Arthur A. Telcser

Arthur A. Telscer (January 17, 1932 November 26, 1999) was an American pharmacist and politician.

Born in Chicago, Illinois, Telscer received his degree in pharmacy from UIC College of Pharmacy and then owned Wilart Drugs, a pharmacy business, in Chicago.[1]. He joined the Republican Party in 1954 and was active with the Young Republicans. In 1966, Telscer was elected to the Illinois House of Representatives as one of three representatives from the 11th Legislative District. He quickly rose to legislative leadership becoming House Majority Whip in 1969. He would go on to be appointed to other leadership positions; Assistant Majority Leader in 1973; Assistant Minority Leader in 1975; Minority Whip in 1977; Assistant Minority Leader in 1979 and Majority Leader in 1981. During his legislative tenure, Telcser was a resident of the Lake View neighborhood.[2] He briefly served as the Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives. In 1983, Telcser then worked in the Illinois Secretary of State office under George Ryan. In 1998, after Ryan was elected Governor of Illinois, Telscer joined his transition team.[3] Telcser had Parkinson's disease and died at his home in Chicago of a heart attack on November 26, 1999.[3][4]

Notes

  1. Illinois Blue Book 1967-1968 page 212
  2. Edgar, Jim (ed.). Illinois Blue Book 1981-1982. Springfield, Illinois: Illinois Secretary of State. p. 93. Retrieved June 8, 2020.
  3. Whelpley, Rodd (ed.). "People: Obituary for Arthur Telcser". Illinois Issues. Sangamon State University. 26 (1): 38. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
  4. 'Arthur Telcser, 67, Legislator, Ryan Aide, Chicago Illinois, Rick Pearson, November 27, 1999


gollark: Or really anything about it other that than people think they have some sort of subjective experience.
gollark: Well, I don't think we know what consciousness is or how it works.
gollark: I think if we do get general intelligence it'll probably work on some higher level then "feed in a set of expected responses and inputs and evolve a network to better predict these", which I think is how current neural network things mostly work.
gollark: This is a neural network thing, then?
gollark: Are you asking:- how close we are to it- what it actually means- whether people would want itor something else?
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