| Articles....The Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame
                 
                
                http://www.glhalloffame.org/index.html  The Chicago Gay and Lesbian 
                Hall of Fame is both a historic event and an exhibit. through 
                the Hall of Fame, residents of Chicago and the world are made 
                aware of the contributions of Chicago's lesbian and gay 
                community and the community's efforts to eradicate homophobic 
                bias and discrimination. With the support of the City 
                of Chicago Commission on Human Relations, the Advisory Council 
                on Gay and Lesbian Issues established the Chicago Gay and 
                Lesbian Hall of Fame in June 1991. The inaugural induction 
                ceremony took place during
                
                Gay and Lesbian Pride Week at City Hall, hosted by Mayor 
                Richard M. Daley. This was the first event of its kind in the 
                country.  The Hall of Fame recognizes 
                the volunteer and professional achievements of lesbians and gay 
                men, their organizations, and their friends, as well as their 
                contributions to the lesbian and gay community and to the City 
                of Chicago. This is a unique tribute to dedicated individuals 
                and organizations whose services have improved the quality of 
                life for all of Chicago's citizens.  Induction into the Hall of 
                Fame symbolizes that the recipient either has made a 
                contribution with far-reaching effects on the quality of life 
                for Chicago's lesbian and gay community or the city of Chicago, 
                or has made a significant long-term contribution to the 
                well-being of Chicago's lesbian and gay community.  The Chicago Gay and Lesbian 
                Hall of Fame is privately funded through generous donations from 
                individuals, businesses, and organizations. Staff support is 
                provided by the City of Chicago Commission on Human Relations, 
                members of the Advisory Council on Gay and Lesbian Issues, and 
                volunteers. Other GLBT People of Color
                  
                    | Israel Wright moved to 
                    Chicago from Ohio in 1975 and began a 20-year career in
                     banking and 
                    finance. His 
                    Chicago volunteerism began at 
                    Horizons Community Services. “I went to Horizons looking 
                    for a black boyfriend and found the pool of potential black 
                    men pretty shallow,” he relates. Wright remonstrated and 
                    soon obtained a seat on the Horizons board. Through a 
                    focus group developed by Horizons’ Diversity Committee, he 
                    was introduced to members of organizations for people of 
                    color. He met with organizations such as Chicago Black 
                    Lesbians and Gays, the Minority Outreach Intervention Group, 
                    the Greater Chicago Committee, and Kupona Network. 
                    Eventually, Wright served as the second treasurer of Chicago 
                    Black Lesbians and Gays, served on the Kupona Network board, 
                    became president of the Greater Chicago Committee, and 
                    received the 1997 “Male of the Year” award during the latter 
                    group’s annual Bayard Rustin Awards ceremony.  
                    
                    
                    [Read More]   | Israel Wright2000
 
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                    | Lorrainne Sade Baskerville is 
                    an experienced HIV/AIDS case manager and a professional 
                    social worker. Baskerville founded transGenesis in 1995 as 
                    an agency aimed at addressing the special concerns of 
                    persons in the city’s transgender community, such as gender 
                    identity, substance abuse, HIV/AIDS, sex work, harm 
                    reduction, and self-empowerment. 
 TransGenesis aims to provide a safe environment for 
                    transgendered persons to pursue common social and personal 
                    goals. The organization supports awareness of and openness 
                    about gender identity and the way gender is expressed. It 
                    seeks to aid personal development and integrity in the 
                    transgender population. Its HIV/AIDS prevention program is 
                    called T-PASS (Trans-People Advocating Safer Sex) and 
                    includes street and community outreach, education, testing, 
                    and counseling. It also offers a weekly drop-in program for 
                    youth and young adults, called TransDiva, and a peer-led 
                    transgender support and discussion group.  
                    
                    
                    [Read More]
 
 
 | Lorrainne Sade 
                    Baskerville 2000 
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                    | A Chicago native, Phill 
                    Wilson has achieved prominence as an eloquent advocate for 
                    persons with AIDS, particularly those of color. His work has 
                    had national impact. 
                    Wilson has 
                    served as Director of Public Policy for
                    AIDS Project Los Angeles, 
                    the nation’s second-largest AIDS service organization. He 
                    interacted with federal, state, and local governments, 
                    helping to draft legislation that would increase public 
                    funding for AIDS-related research, education, and support 
                    services and would affect national public policy on AIDS and 
                    HIV disease.  Wilson is 
                    also the former AIDS Coordinator for the City of Los 
                    Angeles. In that capacity, he was responsible for 
                    implementing, monitoring, and supervising AIDS policy and 
                    for directing the city’s AIDS residential, education, 
                    awareness, and rental-assistance programs. He also hosted a 
                    monthly cable television show and oversaw workplace training 
                    for 65,000 city employees.  
                    
                    
                    [Read More]   | Phill Wilson1999
 
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                    | An 
                    internationally known, three-time winner of Chicago’s Ruth 
                    Page Award as Outstanding Choreographer of the Year (1988, 
                    1990, 1992), Randy Duncan has often used his dance talents 
                    to raise funds for the fight against AIDS and to include gay 
                    and lesbian themes in his body of work. 
                    A Chicago native and Austin High School 
                    alumnus who began his professional career at 15 as a dancer 
                    with the Joseph Holmes Chicago Dance Theatre, Duncan rose to 
                    become artistic director (1986 to 1993) after the death of 
                    founder Holmes.  Drawing on ballet, jazz dance, and modern 
                    dance for choreography, Duncan has created works that have 
                    also been performed by other companies including the
                    Joffrey Ballet of Chicago,
                    
                    River North Dance Company, and
                    
                    Gus Giordano Jazz Dance Chicago as well as companies in 
                    Seattle and Tel Aviv. He has also choreographed and 
                    performed in musical theater. In 1987, he choreographed for 
                    the first all–African American cast of A Chorus Line, and he 
                    contributed work to the 20th-anniversary production of 
                    Michael Butler’s Hair. 
                    
                    [Read More]   | Randy Duncan1999
 
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                    | Born in Chicago in 1930, 
                    Lorraine Vivian Hansberry spent her short life as the author 
                    of essays and dramatic works, creatively interpreting the 
                    African American experience. She was also an early supporter 
                    of equal rights regardless of sexual orientation. 
 In 1959, Hansberry became the first African American woman 
                    to have a play, A Raisin in the Sun, produced on Broadway. 
                    That year, she also became the first African American to win 
                    the New York Drama Critics Circle’s Best Play award. The 
                    play later became a film and still later a television 
                    adaptation. It is critically viewed as among the century’s 
                    most memorable works of drama. 
                    
                    [Read More]
 
 
 | Lorraine Vivian 
                    Hansberry1999
 
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                    | A longtime resident of 
                    Chicago’s Cabrini-Green neighborhood, Jesse White has been a 
                    loyal supporter of lesbian and gay rights. He was an early 
                    fixture on the civil rights scene, working with the Rev. Dr. 
                    Martin Luther King, Jr., in Montgomery, Alabama. He has 
                    continued his advocacy through today with ongoing support of 
                    equal rights for all. 
 Born in Alton, Illinois, White received a B.S. degree from 
                    Alabama State College (now Alabama State University), was an 
                    Army paratrooper in the 101st Airborne Division, played 
                    professional baseball with the Chicago Cubs organization, 
                    and had a 33-year career as an educator and administrator in 
                    the Chicago Public Schools. He is the founder of the 
                    internationally known Jesse White Tumblers, which in 1999 
                    celebrated 40 years as a positive alternative for at-risk 
                    youths. 
                    [Read 
                    More]
 
 
 | Jesse White1999
 
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