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Li’l Literati: Pre-K student racks up record accelerated reader points at elementary

SAN BENITO — “Look! Look! I am invited to a party.”

How can the petite voice of a 5-year-old resonate with such warmth, excitement and expression?

By reading a book she loves.

Isabela Pierce, a pre-kindergarten student at Sullivan Elementary School, read 200 books this year within a two-month period beginning in January. Those books earned her 100 points under the Accelerated Reading Program.

Lupita Garza, assistant principal, said Isabela or “Bela” is the youngest child to have ever participated in the program at Sullivan Elementary.

“We are very excited to have her here on our campus,” she said. “She’s really encouraging all of our students to read. We use her as our role model to the fourth- and fifth-grade students. She’s very joyful. She’s eager to learn.”

Although Bela’s looking forward to taking a field trip with other Sullivan students who earned 100 points, that’s really just a detail. Her drive for reading is motivated by an intense passion for reading.

In fact, the very word “reading” seems to fail when referring to what Isabela can do with a book.

“Cool. It is cool,” she read without hesitation. “Will you go with me? I have never been to a party. I love parties. Zip. Zap.”

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A 3-star rating for Heart Surgery

HARLINGEN — Harlingen Medical Center has received the highest possible rating for performing heart bypass surgeries from an international organization, the Society of Thoracic Surgeons.

The award-winning and nationally-recognized hospital is the only hospital in Cameron County to receive the “3-Star” rating for Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) surgery.

The “3-Star” rating means that Harlingen Medical Center continues to be considered in the top tier in the country for heart surgery centers.

“Earning this recognition from the Society of Thoracic Surgeons — for a third time — is a testament to the quality of patient care which our thoracic surgeons and their supporting teams deliver during each patient encounter,” said Brenda Ivory, President and Chief Executive Officer at Harlingen Medical Center. “I am proud to be a member of this team that is dedicated to making a difference in the lives of the patients we serve.”

“We have a common goal here at Harlingen Medical Center, and that is to ensure the best possible outcome for our patients,” added Dr. Daniel Martinez, Board-Certified Cardiovascular Surgeon. “The cardiologists, the cardiovascular surgeons and clinical staff are all committed to our patients and their well-being.”

The 3-Star rating indicates that patient outcomes and bypass surgery performance are statistically better at Harlingen Medical Center than the national mean.

The rating is derived from a combination of 11 different processes and outcome measures for coronary artery bypass surgery which are recommended by the National Quality Forum, a non-profit organization which works to improve the quality of healthcare in the United States.

The national measures rate the performance of heart surgery programs in various areas, including avoidance of death and major complications; appropriate use of medications before, during and after surgery; and using the best possible blood vessel (the internal mammary artery) during bypass surgery.

The comprehensive rating system uses the largest single specialty database in the United States, with 1,100 hospitals participating and analysis of more than five million patient records.

According to the Society of Thoracic Surgeons, Harlingen Medical Center is among the top 10 percent of U.S. hospitals who received the top-tier rating of three stars for 2015. Hospitals which have average ratings receive two stars, while hospitals which score below average receive one star.

A patient may need heart bypass surgery if blood flow to their heart becomes blocked by “plaque”, a waxy substance that forms inside blood vessels, often as a result of a high-fat, high-cholesterol diet.

During the surgery, experienced cardiovascular surgeons at Harlingen Medical Center re-route a blood vessel to “bypass” the damaged artery.

This allows blood and oxygen to once again reach the heart muscle – and reduces the risk of the patient suffering a heart attack.

Attorney adds bus coordinator, casino to fatal rollover lawsuit

McALLEN — Five survivors of the fatal bus rollover May 14 are expanding their lawsuit to include the Eagle Pass casino and the bus coordinator.

The original lawsuit included only two survivors and named OGA Charters, of San Juan, as the sole defendant. An amended petition filed Saturday adds three plaintiffs and includes Kickapoo Lucky Eagle Casino; Porfirio Aguirre, the bus driver; and Elvia Estrada, a contracted bus coordinator for the casino.

The lawsuit, filed by attorney John Franz, claims the bus company and the casino are vicariously liable in the crash of a charter bus that killed nine people and injured 43.

The bus, owned by OGA Charters, originated in the Rio Grande Valley and was destined for the Kickapoo Lucky Eagle Casino and Hotel.

According to the lawsuit, Estrada was contracted by Kickapoo casino to bring busloads of customers for a minimum of 12 hours. It estimates each busload represented between $15,000 and $30,000 in revenue for the casino.

“The casino is liable for the negligence of its Bus Coordinator, Estrada in failing to train Estrada to direct bus drivers under her control as a Casino Bus Coordinator not to travel at unsafe rates of speed, especially during wet and rainy roadway conditions,” reads Franz’s amended petition.

“The Lucky Eagle Casino is also vicariously liable for the negligence of OGA and its driver, Aguirre Vasquez, and is subject to the same high degree of care.”

The morning of the crash, the lawsuit states two bus riders, Carlota Salinas and Manuel Salinas, boarded the bus at 5:30 a.m. at a Walmart in Brownsville. Plaintiffs Mario Alberto Zuniga, Lizbeth Nicole Rangel and Thelma Hernandez boarded at 7:20 a.m. at an H-E-B in Palmview. Each had paid $40 with a promise of a $25 credit at the casino. They were also encouraged to bring a minimum of $300 to spend each trip, the lawsuit states.

“Estrada, OGA and Aguirre Vasquez were all on a mission for the benefit of the Lucky Eagle Casino,” the lawsuit reads.

A separate lawsuit filed by McAllen attorney Jeffrey Stern sought a temporary restraining order preventing the company from destroying or altering any evidence from the crash, such as the onboard black box recorder, all paper records, emails and documents containing employee personnel files, in fear they may be altered or destroyed. The temporary restraining order was signed in the 332nd District Court and a hearing has been set for May 31.

Stern is representing five of the rollover survivors as well as the family of Francisca Guerrero, who died in the crash.

The National Transportation Safety Board is leading the investigation into the factors that led to the crash and how the bus company and its vehicles operate, according to spokesman Keith Holloway. NTSB will also investigate the bus’s black box to determine if it contains data that can provide details on what happened, but the investigation could take up to 14 months to complete, Holloway said.

Earlier this month, Frank Branson, a Dallas attorney who specializes in high-stakes personal injury cases, won an $11 million lawsuit against the Choctaw Nation after a 2013 one-vehicle charter bus crash near Irving.

Branson represented several bus passengers that were on their way to the Choctaw tribe’s casino in Oklahoma, including one of the three victims who died as a result of the crash that also injured more than a dozen people.

“Evidence showed how casinos rely on these buses to bring in business, and the Choctaw Nation was aggressive in its contract negotiations to get the very cheapest price from these bus companies while having little vigilance for safety,” Branson said. “Trial testimony revealed that a charter bus carrying 50 passengers was guaranteed to generate $15k to $50k for the casino.”

Teamwork, chance at the heart of UTRGV baja racing program

EDINBURG — Jacky Hay has been drag racing since she was 7 years old. At 18, she started racing with adult dragsters. Hay races twice a month, busing the six-hour round-trip to her hometown of Monterrey to compete during the weekends.

Still, despite her experience in racing, the junior at University of Texas Rio Grande Valley was reluctant to join the UTRGV baja racing program.

“It can be intimidating,” said Hay, who joined in spring 2014. “There are a lot of guys, and there’s no experience for getting your hands dirty with cars and working with machinery, but this creates that background. Girls can be scared, and I think they think they don’t know anything and that will be a problem. It isn’t. We’re here to teach and learn.”

UTRGV’s baja racing program is founded upon opportunity, which is evident in how it has grown.

In 2001, the program had 12 students. Today, there are 96 registered students. When Hay joined, she was one of a couple of women involved. Now there are 10.

“Team is the crucial element,” said Arturo Fuentes, an engineering professor who started the program in 2000. “It’s not as simple as it seems. What we’d like is all the students become leaders in such a way that the work gets distributed and everyone has the opportunity to become a better engineer.”

Every year, UTRGV’s baja racing program competes in a national competition hosted by the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) that concludes with a four-hour endurance race for a car built from scratch by the students. This year’s race is today in Bakersfield, California, and because of the strength of UTRGV’s team, faculty advisors Fuentes and Greg Potter and co-captains Domingo Villarreal and Noel Rodriguez have high expectations.

“All the goals we set for this car, we reached,” said Villarreal, a 30-year-old from McAllen who was raised in Houston. “The only goal we have left is to bring that trophy home. It’s a nervous time of year for us because we know how competitive we’re going to be. But we’ve never had the confidence that we do now.”

OPPORTUNITY

UTRGV placed 22nd out of 120 registered cars at last year’s national competition in Auburn. It is an overall ranking that includes not just how the car — which is essentially a go-cart on steroids — does during the endurance race, but also how it fares during design, acceleration and suspension tests.

When the UTRGV team set out to design this year’s car, it wanted a lighter, quicker vehicle. Villarreal and Rodriguez set out to reduce weight and the turning radius. Baja racing is a competition of off-road cars that travel rough terrain. A lighter car and smaller radius make for fluid racing.

From the start of the 2015-16 academic school year until early this month, at least 15-20 program members worked every Friday and Saturday to manufacture the car for about eight hours each day. Rodriguez designed the rear suspension. Joseph Montalvo, a graduate student from Pharr, designed the front suspension. Juan Carbon, a senior from Venezuela, designed the gearbox. One of three senior design teams worked the brakes. Sophomore Omar Hinojosa, a San Juan native who grew up in Reynosa, oversaw the frame design. Carbon and Rodriguez are the drivers.

“The point of the project is to give them some hands-on experience, some leadership skills they need when they graduate,” said Potter, a fifth-year UTRGV lecturer in his third year as supervisor of the team since taking over for Fuentes. “With engineering, you can’t just have a degree and no experience to go along with it.”

Through baja racing, Hay and Carbon earned “co-ops”, i.e. internships, with Toyota. Their knowledge of working with machinery, tools and robots made them attractive as employees.

“You learn research, manufacturing and the business side of a team with baja,” Carbon said. “Those automotive companies want student engineers. It makes it easier for them to prepare you if you know how to manage a design and a team. It’s the same thing they do there that we do here; it’s just a bigger scale over there.”

‘WE’VE WON ALREADY, HONESTLY’

Before the UTRGV team left the Valley earlier this week for the two-day drive to Bakersfield to compete in this weekend’s competition, students put the car through rigorous testing.

The team tested on campus in Edinburg and at on a property off 10th street in south McAllen. The goal was to break the car, and break the car it did.

The tie rods at the ball joint stripped so the driver couldn’t control the steering. The mounting tabs broke from the base of the tube, shearing off because of stress. A tire popped after the car crashed head-on into a tree.

This is all good. It allows the team to fix and improve things during testing instead of having to do so during competition. Last year, the car was finished about 10 days before the competition. This year, it was finished about a month in advance, allowing for more than enough time to test and analyze.

“As far as performance, I think it’s going to be really good,” Villarreal said. “It’s lighter. It’s faster. We’re confident it will withstand.”

Last year, UTRGV’s car weighed 398.7 pounds. This year, it’s 372. This year, the car has a turning radius of 6 1/2 feet. It was 12 last year.

This year’s car is even more economical. Last year’s cost $15,164. This year’s cost $13,900.

“The difference is the amount of engineering that has gone into this car,” Potter said. “Before, we’d have maybe one or two senior design project teams. This year we have three, four teams. There’s a lot more calculation and planning on the front end, and you can really see it paying off now.”

The only concerns are the tie rods — they might be too thin — and the binding of some metal. But Villarreal said those concerns are not significant.

“I feel like we’ve won already, honestly,” Potter said. “If we don’t succeed this year, I don’t know how we succeed any year, because we have such a great team.”

A NEVER-ENDING CYCLE

Rodriguez played basketball at La Joya High. He was a shooting guard. But the Mission native didn’t care as much for making 3-pointers or blocking shots as he did for simply being a part of a team.

“I’ve always been a part of a team since middle school,” Rodriguez said. “There’s nothing like a common goal between people and accomplishing it and doing what you set out to do.”

Though athletic, Rodriguez’s passion wasn’t sports. It was cars. Around the ceiling of his room at his Mission home, there are 165 toy Hot Wheels cars displayed in a circle. In second grade, Rodriguez doodled car drawings in notebooks.

His brother, Humberto Rodriguez Jr., graduated from UTPA in 2010 and is now a fracking engineer for Halliburton in Mission. Humberto was in baja racing the last three years and captain when the team placed 15th at the national competition in 2010, the team’s best finish.

“I’m trying to follow in his footsteps,” Rodriguez said. “Building something and the whole process from design, it comes from imagination. You put your smarts and knowledge and apply it for it all to come to life.”

While UTRGV’s baja racing program is certainly growing, it can be better. Students tirelessly fundraise, whether by selling raffle tickets, volunteering for summer camps in exchange for a $4,600 donation from a sponsor, or selling fajita plates on campus. The program aims for eight fundraisers per year.

“We’ve come a long way,” Fuentes said. “The only issue we’re still facing is the funding. It’s the challenging part. But in terms of impact and the depth of talent, we’ve come a long way.”

After today’s competition, the team will review the results of its finish and begin working on a car to compete next year. It’s a persistent, relentless cycle, though it does not go unrewarded.

“What we have is a mystical bond between man and machine,” Rodriguez said. “We are making it. This is a car done with our two hands and this is something that will pay off for our careers. It’s pretty exciting.”

School tie-breaker election June 11

HARLINGEN — Voters in the Harlingen school district will be heading back to the polls next month to break a tie for school board trustee.

The election to vote for either Eladio Jaimez or Rosalinda Mercado-Garza will take place June 11.

The election is being held because both candidates received 1,422 votes May 7.

The initial count put Jaimez ahead by one vote, 1,422 to Mercado-Garza’s 1,421 votes.

However, last Saturday the Early Voting Election Board added one provisional ballot to the school board election returns. The extra vote was in favor of Mercado-Garza, bringing the vote to a tie.

The candidates had the option of flipping a coin to determine the winner. The Texas Election Code gives them that option.

However, both candidates declined the coin toss, stating they had a responsibility to their supporters to continue their campaigns.

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Using Caution: Matamoros, local firefighters team up for disaster training

HARLINGEN — The Matamoros bomberos, the firefighters, had their hands full.

A rail tank car was leaking chlorine, and victims were piling up at the decontamination tent.

Miles away at the Harlingen Emergency Operations Center, the disaster response was being directed in real-time via Skype video. It was a first for Texas, and possibly the United States, officials said.

The mock haz-mat incident yesterday morning was of course a training exercise at Casa de Amistad’s parking lot, one that involved a dozen U.S. agencies in addition to 20 or so Matamoros firefighters.

Officials said “border” was just a word when it comes to a leak of wind-blown hazardous gas or other material, whether it originated in the United States or Mexico. It capped a week of training here for the Matamoros bomberos.

“We’re allowing the border to be non-existent when it comes to emergency responses,” said Brownsville Fire Chief Carlos Elizondo.

“We’re so close to the border especially with these chemical plants over there that exist now, it would take us a long time to cross the border and assist them,” he said.

“So if they’re there and already trained as first responders to take care of their own emergencies, we’re in support to those emergency needs,” he added. “It’s a great event between Harlingen and Matamoros … and I’m glad it’s happening.”

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Second wind farm to benefit schools

RAYMONDVILLE — A new wind farm will soon be churning tax dollars for the school district.

E.ON Climate & Renewables’ second wind farm will generate about $1.5 million in payments in lieu of taxes over a 10-year period, Austin-based attorney Kevin O’Hanlon said yesterday.

In exchange, the district would cap the wind farm’s maximum taxable value at $20 million during the 10-year period, O’Hanlon said.

The wind farm’s projected taxable value is $80 million.

As part of a proposed 10-year agreement, the wind farm would pay the school district about $150,000 a year, O’Hanlon said.

He said the wind farm is expected to begin making payments after construction starts next year.

School officials plan to put the annual installments in the general fund budget that currently stands at $19.3 million, Superintendent Johnny Pineda said.

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Boys & Girls Club to hold yard sale

boys & girls club

SAN BENITO — The San Benito Boys & Girls Club will hold a community yard sale in an effort to raise funds, kick off the summer and add to program registration.

The club is taking donations now until May 27.

They will then turn around and sell these items for proceeds.

Items accepted for re-sale include gently worn clothing, books, toys, games, tools, home décor, artwork, electronics, DVDs, CDs and collectibles.

They will also accept monetary donations. Bedding and broken items will not be accepted.

The proceeds will go toward funding club operations.

Event coordinator Carlos Gomez said they get money to fund their programs but not much money for operations.

“Funding is kind of slim,” he said.

Gomez said it would be ideal to receive $100,000.

“Whatever we can get, we can get,” he said.

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Bound for Washington: Valley speller headed to Scripps National Spelling Bee

LOS FRESNOS — Clarisse Tudon has a matter-of-fact attitude about being the Rio GrandeValley’s representative to the 98th annual Scripps National Spelling Bee and what it would take to win.

“I just study and will try to do my best,” the LosCuatesMiddle School student said Wednesday during a break from ninth-grade orientation at Los Fresnos United, where she will be a freshman next year. “I don’t really believe in luck.”

Clarisse won the championship at the Rio Grande Valley Spelling Bee in March to qualify for the national bee. She correctly spelled the word “sanguinary” during the 13th round for the championship.

On Sunday, she and her family will depart for the Washington, D.C., suburb of National Harbor, Maryland, where the national showdown takes place. The preliminaries are Tuesday and Wednesday, and the finals all day Thursday. The preliminaries will be covered again this year by ESPN3, and the finals will start on ESPN2 and switch to ESPN at night. Clarisse is one of 285 spellers who will compete for the title of 2016 Scripps National Spelling Bee Champion.

“I’ve never been to Washington, D.C., so I want to take some time to visit the monuments and museums,” she said.

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Harlingen South graduate Carlos Perez making waves at McMurry University

Former Harlingen South tennis player and 2012 graduate Carlos Perez has had a career to remember at Division III McMurry University in Abilene.

The College senior collected nearly 60 wins as a singles and doubles competitor during his four years with the War Hawks.

Now, Perez will finish as a second-team All-American after announcement from the National Christian College Athletic Association National office Monday.

Listed at 5-foot-4 on the McMurry roster, Perez is the shortest on the men’s team, but is known to wear down opponents with his stamina.

Earning a second-team All-American honor is simply the cherry on top for Perez.

This year alone he won the NCCAA student athlete of the week award twice, once in March and again in April.

Overall, he has a 29-14 singles mark and a 30-16 doubles record.

That includes his 10-11 singles and 12-9 doubles records this season, in which the War Hawks were in the Central Regional finals.

Those numbers earned him the McMurry tennis program’s War Hawk of the Year Award.

As good as Perez was on the court, he was equally as good in the class room and was awarded the McMurry University Senior Scholar Athlete Award.