Education Simon rose to national attention in the 1960s, due in part to his well-researched book ''Lincoln's Preparation for Greatness: The Illinois Legislative Years''. Despite being published 100 years after
Abraham Lincoln's death, it was the first book to exhaustively cite original source documents from Lincoln's eight years in the General Assembly. He later went on to write more than 20 books on a wide range of topics, including
interfaith marriages (he was a Lutheran and his wife, Jeanne, was a
Catholic), global water shortages,
United States Supreme Court nomination battles that focused heavily on his personal experiences with
Robert Bork and
Clarence Thomas, his autobiography, and even a well-received book on martyred abolitionist publisher
Elijah Lovejoy. His final book,
Our Culture of Pandering, was published in October 2003, two months before his death. After his primary defeat for governor in 1972, Simon founded the Public Affairs Reporting graduate program at
Sangamon State University in
Springfield, Illinois, which helped launch the careers of more than 500 journalists. Simon, who had written four books at the time; he taught a course titled "Non-Fiction Magazine and Book Writing" at Sangamon State, and also taught at the
John F. Kennedy School of Government in 1973. Simon lived for many years in the small town of
Makanda, Illinois, south of Carbondale, where he was a professor and director of the
SIU Public Policy Institute. While there, he tried to foster the institute into becoming a think tank that could advance the lives of all people. Activities included going to
Liberia and
Croatia to
monitor their elections, bringing major
speakers to campus, denouncing the
death penalty, trying to end the
United States embargo against Cuba, fostering political courage among his students, promoting an amendment to the
United States Constitution to end the
electoral college, and attempting to limit the president to a single six-year term of office. During the electoral college fiasco that followed the
2000 election, Simon said: "I think if somebody gets the majority vote, they should be president. But, I don't think the system is going to be changed."
Family Simon was the brother of
Arthur Simon, founder of
Bread for the World. On April 21, 1960, Simon married
Jeanne Hurley Simon, a member of the Illinois state legislature. It was the first time in Illinois history that two sitting members of the
Illinois General Assembly married. She was an integral part of her husband's rise to national prominence. She later became a successful lawyer, author, and
chair of
National Commission on Libraries and Information Science. She died in February 2000 of brain cancer. Upon her death, Illinois Senator
Dick Durbin delivered a tribute to Mrs. Simon on the Senate floor. Their daughter,
Sheila Simon, became the 46th
lieutenant governor of Illinois in January, 2011. She previously served as a councilwoman in
Carbondale, Illinois and was a law professor at
Southern Illinois University. In May 2001, Simon remarried to Patricia Derge, the widow of former
Southern Illinois University President David Derge.
Culture Simon appeared on
Saturday Night Live with host and singer
Paul Simon (no relation) on December 19, 1987. Also on SNL, Simon was played by
Al Franken who would later become a senator himself. Simon made a brief
cameo appearance as himself in the 1993 political comedy film
Dave. == Awards ==