[Congressional Record Volume 155, Number 165 (Friday, November 6, 2009)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E2736-E2737]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IN HONOR OF ACEL MOORE, DISTINGUISHED PHILADELPHIA JOURNALIST,
EDUCATOR, MENTOR AND ROLE MODEL
______
HON. CHAKA FATTAH
of pennsylvania
in the house of representatives
Friday, November 6, 2009
Mr. FATTAH. Madam Speaker, I rise today to recognize Acel Moore, a
distinguished Philadelphia journalist and educator, mentor and role
model, who is adding another significant honor to his already
impressive career. Along the way, Acel Moore has been a pioneer in the
promotion and showcasing of minority journalism and a star in the ranks
of Philadelphia journalists.
Acel Moore has been called ``the conscience of the community,'' a
title and responsibility that he continues to earn every day.
His latest honor, the 2009 Star Alumnus EDDY from the Philadelphia
Education Fund as a Star of Public Education, will be presented
November 19, 2009 at the Philadelphia Education Fund awards ceremony on
the campus of Drexel University in my district.
Acel's journalism career began at the Philadelphia Inquirer in 1962
as a copy book, gained added prominence with the 1977 Pulitzer Prize
and continues today as the Inquirer's Associate Editor Emeritus and
columnist. Yet alongside his work in the newsroom, Acel has been the
creator of programs, motivator and instructor for generations of public
school youth in Philadelphia.
Most significantly, he has blended these dual passions. Acel Moore
has not only opened the door for talented youth of color to launch
journalism and communications careers in workplaces desperately in need
of diversity. He has, time after time, built the doorway itself.
Acel--known throughout Philadelphia and in wider journalism circles
simply by his distinctive first name--continues to lecture at several
colleges and universities around the country. At the Inquirer, he
writes and directs recruitment, training and staff development while
still being consulted to help shape and balance the paper's editorial
policies.
In 1979, he established the Art Peters Fellowship Program, a copy
editor internship that has launched the careers of 50 journalists. In
1984, he created the Journalism Career Development Workshop that has
trained dozens of Philadelphia high school students. The program is now
named in his honor--the Acel Moore Minority Workshop. He also has
developed writing and journalism programs for the School District of
Philadelphia.
In 1970 he won the Pennsylvania Bar Association's Scale of Justice
Award for his series on the juvenile court system. Then came the Public
Service Award from the Society of Professional Journalism in 1971 and
an award from the Pennsylvania Associated Press Managing Editors
Association in 1974. That same
[[Page E2737]]
year Moore joined Reggie Bryant to host an influential television show
called Black Perspectives on the News on WHYY public television.
In 1975, Acel Moore and 43 other newsmen and women met in Washington
to launch the National Association of Black Journalists. NABJ soon
spawned a Philadelphia chapter, and many more local chapters.
A quarter century later, Acel Moore reflected, ``If I had said in
1975 . . . that I thought NABJ would have the impact and import it has
today, I'd be lying. There was a feeling among some people that signing
their name on the list [to form NABJ] was a risk, that there would be a
retaliation for doing that.''
NABJ soon spawned a Philadelphia chapter, and many more local
chapters. It was an advocacy group, an employment agency, a civil
rights crusader. Now NABJ has 3,300 members. It has provided the
example for minority journalism organizations of Hispanics, Native
Americans, Asian Americans, lesbians and gays, significantly increasing
the diversity of our newsrooms, networks and the communications
executive ranks. This is no small feat, and it is a tremendous service
to the profession that Acel Moore loves: A newsroom or newscast must
reflect the audience and the community it serves or its credibility
suffers.
Acel Moore had already achieved prominence and impact by the time he
and Inquirer colleague Wendell Rawls began their investigation of abuse
of inmates at Farview State Hospital. Their series led to awarding of
the 1977 Pulitzer Prize, journalism's most important award, for local
investigative reporting--and to significant changes at the hospital
itself. Typically, Acel Moore was digging hard, uncovering the truth
and providing a voice for the voiceless.
I was honored to attend Acel Moore's ``retirement'' party in December
2005 with 250 colleagues, admirers, movers and shakers at the Moore
College of Art. I put retirement in quotes because Acel wasn't truly
retiring then, or in full retirement even today. He has taken up the
hobby of painting. But he has never really stepped away from his day
job--serving the Philadelphia community, its underprivileged and
voiceless, coaxing and grooming the next generation of communicators to
continue his life's work.
On the eve of this next great and greatly deserved honor, I urge my
colleagues to join me in congratulating and thanking a great
Philadelphian, Acel Moore.
____________________