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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 Abner J. Mikva, who passed away on July | ||||||
4 | 4, 2016 at the age of 90; and
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5 | WHEREAS, Abner Mikva was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; his | ||||||
6 | parents were Ida and Henry Mikva; he married Zorita Wise on | ||||||
7 | September 19, 1948; and
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8 | WHEREAS, In 1944, after graduating from Washington High | ||||||
9 | School, Abner Mikva enrolled in the United States Army Air | ||||||
10 | Corps; after the war, he enrolled at the University of | ||||||
11 | Wisconsin in Madison, where he met his future wife, Zorita | ||||||
12 | "Zoe", on a blind date; he later attended law school at the | ||||||
13 | University of Chicago, where he served as editor-in-chief of | ||||||
14 | the law review and finished near the top of his class; after | ||||||
15 | graduating in 1951, he served as a law clerk for United States | ||||||
16 | Supreme Court Justice, Sherman Minton; and
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17 | WHEREAS, Abner Mikva was long known in Chicago and | ||||||
18 | Washington political and legal circles as a liberal reform | ||||||
19 | leader and a man of unassailable integrity; in 1956, when he | ||||||
20 | was living in Hyde Park and practicing law in the Chicago | ||||||
21 | office of Goldberg and Devoe (later Goldberg, Devoe, Shadur, | ||||||
22 | and Mikva), he was persuaded by his friends, Victor deGrazia |
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1 | and Lou Silverman, leaders in the grassroots Independent Voters | ||||||
2 | of Illinois, to run for a seat in the Illinois House of | ||||||
3 | Representatives in the newly drawn 23rd District; he won the | ||||||
4 | primary and became the first independent Democrat from Chicago | ||||||
5 | in modern times to have been elected to the General Assembly; | ||||||
6 | as a Representative, he was a prominent supporter of handgun | ||||||
7 | control, fair housing, and election and civil service reforms; | ||||||
8 | and
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9 | WHEREAS, In 1966, Abner Mikva lost a close Democratic | ||||||
10 | congressional primary election in the Second Congressional | ||||||
11 | District on Chicago's South Side; in 1968, he was elected to | ||||||
12 | serve in the United States House of Representatives, where he | ||||||
13 | served on the Judiciary Committee among other assignments; he | ||||||
14 | was known for his pro-civil rights and civil liberties views | ||||||
15 | and as an opponent of the Vietnam War; in 1971, he served as a | ||||||
16 | floor manager when the House passed the 26th Amendment which | ||||||
17 | lowered the voting age to 18; after reapportionment in 1970, he | ||||||
18 | moved to Evanston and ran in the open, newly created 10th | ||||||
19 | Congressional District in Chicago's northern suburbs; after a | ||||||
20 | loss in 1972, he won three consecutive elections, each by a | ||||||
21 | margin of less than one percent of the vote; his hard-earned | ||||||
22 | victories were widely attributed to the legions of enthusiastic | ||||||
23 | doorbell-ringing volunteers he inspired, including many high | ||||||
24 | school and college students; when he returned to Washington | ||||||
25 | after the 1974 election, he exercised an influential voice in |
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1 | the post-Watergate House of Representatives, serving as | ||||||
2 | chairman of the liberal House Democratic Study Group and as a | ||||||
3 | tax reform leader on the powerful Ways and Means Committee; and
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4 | WHEREAS, In 1979, Abner Mikva was confirmed to the United | ||||||
5 | States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit by a vote of 58 to | ||||||
6 | 31 in the Senate; he served on the court until 1994, the last | ||||||
7 | four years as Chief Judge; of his many judicial opinions, the | ||||||
8 | one of which he was most proud was the one he wrote in a 1993 | ||||||
9 | case for a unanimous three-judge panel rejecting the Navy's | ||||||
10 | dismissal of a homosexual Naval Academy midshipman, one of the | ||||||
11 | early rulings by a federal court defending LGBT rights; the | ||||||
12 | following year, he left the court to become White House | ||||||
13 | Counsel; and
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14 | WHEREAS, Upon returning to Chicago in 1997, Abner Mikva and | ||||||
15 | his wife started the Mikva Challenge, a non-partisan | ||||||
16 | organization that promotes civic and political engagement | ||||||
17 | among high-school students; through the program, thousands of | ||||||
18 | Chicago students, with support from Mikva Challenge staff and | ||||||
19 | their teachers, have volunteered in local and national election | ||||||
20 | campaigns, served as election judges, and worked on | ||||||
21 | neighborhood and citywide issues that the students identify as | ||||||
22 | important to them; the Mikva Challenge model is now being | ||||||
23 | implemented by teachers and school districts in other cities, | ||||||
24 | most recently in Washington, D.C.; and
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1 | WHEREAS, Abner Mikva was awarded the Presidential Medal of | ||||||
2 | Freedom by President Barack Obama in 2014; and | ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, Abner Mikva is survived by his wife, Zoe; his | ||||||
4 | daughters, Mary, Laurie, and Rachel; his sons-in-law, Steven | ||||||
5 | Cohen, James Pfander, and Mark Rosenberg; and his | ||||||
6 | grandchildren, Rebecca and Jordan Cohen, Sarah, Samantha, and | ||||||
7 | Benjamin Pfander and Jacob and Keren Mikva Rosenberg; | ||||||
8 | therefore, be it
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9 | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE NINETY-NINTH GENERAL | ||||||
10 | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we, along with his | ||||||
11 | family and friends, mourn the passing of Abner J. Mikva; and be | ||||||
12 | it further
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13 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
14 | presented to the family of Abner Mikva as an expression of our | ||||||
15 | sympathy.
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