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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of | ||||||
3 | Representatives are saddened to learn of the death of Conrad | ||||||
4 | Walter Worrill, Ph.D., who passed away on June 3, 2020; and
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5 | WHEREAS, Dr. Worrill was born in Pasadena, California to | ||||||
6 | Walter and Anna Bell Worrill on August 15, 1941; he moved to | ||||||
7 | Chicago at age nine; he was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1962, | ||||||
8 | and he was stationed in Okinawa, Japan; he returned to the U.S. | ||||||
9 | in 1963; he earned his Bachelor of Science in Applied | ||||||
10 | Behavioral Science from George Williams College in 1968; he | ||||||
11 | earned his Master of Arts in Social Service Administration from | ||||||
12 | the University of Chicago in 1971; he earned his doctorate in | ||||||
13 | Curriculum and Instruction from the University of | ||||||
14 | Wisconsin-Madison in 1973; he married Arlina Worrill; and
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15 | WHEREAS, After teaching at George Williams College for two | ||||||
16 | years, Dr. Worrill joined the faculty of Northeastern Illinois | ||||||
17 | University's Department of Inner City Studies, now Urban | ||||||
18 | Community Studies, in 1976; during his 40-year tenure, he | ||||||
19 | served as the program's department chair and academic | ||||||
20 | coordinator; he served as the director of NEIU's Jacob H. | ||||||
21 | Carruthers Center for Inner City Studies (CCICS) in | ||||||
22 | Bronzeville, which he helped establish with Drs. Jacob H. | ||||||
23 | Carruthers and Anderson Thompson; together in 1971, they |
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1 | started an Annual Study Tour at NEIU, which took students to | ||||||
2 | countries in Africa and other countries in the African Diaspora | ||||||
3 | to learn about the impact of African people on civilizations | ||||||
4 | all over the world; he retired from Northeastern Illinois | ||||||
5 | University in December of 2018; and
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6 | WHEREAS, Dr. Worrill was the radio host of WVON's "On | ||||||
7 | Target" and a key figure in the Great Black Music Project, | ||||||
8 | which sponsors the Jazzy Mondays series at the Carruthers | ||||||
9 | Center for Inner City Studies; he wrote the syndicated weekly | ||||||
10 | column Worrill's World, which was widely read in African | ||||||
11 | American newspapers across the country; and
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12 | WHEREAS, Dr. Worrill served in leadership roles in numerous | ||||||
13 | organizations, including the National Black United Front and | ||||||
14 | the Black United Fund of Illinois (BUFI); he was active with | ||||||
15 | the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America | ||||||
16 | (N'COBRA) and was a special consultant for the 1995 Million Man | ||||||
17 | March; in 1983, he helped to elect Chicago's first Black mayor, | ||||||
18 | Harold Washington, and co-founded the Task Force for Black | ||||||
19 | Political Empowerment; he traveled to Geneva, Switzerland with | ||||||
20 | a delegation to formally charge the U.S. government with | ||||||
21 | genocide and human rights violations before the Commission on | ||||||
22 | Human Rights in 1997; he also presented the petition to the | ||||||
23 | United Nations; he led a 400-member delegation to the U.N. | ||||||
24 | World Conference Against Racism in Durban, South Africa in |
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1 | 2001; and
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2 | WHEREAS, Dr. Worrill had been an athlete in his youth and | ||||||
3 | believed opportunities for inner city youth could be gained | ||||||
4 | through athletic scholarships; during his retirement, he | ||||||
5 | continued to push for an indoor track facility to be built on | ||||||
6 | the South Side of Chicago; he fought for the Gately Park Indoor | ||||||
7 | Track and Field Facility for 35 years; and
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8 | WHEREAS, Dr. Worrill, writer, educator, activist, | ||||||
9 | historian, and former talk show host, was a mentor to many and | ||||||
10 | the person most reporters turned to for a perspective on | ||||||
11 | matters impacting the African-American community; his voice | ||||||
12 | will be greatly missed, and his extraordinary career is best | ||||||
13 | expressed with his own words, "I have attempted to provide | ||||||
14 | leadership based on the foundation of what others built, in | ||||||
15 | hopes that the next generation would build on what we have | ||||||
16 | attempted to preserve"; and
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17 | WHEREAS, Dr. Worrill is survived by his wife, Arlina | ||||||
18 | Worrill, and his daughters, Femi Skanes, Sobenna Worrill, | ||||||
19 | Michelle Worrill, and Kimberley Aisha King; therefore, be it
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20 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | ||||||
21 | HUNDRED FIRST GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
22 | we mourn the passing of Conrad Walter Worrill, Ph.D. and extend |
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1 | our sincere condolences to his family, friends, and all who | ||||||
2 | knew and loved him; and be it further
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3 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
4 | presented to the family of Dr. Worrill as an expression of our | ||||||
5 | deepest sympathy.
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