Carson, a favorite of conservative activists, is neck-and-neck
with Trump at the top of Republican primary polls a year before the
November 2016 presidential election.
But last week Carson faced media stories that he had misrepresented
details surrounding a scholarship offer to the Army's prestigious
U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York, as well as other
tales from his youth in inner-city Detroit and college life.
Carson told ABC's "This Week" news show on Sunday that the West
Point website uses the word "scholarship," so that he was not wrong
to use this word in the past when describing overtures from military
officials who told him when he was young that they could get him a
"full scholarship" to the academy.
He said he was flattered by the suggestions but had already decided
to go to college and medical school.
Carson also said his campaign had been able to find an article from
the Yale Daily News that would back up statements he made about a
psychology class he took in college. He told CBS's "Face the Nation"
that "it will be coming out within the next day or two, showing what
happened with that psychology course."
In his 1990 autobiography, “Gifted Hands,” Carson, a 64-year-old
retired neurosurgeon, wrote about the offers of a West Point
scholarship and of later being labeled the most "honest student" in
a psychology course at Yale.
He said he was photographed by the Yale Daily News at the time, but
the Wall Street Journal challenged this on Friday, saying no photo
identifying Carson as a student ran in the student newspaper.
Trump raised questions about Carson's accounts of his past on four
different Sunday talk shows, calling Carson's tales "strange" and
"weird" in a conversation with ABC's "This Week."
"He's going to have to explain a lot of things away," Trump told
NBC's "Meet the Press."
[to top of second column] |
Carson did not address the questions about his veracity during an
appearance on Sunday in Puerto Rico.
The questions about his account of the West Point scholarship arose
last week after a report by political news website Politico, which
said Carson never applied to nor was he admitted to the
taxpayer-funded academy.
But some media critics have questioned the way Politico ran its
initial story, which said Carson’s campaign had admitted he
"fabricated" a "full scholarship" from West Point. Carson then
denied that his campaign’s statement constituted such an admission,
and Politico's story and headline were changed to reflect that.
A check of the West Point website shows it uses the words "full
scholarship" under "admissions information."
"As a cadet, you are a member of the U.S. Army and receive a full
scholarship and an annual salary of more than $10,000 from which you
pay for your uniforms, textbooks, a laptop computer, and
incidentals," it says.
(Additional reporting by Nick Brown and Alana Wise; Editing by
Jonathan Oatis)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|