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          SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
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               WHEREAS, The Texas Legislative Medal of Honor was established  | 
      
      
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        to recognize gallant and intrepid service by a member of the state  | 
      
      
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        or federal military forces, and Lieutenant Colonel Ed Dyess, a  | 
      
      
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        highly decorated aviator and warrior called "the One-Man Scourge of  | 
      
      
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        the Japanese" during World War II due to his remarkable adaptive  | 
      
      
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        ability to fight a relentless, ruthless enemy in the Pacific  | 
      
      
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        Theater as a combat pilot, infantry commander, prisoner of war, and  | 
      
      
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        guerrilla, would be a fitting recipient of this prestigious award;  | 
      
      
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        and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, Born in Albany, Shackelford County, on August 9,  | 
      
      
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        1916, William Edwin Dyess exhibited natural leadership skills as  | 
      
      
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        the student body president at Albany High School and as the class  | 
      
      
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        president and commander of the R.O.T.C. detachment at John Tarleton  | 
      
      
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        Agricultural College (now Tarleton State University); a  | 
      
      
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        distinguished graduate of the flight schools at Randolph Field,  | 
      
      
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        known as "the West Point of the Air," and Kelly Field in San  | 
      
      
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        Antonio, Dyess was appointed commanding officer of the 21st Pursuit  | 
      
      
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        Squadron and deployed to the Philippine Islands in 1941, where he  | 
      
      
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        would become one of the first Americans to engage the enemy in World  | 
      
      
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        War II; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, During the early phase of the Pacific War, First  | 
      
      
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        Lieutenant Dyess shot down six enemy planes, actions that would  | 
      
      
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        have classified him as an "ace" if not for the lack of gun cameras  | 
      
      
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        and the destruction by American forces of military records to  | 
      
      
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        prevent them from falling into enemy hands; in late January 1942,  | 
      
      
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        during an emergency shortage of combat aircraft, Dyess demonstrated  | 
      
      
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        exceptional skill as a marksman and motivator as he led his  | 
      
      
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        ill-equipped and inexperienced squadron of airmen in infantry  | 
      
      
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        combat through the jungles of the Bataan Peninsula during the  | 
      
      
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        "Battle of the Points"; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, On February 8, 1942, Captain Dyess volunteered to  | 
      
      
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        lead America's first amphibious landing of World War II, at  | 
      
      
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        Agloloma Bay, to root out two enemy battalions that had entrenched  | 
      
      
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        themselves with orders from Japanese commanding General Masaharu  | 
      
      
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        Homma to wreak havoc behind the Filipino-American lines; Dyess was  | 
      
      
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        the first man ashore, selflessly exposing himself to enemy fire  | 
      
      
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        while engaging enemy positions with a Lewis machine gun and  | 
      
      
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        motivating his apprehensive 20-man force to join him; amidst  | 
      
      
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        exploding bombs, Dyess and his party secured the beachhead using  | 
      
      
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        automatic weapons and hand grenades and eliminated approximately 75  | 
      
      
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        heavily armed, elite Japanese troops who had fortified themselves  | 
      
      
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        in caves; the failure of General Homma's operation allowed American  | 
      
      
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        forces in the Philippines to hold out a few months longer, trapping  | 
      
      
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        enemy resources and giving America time to mobilize in the wake of  | 
      
      
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        the attack on Pearl Harbor; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, On March 2, 1942, Dyess led nine pilots flying five  | 
      
      
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        battered warplanes in a daring raid on the enemy supply depot at  | 
      
      
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        Subic Bay, Luzon; flying a Curtiss P-40 Warhawk rigged to carry  | 
      
      
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        500-pound bombs, Dyess braved heavy antiaircraft fire, engaged an  | 
      
      
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        enemy cruiser, and ultimately destroyed one 12,000-ton transport,  | 
      
      
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        one 6,000-ton vessel, at least two 100-ton motor launches, and a  | 
      
      
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        handful of barges and lighters; in order to save face, Radio Tokyo  | 
      
      
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        reported that 54 bombers and swarms of fighter planes had been  | 
      
      
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        responsible for the attack; Dyess was presented with the  | 
      
      
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        Distinguished Service Cross, the second-highest military  | 
      
      
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        decoration that can be awarded, for the extraordinary heroism that  | 
      
      
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        he displayed on this occasion; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, Although many officers began to shirk their duties  | 
      
      
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        and pull rank as the military situation deteriorated, Dyess worked  | 
      
      
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        hard to boost the morale of his men, cleaning cockpits and flying  | 
      
      
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        countless reconnaissance, resupply, and evacuation missions; he  | 
      
      
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        sometimes flew up to 1,400 miles through enemy skies to bring back  | 
      
      
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        desperately needed medicines and telegrams for his men; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, Dyess refused multiple opportunities to leave the  | 
      
      
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        doomed Bataan Peninsula and endeavored to ensure others were  | 
      
      
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        evacuated before him; Dyess personally supervised the boarding of  | 
      
      
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        evacuees on the last flyable aircraft on Bataan; the final seat was  | 
      
      
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        reserved for Dyess himself, but at the last second he ordered a  | 
      
      
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        friend onto the plane in his stead; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, After the surrender of 75,000 American and Filipino  | 
      
      
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        troops on Bataan on April 9, 1942, Dyess endured the most horrific  | 
      
      
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        war crime in the history of the United States, the Bataan Death  | 
      
      
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        March; Dyess watched as prisoners of war were denied water and  | 
      
      
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        medical care, beaten, beheaded, whipped, shot, buried alive, run  | 
      
      
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        over by tanks, and used for bayonet practice; due to his height,  | 
      
      
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        fair complexion, and status as an officer, Dyess was singled out for  | 
      
      
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        mistreatment and suffered through savage beatings; despite this,  | 
      
      
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        Dyess shepherded his men forward, helped the wounded, and noted the  | 
      
      
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        horrors taking place around him so that he could describe them in a  | 
      
      
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        firsthand account; for the next six months, Dyess endured  | 
      
      
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        starvation, disease, interrogation, and torture in two squalid  | 
      
      
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        prison camps on Luzon, where he continued to encourage and aid his  | 
      
      
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        fellow prisoners, smuggling food and medicine to those in need; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, In November 1942, Captain Dyess arrived at the Davao  | 
      
      
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        Penal Colony, known as "Dapecol," a reportedly escape-proof prison  | 
      
      
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        plantation where 2,000 American prisoners of war were being forced  | 
      
      
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        to work as slave laborers; while at Dapecol, Dyess co-organized a  | 
      
      
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        team of United States military personnel to execute the only  | 
      
      
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        large-scale prison break of prisoners of war in the Pacific War;  | 
      
      
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        Dyess volunteered for the dangerous task of transporting the escape  | 
      
      
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        party's gear on a bull cart past multiple guard checkpoints; on  | 
      
      
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        April 4, 1943, the "Davao Dozen," 10 American prisoners of war and  | 
      
      
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        two Filipino convicts, made their amazing escape through a deep,  | 
      
      
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        crocodile-infested swamp; after eluding search parties, Dyess  | 
      
      
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        fought alongside Filipino guerrilla forces behind enemy lines  | 
      
      
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        before evacuating to Australia in July 1943; he received a  | 
      
      
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        promotion to major and was personally presented with his second  | 
      
      
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        Distinguished Service Cross, in the form of a Bronze Oak Leaf  | 
      
      
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        Cluster, by General MacArthur on July 30, 1943; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, Dyess would have enjoyed a hero's welcome had his  | 
      
      
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        superiors not consigned him to a military hospital in the mountains  | 
      
      
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        of West Virginia, where he was subjected to secret debriefings by  | 
      
      
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        government officials; he was sequestered there because the  | 
      
      
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        government feared that his story, if released to the public, would  | 
      
      
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        jeopardize the "Europe First" strategic policy and Pacific prisoner  | 
      
      
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        of war relief efforts of the Allies; despite suffering from  | 
      
      
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        depression and severe post-traumatic stress disorder, Dyess was  | 
      
      
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        determined to make his account of the Bataan Death March and other  | 
      
      
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        atrocities known to the public, and he entered into a publishing  | 
      
      
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        agreement with the Chicago Tribune; his epic story, trumpeted by  | 
      
      
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        the War Department as "The Greatest Story of the War in the  | 
      
      
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        Pacific," was eventually released on January 28, 1944, skillfully  | 
      
      
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        timed to harness the full fury of America's anger; stagnant war bond  | 
      
      
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        sales and service enlistment numbers soared as Dyess's revelations  | 
      
      
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        forced America out of a mid-war complacency; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, Lieutenant Colonel Dyess never lived to see his  | 
      
      
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        remarkable story take hold of America; during a routine flight over  | 
      
      
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        Los Angeles on December 22, 1943, his P-38 Lightning began to have  | 
      
      
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        engine trouble; rather than bailing out and letting his plane  | 
      
      
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        careen into a crowded residential area, Dyess attempted an  | 
      
      
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        emergency city street landing, but he pulled up at the last moment  | 
      
      
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        to avoid hitting a motorist who had strayed into his path; while  | 
      
      
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        attempting to guide his crippled aircraft onto a vacant lot, he  | 
      
      
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        struck a church and was killed instantly when his plane crashed;  | 
      
      
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        Dyess was awarded the Soldier's Medal posthumously in recognition  | 
      
      
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        of a heroic act not involving an armed enemy; Dyess's family  | 
      
      
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        resisted the public's clamor for his interment at Arlington  | 
      
      
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        National Cemetery and instead buried him in his beloved home state  | 
      
      
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        in the Albany Cemetery; to this day, the only public recognition of  | 
      
      
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        Dyess and his incredible life was the renaming of Abilene Air Force  | 
      
      
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        Base to Dyess Air Force Base in 1956; and | 
      
      
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               WHEREAS, Lieutenant Colonel Ed Dyess risked his life  | 
      
      
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        repeatedly in defense of his country, and he put the welfare of his  | 
      
      
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        fellow prisoners of war ahead of his own; he revealed to the  | 
      
      
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        American people a vital aspect of the war, and he ultimately  | 
      
      
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        sacrificed his own life to save the life of another; he is most  | 
      
      
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        assuredly deserving of this state's supreme military award; now,  | 
      
      
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        therefore, be it | 
      
      
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               RESOLVED, That the 84th Legislature of the State of Texas  | 
      
      
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        hereby direct the governor of the State of Texas to award the Texas  | 
      
      
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        Legislative Medal of Honor posthumously to Lieutenant Colonel Ed  | 
      
      
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        Dyess in recognition of his extraordinary military service and  | 
      
      
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        remarkable succession of valorous acts in World War II. | 
      
      
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        ______________________________ | 
        ______________________________ | 
      
      
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           President of the Senate | 
        Speaker of the House      | 
      
      
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               I hereby certify that S.C.R. No. 26 was adopted by the Senate  | 
      
      
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        on May 14, 2015, by the following vote:  Yeas 31, Nays 0. | 
      
      
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        ______________________________ | 
      
      
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        Secretary of the Senate     | 
      
      
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               I hereby certify that S.C.R. No. 26 was adopted by the House  | 
      
      
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        on May 22, 2015, by the following vote:  Yeas 140, Nays 0,  | 
      
      
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        two present not voting. | 
      
      
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        ______________________________ | 
      
      
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        Chief Clerk of the House    | 
      
      
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        Approved: | 
      
      
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        ______________________________  | 
      
      
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                    Date | 
      
      
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        ______________________________  | 
      
      
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                  Governor |