Texas 2013 - 83rd Regular

Texas House Bill HR50 Latest Draft

Bill / Enrolled Version

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                            H.R. No. 50


 R E S O L U T I O N
 WHEREAS, The Irma Lerma Rangel Young Women's Leadership
 School is commemorating in the 2013-2014 school year its 10th year
 of providing an outstanding education to area youth, and this
 occasion provides a welcome opportunity to recognize the school as
 well as its namesake, the Honorable Irma Rangel; and
 WHEREAS, Opened in the Oak Lawn neighborhood of Dallas in the
 fall of 2004, the Irma Lerma Rangel Young Women's Leadership School
 is a magnet program of the Dallas Independent School District; it is
 the first all-girls public school in Dallas and part of a move that
 allows educators to focus on the different ways boys and girls
 learn; and
 WHEREAS, Through leadership seminars, weekly advisory
 meetings, and partnerships with educational and cultural
 organizations, the Dallas school provides students with a rigorous
 course of study that prepares them for college and addresses their
 developmental needs; teachers work with students following a
 project-oriented curriculum that emphasizes math, science, and
 technology, but also offers ample learning opportunities in foreign
 languages and humanities; in addition to providing an excellent
 academic curriculum, the school encourages students to develop a
 strong sense of ethics and civic responsibility and to become
 leaders in their community; and
 WHEREAS, It is fitting that such an admirable and progressive
 institution be named for Irma Rangel, who was a trailblazer and one
 of the leading proponents of the state's efforts to improve public
 school and higher education systems; Ms. Rangel taught for 14 years
 in Texas, California, and Venezuela before changing careers and
 earning a degree at St. Mary's School of Law in San Antonio; after
 working as an assistant district attorney for two years in Corpus
 Christi, she returned to her hometown of Kingsville in 1973 to open
 her own law practice; and
 WHEREAS, When Ms. Rangel won a seat in the house of
 representatives in 1976, she became the first Hispanic woman
 elected to the Texas Legislature; she spent more than 26 years in
 the Texas House and was the fifth most-senior member of this body at
 the time of her death in 2003; while serving in the house, she
 sponsored legislation establishing a pharmacy school for Texas A&M
 University--Kingsville, now known as the Irma Lerma Rangel College
 of Pharmacy; and
 WHEREAS, The first Mexican American woman to be appointed
 chair of a house committee, Representative Rangel was named chair
 of the House Committee on Higher Education in 1995, and she served
 in that role for four consecutive legislative sessions; she was
 also the first woman elected chair of the Mexican American
 Legislative Caucus and the first Mexican American  to  receive  the
 G. J. Sutton Award from the Legislative Black Caucus; and
 WHEREAS, A passionate advocate for the poor, the needy, and
 the underserved, Irma Rangel was a true Texas pioneer who worked
 tirelessly to make a college education accessible to all citizens,
 and it is indeed appropriate that an important part of her legacy
 lies with the outstanding young women who are attending the school
 that bears her name; now, therefore, be it
 RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 83rd Texas
 Legislature hereby pay tribute to the rich and accomplished life of
 the Honorable Irma Rangel and honor the students of the Irma Lerma
 Rangel Young Women's Leadership School on the 10th anniversary of
 the opening of the school; and, be it further
 RESOLVED, That an official copy of this resolution be
 prepared for the school as an expression of high regard by the Texas
 House of Representatives.
 Alonzo
 ______________________________
 Speaker of the House
 I certify that H.R. No. 50 was adopted by the House on
 February 7, 2013, by a non-record vote.
 ______________________________
 Chief Clerk of the House