Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of SR0637
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Full Text of SR0637  100th General Assembly

SR0637 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY


  

 


 
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1
SENATE RESOLUTION

 
2    WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois Senate are saddened to
3learn of the death of Fred August Kummerow of Urbana, who
4passed away on May 31, 2017; and
 
5    WHEREAS, Fred Kummerow was born in Berlin, Germany to
6Helene Rieck and August Kummerow on October 4, 1914, while his
7father was away in the German Army fighting the Russians on the
8Eastern Front; in 1923, at the age of eight, he and his family
9emigrated to the United States; he began school in Milwaukee,
10Wisconsin, not speaking a word of English; he graduated from
11Boys Technical High School in Milwaukee in 1933; and
 
12    WHEREAS, Fred Kummerow was employed at Yahr Lange Drug &
13Cosmetic Company, working 48-hours a week and taking night
14classes four nights a week at the Milwaukee branch of the
15University of Wisconsin, which was enough to make him a
16sophomore at the University of Wisconsin-Madison when he began
17there in September of 1936; he graduated with a Bachelor of
18Science in Chemistry in 1939; he started his graduate work with
19Professor Harry Steenbok, the discoverer of Vitamin D; he was
20awarded a Master of Science in 1941 and a Ph.D. in 1943, both
21in Biochemistry; and
 
22    WHEREAS, Fred Kummerow married Amy Louise Hildebrand on

 

 

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1June 24, 1942; in the Fall of 1943, they left Madison for a
2National Research Council job at Clemson University in South
3Carolina; the job aimed to eradicate pellagra, a disease caused
4by the lack of niacin in the diet, which was still killing
52,000 people in 1941; by 1945, only 12 people died of pellagra
6because of the success of this project; he then took a position
7as assistant professor in chemistry at Kansas State University
8in Manhattan, Kansas; there, among other projects, he worked on
9making frozen turkeys more edible by changing their diets; in
101950, the family, now with children, Max and Jean, and
11soon-to-be born, Kay, moved to Urbana for a position as
12assistant professor of food chemistry in the newly organized
13Department of Food Technology (later renamed Food Science); he
14retired in 1985 and continued to serve as professor emeritus
15and adjunct professor in the Department of Comparative
16Biosciences, where he was actively involved in research; he
17served as Ph.D. thesis adviser for more than 60 graduate
18students; more than 50 post-doctoral fellows also performed
19research at the Burnsides Research Laboratory, a facility which
20Fred Kummerow built and headed on the University of Illinois
21campus; and
 
22    WHEREAS, Fred Kummerow was an author or co-author of
23approximately 450 peer-reviewed papers; the Burnsides Lab was
24an international enterprise with students and professors from
25at least 14 different countries working there over the years;

 

 

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1he was awarded over $16 million in research grants and had
2several million dollars of grants since his retirement to
3support his research; he authored a book of nutritional advice
4with his daughter, Jean, entitled "Cholesterol is Not the
5Culprit"; and
 
6    WHEREAS, Fred Kummerow published a paper on the negative
7heart health effects of trans fats in 1957 and had been
8concerned about their effects ever since; he served on the
9American Heart Association Diet Committee in 1968; and
 
10    WHEREAS, In 2009, at age 95, Fred Kummerow filed a Citizens
11Petition with the Food and Drug Administration to ban trans fat
12entirely; in 2014, after no action was taken, a lawsuit was
13filed on his behalf; he was delighted and vindicated when the
14FDA finally agreed that trans fats were dangerous and announced
15their ban in 2015; slowly, nutritional and political
16communities have come towards his point of view; he received
17worldwide publicity for his work on trans fats, including
18articles in the New York Times, the Chicago Tribune, and the
19Washington Post, along with features by Al Jazeera, a Korean
20television network, and the University of Illinois; never one
21to slow down, he then began research on the effects of diet on
22Alzheimer's disease; and
 
23    WHEREAS, Fred Kummerow received several awards for his

 

 

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1research, including a "Scientist of Integrity" award from the
2Weston Price Foundation; his intelligence and insight remained
3quite strong, even after he reached the age of 102; he followed
4politics avidly, writing numerous letters to public officials,
5and advocating for peace and green energy; he felt that
6spreading scientific knowledge throughout the world and
7feeding people enough of the right foods would go a long way
8towards promoting better health and longer lives; and
 
9    WHEREAS, Fred Kummerow supported his wife's political and
10community activities, including Planned Parenthood and the
11Democratic Party; he agreed with her liberal politics and was
12proud when she was one of the first women elected to the
13Champaign County Board, where she served for 20 years; and
 
14    WHEREAS, Fred Kummerow and his wife loved to travel; he
15visited laboratories in Western and Eastern Europe, Japan,
16India, Israel, China, Australia, and Cuba and presented
17research at conferences all over the world; they also loved
18going to the opera, especially LaBoheme; and
 
19    WHEREAS, Fred Kummerow was preceded in death by his wife,
20Amy, and his brother, Werner; and
 
21    WHEREAS, Fred Kummerow is survived by his children, Max
22(Ellen Jacobsen-Isserman), Jean (Frank Mabley), and Kay (Ron

 

 

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1Mengarelli); his grandchildren, Elizabeth Loban, Robert Loban,
2and Patrick Watson; his great-grandson, Asher Watson; and
3numerous nieces and nephews; therefore, be it
 
4    RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDREDTH GENERAL
5ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn the passing of
6Fred August Kummerow, and extend our sincere condolences to his
7family, friends, and all who knew and loved him; and be it
8further
 
9    RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be
10presented to the family of Fred Kummerow as an expression of
11our deepest sympathy.