Jarrett was inducted into the |
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| National Literary Hall of Fame at the University of Chicago's |
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| Gwendolyn Brooks Center; the National Academy of Television |
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| Arts and Sciences awarded him its Silver Circle Award, |
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| recognizing his 30 years of contributions to the medium; he was |
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| honored with the first NAACP James Weldon Johnson Achievement |
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| Award; and
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| WHEREAS, In recent years, Mr. Jarrett was a columnist for |
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| the New York Times' New American News Syndicate and his social |
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| commentary was heard during "The Jarrett Journal", a news |
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| broadcast on WVON-AM, Chicago's only African-American owned |
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| radio station; and |
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| WHEREAS, Mr. Jarrett had a passion for writing, was an avid |
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| reader, especially of history, and was a chronicler of black |
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| politics nationwide; and |
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| WHEREAS, The passing of Vernon Jarrett has been deeply felt |
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| by many especially his wife, Fernetta; his son, Thomas; and his |
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| three grandchildren; therefore, be it
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| RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE NINETY-THIRD GENERAL |
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| ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn the passing of |