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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of | ||||||
3 | Representatives are pleased to recognize and honor the upcoming | ||||||
4 | 80th anniversary of the founding of the National Pan-Hellenic | ||||||
5 | Council, Incorporated; and
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6 | WHEREAS, The National Pan-Hellenic Council, Incorporated | ||||||
7 | (NPHC) is currently composed of nine International Greek letter | ||||||
8 | Sororities and Fraternities: Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., | ||||||
9 | Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, | ||||||
10 | Inc., Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc., Delta Sigma Theta | ||||||
11 | Sorority, Inc., Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc., Zeta Phi Beta | ||||||
12 | Sorority, Inc., Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc., and Iota Phi | ||||||
13 | Theta Fraternity, Inc.; NPHC promotes interaction through | ||||||
14 | forums, meetings, and other mediums for the exchange of | ||||||
15 | information and engages in cooperative programming and | ||||||
16 | initiatives through various activities and functions; and
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17 | WHEREAS, On May 10, 1930, on the campus of Howard | ||||||
18 | University, in Washington D.C., the National Pan-Hellenic | ||||||
19 | Council was formed as a permanent organization with the | ||||||
20 | following charter members: Omega Psi Phi and Kappa Alpha Psi | ||||||
21 | Fraternities and Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma Theta, and Zeta | ||||||
22 | Phi Beta Sororities; in 1931, Alpha Phi Alpha and Phi Beta | ||||||
23 | Sigma Fraternities joined the Council; Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority |
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1 | joined in 1937 and Iota Phi Theta Fraternity completed the list | ||||||
2 | of member organizations in 1997; and
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3 | WHEREAS, Early in 1937, the organization was incorporated | ||||||
4 | under the laws of the State of Illinois and became known as | ||||||
5 | "The National Pan-Hellenic Council, Incorporated";
since its | ||||||
6 | founding on December 4, 1906, Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., | ||||||
7 | has supplied voice and vision to the struggle of | ||||||
8 | African-Americans and people of color around the world; and
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9 | WHEREAS, Alpha Phi Alpha, Fraternity, Inc., the first | ||||||
10 | intercollegiate Greek-letter fraternity established for | ||||||
11 | African-Americans, was founded at Cornell University in | ||||||
12 | Ithaca, New York by seven college men who recognized the need | ||||||
13 | for a strong bond of Brotherhood among African descendants in | ||||||
14 | this country; the visionary founders, known as the "Jewels" of | ||||||
15 | the Fraternity, are Henry Arthur Callis, Charles Henry Chapman, | ||||||
16 | Eugene Kinckle Jones, George Biddle Kelley, Nathaniel Allison | ||||||
17 | Murray, Robert Harold Ogle, and Vertner Woodson Tandy; and
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18 | WHEREAS, The Fraternity initially served as a study and | ||||||
19 | support group for minority students who faced racial prejudice, | ||||||
20 | both educationally and socially, at Cornell; the Jewel founders | ||||||
21 | and early leaders of the Fraternity succeeded in laying a firm | ||||||
22 | foundation for Alpha Phi Alpha's principles of scholarship, | ||||||
23 | fellowship, good character, and the uplifting of humanity; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, Founded on the campus of Howard University in | ||||||
2 | Washington, D.C. in 1908, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., is | ||||||
3 | the oldest Greek-letter organization established by | ||||||
4 | African-American college-trained women; to trace its history | ||||||
5 | is to tell a story of changing patterns of human relations in | ||||||
6 | America in the 20th century; and
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7 | WHEREAS, After the organization's establishment over a | ||||||
8 | century ago, Alpha Kappa Alpha has helped to improve social and | ||||||
9 | economic conditions through community service programs; | ||||||
10 | members have improved education through independent | ||||||
11 | initiatives, contributed to community-building by creating | ||||||
12 | programs and associations, such as the Mississippi Health | ||||||
13 | Clinic, and influenced federal legislation by Congressional | ||||||
14 | lobbying through the National Non-Partisan Lobby on Civil and | ||||||
15 | Democratic Rights; the sorority works with communities through | ||||||
16 | service initiatives and progressive programs relating to | ||||||
17 | education, family, health, and business; and
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18 | WHEREAS, Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc., is a collegiate | ||||||
19 | Greek-letter fraternity with a predominantly African-American | ||||||
20 | membership; since the fraternity's founding on January 5, 1911 | ||||||
21 | at Indiana University in Bloomington, the fraternity has never | ||||||
22 | limited membership based on color, creed, or national origin; | ||||||
23 | the fraternity has over 150,000 members with 700 undergraduate |
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1 | and alumni chapters in every state of the United States, and | ||||||
2 | international chapters in the United Kingdom, Germany, Korea, | ||||||
3 | Japan, the Caribbean, Saint Thomas, Saint Croix, U.S. Virgin | ||||||
4 | Islands, Nigeria, and South Africa; and
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5 | WHEREAS, Kappa Alpha Psi sponsors programs providing | ||||||
6 | community service, social welfare, and academic scholarship | ||||||
7 | through the Kappa Alpha Psi Foundation and is a supporter of | ||||||
8 | the United Negro College Fund and Habitat for Humanity; and
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9 | WHEREAS, Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc., is the first | ||||||
10 | African-American national fraternal organization to be founded | ||||||
11 | at a historically black college; Omega Psi Phi was founded on | ||||||
12 | November 17, 1911, at Howard University in Washington, D.C.; | ||||||
13 | the founders were three Howard University juniors, Edgar Amos | ||||||
14 | Love, Oscar James Cooper, and Frank Coleman, and their faculty | ||||||
15 | adviser was Dr. Ernest Everett Just; and
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16 | WHEREAS, The fraternity has worked to build a strong and | ||||||
17 | effective force of men dedicated to its Cardinal Principles of | ||||||
18 | manhood, scholarship, perseverance, and uplift; since 1945, | ||||||
19 | the fraternity has undertaken a National Social Action Program | ||||||
20 | to meet the needs of African-Americans in the areas of health, | ||||||
21 | housing, civil rights, and education; Omega Psi Phi has been a | ||||||
22 | patron of the United Negro College Fund since 1955, providing | ||||||
23 | an annual gift of $50,000 to the program; and
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1 | WHEREAS, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., was founded in | ||||||
2 | 1913 by 22 students at Howard University; these young women | ||||||
3 | wanted to use their collective strength to promote academic | ||||||
4 | excellence, to provide scholarships, to provide support to the | ||||||
5 | underserved, educate and stimulate participation in the | ||||||
6 | establishment of positive public policy, and to highlight | ||||||
7 | issues and provide solutions for problems in their communities; | ||||||
8 | and
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9 | WHEREAS, The major programs of the sorority are based upon | ||||||
10 | the organization's Five Point Programmatic Thrust: Economic | ||||||
11 | Development, Educational Development, International Awareness | ||||||
12 | and Involvement, Physical and Mental Health, and Political | ||||||
13 | Awareness and Involvement; and
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14 | WHEREAS, Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc., was founded at | ||||||
15 | Howard University in Washington, D.C., January 9, 1914, by | ||||||
16 | three young African-American male students; the founders, | ||||||
17 | Honorable A. Langston Taylor, Honorable Leonard F. Morse, and | ||||||
18 | Honorable Charles I. Brown, wanted to organize a Greek letter | ||||||
19 | fraternity that would truly exemplify the ideals of | ||||||
20 | brotherhood, scholarship, and service; and
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21 | WHEREAS, From its inception, Phi Beta Sigma was conceived | ||||||
22 | by its founders as a mechanism to deliver services to the |
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1 | general community, rather than gaining skills to be utilized | ||||||
2 | exclusively for themselves or their immediate families; this | ||||||
3 | deep conviction is mirrored in the fraternity's motto, "Culture | ||||||
4 | for Service and Service for Humanity"; and
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5 | WHEREAS, Zeta Phi Beta Sorority was founded on the simple | ||||||
6 | belief that sorority elitism and socializing should not | ||||||
7 | overshadow the real mission for progressive organizations, to | ||||||
8 | address societal mores, ills, prejudices, poverty, and health | ||||||
9 | concerns of the day; and
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10 | WHEREAS, Founded January 16, 1920, Zeta began as an idea | ||||||
11 | conceived by five co-eds at Howard University in Washington | ||||||
12 | D.C.: Arizona Cleaver, Myrtle Tyler, Viola Tyler, Fannie | ||||||
13 | Pettie, and Pearl Neal; these five women, also known as the | ||||||
14 | Five Pearls, dared to depart from the traditional coalitions | ||||||
15 | for black women and sought to establish a new organization | ||||||
16 | predicated on the precepts of Scholarship, Service, Sisterly | ||||||
17 | Love, and Finer Womanhood; it was the ideal of the Founders | ||||||
18 | that the Sorority would reach college women in all parts of the | ||||||
19 | country who were sorority minded and desired to follow the | ||||||
20 | founding principles of the organization; and
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21 | WHEREAS, Since its inception, the Sorority has chronicled a | ||||||
22 | number of firsts; Zeta Phi Beta was the first Greek-letter | ||||||
23 | organization to charter a chapter in Africa (1948), to form |
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1 | adult and youth auxiliary groups, to centralize its operations | ||||||
2 | in a national headquarters, and to be constitutionally bound to | ||||||
3 | a fraternity, Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Incorporated; and
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4 | WHEREAS, Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc., was founded on the | ||||||
5 | campus of Butler University on November 12, 1922 in | ||||||
6 | Indianapolis, Indiana, by seven young educators: Mary Lou | ||||||
7 | Allison Little, Dorothy Hanley Whiteside, Vivian White | ||||||
8 | Marbury, Nannie Mae Gahn Johnson, Hattie Mae Dulin Redford, | ||||||
9 | Bessie M. Downey Martin, and Cubena McClure; the group became | ||||||
10 | an incorporated national collegiate sorority on December 30, | ||||||
11 | 1929, when a charter was granted to Alpha chapter at Butler | ||||||
12 | University; and
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13 | WHEREAS, Founded in the midst of segregation, Sigma Gamma | ||||||
14 | Rho Sorority is the only sorority of the four historically | ||||||
15 | African-American sororities which comprise the NPHC, to be | ||||||
16 | established at a predominantly white campus; Sigma Gamma Rho | ||||||
17 | also supports two affiliates: the RHOERS, a group of young | ||||||
18 | women, and PHILOS, women who are friends of the sorority;
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19 | Soaring To Greater Heights of Attainment Around The World, | ||||||
20 | Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc., as a leading national service | ||||||
21 | organization, has met the challenges of the day and continues | ||||||
22 | to grow through Sisterhood, Scholarship, and Service; and
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23 | WHEREAS, Iota Phi Theta Fraternity, Inc., was founded on |
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1 | September 19, 1963 at Morgan State University in Baltimore, | ||||||
2 | Maryland; the fraternity was founded by twelve men in the midst | ||||||
3 | of the Civil Rights Movement even though there were already | ||||||
4 | four other prominent historically black fraternities at the | ||||||
5 | time; and
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6 | WHEREAS, Since its founding date, Iota Phi Theta has | ||||||
7 | continued to grow and has become the fifth-largest | ||||||
8 | predominantly black fraternal organization in the United | ||||||
9 | States; as of now, there are over 35,000 members in the United | ||||||
10 | States and overseas; a key appeal of Iota Phi Theta is, as an | ||||||
11 | organization, it refuses to have its members bind themselves to | ||||||
12 | a defined fraternal image but celebrates the individuality of | ||||||
13 | its members; more importantly, its members continue to build | ||||||
14 | upon the fraternity's commitment to success and excellence with | ||||||
15 | individual and collective achievements in such fields as | ||||||
16 | politics, education, law, business, medicine, and the | ||||||
17 | performing arts; and
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18 | WHEREAS, The National Pan-Hellenic Council has | ||||||
19 | distinguished members in the General Assembly, Senator Donne E. | ||||||
20 | Trotter, Representatives Marlow Colvin and Al Riley (Alpha Phi | ||||||
21 | Alpha Fraternity, Inc.); Senators Mattie Hunter and Toi W. | ||||||
22 | Hutchinson, Representatives Annazette Collins, Monique D. | ||||||
23 | Davis, and Constance A. Howard (Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, | ||||||
24 | Inc.); Senator James F. Clayborne Jr., and Representatives |
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1 | William D. Burns, William Davis, and Eddie Lee Jackson, Sr. | ||||||
2 | (Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc.); Representative David E. | ||||||
3 | Miller (Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc.); Senator Kimberly A. | ||||||
4 | Lightford and Representative Camille Lilly (Delta Sigma Theta | ||||||
5 | Sorority, Inc.); and Representatives Kenneth Dunkin and | ||||||
6 | LaShawn K. Ford (Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc.); therefore, | ||||||
7 | be it
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8 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE | ||||||
9 | NINETY-SIXTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we | ||||||
10 | recognize and honor the 80th anniversary of the founding of the | ||||||
11 | National Pan-Hellenic Council, Incorporated and wish all the | ||||||
12 | members of the organization the best at this time; and be it | ||||||
13 | further
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14 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
15 | presented to the National President of the National | ||||||
16 | Pan-Hellenic Council, Incorporated, as a symbol of our respect | ||||||
17 | and esteem.
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