H.R. No. 2705 R E S O L U T I O N WHEREAS, Family, friends, and former colleagues are mourning the loss of veteran Texas newspaperman Charles Raymond Bell, Jr., of Waxahachie, who died on March 5, 2009, at the age of 77; and WHEREAS, A native of Waco, Ray Bell began his career in journalism at the age of 16, when he graduated from high school and began a full-time job with the Hillsboro Daily Mirror; he started as an assistant sports editor but was soon promoted to sports editor; he also took on the job of writing about local engagements, weddings, and parties and eventually was given responsibility for the entire paper; and WHEREAS, Picking up a college education piecemeal between jobs, Mr. Bell was a journalist for the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, the Temple Daily Telegram, the Charlotte Observer, the Waco Tribune-Herald, the Dallas Times Herald, and the Fort Worth Press; and WHEREAS, He spent an exceptional 20 years with the Dallas Morning News, where his work in the newsroom earned him the respect of his editors and colleagues; he could handle myriad responsibilities, and he received numerous awards, including ones for his firsthand report of surviving a heart attack in the paper's parking lot in 1983; and WHEREAS, Mr. Bell also worked for the Associated Press in Atlanta, sold articles to national magazines, such as The Saturday Evening Post and Vanity Fair, and published six books, including The Hiroshima Pilot, which he coauthored with William Bradford Huie; he taught journalism part-time at El Centro College in Dallas and worked in public relations; and WHEREAS, Well past his retirement from full-time newspaper work, Mr. Bell carried on as a journalist, and he covered local high school football games even as his health began to fail, until about a year before his death; and WHEREAS, Ray Bell's veins ran with printer's ink for 60 years as he pursued the trade he loved, and though his final late edition has been put to bed, memories of the gentle nature and colorful personality of this old-style journalist will remain to comfort all those who knew and loved him; now, therefore, be it RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 81st Texas Legislature hereby pay tribute to the life of Charles Raymond Bell, Jr., and extend sincere condolences to the members of his family: to his wife, Barbara Bell; to his sons, Ray Bell III, Don Shaw, and Kevin Shaw and his wife, Marsha; to his daughter, Monica Prater, and her husband, Richard; to his five grandchildren and one great-grandchild; and to his other relatives and friends; and, be it further RESOLVED, That an official copy of this resolution be prepared for his family and that when the Texas House of Representatives adjourns this day, it do so in memory of Ray Bell. Pitts ______________________________ Speaker of the House I certify that H.R. No. 2705 was unanimously adopted by a rising vote of the House on May 31, 2009. ______________________________ Chief Clerk of the House