H.R. No. 1064 R E S O L U T I O N WHEREAS, The State of Texas lost a distinguished native son with the death of Charles T. McDowell of Arlington on July 8, 2007; and WHEREAS, Born on November 23, 1921, to Jesse Calvin and Alva Lange McDowell, Charles Taylor McDowell was raised in San Saba; he graduated from Texas A&M University in 1943 and attended officer candidate school at Fort Benning, Georgia, before being commissioned as a second lieutenant in the United States Army; a master parachutist, he fought in both the European and Pacific theaters during World War II and later served in the occupational forces in Japan; and WHEREAS, An information and education officer as well as a professor, director, and commandant of Tokyo Army College in the late 1940s, Dr. McDowell also taught Russian language, history, economics, geography, and political science in a classified joint military/civilian intelligence agency in the 1950s before serving as an instructor in Taiwan, Korea, and Hawaii; he continued his studies through various defense intelligence programs and earned a master's degree from Columbia University in 1953 and a doctorate from Texas A&M in 1956; and WHEREAS, Dr. McDowell further served his country as an intelligence officer with the Joint Chiefs of Staff and worked closely with the president of the United States to evaluate military threats; he was a custodian of the "nuclear football," utilized by presidents to authorize the use of nuclear weapons when away from fixed command centers; moreover, he served as a diplomatic courier and USSR specialist, as well as a foreign service officer for the state department in the former Soviet Union, Europe, Asia, and North Africa; and WHEREAS, Eventually retiring from the military at the rank of colonel, Dr. McDowell earned numerous honors for his notable tenure in the armed forces, including the Bronze Star Medal and the Army Commendation Medal, both with oak leaf cluster, and the Combat Infantry Badge, along with medals recognizing service in World War II and the Korean and Vietnam conflicts; he was described by General William C. Westmoreland as an outstanding officer; and WHEREAS, Dr. McDowell had an equally illustrious career in civilian life, spending more than four decades, in total, at The University of Texas at Arlington; he first joined the school in 1960, and after serving as senior area administrator for President Lyndon B. Johnson's Job Corps program, he returned in 1966 as assistant to the president of the university and then dean of student life; a teacher of Russian, he became the chair of the department of foreign languages and linguistics as well as the founder and director of the Center for Post-Soviet and East European Studies; and WHEREAS, The first chair of the faculty senate at UT Arlington, Dr. McDowell was reelected to that post six times; he was an advisor to the Alpha Chi honor society and led annual summer study abroad programs in Russia; he was recognized as an outstanding teacher with awards from UT Arlington and its chancellor's council, and he was inducted into the school's military science hall of honor; after his death, generous donors endowed a new center at the university in his memory, the Charles T. McDowell Center for Critical Languages and Area Studies; and WHEREAS, Over the course of his life, Dr. Charles McDowell met 10 U.S. presidents, traveled to Russia more than 50 times, and ignited the curiosity and interest of countless young people, and he will long be remembered for his notable contributions to the state and nation; now, therefore, be it RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 82nd Texas Legislature hereby pay tribute to the memory of Dr. Charles Taylor McDowell and his exemplary record of service to the people of Texas and the United States. Hilderbran ______________________________ Speaker of the House I certify that H.R. No. 1064 was unanimously adopted by a rising vote of the House on April 7, 2011. ______________________________ Chief Clerk of the House