6A - Monday, October 1, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 6A - Monday, October 1, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom U.S.-based Venezuelans forced to vote in New Orleans Seth Lynn, director of the Center for Second Service at George Washington University, with Darren Phelps and Mark Kennedy. Man Iraq, han VeS cho " d ose 'SeConds ervice~ Strong connection a National Guardsman. between militar They are people like former Marine tank commander Nick service and public Popaditch, who lost his right eye during the April 2004 Battle office of Fallujah in Iraq, and who is now the Republican nominee in RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - The California's 53rd Congressional link between U.S. military service District. and running for office is as old "Iwaslookingatmygovernment as the republic itself. It started and I wasn't happy with it," says with George Washington, who ' the ex-gunnery sergeant, who cuts famously wrote that, "When we a striking figure on the campaign assumed the Soldier, we did not trail with his shaved head and lay aside the Citizen." black eye patch. "So rather than During the long wars in complain, I decided to run myself. Afghanistan and Iraq, hundreds I thought I could do a better job, of thousands of veterans have and I still feel that way." come home and laid aside their After back-to-back wars, there uniforms. But not all have opted to are more recent combat veterans simply blend back into civilian life. in the United States today than at Many have chosen to run for any time since Vietnam. public office. But the number of former Several dozen veterans - military members in public office some of them from earlier wars has been declining for years. In - are vying for U.S. House and 1969, nearly 90 percent of all U.S. Senate seats this year. And many House and Senate seats were others are seeking state and held by people who'd served local offices across the country. in uniform. Today, says the Men and women, Republicans Congressional Research Service, and Democrats, they ranke from it's about 20 percent. And for well-known hopefuls such as the first time in decades, none of congressional candidate Tammy the major party candidates for Duckworth in Illinois, , who president and vice president has became a double amputee when been in the military. her National Guard helicopter was Seth Lynn thinks that's one of shot down in Iraq, toArizonastate the problems with our political House contender Mark Cardenas, system these days, and he's a25-year-old Iraq vet who remains working to change that. Lynn, a Naval Academy graduatewhospentsixyears inthe Marines, helped found Veterans Campaign to train former service members interested in running for office. He notes that as the number of veterans on Capitol Hill has dropped,there has been "analmost parallel decrease in America's confidence in Congress." "I'm not saying that the two are necessarily a causal relationship," says Lynn. "But I do think that there is that ability to put your country before yourself, but also to work together across party lines, that Americans want more that just isn't happening in Washington." There is a natural ebb and flow to this nexus between military and public service. When World War II ended, 16 million men and women had served in uniform around the globe, and as a result postwar politicians were often veterans. The pool of veterans grew smaller in followingyears, especially since the end of the military draft in 1973. The all-volunteer military engenders a sense of duty and "selflessness" that Lynn and others feel has been sorely lacking, in the political arena. He sees this quality as a motivation for veteran-candidates today. Residents make costly trip to cast votes at consulate MIAMI(AP) - By bus and car, commercial flight and charter, U.S.-based Venezuelans are trav- eling en masse to New Orleans in the coming days, spending hundreds of dollars and in some cases more than a day of their time to cast a vote in their coun- try's presidential election. The government of President Hugo Chavez earlier this year closed the country's consulate in Miami, where most Venezuelans living in the U.S. have cast bal- lots in the past. It later said vot- ers would have to travel to New Orleans if they want to partici- pate on Oct. 7. It's a hardship in terms of time and money for many potential voters. But some, especiallythose who want to stop Chavez from being re-elected after 13 years in power, are determined to make the trip anyway. Carolina Guevara, a 21-year- old college student, plans to take the 15-hour bus ride from Miami to New Orleans, an 870-mile trek. "We want to demonstrate to the government that even if they put obstacles in our path, we will, practice our right to vote," said Guevara, who hopes to return to Venezuela after completing her political science studies at Miami Dade College. The Venezuelan government closed its Miami mission after the State Department expelled consul Livia Acosta amid an investigation into recordings that seemed ts implicate her in an Iranian plot for a cyber-attack against the U.S.. The closure affected nearly 20,000 Venezuelan voters living in Florida, Georgia, North Caro- lina and South Carolina who had registered to vote at the Miami consulate. Most Venezuelan vot- ers in the United States live in the Miami area and the vast majority of those are critical of the Chavez government. After the Miami mission closed, Venezuelan election offi- cials said that voters registered there would have to cast bal- lots in New Orleans, where the next-nearest consulate is located. Venezuelan opposition leaders accused the government of try- ing to disenfranchise voters, a charge officials denied. "They tried to do everything possible to prevent us from vot- ing," said Gisela Parra, a former judge who left Venezuela in 2005 after being accused of conspiring against Chavez. "The pressure was such that they had to open a voting center far away, in New Orleans. It's like punishing us." Parra, who plans to volunteer at the New Orleans voting cen- ter, said Venezuelan electoral officials "had the obligation" to make another Miami location available. But Tibisay Lucena, president of Venezuela's Elections Council, countered that voters registered in Miami "were relocated using the same criteria used inside the country, telling them to go to the nearest polling station." About 15,800 Venezuelans in the U.S. voted in their country's Dec. 2006 presidential election, three-quarters of them in Miami. Of the 10,800 Venezuelans vot- ingin Florida, 98 percent castbal- lots for the opposition candidate and 2 percent for Chavez. Thirty- four percent of registered voters did not participate, according to figures from Venezuela's Elec- tions Council. Most Venezuelans in the U.S. are professionals or business- people who left their country after Chavez became president in 1999. The number of Venezu- elans in the U.S. burgeoned from 91,500 in 2000 to 215,000 in 2010, according to the 2010 Cen- sus, with 57 percent of them liv- ing in Florida. Numerous groups surfaced to assist U.S.-based Venezuelan vot- ers, with information distributed on the Internet and social media, as well as at coffee shops and bookstores frequented by Ven- ezuelans. The groups include Voto Joven and Voto Donde Sea, comprised mostly of young people, and the Mesa de la Unidad Democrati- ca, or Democratic Unity Table, a coalition of political parties backing opposition presidential candidate Henrique Capriles. Beatriz Olavarria, who leadsa commission created by the oppo- sition alliance to distribute voter information and mobilize observ- ers, said she hopes at least half of the voters registered in Miami will cast ballots in New Orleans. "Something tells me that many people will. get on board at the last minute," she said. Olavarria, who has volun- teered in Miami during past Venezuelan elections, created the website www.Miami7octu- bre.com, to provide information about the New Orleans vote. The group's major push now is figuring out how to get regis- tered voters to the Louisiana city, where balloting will be held in a convention center. Opposition members complain that voting will not occur inside the mission itself, but Lucena, the electoral council president, said "the rules state that the polling center must be as near as possible to a consul- ate." In most cases, traveling from here to New Orleans to vote would require at least one night away from home. With travel costs a major obstacle for many potential vot- ers, financial adviser Andres Casanova and his childhood friend Andres Morrison are col- lecting donations to pay for char- ter planes to ferry Venezuelans to New Orleans. So far, they have received almost $355,700 in donations, enough to pay for trips for 1,100 voters. But far more people - as many as 3,000 - have registered on the organization's website, www.aerovotar.com , for seats assigned on a first-come, first- served basis. Voto Donde Sea, meanwhile, is collecting donations to subsidize bus fares for voters, said group leader Vanessa Duran. Milagros and Fernando Nunez Noda are renting a car with another couple to make the trip from Miami. "We're going no matter what," said Nunez Noda, a journalist and businessman. "It's like they threw down a challenge," he said of the government's decision to move the balloting to New Orleans. "We will prove our strength." Gas drillin Call: #734-418-4115 Email:dailydisplay@gmail.com Hydro-fracking reduces Russia's hold 1 SL on European gas g boom rattles Russia I RELEASE DATE- Monday, October 1, 2012 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS 3 Mountain Dew 35 Trinidad's 50 Tennis great Bjorn 1 Scottish hat competitor partner 51 Like some 4 Cries out loud 4 Undercover 36 Made goo-goo doctorate S Call sound atoll eyes at r seekers' exams 13 Whaton's "The 5" g02a la!" 38 Murphy's 52 xusue of Innocence" 6 Word with hatch 39 Communicate 53 "Livin' La Vida 14 Summer or prize silk hand ": Sicky Marlin Olympisevent 7 Gintfizz fruit gestures hit venue 8 Broadway 44 Leafy hideaway 54"In memoriam" 15 Coveringfor awards 46 Charlie Brown's ste-up piggios" 0 "The Tao at tormentor 06 Viewed 16 Big stink Pooh" author 47' Hosiery material 59 Superman 18 Stored in a Benjamin 48 Drawaforth nemesis Luthor database, say 10 Either of two 49 Bring to mind 60 Allow 19 Rural storage Monopoly sqs. structure 11 Venusde ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: 20 Amateurish dive 12 Littlechirp R 22 Opposite of a big 15 Makes a mad MA P APRtJBMRAo M str dash AL I OTO ALOtatEw 25" atrap! 17Western wolf H A Z M A T R E M NIA N T S 26"TheBalladof 21 Wasn't honest Z O L A I R E L O S T John and " with 27 Men 23Givesa Wt A N T A N T R A 28 Beardedflower thumbs-up E S C A P E V E L O C I T Y 32 Barely get, with 24 Second of two I S R H I S S Y T R O U T 'out' bell sounds LAUREN SNAPT O 34 ddeda chipto 27Caaghtwindabb L A U L P 0 A A P T N the pat 28Outlet storeoabbr. 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It's not some Cold War movie; it's about the U.S. boom in natu- ral gas drilling, and the political implications are enormous. Like falling dominoes, the drilling process called hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, is shaking up world energy markets from Washington to Moscow to Bei- jing. Some predict what was once unthinkable: that the U.S. won't need to import natural gas in the near future, and that Russia could be the big loser. "This is where everything is being turned on its head," said Fiona Hill, an expert on Russia at the Brookings Institution, a think tank in Washington. "Their days of dominating the European gas markets are gone." Any nations that trade in ener- gy could potentially gain or lose. "The relative fortunes of the United States, Russia, and China - and their ability to exert influ- ence in the world - are tied in no small measure to globalgas devel- opments," Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government concluded in a report this sum- mer. The story began to unfold a few years ago, as advances in drilling opened up vast reserves of gas buried in deep shale rock, such as the Marcellus formation in Pennsylvania and the Barnett, in Texas. Experts had been predicting that the U.S. was running out of natural gas, but then shale gas began to flood the market, and prices plunged. - Russia had been exporting vast quantities to Europe and other countries for about $10 per unit, but the current price in the U.S. is now about $3 for the same quan- tity. That kind of math got the attention of energy companies, and politicians, around the world. Some European governments began to envision a future with less Russian natural gas. In 2009, Russia had cut off gas shipments via Ukraine for nearly two weeks amid a price and payment dis- pute, and more than 15 European countries were sent scrambling to find alternative sources of energy. The financial stakes are huge. Russia's Gazprom energy corpo- ration, which is state-controlled, had $44 billion in profits last year. Gazprom, based in Moscow, is the world's largest producer of natu- ral gas and exports much of it to other countries. Butlastmonth Gazprom halted plans to develop a new arctic gas field, saying it couldn't justify the investment now, and its most recent financial report showed profits had dropped by almost 25 percent. .The U.S. presidential cam- paigns have already addressed the strategic potential. A campaign position paper for Republican Mitt Romney said he "will pursue policies that work to decrease the reliance of Euro- pean nations on Russian sources of energy." In early September, President Barack Obama said the U.S. could "develop a hundred-year supply of natural gas that's rightbeneath our feet," which would "cut our oil imports in half by 2020 and support more than 600,000 new jobs in natural gas alone." Poland's Ministry of the Envi- ronment wrote in a statement to The Associated Press that "an increased production of natu- ral gas from shale formations in Europe will limit the import via pipelines from Algeria and Rus- sia." The issue has reached the highest levels of the Kremlin, too. Hill, of the Brookings think tank, heard President Vladimir Putin speak in late 2011 at a Mos- cow gathering of academics and media. She said in a blog post that "the only time I thought that he became truly engaged was when he wanted to explain to us how dangerous fracking was." But one top Gazprom execu- tive said shale gas will actu- ally hglp the country in the long run. Sergei Komlev, the head of export contracts and pricing, acknowledged the recent disrup- tions but predicted that the U.S. fuels wouldn't make their way to Europe on any important scale. "Although we heard that the motive of these activities was to decrease dependence of certain countries on Gazprom gas, the end results of these efforts will be utterly favorable to us," Komlev wrote in an email to the AP. "The reason for remaining tranquil is that we do not expect the cur- rently abnormally low prices in the USA to last for long." In other words, if the market- place for natural gas expands, Russia will have even more potential customers because it has tremendous reserves. Komlev even thanked the U.S. for taking the role of "shale gas global lobbyist" and said Gaz- prom believes natural gas is more environmentally friendly than other fossil fuels. "Gazprom group generally views shale gas as a great gift to the industry," he wrote. When natural gas prices rise, "it will make the U.S. plans to become a major gas exporter questionable." Whether exports happen involves a dizzying mix of math,