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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of | ||||||
3 | Representatives wish to congratulate the owners and employees | ||||||
4 | of the WVON radio station in Chicago on the occasion of the | ||||||
5 | station's 50th anniversary in 2013; and
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6 | WHEREAS, WVON originated from the acquisition of | ||||||
7 | WHFC-1450AM, a 1,000-watt station licensed in Cicero, by | ||||||
8 | Leonard and Phil Chess, the owners of Chess Records, a | ||||||
9 | successful record label, which produced mega-hits for local | ||||||
10 | artists such as Muddy Waters, Lil' Howlin' Wolf, and others; | ||||||
11 | the brothers envisioned one station that would pull together | ||||||
12 | the best radio talent who could galvanize all of black Chicago; | ||||||
13 | and
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14 | WHEREAS, On April 1, 1963, WVON hit the airwaves in Chicago | ||||||
15 | with a group of handpicked personalities, Franklin McCarthy, E. | ||||||
16 | Rodney Jones, Herb Kent, Wesley South, and Pervis Spann, who | ||||||
17 | eventually became known as "The Good Guys"; Ric Ricardo, Bill | ||||||
18 | "Butterball" Crane, Ed Cook, Joe Cobb, Roy Wood, Ed Maloney, | ||||||
19 | Bill "Doc" Lee, Don Cornelius, Richard Pegue, Isabel Joseph | ||||||
20 | Johnson, Cecil Hale, and McKee Fitzhugh eventually joined the | ||||||
21 | roster; under the direction of the station's general manager, | ||||||
22 | Lucky Cordell, and its "Ambassador of Good Will", Bernadine C. | ||||||
23 | Washington, the Good Guys held black Chicago captive for more |
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1 | than a decade and ranked consistently in the top 5 of the "most | ||||||
2 | listened to" stations in the market; and
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3 | WHEREAS, The power of WVON soon went beyond the Chicago | ||||||
4 | market; Berry Gordy, the founder of Motown Records, had a | ||||||
5 | special arrangement with WVON that every song he produced would | ||||||
6 | be sent immediately to WVON before any other station; WVON also | ||||||
7 | served as the voice of information for local and national | ||||||
8 | affairs; during the riots that followed the death of Dr. Martin | ||||||
9 | Luther King, Jr., WVON on-air personalities were there to lift | ||||||
10 | the spirits and ease the tension that had erupted in | ||||||
11 | neighborhoods across the city; and
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12 | WHEREAS, Following the death of Leonard Chess in 1969, the | ||||||
13 | Chess family decided to sell WVON to George Gillette and Potter | ||||||
14 | Palmer, who formed Globetrotter Communications; in 1977, | ||||||
15 | Globetrotter Communications sold WVON to the Gannett Company; | ||||||
16 | in 1986, at the height of the black community's political | ||||||
17 | involvement in Chicago, Wesley South, co-owner of WVON, opted | ||||||
18 | to change the station's format to talk, providing Chicago with | ||||||
19 | its first black-talk radio format; and
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20 | WHEREAS, WVON will celebrate its 50th anniversary with a | ||||||
21 | two-day celebration on April 5-7, which will include the | ||||||
22 | station's "IMPACT 50" Grand Gala; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, For 40 years, WVON has been and remains the drum | ||||||
2 | major for the African-American community of Chicago and | ||||||
3 | continues its mission of providing a platform on which black | ||||||
4 | Chicago can air its concerns, voice its differences, and | ||||||
5 | discuss the issues that affect society; therefore, be it
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6 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE | ||||||
7 | NINETY-EIGHTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
8 | we congratulate the owners and employees of the WVON radio | ||||||
9 | station on the occasion of the station's 50th anniversary and | ||||||
10 | wish them continued success and happiness in the future; and be | ||||||
11 | it further
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12 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
13 | presented to WVON as a symbol of our esteem and respect.
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