southwest journalist

6
ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett won the Demo- cratic primary in the newly created 35th Congressional District, where the nine-term congressman sought re-election after his former district was redrawn to favor Republicans. Doggett defeated two His- panic challengers in a solidly Hispanic district that stretches from Austin to San Antonio. His opponents criticized the lawyer for not running else- where and taking on Repub- licans with his $3 million in campaign funds. Doggett defeated Sylvia Romo, a former state STEPHEN OHLEMACHER Associated Press WASHINGTON — Mitt Romney clinched the Republican presiden- tial nomination Tuesday with a win in the Texas primary, a triumph of endurance for a candidate who came up short four years ago and had to fight hard this year as voters flirted with a carousel of GOP rivals. According to the Associated Press count, Romney surpassed the 1,144 delegates needed to win the nomi- nation by winning at least 88 del- egates in the Texas primary. The former Massachusetts gov- ernor has reached the nomination milestone with a steady message of concern about the U.S. econo- my, a campaign organization that dwarfed those of his GOP foes and a fundraising operation second only to that of his Democratic opponent in the general election, President Barack Obama. “I am honored that Americans across the country have given their support to my candidacy, and I am humbled to have won enough del- egates to become the Republican Party’s 2012 presidential nominee,” Romney said in a statement. Romney said his party has united with the goal of putting the failures of the last three-and-a-half years be- hind itself. “I have no illusions about the diffi- culties of the task before us,” he said. “But whatever challenges lie ahead, we will settle for nothing less than getting America back on the path to full employment and prosperity.” Romney must now fire up con- servatives who still doubt him while persuading swing voters that he can do a better job of fixing the nation’s struggling economy than Obama. In Obama, he faces a well-funded can- didate with a proven campaign team in an election that will be heavily in- fluenced by the economy. “It’s these economic indicators that will more or less trump any good or bad that Romney potentially got out of primary season,” said Josh Putnam, a Davidson College politi- cal science assistant professor. Romney spent Tuesday evening at a Las Vegas fundraiser with Don- ald Trump, who has been renewing discredited suggestions that Obama wasn’t born in the United States. Romney said he believes Obama was born in America but has yet to condemn Trump’s repeated insinua- tions to the contrary. “If Mitt Romney lacks the back- bone to stand up to a charlatan like Donald Trump because he’s so con- cerned about lining his campaign’s pockets, what does that say about the kind of president he would be?” Obama’s deputy campaign manag- er, Stephanie Cutter, said in a state- ment. “I don’t agree with all the people who support me,” Romney said when asked Monday about Trump’s contentions. “And my guess is they don’t all agree with everything I be- lieve in.” Trump told CNN in an interview Tuesday that he and Romney talk about other issues — jobs, China, oil and more — and not about Obama’s place of birth or the validity of his birth certificate. S OUTHWEST J OURNALIST Wednesday, May 30, 2012 INSIDE: Youngest finalist to compete in spelling bee, Page 4 The University of Texas at Austin Dow Jones News Fund Center for Editing Excellence Doggett sweeps district primary MICHAEL GRACZYK Associated Press DALLAS Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst grabbed a double-digit percentage lead Tues- day evening over eight other challengers as early results rolled in for the state’s conten- tious Republican primary to replace retiring Texas U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison. The Senate race, the most watched among hundreds of races, was shaping up to be a two-man contest be- tween mainstream Republican Dewhurst, who counted Gov. Rick Perry among his backers, and fiery attorney and tea par- ty favorite Ted Cruz, a former Texas solicitor general. Despite the early lead, De- whurst could be headed for a runoff. He was still shy of the majority needed to avoid an- other contest for the nomination in July. The secretary of state’s office said more than 13 million Texans were registered to vote, but several polling places indicated voters stayed away, perhaps because of the heat, the confu- sion about a rescheduled primary date, and Memorial Day weekend travels that kept some folks away from home. “We’re all trying to find where the voters are,” Ellen Rusch, whose husband was seeking nomination for a judge’s position, lamented from a suburban Dallas polling place. Polling officials reported seeing just dozens of people out of thousands registered to vote. Mitt Romney secures presidential nomination ELECTION 2012 Texas primaries give candidate needed push HISPANIC VOTE ON THE RISE For more election coverage, visit www.swjournalist.com Despite a rapidly growing population, Hispanics don’t see themselves reflected in elections. Read more on page 5. Deals with banks pack punch to college students’ wallets DANIEL WAGNER Associated Press I t took Mario Parker-Milli- gan less than a semester to decide he was paying too many fees to Higher One, the company hired by his college to pay out students’ fi- nancial aid on debit cards. Four years after he opted out, his classmates still face more than a dozen fees — for replacement cards, using the cards as all-purpose debit cards and using an ATM other than the two on-campus ki- osks owned by the company. “They sold it as a faster, cheaper way for the college to get students their money,” said Parker-Milligan, 23, Lane Community College student body president in Eugene, Ore. As many as 900 colleges are pushing students into using payment cards that carry hefty costs, sometimes even to get to their financial aid money, according to a report to be re- leased Wednesday by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group Higher Education Fund. Colleges and banks rake in millions from the fees, often through secretive deals and sometimes in apparent viola- tion of federal law, according to the report. More than two out of five U.S. higher-education stu- dents attend schools that have deals with financial compa- nies, according to the report. The fees add to the moun- tain of debt many students already take on to get a diplo- ma. U.S. student debt tops $1 trillion, according to the Con- sumer Financial Protection Bureau. Student loans have sur- passed credit cards as the big- gest source of unsecured debt in America, according to the bureau. Among the fees charged by Higher One, according to its website, is a $50 “lack of docu- mentation fee” for students who fail to submit certain pa- perwork. The Education De- partment called the charging of such fees “unallowable” in guidance to financial aid offi- cers issued last month. Higher One founder and Chief Operating Officer Miles Lasater said in an emailed statement the company takes compliance with the govern- ment’s rules “very seriously.” “We are committed to pro- viding good value accounts that are designed for college students,” he said, and stu- dents must review the com- pany’s fee list when they sign Report shows schools, banks rake in millions from hefty card fees Please see ROMNEY, Page 2 Dewhurst Doggett Democratic Proposals 45% reporting Proposition 1: Texas high school graduates who lived in state for three years and lived here con- tinuously for the last year should be eligible for in-state tuition at public universities and gain legal status through higher educa- tion or military service For: 86% Against: 14% Proposition 2: Texas Legislature should fund colleges so tuition and fees are affordable to Texans For: 92% Against: 8% Proposition 3: Texas Legislature should allow Texans to vote to legalize casino gambling with funds going to education For: 74% Against: 26% Republican Proposals 45% reporting Proposition 1: State should fund education by allow- ing parents to choose their child’s school and save taxpayer dollars. For: 84% Against: 16% Proposition 2: Congress should repeal Obamacare and reject govern- ment health care and intrude upon the doc- tor-patient relationship. For: 91% Against: 9% Proposition 3: Government should not restrict the content of public prayer. For: 93% Against: 7% Proposition 4: Out of control spend- ing should be stopped at all levels of federal and state government. For: 94% Against: 6% Proposition 5: Texas Legislature should redraw lines for Congress and Legislative districts in its upcoming session. For: 76% Against: 24% MARY ALTAFFER / CONTRIBUTOR Mitt Romney secured the Republican presidential nomination, winning at least 88 delegates in the Texas primary Tuesday. He now has the 1,144 needed to clinch the nomination at the Aug. 22 Republican National Convention. JOSE D. ENRIQUEZ III / SOUTHWEST JOURNALIST Romney secured 31 out 50 states, in addition to a few a U.S. territories. Six more states have not held their primaries. Please see PRIMARY, Page 2 Dewhurst may face a runoff Wealthy incumbent criticized for funding gap as Texas congressional candidates compete for new seats Primary results roll in; contentious race may continue to second round Please see CARDS, Page 2 Please see DOGGETT, Page 2 Santorum Gingrich Romney Upcoming GOP candidates’ victories by state

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The May 30, 2012 edition of the Southwest Journalist produced by the Dow Jones News Fund Center for Editing Excellence at the University of Texas at Austin.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Southwest Journalist

AssociAted Press

U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett won the Demo-cratic primary in the newly created 35th

Congressional District, where the nine-term congressman sought re-election after his former district was redrawn to favor Republicans.

Doggett defeated two His-panic challengers in a solidly Hispanic district that stretches from Austin to San Antonio. His opponents criticized the lawyer for not running else-where and taking on Repub-

licans with his $3 million in campaign funds. Doggett defeated Sylvia Romo, a former state

stePHeN oHLeMAcHerAssociated Press

WASHINGTON — Mitt Romney clinched the Republican presiden-tial nomination Tuesday with a win in the Texas primary, a triumph of endurance for a candidate who came up short four years ago and had to fight hard this year as voters flirted with a carousel of GOP rivals.

According to the Associated Press count, Romney surpassed the 1,144 delegates needed to win the nomi-nation by winning at least 88 del-egates in the Texas primary.

The former Massachusetts gov-ernor has reached the nomination milestone with a steady message of concern about the U.S. econo-my, a campaign organization that dwarfed those of his GOP foes and a fundraising operation second only to that of his Democratic opponent in the general election, President Barack Obama.

“I am honored that Americans across the country have given their support to my candidacy, and I am humbled to have won enough del-egates to become the Republican Party’s 2012 presidential nominee,” Romney said in a statement.

Romney said his party has united with the goal of putting the failures of the last three-and-a-half years be-hind itself.

“I have no illusions about the diffi-culties of the task before us,” he said. “But whatever challenges lie ahead, we will settle for nothing less than

getting America back on the path to full employment and prosperity.”

Romney must now fire up con-servatives who still doubt him while persuading swing voters that he can do a better job of fixing the nation’s struggling economy than Obama. In Obama, he faces a well-funded can-didate with a proven campaign team in an election that will be heavily in-fluenced by the economy.

“It’s these economic indicators that will more or less trump any good or bad that Romney potentially got out of primary season,” said Josh Putnam, a Davidson College politi-cal science assistant professor.

Romney spent Tuesday evening at a Las Vegas fundraiser with Don-

ald Trump, who has been renewing discredited suggestions that Obama wasn’t born in the United States. Romney said he believes Obama was born in America but has yet to condemn Trump’s repeated insinua-tions to the contrary.

“If Mitt Romney lacks the back-bone to stand up to a charlatan like Donald Trump because he’s so con-cerned about lining his campaign’s pockets, what does that say about the kind of president he would be?” Obama’s deputy campaign manag-er, Stephanie Cutter, said in a state-ment.

“I don’t agree with all the people who support me,” Romney said when asked Monday about Trump’s contentions. “And my guess is they don’t all agree with everything I be-lieve in.”

Trump told CNN in an interview Tuesday that he and Romney talk about other issues — jobs, China, oil and more — and not about Obama’s place of birth or the validity of his birth certificate.

SouthweSt JournaliStWednesday, May 30, 2012

INSIDE: Youngest finalist to compete in spelling bee, Page 4

The University of Texas at Austin Dow Jones News Fund Center for Editing Excellence

Doggett sweeps district primary

MicHAeL GrAcZYKAssociated Press

DALLAS — Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst grabbed a double-digit percentage lead Tues-day evening over eight other challengers as early results rolled in for the state’s conten-tious Republican primary to replace retiring Texas U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison.

The Senate race, the most watched among hundreds of races, was shaping up to be a two-man contest be-tween mainstream Republican Dewhurst, who counted Gov. Rick Perry among his backers, and fiery attorney and tea par-ty favorite Ted Cruz, a former Texas solicitor general.

Despite the early lead, De-whurst could be headed for a runoff. He was still shy of the majority needed to avoid an-

other contest for the nomination in July.The secretary of state’s office said more than

13 million Texans were registered to vote, but several polling places indicated voters stayed away, perhaps because of the heat, the confu-sion about a rescheduled primary date, and Memorial Day weekend travels that kept some folks away from home.

“We’re all trying to find where the voters are,” Ellen Rusch, whose husband was seeking nomination for a judge’s position, lamented from a suburban Dallas polling place.

Polling officials reported seeing just dozens of people out of thousands registered to vote.

Mitt Romney secures presidential nomination

ELECTION 2012

Texas primaries give candidate needed push

HISPANIC VOTE ON THE RISE ✔ For more election coverage, visit www.swjournalist.com

✔ Despite a rapidly growing population, Hispanics don’t see themselves reflected in elections. Read more on page 5.

Deals with banks pack punch to college students’ wallets

dANieL WAGNerAssociated Press

It took Mario Parker-Milli-gan less than a semester to decide he was paying too many fees to Higher

One, the company hired by his college to pay out students’ fi-nancial aid on debit cards.

Four years after he opted out, his classmates still face more than a dozen fees — for replacement cards, using the cards as all-purpose debit cards and using an ATM other than the two on-campus ki-osks owned by the company.

“They sold it as a faster, cheaper way for the college to get students their money,” said Parker-Milligan, 23, Lane Community College student body president in Eugene, Ore.

As many as 900 colleges are pushing students into using payment cards that carry hefty costs, sometimes even to get to their financial aid money, according to a report to be re-leased Wednesday by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group Higher Education Fund.

Colleges and banks rake in millions from the fees, often through secretive deals and sometimes in apparent viola-tion of federal law, according

to the report.More than two out of five

U.S. higher-education stu-dents attend schools that have deals with financial compa-nies, according to the report.

The fees add to the moun-tain of debt many students already take on to get a diplo-ma. U.S. student debt tops $1 trillion, according to the Con-sumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Student loans have sur-

passed credit cards as the big-gest source of unsecured debt in America, according to the bureau.

Among the fees charged by Higher One, according to its website, is a $50 “lack of docu-mentation fee” for students who fail to submit certain pa-perwork. The Education De-partment called the charging of such fees “unallowable” in guidance to financial aid offi-cers issued last month.

Higher One founder and Chief Operating Officer Miles Lasater said in an emailed statement the company takes compliance with the govern-ment’s rules “very seriously.”

“We are committed to pro-viding good value accounts that are designed for college students,” he said, and stu-dents must review the com-pany’s fee list when they sign

Report shows schools, banks rake in millions from hefty card fees

Please see ROMNEY, Page 2

Dewhurst

Doggett

Democratic Proposals

45% reportingProposition 1: Texas high school graduates who lived in state for three years and lived here con-tinuously for the last year should be eligible for in-state tuition at public universities and gain legal status through higher educa-tion or military service

For: 86%

Against: 14%

Proposition 2: Texas Legislature should fund colleges so tuition and fees are affordable to Texans

For: 92%

Against: 8%

Proposition 3: Texas Legislature should allow Texans to vote to legalize casino gambling with funds going to education

For: 74%

Against: 26%

Republican Proposals

45% reportingProposition 1: State should fund education by allow-ing parents to choose their child’s school and save taxpayer dollars.

For: 84%

Against: 16%

Proposition 2: Congress should repeal Obamacare and reject govern-ment health care and intrude upon the doc-tor-patient relationship.

For: 91%

Against: 9%

Proposition 3: Government should not restrict the content of public prayer.

For: 93%

Against: 7%

Proposition 4: Out of control spend-ing should be stopped at all levels of federal and state government.

For: 94%

Against: 6%

Proposition 5: Texas Legislature should redraw lines for Congress and Legislative districts in its upcoming session.

For: 76%

Against: 24%

Mary altaffer / Contributor

Mitt Romney secured the Republican presidential nomination, winning at least 88 delegates in the Texas primary Tuesday. He now has the 1,144 needed to clinch the nomination at the Aug. 22 Republican National Convention.

Jose D. enriquez iii / southwest Journalist

Romney secured 31 out 50 states, in addition to a few a U.S. territories. Six more states have not held their primaries.

Please see PRIMARY, Page 2

Dewhurstmay face a runoff

Wealthy incumbent criticized for funding gap as Texas congressional candidates compete for new seats

Primary results roll in; contentious race may continue to second round

Please see CARDS, Page 2

Please see DOGGETT, Page 2

SantorumGingrichRomneyUpcoming

GOP candidates’ victories by state

Page 2: Southwest Journalist

up for an account. Among the fees charged to students who open Higher One accounts are $50 if an account is overdrawn for more than 45 days, $10 per month if the student stops us-

ing his account for six months, $29 to $38 for overdrawing an account with a recurring bill payment and 50 cents to use a PIN instead of a signature sys-tem at a retail store.

Higher One has agreements with 520 campuses that en-roll more than 4.3 million students, about one-fifth of the students enrolled in col-lege nationwide, according to public filings. Wells Fargo and US Bank combined have deals with schools that enroll 3.7 million, the report said.

Lane Community College’s president, Mary Spilde, said the real problem is a “lack of adequate public funding.”

“Many institutions are look-ing at ways to streamline and to do things that we’re good at, which is education and learn-ing, and not banking,” she said.

Programs like Higher One’s shift the cost of handing out financial aid money from universities to fee-paying stu-dents, said Rich Williams, the report’s lead author.

“For decades, student aid was distributed without fees,” Williams said.

“Now bank middlemen are making out like bandits using campus cards to siphon off millions of student aid dol-lars.”

Students can opt out of the programs and choose direct deposit or paper checks to re-ceive their aid but few do.

In the end, students feel locked into accounts before they have a chance to shop for a better deal, Parker-Milligan

said. Many banks are willing to pay universities for the privi-lege.

Under its contract with Huntington Bank, Ohio State University will receive $25 million over 15 years, plus a sweetener of $100 million in loans and investments for the neighborhoods around cam-pus, according to the report. Florida State receives a portion of every ATM fee paid by a stu-dent, according to the report.

It’s difficult to get a full pic-ture of how much money the

schools are getting because most of them refuse to release their contracts with banks. Only a handful were available to the report’s authors.

Ohio State and Florida State didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment. The National Association of Col-lege and University Business Officers didn’t respond to re-quests for comment.

CARDS: Few pick other route

The Southwest Journalist is a teaching publication of the Dow Jones News Fund and the Center for Editing Excellence at The University of Texas at Austin. The Southwest Journalist is edited and designed by students attending the 2012 pre-internship training program funded by a grant from the News Fund and news organizations hosting the interns. Printing of the Southwest Journalist by the Austin American-Statesman is gratefully acknowledged.

2012 Dow Jones news FunD InternsMatthew Bryan BastiBle

University of Texas at ArlingtonBeaumont Enterprise

Kristina BuiUniversity of Arizona

The Los Angeles Times

BenjaMin DiazLong Beach City CollegeSan Francisco Chronicle

Bryan scott DuganUniversity of Oklahoma

San Luis Obispo Tribume

jose D. enriquez iiiUniversity of Texas at Arlington

The Dallas Morning News

tor n. hauganUniversity of Montana-Missoula

Bay Area News Group

jennifer KillinDel Rio News-Herald

Del Rio, Texas

thoMas Kyle-MilwarDUniversity of Oregon

The Oregonian, Portland

eMily tatePurdue University

Austin American-Statesman

regan teMpletonUniversity of Texas at Austin

Idaho Falls Post Register

pashtana usufzyUniversity of Nevada-Las Vegas

San Francisco Chronicle

Vinny VellaLa Salle University

The Denver Post

SouthweSt JournaliStVolume 15 — May 30-June 1, 2012

Center for Editing ExcellenceSchool of JournalismThe University of Texas at Austin

s. griffin singerDirectorUT Center for Editing Excellence

george sylVieAssistant DirectorUT Center for Editing Excellence

Beth ButlerAssistant Director Kent State University

Drew MarcKsFaculty Austin American-Statesman

sonia reyes KreMpinAdministrative Assistant UT Austin School of Journalism

linDa shocKleyFaculty Dow Jones News Fund

BraDley wilsonFaculty Midwestern State University

aMy zerBaFaculty University of Florida

Page 2 — SouthweSt JournaliSt CONTI N U E D FROM PAG E 1 May 30, 2012

aMy teiBelAssociated Press

LONDON — A computer virus that can eavesdrop on computer users and their co-workers and filch information from nearby cellphones hit Iran and other Middle East countries, experts said Tues-day, and fingers pointed to Is-rael.

The Russian Internet secu-rity firm Kaspersky Lab ZAO

said the “Flame” virus is un-precedented in size, complex-ity and versatility.

“It can be used to spy on ev-erything that a user is doing,” researcher Roel Schouwen-berg said.

The virus has particularly af-fected computers in Iran, and Kaspersky’s conclusion that it was crafted at the behest of a national government fueled speculation it could be part of an Israeli-backed sabotage campaign against Iran.

Schouwenberg said evi-dence suggests the people be-hind Flame helped craft Stux-

net, a virus believed to have been created by Israel believed to attack nuclear centrifuges in Iran in 2010. Many suspect Stuxnet was the work of Israeli

intelligence.A unit of the Iranian com-

munications and information technology ministry said it has produced an anti-virus capa-ble of removing Flame from its computers.

Israel’s vice premier did little to deflect suspicion about the country’s possible involve-ment in the attack.

“Whoever sees the Iranian threat as a significant threat is likely to take various steps, including these, to hobble it,” Moshe Yaalon told Army Ra-dio.

Researchers not involved in

Flame’s discovery were more skeptical of its sophistication than Kaspersky.

Colorado-based Webroot said the virus wasn’t as com-plex or as stealthy as Stuxnet and was an easy threat to iden-tify.

Udi Mokady, chief executive of Cyber-Ark, an Israeli infor-mation security developer, said he believes only Israel, the United States, China and Rus-sia have the know-how to de-velop such a weapon.

It’s not clear exactly what the virus was targeting, but Kaspersky said it detected the

program in hundreds of com-puters, mainly in Iran but also in Israel, the Palestinian terri-tories, Sudan, Syria, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

The company said the vic-tims range from individuals to state-related organizations and educational institutions.

As for Flame’s purpose, “maybe it’s just espionage,” Schouwenberg said. “Maybe it’s also sabotage.”

teiBel reporteD froM jeru-saleM. associateD press writers Diaa haDiD in jerusaleM anD lo-lita BalDor in washington also contriButeD to this report.

Unprecedented cyberattack rocks Middle East Suspicion cast on Israel as possible originator of sophisticated virus

THE VIRUS CAN: ✔ Activate a computer’s audio system to listen in on Skype calls or office chatter

✔ Take screenshots ✔ Log keystrokes ✔ Steal data from Blue-tooth enabled cell-phones

Republicans won’t officially nominate Romney until late August at the GOP national convention in Tampa, Fla. Romney has 1,174 convention delegates.

The 152 delegates in Texas are awarded in proportion to the statewide vote.

Romney, 65, is clinching the presidential nomination later in the calendar than any re-cent Republican candidate — but not quite as late as Obama in 2008. Obama clinched the D e m o c r a t i c nomination on June 3, 2008, at the end of an epic primary battle with Hillary Rod-ham Clinton. Four years ago, John McCain reached the threshold on March 4, after Romney had dropped out of the race a month earlier.

This year’s primary fight was extended by a back-loaded primary calendar, new GOP rules that generally awarded fewer delegates for winning a state, and a Republican elec-torate that built up several other candidates before set-tling on Romney.

Rick Perry, Herman Cain, Newt Gingrich, Rick Santo-rum and Trump all sat atop the Republican field at some point. Minnesota Rep. Mi-chelle Bachmann peaked for a short time, too. But Rom-ney outlasted them all, even as some GOP voters and tea party backers questioned his conservative credentials.

The primary race started in January with Santorum, the former Pennsylvania senator, narrowly edging Romney in the Iowa caucuses. Romney rebounded with a big win in New Hampshire before Gingrich, the former House speaker, won South Carolina.

Romney responded with a barrage of negative ads against Gingrich in Florida and got a much-needed 14-point win.

Romney’s opponents fought back: Gingrich called him a liar, and Santorum said Rom-ney was “the worst Repub-lican in the country” to run against Obama.

Gingrich and Santorum as-sailed Romney’s work at Bain Capital, the private equity firm he co-founded, saying the firm sometimes made mil-lions at the expense of workers and jobs. It is a line of attack that Obama has promised to carry all the way to November.

On Feb. 7 Santorum swept all three contests in Missouri, Colorado and Minnesota, rais-ing questions about Romney’s status as the front-runner. Af-ter a 17-day break in the vot-ing, Romney responded with wins in Arizona, Michigan and Washington state before es-sentially locking up the nomi-nation on March 6, this year’s version of Super Tuesday.

R o m n e y has been in general-elec-tion mode for weeks, rais-ing money and focusing on Obama, largely ignor-ing the prima-ries since his competitors dropped out

or stopped campaigning. San-torum suspended his cam-paign April 10, and Gingrich left the race weeks later.

Both initially offered tepid endorsements of Romney, but on Sunday Gingrich gave a full-throated defense of Rom-ney’s campaign, saying on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that he was “totally committed to Romney’s election.”

Texas Rep. Ron Paul said on May 14 he would no longer compete in primaries, though his supporters are still work-ing to gain national delegates at state conventions.

Rich Galen, a Republican strategist who has been un-aligned in the 2012 race, said the long primary fight should help Romney fine-tune his campaign organization.

“Romney’s been running for president for six years. He is as good a candidate as he’s ever going to be,” Galen said. “Whatever you say about him, he was better than everybody else in the race.”

associateD press writer steVe peoples contriButeD to this re-port froM coloraDo.

—Continued from Page 1

—Continued from Page 1

Anette Fay, 50, of Richard-son, a German immigrant who looked forward to voting for president for the first time, was taken aback when she arrived to vote.

“I thought there would be lines,” she said.

The presidential primary topped the Texas ticket, but the GOP U.S. Senate race drew the greatest attention in the weeks

leading up to election day.Also vying for the GOP senatorial nomination were former Dal-las Mayor Tom Leppert, who billed himself as a fiscally conservative businessman, and ex-NFL running back and ESPN announcer Craig James, who struggled to gain traction.

Dewhurst has overseen the Texas Senate as lieuten-ant governor since 2003, but Cruz claimed Dewhurst was too moderate for sometimes

showing a willingness to com-promise with Democratic state senators to ensure the flow of legislation.

Cruz drew support from for-mer Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint and national limited-government groups including the Club For Growth — sup-port Dewhurst dismissed as outsiders meddling in state politics.

On the Democratic side, for-

mer state Rep. Paul Sadler led three opponents but was far from avoiding a runoff.

Texas’ booming population meant it added four new seats in Congress, while new redis-tricting maps drawn by the Republican-dominated state Legislature — and a subse-quent legal fight over whether they fairly represented minor-ity voters — reshaped many existing districts.

PRIMARY: Turnout low despite high-profile races

He is as good a candidate

as he’s ever going to be. Whatever you say about him, he was better than everybody else in the race.

— Rich Galen

lawmaker and tax assessor in Bexar County.

District 35 is one of four new U.S. House seats in Texas and was drawn to allow mi-norities to elect their preferred candidate, as the state saw an

increase in the Hispanic popu-lation. Doggett says there was no chance for a Democrat to win in four other Austin-area districts that lean Republican.

Longtime U.S. Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson of District 30 also survived a primary chal-lenge Tuesday, easily beating two Democratic challengers. Johnson’s victory was among the first congressional races called during a statewide pri-mary that could change the face of Texas in Congress. Along the Texas coast, Repub-lican U.S. Rep. Blake Faren-thold beat three challengers in the GOP primary.

Farenthold will face an eas-ier general election than in 2010, as the Republican-con-trolled Legislature gave Far-enthold a more GOP-friendly district when redrawing the state’s political boundaries last summer.

Ron Paul will retire from Congress after more than 20 years, but the failed presiden-tial candidate hasn’t endorsed any of the nine candidates vy-ing for the GOP nomination in the South Texas district.

The crowded Republican field for Paul’s seat raises the likelihood of a July runoff. The likely Democratic nominee is

former U.S. Rep. Nick Lamp-son, whose candidacy could make the U.S. House race a rare general election toss-up in Texas.

Voters in the new 33rd Con-gressional District stretching across Dallas and Fort Worth will pick a winner with 15 Democrats vying for the open seat. Former state lawmaker Domingo Garcia and Mark Veasey, a black state lawmaker who won endorsement from The Dallas Morning News and Fort Worth Star-Telegram, have the most name recogni-tion.

ROMNEY:Candidate ‘honored’ by support

eRic Gay / associated PRess

U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas, center, holds a picture of a slice of pie as he participates in an art fair in San Antonio. The soaring Hispanic population in Texas may not help Hispanic congressional hopefuls in the state’s primary elections. Two of the new districts are predominately Hispanic.

DOGGETT: Minorities playing bigger role

— Continued from Page 1

—Continued from Page 1

Page 3: Southwest Journalist

ALBERTO ARSIEAssociated Press

SAN FELICE SUL PANARO, Italy — Workers at the small machin-ery company had just returned

for their first shift following Italy’s powerful and deadly quake earlier this month when another one struck Tuesday morning, collapsing the roof.

At least three employees at the fac-tory — two immigrants and an Ital-ian engineer checking the building’s stability — were among those killed in the second quake in nine days to strike a region of Italy that hadn’t con-sidered itself quake prone.

By late Tuesday, the death toll stood at 16, with one person missing. Some 350 people also were injured in the 5.8 magnitude quake north of Bologna in Emilia Romagna, one of Italy’s more productive regions, agri-

culturally and industrially. Factories, barns and churches fell, dealing a second blow to a re-gion where thousands remained homeless from the May 20 tem-blor, much stronger in intensity, at 6.0 mag-nitude.

The two quakes struck one of the most productive regions in Italy at a particu-larly crucial moment, as the country faces enormous pressure to grow its economy to stave off the conti-nent’s debt crisis.

The area encompassing the cities of Modena, Mantua and Bologna is prized for its super car production,

churning out Ferraris, Maseratis and Lamborghinis; its world-famous Par-

mesan cheese, and less well-known but critical to the economy: machin-ery companies.

Like the May 20 quake, many of the dead in Tues-day’s temblor were workers inside huge warehouses, many of them pre-fabricated, that house factories. Inspectors have been determining

which are safe to re-enter, but eco-nomic pressure has sped up renewed production — perhaps prematurely.

Seven people were killed in the

May 20 quake. In both, the dead were largely and disproportionately work-ers killed by collapsing factories and warehouses.

Co-workers of Mohamed Azeris, a Moroccan immigrant and father of two who died in the just-reopened factory, claim he was forced back to work as a shift supervisor or faced los-ing his job. A local union representa-tive had demanded an investigation.

“Another earthquake — unfortu-nately during the day — that means people were inside working, so I think that an investigation will need to be opened here to check who cleared as safe these companies to understand who’s responsible for this,” Erminio Veronesi told The Associated Press.

COLLEEn BARRy, FRAnCES D’EmILIO AnD mALCOLm RITTER COnTRIBuTED

TO ThIS REpORT

May 30, 2012 I NTE R NATIONAL SouthweSt JournaliSt — Page 3

Italian workers killed in quake

EUROPE

ASIA MIDDLE EAST

Gunmen targeted vulnerable, poor in Syrian massacre

ELIZABETh A. KEnnEDyAssociated Press

BEIRUT — Eyewitness ac-counts from the Syrian mas-sacre emerged Tuesday, de-scribing shadowy gunmen slaughtering whole families in their homes and targeting the most vulnerable in poor farm-ing villages. Western nations expelled Syrian diplomats in a coordinated move against President Bashar Assad’s re-gime over the killing of more than 100 people.

Survivors of the Houla mas-sacre blamed pro-regime gunmen for at least some of the carnage.

“It’s very hard for me to de-scribe what I saw, the images were incredibly disturbing,” a Houla resident who hid in his home during the massacre told The Associ-ated Press on Tuesday. “Wom-en, children without heads, their brains or stomachs spill-ing out.”

He said the pro-regime gunmen, known as shabiha, targeted the most vulnerable in the farming villages that make up Houla, a poor area in Homs province. “They went after the women, children and elderly,” he said, asking that his name not be used out

of fear of reprisals.Assad’s government often

deploys militias that carry out military-style attacks. They frequently work closely with soldiers and security forces, but the regime never acknowledges their existence, allowing it to deny respon-sibility for their actions. On Tuesday, the U.N.’s human rights office said most of the 108 victims of the Houla mas-sacre were shot at close range. The U.N. report indicated that most of the dead were killed execution-style, with fewer than 20 people cut down by regime shelling.

Deaths from heavy artil-lery can be blamed on regime forces with relative confi-

dence because rebel fighters do not have such weapons. But it is more difficult to de-termine who is behind the

close-range killings — partic-ularly as Syria sharply restricts media access.

On Tuesday, the U.N.’s hu-man rights office said most of the 108 victims of the Houla massacre were shot at close range. The U.N. report indi-cated that most of the dead were killed execution-style-down by regime shelling.

“At this point, it looks like entire families were shot in their houses,” said Rupert Colville, a U.N. spokesperson.

JOCELyn GECKERAssociated Press

BANGKOK — Myanmar de-mocracy activist and longtime political prisoner 66-year-old Aung San Suu Kyi is resuming world travels, arriving Tuesday night in neighboring Thailand after 24 years in confinement.

With the installation of an elected government last year and her party’s entrance into parliament this year, she can claim at least partial success for her long fight and feel the freedom to explore the world.

Suu Kyi is to spend several days in Thailand, meeting

with poor migrant workers and war refugees from her homeland, as well as interna-tional movers and shakers at the World Economic Forum on East Asia.

She’ll return to Myanmar briefly and head to Europe in mid-June, with stops includ-ing Geneva and Oslo — to for-mally accept the Nobel Peace Prize she won 21 years ago.

In Dublin, she’ll share a stage with U2 frontman Bono, a staunch Suu Kyi supporter, at a concert in her honor, ac-cording to Irish media. In Eng-land, she has been given the rare honor of addressing both houses of Parliament. France’s Foreign Ministry says she also plans to stop in Paris.

The tour marks Suu Kyi’s lat-est step in a stunning trajecto-

ry from housewife to political prisoner to opposition leader in Parliament, as Myanmar opens to the outside world and sheds a half century of military rule, with President Thein Sein getting her back for am ambitious program of re-forms. Earlier Tuesday, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh met with Suu Kyi in Yan-gon, saying her “life and her struggle, her determination has inspired millions of peo-ple all over the world” and in-viting her to visit his country.

The last time Suu Kyi flew abroad was in April 1988, when she traveled from Lon-don to Myanmar to nurse her dying mother. She became a political prisoner after pro-testing the nation’s military regime.

Myanmar activist free to travel

They went after the women, children and

elderly.”— Anonymous resident

HoulA , syriA

KHin mAung Win / AssociAted Press

Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi arrives at Yangon International Airport in Myan-mar to depart for Bangkok Tuesday. This is her first trip out of Myanmar in 24 years. She is free to travel now that her party has entered parliasment.

INTERNATIONAL

Europeans lose faithin euro

mArco VAsini / AssociAted Press

A woman holds an umbrella to make shade for an elderly woman who was evacuated from a nearby hospital in Mirandola, Italy Tuesday. A powerful earthquake rocked the city, leaving at least 16 dead and 200 injured. One person is listed as missing.

An Italian firefighter and a dog search the debris of a collapsed house in Cavezzo, Italy Tuesday. The 5.8 magnitude earthquake hit the region especially hard, as it was recovering from a previ-ous earthquake that happened just nine days before. That earthquake left more than 14,000 people homeless. The region had not been hit with an earthquake of high magnitude since 1501 and scientists do not know why the region was hit with two large earthquakes in such a short period.

Victims shot at close range

Democracy advocate to travel West after 24 years in homeland

LONDON — The debt cri-sis that has ravaged Europe for the best part of three years has exposed a dislike of a single currency but little desire to abandon it, the Pew Research Center reported Tuesday.

A survey across eight European Union countries indicated that the region’s financial problems have trig-gered full-blown fears about the future of Europe as a political project.

Pew said the crisis of confidence is evident in the economy and in the euro, which was launched in 1999 and is now used by 17 coun-tries.

Finding little appetite for abandoning the euro, the survey revealed a heavy skep-ticism over Europe’s single currency. More people in France, Italy and Spain think the euro has been more dam-aging than beneficial.

Among the five euro coun-tries surveyed there wasn’t one more than 50 percent of those polled thought the cur-rency has been beneficial.

British court to decide Assange extradition case

LONDON — Britain’s Supreme Court is expected to rule Wednesday on the possible extradition of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to Sweden. Assange, 40, has spent the better part of two years fight-ing extradition attempts after two women accused him of molestation and rape in Sweden.

Assange denies wrong-doing, saying the sex was consensual, but has refused to go to Sweden, saying he doesn’t think he’ll get a fair trial there.

Assange’s lawyers argue that the warrant was improp-erly filed.

Assange is best known for revealing hundreds of thou-sands of secret U.S. docu-ments.

Danish brothers charged with terrorism

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Two Danish brothers origi-nally from Somalia were given four weeks of pre-trial deten-tion Tuesday after they were arrested on suspicion of plot-ting a terror attack.

The PET security service said it suspected the older brother, 23, also received ter-ror training from the Somali militant group al-Shabab. They were arrested late Monday.

Both men pleaded not guilty at a custody hearing Tuesday. The two brothers — who cannot be named under a court order — came to Denmark 16 years ago and are Danish citizens, the agen-cy said. The investigation had been ongoing for a long time when authorities moved to arrest them.

PET said the men had been talking about methods, targets and different types of weapons and were believed to be “in the process of pre-paring an act of terror.”

Nature reserve in works in Dominican Republic

SAN FRANCISCO DE MACORIS, Dominican Republic — The elusive Bicknell’s thrush songbird has inspired the creation of a nature reserve in the Dominican Republic.

The reserve is taking shape in an overgrown former cattle ranch of about 1,000 acres. Conservation-minded Dominican and U.S. investors have acquired the plot as a pilot project, hoping to pro-tect what they say is a biodi-versity hotspot that’s home to many threatened species.

Among those species is the thrush, because it occupies a narrow range of habitat that’s under pressure on both sides of its migratory route, said Chris Rimmer, an ornithologist at the Vermont Center for Ecostudies and expert on the Bicknell’s thrush. He said the preserve will also protect other spe-cies. Rimmer contributed to the foundation of the nature reserve.

The country’s environment minister will inaugurate the reserve project on June 5.

Page 4: Southwest Journalist

Page 4 — SouthweSt JournaliSt NATIONAL May 30, 2012

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court has decided it will not review the appropri-ateness of stun guns used by police on suspects.

The high court on Tuesday refused to hear appeals from police in Hawaii and Washington or people who got stun-gunned by officers.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said officers could not be sued in federal court. But judges also said the offi-cers used excessive force by using stun guns.

High-end retail group reports significant profits

DALLAS — Upscale retail-er Neiman Marcus Inc. said Tuesday its third-quarter profit grew 35 percent as stronger consumer demand allowed it to cut back on discounts.

For the quarter ending April 28, the privately held com-pany earned $62.6 million, up from $46.2 million in the same quarter last year. Sales rose 7.5 percent to $1.06 bil-lion from $983.8 million.

Dallas-based Neiman Marcus, which operates websites and stores under its namesake as well as one Bergdorf Goodman location in New York, said its revenue at stores open at least a year increased 6.7 percent.

Court sentences former star for non-payment

ORANGE, Calif. — Former NBA star Dennis Rodman was sentenced in family court Tuesday to 104 hours of com-munity service on four counts of contempt for failing to pay child support.

Court Commissioner Barry Michaelson also placed Rodman on three years of informal probation. The sen-tence includes the condition that Rodman pay current child and spousal support obligations.

The sentencing put an end to one of the disputes in the long-running case.

On Tuesday, the towering former star rebounder said he’d do whatever community service was required near his home in Florida, possibly working with children, and did not begrudge his former wife.

‘Malcolm X’ biographer’s son wants valued letter

ALBANY, N.Y. — The son of Malcolm X’s biographer is asking Syracuse University to hand over a letter in which the slain activist writes about his shifting views on race relations, saying his family is the rightful owner.

Malcolm X wrote to Alex Haley, his collabora-tor for “The Autobiography of Malcolm X,” from Saudi Arabia in April 1964, about 10 months before he was gunned down at a New York City hotel ballroom. The publisher of the autobiogra-phy later gave the letter to Syracuse University as part of a larger cache of papers to be used by researchers.

But Haley’s son, William Haley, said the publisher never had legal title to the let-ter and could not give it away. His lawyer said Tuesday he plans to make a legal demand this week for the let-ter, which he thinks is worth at least $650,000.

Corruption trial continues as judge, attorneys meet

GREENSBORO, N.C. — The jury in the John Edwards campaign corruption trial deliberated for a seventh day after a judge gave the panel a warning not to talk about the case over the weekend.

Jurors reconvened Tuesday morning. The judge met in a closed courtroom Friday with attorneys to talk about a problem with a juror, but she did not elaborate.

The judge again met with the attorneys behind closed doors Tuesday, but discus-sions were not made public.

Some alternate jurors wore matching shirts last week, and one was said to be flirt-ing with Edwards.

Edwards faces six charges involving money provided by two wealthy donors to help hide his pregnant mistress.

—AssociAted Press

NATIONAL

US court declines Taser case

Market losing faith

MAe ANdersoNAssociated Press

NEW YORK — Americans grew gloomier about the economy in May, causing consumer confidence to suf-fer its biggest decline in eight months and ending a period of steady optimism.

Worries about jobs and housing rattled consumers, even though gas prices are falling. The numbers suggest Americans will need to see more encouraging economic signs before their concerns start to dissipate.

The Conference Board, a private research group, re-ported Tuesday that its Con-sumer Confidence Index fell to 64.9, down from a revised 68.7 in April. Analysts had expected the index to climb to 70.

The May figure, which rep-resents the biggest drop since a 6-point October decline, is now at its lowest level since January.

Mark Vitner, an economist at Wells Fargo, said May’s reading is disappointing but consistent with the sluggish recovery so far.

“In some ways, it’s a micro-cosm of the whole economic recovery,” he said.

A clearer picture of the jobs market will emerge Friday, when May employment fig-ures are due. The unemploy-ment rate is expected to stay at 8.1 percent for May accord-ing to FactSet. Mark Olwick, a designer at Microsoft in Seat-tle, said he still has concerns about the economy.

“I’m cautiously more con-fident,” he said, “but there is still significant work to be done, especially around banking reform, job creation and gas price speculation.”

Tadpoles and spelling beesJosePH WHite

Associated Press

McLEAN, Va. — The youngest person ever to qualify for the National Spelling Bee was running around in a stream, hunt-ing for rocks. Suddenly, she chargedng up the bank and headedfor her mother.

“Hold on to that basalt,” Lori Anne Madison said.

Her mother, Sorina Madi-son, held onto the rock and soon was carrying more ba-salt and ahunk of quartz. “I can’t carry the entire park,” she eventually told her daughter.

Never mind. By then Lori Anne had joined up with more friends and taken on a different quest, searching for snails, slugs, tadpoles, water striders, baby snakes and more as they splashed in the waters on a sunny day.

“A water worm! It’s alive,” Lori Anne said, her shoes soaked from more than an hour of exploring. “I need it in my collection. It’s wonder-ful.”

In the last few weeks, she has won major awards in swimming and math, but one accomplishment has made her an overnight na-tional celebrity.

This week, the precocious girl from Lake Ridge, Va., will be onstage with youngsters more than twice her age and size as one of 278 spell-ers who has qualified for the Scripps National Spelling Bee.

She hit milestones early, walking and talking well be-fore others in her playgroup. She was reading before she was 2. She swims four times a week, keeping pace with 10-year-old boys, and wants to be in the Olympics.

When her mother tried to enroll her in a private school

for the gifted, the headmas-ter said Lori Anne was too advanced to accommodate.

“Once she started reading, that’s when people started looking strange at us, in li-braries, ev-e r y w h e r e , she’s actu-ally fluently reading at 2, and at 2 and a half she was read-ing chap-ter books,” Sorina said Lori Anne now studies at home, mastering topics oth-er kids her age won’t touch. She wants to be an astrobi-ologist, a combination of her two favorite subjects.

And shespeaks quickly,

with well-formed diction and a touch of know-it-all confidence.

“She out-argues both of us, and my husband is a trial lawyer,” Sorina said with a

laugh.Now there’s

another wrin-kle: Spelling bee fame. When Lori Anne spelled “vaquero” to win the re-gional bee,

she set a new standard in the national bee’s 87-year his-tory.

“It was shocking,” Sorina said. “I didn’t expect all the media attention. We’re pri-vate people. We’re regular people. It was intimidating.

But I’m happy for her. She loves it and she does it be-cause it’s a passion — and we never push her into anything and want her to make her own choices.”

Interviews can be bor-ing for a 6-year-old, so she pulled the plug, telling her mother: “I want to go back to being a kid and playing with my friends.”

So a detente was reached. Lori Anne was more than happy to let a reporter and photographer from The As-sociated Press tag along at a picnic with other gifted home-schooled children, but she craftily steered any questions about spelling back toward the joint pursuit of slimy things in the creek.

Asked to spell her favorite word, she raced through the letters of “sprachgefuhl” like a blur. Asked to spell it back-ward, she paused a bit and took her time, but she got it right.

“It’s even crazier back-wards than it is forwards,” she said with a giggle, her hand holding a collection jar and her eyes focused on the wet rocks. “Now let’s look for some slugs or snails.”

Regardless of outcome in the national bee, just being there is a unique accom-plishment, and making it beyond the preliminaries on Tuesday and Wednesday would be another stunning development.

The veteran spellers, some as old as 15, study hours daily over many months to master complex words.

Lori Anne? She likes to study while jumping on her trampoline, with her mother calling out words.

“She doesn’t sit at a table for hours to study anything. I mean, she’s 6,” Sorina said with a laugh.

Jacquelyn Martin / associated Press

Six-year-old National Spelling Bee finalist Lori Anne Madi-son searches for tadpoles Friday in Virginia. Lori Anne is the youngest finalist ever. The 2012 finals begin today.

Snakebots meet surgery

KeViN BeGosAssociated Press

PITTSBURGH — Imagine a tiny snake robot crawling through your body, helping a surgeon identify diseases and perform operations.

It’s not science fiction. Scientists and doc-tors are using the creeping metallic tools to perform surgery on prostate cancer as well as hearts and other diseased organs. The snake-bots carry tiny cameras, scissors and forceps, and even more advanced sensors are in the works. For now, they’re powered by tethers that humans control. But experts say the day is coming when some robots will roam the body on their own.

“It won’t be very long before we have robots that are nanobots, meaning they will actually be inside the body without tethers,” said Dr. Michael Argenziano, the Chief of Adult Cardiac Surgery at New York-Presbyterian Hospital and Columbia University Medical Center in New York.

Argenziano was involved with some of the first U.S. Food and Drug Administration clinical trials on robotic heart surgery more than 10 years ago. Now he says snake robots have become a commonly used tool that gives surgeons a whole new perspective.

“It’s like the ability to have little hands inside the patients, as if the surgeon had been shrunk, and was working on the heart valve,” he said.

But Argenziano and experts in robotics say the new creations work best when they’re designed for very specific tasks. “The robot is a tool. It is no different in that sense than a scal-pel. It’s really a master-slave device,” he said.

Howie Choset has been researching and building robots, particularly snake robots, at Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Mellon University for years.

Choset thinks his snake robot and oth-ers similar to it help reduce medical costs by making complex surgeries faster and easier. Choset says his new design is smaller and more flexible than earlier models: The diameter of the head is smaller than a dime.

The size of surgical robots allows surgeons to operate with far less damage to the body, helping the patient heal faster. For example, instead of opening the entire chest during heart surgery, a small incision is made and the robot crawls inside to the proper spot.

Dr. Ashutosh Tewari of Weill Cornell Medical College in New York has used robotic

tools to perform thousands of prostate opera-tions. He said the precision of the tiny robotic tool is vital to cutting out cancerous tumors, as well as to seeing exactly what nerves to leave intact.

Argenziano noted that robots aren’t a magic cure. “The robot is good at certain things and it’s not good at other things,” he said. Studies

have found that the cost ef-fectiveness of surgical robots varies greatly.

Choset also has built larger snake robots designed for search and rescue or explora-tion. They can climb poles or trees and then look around through a camera in the head, and slither through places humans can’t reach.

“We sent our snake robots into these caves off the coast of the Red Sea to look for evidence of ancient Egyptian ships,” he said. “To me archae-ology is like search and rescue, but everyone’s been dead for 5,000 years.”

Virginia 6-year-old waltzes into spotlight

Keith Srakocic / Associated Press

Scientists and doctors are using the snake robots’ creeping metallic tools to perform surgery on hearts, as shown on this model at Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Melon University.

Doctors can now perform intricate inner operations with tiny tethered robots

Witness recounts man eating another’s face

AssociAted Press

MIAMI — A witness says a naked man chewing on the face of another naked man on a downtown highway ramp kept eating and growled at a police officer who fatally shot him to stop the attack.

Larry Vega told WSVN-TV in Miami that he was riding his bicycle Saturday afternoon off the causeway that connects downtown Miami with Miami Beach when he saw the attack at the bridge’s off-ramp.

“The guy was, like, tearing him to pieces with his mouth, so I told him, ‘Get off!’” Vega said.

“The guy just kept eating the other guy away, like, rip-ping his skin.”

The slain man was iden-tified by the Miami-Dade County Medical Examiner’s

office as Rudy Eugene, 31, Mi-ami television station WFOR reported.

Vega flagged down a police officer, who he said repeatedly ordered the attacker to get off the victim. The attacker picked up his head and growled at the officer, Vega said.

As the attack continued, Vega said, the officer shot the attacker, who continued chewing the victim’s face. The officer fired again, killing the attacker.

Miami police have released few details about the attack, other than confirming that there was a fatal officer-in-volved shooting. The name of the victim had not been im-mediately determined by au-thorities, said Detective Wil-liam Moreno.

Vega said the victim ap-peared gravely injured.

It was intimidating. But I’m happy for

her. She loves it and she does it because it’s a passion.

— sorina Madison

The new snakebots being developed by doctors can test blood and examine nerves.

‘Tangled up’ in gold

Charles Dharapak / Associated Press

President Barack Obama presents musician Bob Dylan with a Medal of Freedom Tuesday during a ceremony at the White House. The award is given every year to people who have contributed to the country’s national interests. John Glenn and author Toni Morrison were also honored.

WORD WHIZBUSINESS

HEALTH SCIENCE

CRIME

Page 5: Southwest Journalist

JEANNIE KEVERHouston Chronicle

HOUSTON — Riley Simp-son could have become a sta-tistic, one of the growing num-ber of people with autism who leave school only to discover the next step toward indepen-dence remains just beyond their grasp.

Instead, Simpson has found something entirely different: Dinner parties. Job interview tips. Freedom.

“When everyone laughs, it’s because we understand each other,” he said as he shared dinner with friends. “We have the same experiences in life.”

Simpson, 18, will graduate this spring from the Monarch School, a therapeutic day school in west Houston.

Monarch serves students with attention deficit disorder, Tourette Syndrome, traumatic brain injury, and mood, anxi-ety and seizure disorders tran-sition from prekindergarten through high school and of-fers a post-graduate program with internships, help finding jobs and, for some students, the transition to college. It has

a cluster of homes near cam-pus where students live with a house parent.

Early diagnosis and inter-vention of autism have eased the hallmark behaviors of some children, said Linda Holloway, who chairs the de-partment of rehabilitation, so-cial work and addictions at the University of North Texas. Too often, she said, progress ends when students leave school.

“We talk about this black hole after graduation,” she said. “Too many ... don’t know about the resources out there.”

Unemployment and under-employment among adults with autism is as high as 90

percent, according to Lisa Goring, vice president for family services at the advoca-cy group Autism Speaks.

That helps to explain why lifetime costs to care for a per-son with autism are $1.4 mil-lion, according to the Univer-sity of Pennsylvania and the London School of Economics. The cost rises to $2.3 million for those who also have a cog-nitive disability.

Simpson had his first job in-terview last month. And while he didn’t get the job, he felt good about applying.

“They liked me,” he said. “They wanted to go full time. I did really good, though.”

May 30, 2012 TEXAS / SOUTHWE ST SouthweSt JournaliSt — Page 5

PAUL J. WEBERAssociated Press

SAN ANTONIO — One is a black real estate agent and the other a white millionaire. One won no-

nination and the other is in a battle to go to Congress for the two new dis-tricts created to reflect Texas’ soaring Hispanic population,

That’s not exactly what Hispanic leaders pictured, and some are dis-heartened after incumbent U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett won easily.

The number of Hispanics in Texas grew by 2.8 million in the last decade — second only to California — and drove a population boom that re-warded the state with a total of four new U.S. House seats. Yet in Tuesday’s primaries, Texas voters likely put no more Hispanics on the path to Con-gress than the six the state has sent since 1997.

The reasons illustrate why more population doesn’t necessarily mean more political power in an ethnically diverse state. In this case, the way the new districts were mapped by a Republican-controlled legislature, combined with the natural advantag-es enjoyed by political veterans who already are well established, has left a group of eager Hispanic candidates facing formidable opponents from other races.

“Cheated. We’re cheated. Are we going to wait another 10 years?” said Sylvia Romo, a Hispanic former state lawmaker running against the wealthy Rep. Lloyd Doggett.

After Doggett’s victory Tuesday, some Hispanic leaders already are beginning to look toward the next election cycle, when they hope pend-ing legal challenges will bring about helpful changes in the district maps.

Between 2000 and 2010, Hispanics accounted for three out of every five new Texas residents. Nearly 38 per-cent of the state’s population is now Hispanic.

Population gains have been reflect-ed in the number of Hispanic office-holders elected in down-ballot races from the legislature to school boards — up 46 percent to about 2,500 be-tween 1996 and 2010.

Yet gains on Capitol Hill have not kept pace. The six Hispanic members represent about a fifth of the state’s 32 congressional seats.

Low voter registration and turnout among Hispanic residents has long played a part in sapping Hispanic representation.

But Hispanic Democrats had ex-pected the new congressional dis-tricts, which were based on the 2010 Census, to help them flex more de-mographic muscle.

Two of the four new districts were drawn as minority-opportunity seats, touching on four major cities with large Latino populations: Fort Worth, Dallas, San Antonio and Austin. About 60 percent of the voting-age popula-tion in both districts is Hispanic.

Domingo Garcia, who was at-tempting to become the first Hispanic elected to Congress from Dallas, said

the elections were a key test of Latino voting power in 2012. “It would be breaking that glass barrier in terms of what Texas really looks like.”

But the boundaries set up rac-es with two strong Democrats — Doggett, 65, who has served in Con-gress since 1995, and Mark Veasey, a black state lawmaker and real estate agent, who has a solid political base and the endorsement of both major newspapers in the district, The Dallas Morning News and Fort Worth Star-Telegram. His state House district overlaps about a third of the new con-gressional district where his biggest challenger is Garcia.

Doggett had a campaign treasury of $2.8 million. Romo didn’t an-nounce her candidacy until February and started with only $20,000.

Doggett advertised and cam-paigned actively in the district, argu-ing he must be doing something right for Republicans to try to remap him out of office.

The Hispanic candidates did not openly woo voters with their ethnici-

ty. And some voters say they wouldn’t vote on that basis anyway.

“To me, what difference does it make?” said teacher Diana Ramirez, 32, who met Doggett this month in San Antonio’s downtown La Villita district, where he was campaigning at an art fair.

Doggett said he did not cost Texas another Hispanic face in Congress by competing in the predominantly His-panic district rather than in a neigh-boring GOP-friendly one drawn by the Legislature.

Luis Vera, an attorney for the League of United Latin American Cit-izens, which was among the groups that sued the state over the redis-tricting maps, said Hispanics were “stabbed in the back” by how blacks and Latinos wound up with a single district in North Texas instead of hav-ing one for each.

But Vera also said Hispanics must improve their low voter turnout to shape elections. Hispanics account for only 20 percent of registered vot-ers.

BY THE NUMBERS ✔ 2.8 million Hispanics added to Texas population in the last decade ✔ 4 new Texas seats in the U.S. House, resulting from state’s population boom

✔ 38 percent of state’s current population is Hispanic ✔ 20 percent of registered voters are Hispanic ✔ 6 Hispanics account for a fifth of the state’s 32 congressional seats

ERIC AASENThe Dallas Morning News

DALLAS — As he sat at a pep rally in 2009, Aden Shank got tired of seeing the cheer-leaders toss candy weakly into the crowds. The goodies only reached the first few rows.

Aden didn’t get any treats.Aden was annoyed.So Aden thought “I want

to make something that will launch candy.”

“I get ideas like this all the time,” he said.

First, he concocted a device of PVC pipes, rubber bands and hot glue. Over time, he’s transformed it into a glossy crossbow called the Cheer Launcher. Candy is stuffed into a paper tube and placed onto the contraption. Pull back a large latex band, let it go and watch the candy soar.

Woodrow’s cheerleaders have begun using the Cheer Launcher — now, the candy flies with ease.

But the Cheer Launcher has gained attention beyond the

East Dallas school. Aden, who created a business plan for his invention, was honored last month in New York with a teen entrepreneurial award from the Network for Teaching En-trepreneurship. Last October, he competed at the network’s National Youth Entrepreneur-ship Challenge.

Aden, 17, says he’s applied for a patent.

“Cheerleaders, crossbows, candy, money — it doesn’t get any better than that,” he said.

But to take his invention to the next level, he needs help. He wants to talk with a man-ufacturer to figure out how to mass-produce the device. He’d like advice from an engi-neer, too.

“We either go big or go home,” he said.

Aden has sold five to 10 Cheer Launchers for $99.99 each. “Sounds better than $100,” he said.

He says they’re ideal for high schools or floats at parades.

No matter what happens with his invention, Aden said, the Cheer Launcher will play a prominent role in his college applications.

“I plan to leverage this — a lot.”

Hispanic population boom a bust

Redistricting blamed for continued lack of representation

Incumbent U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, left, who handily won renomination Tuesday, took one of four new congressional districts that are predominantly

Hispanic. Results were undecided late Tuesday in a second district. Hispan-ics had hoped to exert more political muscle with growing numbers.

Eric Gay / aP Photo

Dallas teen builds ‘sweet’ launcher

INVENTION

POLITICAL FRUSTRATION

AUTISM

Training for transitions

mElissa PhilliP / houston chroniclE

Riley Simpson and 27-year-old artist Kate Matthiesen, left, are part of the Monarch School’s transitional living program.

Houston school offers the autistic a path to college School pep rally

inspires design of candy cannon

TEXAS

2 charges dismissed for Clemens

WASHINGTON — The judge in the Roger Clemens perjury trial has dismissed two of the obstructive acts in the charges against the for-mer pitcher.

Clemens remains charged with two counts of perjury and three counts of mak-ing false statements before Congress, along with 13 other obstructive acts.

All relate to Clemens’ testi-mony at a 2008 hearing and his deposition that preceded it. The deposition was part of a probe into steroid usage in professional baseball.

One of the statements dismissed was Clemens’ contention that he had “no idea” that former Sen. George Mitchell wanted to talk with him in preparation for the 2007 Mitchell Report on drugs in baseball.

Prosecutors rested their case Monday. The judge ruled against Clemens’ request for a dismissal of all charges.

Judge grants police access to Manson files

PLANO, Texas — A state judge has ruled that Los Angeles police are entitled to recordings of conversations between a Manson family member and his attorney.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Brenda T. Rhoades granted the request Tuesday, allow-ing officers to obtain eight audio tapes of talks between Charles “Tex” Watson and attorney Bill Boyd.

Watson is serving a life sentence for his role in the 1969 Tate-La Bianca mur-ders. He made the tapes available to his co-author for the 1978 book, “Will You Die for Me?”

Now, police want to see whether Watson described any unsolved killings in the conversations.

Rhoades’ ruling came despite an objection from Watson’s current attorney, who argued Watson didn’t waive attorney-client privilege when making the book deal.

After 14-hour standoff, man plunges to death

DALLAS — A man who threatened to shoot officers during a 14-hour standoff in a construction crane was unarmed, police said Tuesday.

Lee Thomas Jr., 44, of Dallas, fell to his death early Tuesday, about 14 hours after he climbed into the crane towering over the Southern Methodist University campus.

Thomas said he was armed and threatened to shoot any-one who approached him, police said. Assistant Chief Thomas Lawrence said no weapon was found.

Thomas was “a person of interest” in the hijacking Monday of a truck, but he hadn’t been conclusively linked, Lawrence said.

The truck was found near the crane, Deputy Chief Randall Blankenbaker said. About midday Monday, Thomas scrambled up the crane and into its cab.

“I don’t know if anyone can say why he went up there,” Blankenbaker said. “It might make sense that he was try-ing to elude capture,” but no determination has been made.

Thousands lose power after late-night storms

DALLAS — Utility officials say Monday night storms in Texas have left more than 6,700 homes and businesses without electricity.

Crews from Dallas-based Oncor Electric worked Tuesday afternoon to restore power in a stretch as far north as Wichita Falls, south to Waco and west to Midland-Odessa.

Most of the sites without electricity, which at one point left as many as 17,000 cus-tomers without power, are in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

Authorities say some homes in the Brownwood area suffered roof damage, downed trees and power lines. No injuries were imme-diately reported.

— ASSoCIAtEd PRESS

Page 6: Southwest Journalist

Page 6 — SouthweSt JournaliSt TRAVE L May 30, 2012

Discover DenaliMichael Penn / associated Press

In her new kayak, Misty Butler takes her dog, Bridger, on Mendenhall Lake in Juneau, Alaska. Chunks of ice from Mendenhall Glacier float in the water.

I planned to stick to day hikes, as my camping skills aren’t great, and I came up with a list of places to explore from two prior, brief trips here, conversations with park workers and bus drivers, and a study of maps: Thorofare Pass, Polychrome Mountain, Stony Dome, Cathedral Mountain and Mount Healy. Throughout the summer tourist season, shuttle buses provide the primary means of access to the park, with the 92-mile road closed to most personal vehicles past mile 15. One of the most popular ways to see the park beyond mile 15 is by bus, where you can view wildlife through the windows and with stops to experience the park through

short walks. You can also hop on and off the green buses, going off on your own to explore before catching a later bus back.

I would advise reservations, as buses can fill up fast.

I carried a bus schedule with me, so I knew when the last buses of the day would run. In my backpack, I also had rain pants, water and energy bars, ad-ditional supplies and a whistle, in case I needed to make noise to announce my presence to wildlife.

For my first day I planned to go to Thorofare Pass, which meant a four-hour bus ride into Denali. Rain drizzled down, but it cleared up as the bus moved deeper into the park. We saw five bears — includ-ing three right beside the dirt road, as opposed to farther off in the distance — and a fantastic view of Mount McKinley, North America’s tallest peak.

Thorofare Pass isn’t a technically chal-lenging hike — none of my hikes were. But it was a fun hike up and a welcome workout for my antsy legs after the ride in. The best part was running the ridge line and drinking in views of the moun-tain before it was partially obscured by clouds. Unfortunately, I encountered a group of loud hikers on my way down. I hike for the solitude and fellowship with nature. This was a buzzkill.

I knew I didn’t want nearly as long a bus ride the next day. I was eager to run off on my own and spend as much time outside as possible. The bus trip started off ago-nizingly slow with people yelling “Stop!” to glimpse birds that seemed microscopic without high-powered binoculars. I rolled my eyes in frustration.

My attitude turned around fast, though, when the next “Stop!” was called out for a lynx sauntering across a sandbar.

I decided to bolt at Polychrome, a rou-tine stop for the buses. It wasn’t long be-fore the sound of traffic melted away, and I was all alone. It was incredible: vistas drenched in the colors of fall — yellow, or-ange, brown, rust — and more ridge line to run. The wind in the area, though, was quite strong, literally clearing my nostrils.

As the day wore on, I found walking the road to be a great pleasure and had no problem catching a bus when I was finally ready to do so.

I drove on my third day from the motel I was staying at about a mile outside of the park to Savage River. The area is as far inside the park as most cars can go. There is a mountain and ridge line behind the rangers’ station that I was interested in trying, so I started up in sometimes spongy, uneven terrain. It looked pretty straightforward, but the higher I got, the higher the brambles and thicket got. Soon I was among vegetation taller than I, branches clawing at my skin and clothes. I grew claustrophobic and frustrated, and decided to cut my losses, descending to a social trail — a path worn away by hikers — along the river. I’d been that way before with my boyfriend and felt comfortable pressing on, even as the trail grew faint. It was beautiful, and I hadn’t seen anyone since I set out.

On the way back, I wound up on a trail that led to large boulders jutting out into the river. This wasn’t right; I’d taken the wrong fork in the trail as I picked it back up. I backtracked, moving higher in hopes of picking up the trail. No luck, just a ledge with a decent drop. Higher still, same result.

My heart had started to beat fast as I scrambled higher still, wondering how I could have been so stupid. When I picked

the path back up, I was so relieved I prac-tically skipped.

I got one last hike in on my last day before the four-hour drive to Anchorage to catch my flight. I decided on going to Mount Healy.

Noisy traffic accompanies the trail, which is near the park entrance. But I had the place virtually to myself, and after a bit of a scramble near the ridge line, I caught sight of a group of Dall sheep.

I accomplished what I’d hoped to ac-complish — leaving tired and smiling — and couldn’t help but think about all the things I wanted to do on my next journey through the Alaskan wilderness.

This is an enchanting but unforgiving landscape, where adventurers far more experienced than I have gotten lost or hurt. The dangers — weather and bears among them — can even be deadly.

So it’s not surprising that my plans to hike solo here led to raised eyebrows — and admonitions to please be careful.

While I’m no novice to back country trips, Denali National Park and Preserve in Alaska is different, namely in that there are virtually no marked trails here. I had no interest in doing anything dangerous; I just wanted to go on some challenging hikes and enjoy my surroundings.

IF YOU GO ...

LOCATIONShuttle buses begin running to the Eielson Visitor Center on June 1. The entire park road will be open to buses, conditions per-mitting, starting June 8. Shuttle buses are scheduled to run through Sept. 13. Ticket prices and terms vary. See details at http://www.reservedenali.com.

FOODMorino Grill is the only restau-rant near Denali’s entrance. The National Park Service says Riley Creek Mercantile sells pre-pack-aged food, and the Wilderness Access Center sells snacks. There are restaurants and other stores along Highway 3, outside of the park.

SUPPLIESFor off-trail hikers, the park recommends:• carrying adequate food and water, and a way to treat water• wearing appropriate clothing• preparing for bad weather• avoiding high ridges and exposed areas in a storm• packing rescue supplies

Becky Bohrer / associated Press

A bear walks across the tundra at Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska. Hundreds of bears make their homes in the 9,000 miles of park terrain.

Becky Bohrer / associated Press

A bald eagle perches atop a buoy where sea lions are resting, near Auke Bay, Alaska, about 20 min-utes from the capital city of Juneau.

BY BECKY BOHRER ASSOCIATED PRESS

Navigating the Alaskan landscape

LOCATION

denali