Saturday,  May 25, 2013 • Vol. 14--No. 309 • 27 of 35 •  Other Editions

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• "This weekend is bigger than Labor Day, because it's really the first time to get out with the family and go," Jacquie Fuks, executive director of Southeastern South Dakota Tourism, told the Yankton Daily Press & Dakotan newspaper. "People have been trapped all winter and are ready to get out."
• The state Tourism Department says early indications are that South Dakota will have a good summer season. There is strong demand for vacation guides and e-newsletters from a digital marketing campaign, and traffic on department-run websites also has been on the increase, department spokeswoman Wanda Goodman told the Capital Journal.
• One travel firm projects about 75 percent of Americans planning a vacation this summer, and "we certainly hope we are attracting a strong number of those people," Goodman said.
• The Tourism Department has launched an eight-state tour of Mount Rushmore mascots as part of the effort to draw people to not only the national memorial in the Black Hills but also to other parts of the state.
• The 2,500-mile tour of the mascots dressed up as George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Teddy Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln began this week. It will hit cities in South Dakota, North Dakota, Nebraska, Missouri, Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota. The mascots previously made appearances at major league baseball games and the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City.
• "It doesn't matter if they're 2 or 102, everyone can relate to the presidents and they've been great in not only promoting Mount Rushmore but our whole state," Tourism Secretary Jim Hagen said during a stop in Pierre on Thursday. "Our goal is to generate interest in South Dakota and to get people talking about our state."

AP News in Brief
Judge finds Ariz. sheriff's office racially profiles Latinos in immigration patrols

• PHOENIX (AP) -- A federal judge has ruled that the office of America's self-proclaimed toughest sheriff systematically singled out Latinos in its trademark immigration patrols, marking the first finding by a court that the agency racially profiles people.
• The decision by U.S. District Judge Murray Snow in Phoenix backs up years of allegations from Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio's critics who say his officers violate the constitutional rights of Latinos in relying on race in their immigration en

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