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1 | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois Senate are saddened to | ||||||
3 | learn of the death of Lucille Rose (Kotewa) Msall, who passed | ||||||
4 | away on May 15, 2016, at the age of 87; and
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5 | WHEREAS, Lucille Msall was born to Polish immigrant parents | ||||||
6 | in Chicago's Back of the Yards neighborhood on June 29, 1928; | ||||||
7 | she graduated from Lourdes High School and studied psychology | ||||||
8 | at Loyola University Chicago; she became active in social | ||||||
9 | justice issues on campus and in the city; she met her husband, | ||||||
10 | Emil, during her junior year of college and they married in | ||||||
11 | 1950; 18 years and seven children later, she received her | ||||||
12 | bachelor's degree from Loyola; and
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13 | WHEREAS, Before getting her degree, Lucille Msall was | ||||||
14 | active in tutoring and teaching children with special needs, | ||||||
15 | both out of her home and in the homes of her pupils, helping to | ||||||
16 | teach the skills they were not being taught in public schools; | ||||||
17 | and
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18 | WHEREAS, Lucille Msall was an American disability rights | ||||||
19 | activist and was recognized for co-founding some of the United | ||||||
20 | States' first organizations to advocate on behalf of people | ||||||
21 | with Down Syndrome; in 1968, she was the founding director of | ||||||
22 | the Beacon Therapeutic School for children with autism and |
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1 | other special needs, which still operates on Longwood Drive on | ||||||
2 | Chicago's Far South Side; and | ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, Lucille Msall helped organize the National | ||||||
4 | Association for Down Syndrome and served as its president from | ||||||
5 | 1974 to 1975; she was inspired to do so when her daughter, | ||||||
6 | Christianne, was born with Down Syndrome in 1969; she helped | ||||||
7 | form the National Down Syndrome Congress, for which she was the | ||||||
8 | first recording secretary and was the organization's president | ||||||
9 | from 1978 to 1979; and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, Lucille Msall was invited by President Jimmy | ||||||
11 | Carter to participate in the White House conference for the | ||||||
12 | mentally "retarded" in 1980; she became a strong advocate for | ||||||
13 | replacement of the word "retarded" in favor of "developmentally | ||||||
14 | challenged" or "special needs"; and | ||||||
15 | WHEREAS, Lucille Msall became a rehabilitation counselor | ||||||
16 | for the Illinois Department of Rehabilitation Services from | ||||||
17 | 1989 until 2003, where she focused on helping people become | ||||||
18 | independent and having opportunities for fuller lives, | ||||||
19 | including employment; and | ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, Lucille Msall's greatest joy of her professional | ||||||
21 | career was helping any child to learn to read and write or to | ||||||
22 | master arithmetic; she believed in the ability of everyone, and |
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1 | she believed that everyone deserved an education and could be | ||||||
2 | educated, and she set out to prove it; and | ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, Lucille Msall and her family moved from the South | ||||||
4 | Side of Chicago to Oak Park in 1975 to give her daughter, | ||||||
5 | Christianne, an opportunity to attend a mainstream school; | ||||||
6 | Christianne went on to attend National Louis University and | ||||||
7 | completed a certificate program, fulfilling a life's goal for | ||||||
8 | her mother; and
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9 | WHEREAS, Lucille Msall expected her children to become | ||||||
10 | well-rounded, each learning a musical instrument and becoming | ||||||
11 | involved in outside activities such as 4-H or the Scouts, and | ||||||
12 | to take on part-time jobs; as they got older, she encouraged | ||||||
13 | her children to help those in need by getting involved in | ||||||
14 | projects that would increase their awareness and address some | ||||||
15 | of the inequities in the community; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, Lucille Msall encouraged expectations of higher | ||||||
17 | education for her children while they were in high school, | ||||||
18 | resulting in nine of her living children attending college; and | ||||||
19 | WHEREAS, Lucille Msall was preceded in death by her beloved | ||||||
20 | husband, Emil B. Msall, and her son, Gerard Peter Msall; and
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21 | WHEREAS, Lucille Msall is survived by her loving children, |
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1 | Michael (Karla), Anita, Karin (Steve) Fischer, Mary (Scott) | ||||||
2 | Rogers, Camille, Laurence, Madeleine (Frank Mauceri), | ||||||
3 | Christianne, and Julianne (Christopher) Pegler; 17 | ||||||
4 | grandchildren; and her sister, Joan (Stanley) Vinkler; | ||||||
5 | therefore, be it
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6 | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDREDTH GENERAL | ||||||
7 | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn the passing of | ||||||
8 | Lucille Rose Msall, and extend our sincere condolences to her | ||||||
9 | family, friends, and all who knew and loved her; and be it | ||||||
10 | further
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11 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
12 | presented to the family of Lucille Msall as an expression of | ||||||
13 | our deepest sympathy.
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