Your afternoon reading.
The Midday Brief: Aug. 17, 2010
TribBlog: How Texas Colleges Stack Up [Updated]
The day that universities have been waiting for — some eagerly, others with a healthy dose of dread — is finally here. The 2011 edition of U.S. News & World Report’s influential (and often controversial) college rankings have finally been released.
TribBlog: Seeking a “Smarter” Contract?
The Department of Information Resources appears to be giving up on IBM — once and for all.
The Brief: Aug. 17, 2010
If you’re keeping a running tally of Texas ethics scandals (and who isn’t?), that’s one in and one out.
The Heat of the Moment
It’s late August in Texas, which means triple-digit temperatures and air conditioners everywhere cranked to the max. No wonder that, on Monday, the state set an energy consumption record — for the second day in a row. Peter Babb of KUT News has this report.
The Optimist Club
Along the border, the beheadings and bombings carried out by drug cartels are drawing comparisons to murders by Muslim extremists — not surprising, given the war-like death toll of 8,100 so far this year in Mexico, including about 50 casualties last weekend. Yet diplomats from both sides reject the notion raised regularly by government officials and media outlets that Mexico is a “failed state.” The horrors of some communities, they told a border security conference last week in El Paso, overshadow the fact that parts of the country remain stable and are thriving economically.
Ballot Brawl
Rio Grande Valley officials are fighting to hold a special election in November to fill a seat on the Hidalgo County Commissioners’ Court — even though the secretary of state and a district judge say they have no legal authority to do so.
Justice DeLayed
The Justice Department has ended a six-year criminal probe of onetime U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Sugar Land, without filing charges. But as Andy Uhler of KUT News reports, that doesn’t mean the controversial former congressman is off the legal hook.
TribBlog: High Court Bucks
There’s big spending going on in Texas Supreme Court races, according to a new study.



