84R27281 JGH-D
 
  By: Raymond H.R. No. 2677
 
 
 
R E S O L U T I O N
         WHEREAS, The end of an era in Texas journalism has come with
  the retirement of Paul Burka from Texas Monthly magazine in March
  2015; and
         WHEREAS, Born in Galveston, Mr. Burka earned a bachelor's
  degree in history from Rice University and a law degree from The
  University of Texas at Austin; he was accepted to the State Bar of
  Texas, and he began his career as an attorney with the Texas
  Legislature, where, as counsel to the Senate Natural Resources
  Committee, he was able to closely observe state legislators in
  their native habitat; and
         WHEREAS, In March 1974, Mr. Burka submitted a Texas-themed
  limerick puzzle to a new periodical called Texas Monthly, and the
  following month he published his first story for the magazine,
  earning $75 for a piece about the old baseball stadium at The
  University of Texas; on October 1, 1974, he switched careers and
  joined the magazine's staff full-time, working out of its original
  offices at 15th and Guadalupe in downtown Austin; and
         WHEREAS, Mr. Burka quickly became one of the magazine's
  signature writers, crafting stylish and well-researched articles
  about Texas barbecue, the Big Bend region, the Houston Astros, the
  Southwest Conference, and noteworthy Texas authors; he won a
  National Magazine Award for a two-part story on the oil tycoon
  Clinton Menges in 1985, and he also won acclaim for his profile of
  John Connally, a cover story calling the Chevy Suburban the
  "National Car of Texas," an insightful article about the struggles
  of a ranching family in Uvalde, and a moving piece about the Texas
  A&M bonfire tragedy; and
         WHEREAS, In addition, Mr. Burka has served the magazine and
  its readers as a skilled editor of the work of other reporters, and
  he has been a mentor and an inspiration to younger writers; and
         WHEREAS, Above all, Mr. Burka has been, for many years, one
  of the most knowledgeable, experienced, and influential
  commentators on Texas politics, sharing his encyclopedic knowledge
  of the Texas Legislature and its colorful history with the readers
  of Texas Monthly and the popular Burka Blog, which he started in
  2006, and to which he will occasionally continue to contribute; he
  has also regularly explained the ways of Texas and Texans to the
  viewers of Fox, MSNBC, NBC, and CNN, and he has inspired both fear
  and delight in legislators as one of the creators of the magazine's
  annual list of the 10 best and 10 worst legislators; and
         WHEREAS, For more than 40 years, this brilliant reporter and
  commentator has informed and enlightened readers of all political
  persuasions with his deep and affectionate understanding of the
  Lone Star State, and he may indeed take pride in the respect with
  which he is regarded by generations of his fellow Texans; now,
  therefore, be it
         RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 84th Texas
  Legislature hereby congratulate Paul Burka on his retirement from
  Texas Monthly and extend to him sincere best wishes for continued
  success and happiness; and, be it further
         RESOLVED, That an official copy of this resolution be
  prepared for Mr. Burka as an expression of high regard by the Texas
  House of Representatives.