Monday, August 5, 2013

Lewis wins Women's British Open at St. Andrews

Stacy Lewis of the USA reacts after playing her shot on the 5th fairway during the fourth round of the Women's British Open golf championship on the Old Course at St Andrews, Scotland, Sunday Aug. 4, 2013. (AP Photo/Scott Heppell)

Stacy Lewis of the USA reacts after playing her shot on the 5th fairway during the fourth round of the Women's British Open golf championship on the Old Course at St Andrews, Scotland, Sunday Aug. 4, 2013. (AP Photo/Scott Heppell)

Morgan Pressel of the US plays her shot on the 15th fairway during the third round of the Women's British Open golf championship on the Old Course at St Andrews, Scotland, Sunday Aug. 4, 2013.Play in the third round was suspended on Saturday due to high winds (AP Photo/Scott Heppell)

Korea's Na Yeon Choi plays a shot from the 15th fairway during the third round of the Women's British Open golf championship on the Old Course at St Andrews, Scotland, Sunday Aug. 4, 2013. (AP Photo/Scott Heppell)

Norway's Suzann Pettersenplays her shot on the 15th fairway during the third round of the Women's British Open golf championship on the Old Course at St Andrews, Scotland, Sunday Aug. 4, 2013. Play in the third round was suspended on Saturday due to high winds (AP Photo/Scott Heppell)

Korea's Na Yeon Choi plays a shot from the 15th bunker during the third round of the Women's British Open golf championship on the Old Course at St Andrews, Scotland, Sunday Aug. 4, 2013. (AP Photo/Scott Heppell)

(AP) ? Stacy Lewis had another big week at St. Andrews and left with an even bigger prize ? a major championship at the home of golf.

Lewis finished a marathon Sunday with exquisite birdies on the last two holes of the Old Course to close with an even-par 72 and win the Women's British Open by two shots. It was her second major on the LPGA Tour, ending a record streak of 10 straight majors won by Asian players.

The last time the 28-year-old Lewis was at St. Andrews was in 2008 for the Curtis Cup, and she went 5-0 to lead the Americans to victory.

This was even sweeter, and it required no less than her best golf in conditions so blustery that Lewis was the only player at par or better in the last 21 groups. Three shots behind on the back nine, Na Yeon Choi gave her a chance with consecutive bogeys, and Lewis took it from there.

"It's unbelievable," Lewis said. "It all happened so fast at the end. You're afraid for every shot, and all of a sudden you make a couple of birdies and it's over."

On the par-4 17th, the famous Road Hole, Lewis drilled a 5-iron that tumbled onto the green and settled 3 feet below the cup for a birdie to reach 7-under and give her a share of the lead when Choi three-putted the 14th hole from about 80 feet.

Walking off the green, Lewis said she told her caddie, "One more."

A driver left her some 40 yards short of the green, and the Texan used a putter to whack the next shot through the Valley of Sin about 25 feet past the hole. She made that for another birdie to post a score at 8-under 280 and see if anyone could catch her.

Choi, who won the U.S. Women's Open last year, was trying to salvage pars to give her a reasonable shot at birdie on the final hole. It all came undone on the 17th. Choi's hybrid from the fairway was too strong and settled in a clump of rough, just inches from going down the slope onto the road. She chipped to 6 feet, but pulled the par putt. When she failed to holed out from the fairway, Lewis had the title.

Inbee Park's bid to become the first pro golfer to win four straight majors in one season ended early ? very early.

Park returned to the Old Course first thing in the morning to resume the third round, which was suspended Saturday because of 40 mph gusts. In calm conditions, Park couldn't cut into a large deficit and shot 74 to fall nine shots behind. Then, she began the final round by four-putting for double bogey. Park closed with rounds of 74-78 and finished 14 shots behind.

"I've done something amazing this season," Park said. "I won three straight majors. I don't know if I can do that again."

Choi, who had a three-shot lead with six holes to play, had back-to-back bogeys from about 80 feet, and her bogey on the 17th led to a 73. He tied for second with Hee Young Park, one of four players who had a share of the lead at one point in the final round. Park also had a 73.

Morgan Pressel, who had a one-shot lead going into the final round, was tied one shot behind Choi until getting into trouble off the tee at the 12th and taking double bogey. Her last hope was a birdie-birdie finish, just like Lewis, only her shot into the 17th went over the green and onto the gravel path separating the putting surface from the road.

Pressel, a major champion at 18 in 2007 at the Kraft Nabisco, closed with a 76 and had to settle for her consolation prize. She tied for fourth with Suzann Pettersen (74), enough to boost her world ranking and grab one of the last two spots on the Solheim Cup team. The other spot available through the ranking went to Lizette Salas, who finished alone in sixth place.

It was the second time the Women's British Open was played at St. Andrews, and Lewis provided another quality winner. Lorena Ochoa won in 2007.

Lewis last year became the first American since Beth Daniel in 1994 to win LPGA player of the year, which is based on a points system. Then, she won twice early this season to reach No. 1 in the world. That lasted only until Park won the first major and kept right on going.

Sunday was another stage for Lewis to show her grit.

She was diagnosed with scoliosis when she was 11, so severe that she wore a back brace for 18 hours every day from age 11 until she got out of high school, and then had to have surgery when that didn't correct the curvature in her spine.

She went on to win an NCAA title at Arkansas, star at St. Andrews for the Solheim Cup and then take the 54-hole lead in her first U.S. Women's Open as a pro. Lewis won the Kraft Nabisco in 2011, the last American major champion in women's golf until her remarkable performance Sunday.

Nothing was more impressive than her 5-iron on the 17th, one of the toughest par 4s in golf that starts with a blind tee shot over the corner of the Old Course Hotel. Lewis drilled it in the middle of the fairway, and couldn't remember how far she had for her second shot. With the wind, it didn't matter. This is the kind of shot that must be felt, and her 5-iron was hit with the right trajectory and line to catch the slopes perfectly and feed toward the hole.

"That might be one of the best of my career," Lewis said. "I was trying to hit it 160 yards in the air. It worked out perfectly."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-08-04-GLF-Women's-British-Open/id-65bcb27e71b14d11bff0db8cee62d520

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Monday, July 1, 2013

Canada Day beer drinking Molson and Moosehead

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  • Health happy birthday NHS. Stay public for us all

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  • Hate porn sure but be wary of banning it | Nick Cohen

    The Guardian - Sunday 30th June, 2013

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    Standard Digital - Sunday 30th June, 2013

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    Hispanic Business Magazine - Sunday 30th June, 2013

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    New York Times - Saturday 29th June, 2013

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    New York Times - Saturday 29th June, 2013

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    San Diego Union-Tribune - Saturday 29th June, 2013

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    Independent UK - Saturday 29th June, 2013

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  • Sports site No. 13 Peterson Gym

    San Diego Union-Tribune - Saturday 29th June, 2013

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    Whither Snowden? NSA whistleblower skips Moscow-Havana flight

    Edward Snowden's decision to miss his flight to Cuba ? and apparently stay in Russia, at least for the moment ? may lead the US to push harder on the Kremlin to turn him over.

    By Fred Weir,?Correspondent / June 24, 2013

    A passenger checks his phone in front of an Aeroflot passenger plane due to depart to Cuba, parked at a terminal of Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport today. Edward Snowden was booked for the flight, but did not board the plane ? leading to new speculation about his location and plans.

    Maxim Shemetov/Reuters

    Enlarge

    Fleeing National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden pulled a vanishing act in Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport Monday by failing to show up for an Aeroflot flight to Havana that he was booked on ? sending a planeload of frustrated Moscow-based journalists off for an unplanned vacation in Cuba.

    Skip to next paragraph Fred Weir

    Correspondent

    Fred Weir has been the Monitor's Moscow correspondent, covering Russia and the former Soviet Union, since 1998.?

    Recent posts

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    Aeroflot, Russia's national airline,?had confirmed Monday that Mr. Snowden was booked to fly to Cuba on a regular flight leaving Monday afternoon. But as the plane's doors closed and he was still a no-show, reporters for major news outlets who'd scrambled to buy tickets for the flight in hopes of talking with the elusive whistleblower tweeted photos of his empty seat and resigned themselves to ?an unwanted twelve-and-a-half hour flight.

    Russian news services had reported that Snowden arrived in Moscow Sunday aboard an Aeroflot flight from Hong Kong. An unidentified Aeroflot source told journalists that he and his companion, WikiLeaks official Sarah Harrison, spent the night in the "capsule" hotel Vozdushni Express inside Sheremetyevo's transit area. Reporters saw the ambassador of Ecuador, the country to which Snowden has applied for asylum, arrive and go inside the transit zone. But there have been no independently confirmed sightings of Snowden himself.

    Though Snowden himself remains invisible, Ecuador's foreign minister, Ricardo Pati?o Aroca, read out a statement from him ? reported by the Guardian ? in which he compares himself with Bradley Manning, the former US army private currently on trial for handing hundreds of thousands of classified US documents to WikiLeaks.

    "Manning has been subjected to cruel and inhuman treatment. The trial of Bradley Manning is taking place now and secret witnesses have been summoned to court and secret documents have been submitted," Snowden is quoted as saying in defense of his decision to seek asylum in Ecuador.

    "I think that because of the circumstances it is unlikely that I will have a fair trial or humane treatment before trial, and also I have the risk of life imprisonment or death," he added.

    The apparent news that Snowden might still be in Russia could energize efforts by Washington to convince Russia to give him over, despite the fact that Russia and the US have no mutual extradition treaty.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, in several statements to the Russian media, has insisted that President Vladimir Putin has no knowledge of Snowden's whereabouts or interest in his itinerary. "Overall, we have no information about [Snowden]," he told the independent Interfax agency Monday.

    Overnight, the US appealed urgently to Russia to see Snowden as an acid test of partnership and the security cooperation Moscow has been hoping to get from the US in advance of the upcoming Sochi Winter Games.

    "Given our intensified cooperation after the Boston marathon bombings and our history of working with Russia on law enforcement matters ? including returning numerous high-level criminals back to Russia at the request of the Russian government ? we expect the Russian government to look at all options available to expel Mr. Snowden back to the U.S. to face justice for the crimes with which he is charged," US National Security Council Spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said in a statement.

    Speaking to journalists during a visit to New Delhi Monday, US Secretary of State John Kerry suggested that the episode is likely to damage US relations with both Russia and China if they should prove to have been officially involved in his flight.

    "It would be deeply troubling, obviously, if they [Russia and China] had adequate notice, and notwithstanding that, they make the decision willfully to ignore that and not live by the standards of the law," news agencies quoted Mr. Kerry as saying.

    "As a result there would be without any question some effect and impact on the relationship and consequences," he said.

    Russian experts say it's highly unlikely that Snowden boarded an Aeroflot plane, without a valid US passport, and flew to Moscow without at least the acquiescence of the Kremlin.

    "I'm pretty sure this could not have taken place without some level of involvement on the part of Russian and Chinese authorities," says Fyodor Lukyanov, editor of Russia in Global Affairs, a leading Moscow-based foreign policy journal.

    "Russia can resist pressure, and that's why he's here in safety. ?But I don't think Russia wants to keep him, even if [the Kremlin] has suggested that it would be open to that. It's one thing to show that we can't be pushed around, and quite another to have this as a permanent headache in our relations with the US," he says.

    Alexei Pushkov, the chair of the State Duma's international affairs committee, told journalists Monday that the US should stop posing as the offended party, in light of the recent "red-handed" capture of an alleged CIA agent in downtown Moscow and disclosures by Snowden that the NSA and its British counterpart tried to listen to former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev's phone calls during a G-20 summit in London in 2009.

    "I think we should be guided by our own understanding of what we should do. We do not see any special restraint on the part of U.S. special services with regards to Russia," Mr. Pushkov told Interfax.

    "If Snowden were the only problem upsetting perfect relations between Russia and the US, that would be one thing," says Alexei Makarkin, director of the independent Center for Political Technologies in Moscow.

    "But as things stand now, we have different positions on all the key issues of world politics. Russia is extremely disenchanted with the US and given up all hopes of building normal relations with it. So, why would Russia trouble itself over threats that this Snowden case might worsen our ties with Washington?" he adds.

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/Ji85bE42Lpg/Whither-Snowden-NSA-whistleblower-skips-Moscow-Havana-flight

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    Ovarian Cancer & Pets; Dogs Saving Grapes; Revolucion Welcomes ...

    By Steve Dale, Saturday at 9:59 am

    Ovarian Cancer & Pets; Dogs Saving Grapes; Revolucion Welcomes Dogs: Steve Dale's Pet World

    Ovarian Cancer Symptom Awareness (OCSA), Vallie Szymanski, executive director and co-founder and Dr. Kris Junkas talk about how and why OCSA has partnered with veterinary medicine on Steve Dale's Pet World, 1:05 CST on WGN Radio, 720 AM or www.wgnradio.com on June 29.

    OCSA is a Chicago non-profit launched in 2010 to educate the public about a form of cancer that doesn't get much press. And we'll discuss both this unique tie-in with the veterinary community as well an upcoming fundraising event (Susan M. Roman veterinary scholarship award dinner) at the Signature Room, on Sunday, July 21. ?Learn more about this interesting partnership HERE.?

    At 1:135 in our Animal News from Around the World segment, we thank dogs' noses for saving our beloved and near and dear to our hearts California wines.

    Dining with Fido, at 1:40 features a Mexican restaurant on the route of Sunday's Gay Pride Parade where dogs are welcome to watch all the tail wagging in the parade itself, Revolucion Mexican Steakhouse, 3443 N. Broadway.

    Steve also answers your pet behavior questions:??312-981-7200, or?Text 24-720.

    At 10:30, Steve is on the Bill Moller show on WGN Radio talking fireworks and pets, and what you might do now to help ease anxiety.??

    ?

    Source: http://www.chicagonow.com/steve-dales-pet-world/2013/06/ovarian-cancer-dogs-saving-grapes-revolucion-welcomes-dogs-steve-dales-pet-world/

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    Sunday, June 30, 2013

    Appeals board upholds permit for Christo project

    DENVER (AP) ? An appeals board is upholding the Bureau of Land Management's decision to grant the artist Christo a permit for his Over the River project, which involves temporarily suspending 5.9 miles worth of silvery fabric panels in sections over 42 miles of the Arkansas River.

    The Interior Board of Land Appeals on Friday rejected arguments that the BLM didn't fully consider impacts of Over the River before granting the permit.

    Meanwhile, two lawsuits challenging Over the River in state and federal courts are still pending.

    "We can now move on from the agency hijinks and into federal court where we can get an unbiased review of this project," said Michael Harris, a lawyer representing the group Rags Over the Arkansas River, which is trying to block Christo's plan. "We fully expect the court to find that the OTR project approval is illegal."

    New York-based Christo said in a written statement that he remains confident that state and federal permitting processes were thorough and complete. "This is one of three legal hurdles that needed to be overcome, and I am very happy with this decision," Christo said.

    Even if Christo wins in the lawsuits, it would be at least 2016 before the project would be ready for public display.

    He and his late wife, Jeanne-Claude, got their first inkling for Over the River in 1992.

    Work to set up a system of anchors and cables to suspend the fabric panels over the river would unfold over roughly two years. The project would be displayed for two weeks in the month of August, when the river would be calm enough for rafters to peer up at the fabric as they float underneath and when drivers on U.S. 50 along the river could look down.

    Denver-based environmental consultant Rocky Smith, who was among those filing the administrative appeal of the BLM's permitting decision, said he still thinks Over the River is "horribly inappropriate" for the canyon Christo plans to use.

    Opponents contend the project threatens bighorn sheep, public safety, traffic on U.S. 50, and businesses that depend on the scenic river to draw anglers, rafters and tourists.

    Christo's team has said it plans dozens of measures to mitigate impacts.

    ___

    Talk to Catherine Tsai on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/ctsai_denver

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/appeals-board-upholds-permit-christo-project-231612573.html

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    A Deal With Time Warner Just Gave Your Xbox 300 New Live TV Channels

    A Deal With Time Warner Just Gave Your Xbox 300 New Live TV ChannelsMicrosoft has just announced a major deal that means Time Warner Cable subscribers with an Xbox Live Gold membership will be able to watch more than 300 live TV channels direct from their Xbox 360 this summer.

    A Time Warner Cable app will roll out later this summer which let you log in with your cable credentials and start watching TV through your Xbox. It's a pretty big tie-in for Microsoft, and one that makes the Xbox 360 an even more impressive media center than ever. Of course, once the Xbox One arrives with its cable pass through the app will be of less use?but, hey, it's good news for now.

    Source: http://gizmodo.com/a-deal-with-time-warner-just-gave-your-xbox-300-new-liv-607302003

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    Saturday, June 29, 2013

    PFT: Cops search Hernandez's uncle house

    Adam JonesAP

    Adam Jones is willing, and eager to tell anyone who will listen he?s not the same man who was once known as Pacman.

    But that doesn?t mean he?s a finished product.

    The NFL didn?t flinch from having him come to the Rookie Symposium as a speaker after his June 10 arrest for misdemeanor assault for an incident outside a bar, and Jones said that it?s evidence that maturity is not a one-step process.

    During an interview with FOXSports.com?s Alex Marvez and Jim Miller on SiriusXM NFL Radio, Jones called that incident ?one hiccup.?

    ?Me being confronted or touched with a particular object, that?s an area I have to work on,? Jones said. ?If it had been anything else, I probably would have walked away. But when I?m being physically touched ?

    ?Nothing happens overnight. I?ve made a lot of changes. I don?t go out to the places I used to. I don?t hang with the people I used to hang with. The only thing I can control is what I?m doing in the community. Being a great father at home. My fianc?e is very happy. I?m good with my teammates. I?m not out getting drunk all through the night. I?m not out at 3 or 4 in the morning. If you recall, the incident happened at 10:15. I didn?t have a drink. The young lady that was in the party was drinking.?

    Of course, learning to step away from potentially dangerous situations is exactly the kind of thing the league?s trying to teach its rookies this week.

    Jones said he mostly avoids his hometown of Atlanta, where too many friends and family members still refer to him by his old nickname.

    ?It?s not that I can?t handle it. But the crowd I used to hang with, they?re still doing the same things and don?t have anything to lose,? Jones said. ?When I was hanging with them and doing the things they were doing, there was nobody there to tell me, ?No, Pac. You shouldn?t go in the strip club tonight. No, Pac. It isn?t cool that you want to fight that dude.? With time, you grow. . . .

    ?Everybody when I?m in Atlanta wants to come to my house to get in the pool and drink liquor. I?m not with that. The last time I went home there was no liquor at my house. If you are coming over here, don?t bring liquor ? period. But people have to live and learn and want to do better. I?m a true believer in that.?

    Jones has a powerful message to share. If he can put his words into practice, and stay out of the headlines for the wrong reasons, the message gains strength.

    Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/06/27/police-search-hernandezs-uncles-house/related/

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    Goodbye M&M's, hello granola bars as school snacks | ccampeador

    Here is the alarming part?

    ?The federal snack rules don?t take effect until the 2014-15 school year?

    Really?? Since when the Feds have the need and/or the rights to tell us what to eat?

    That is a direct hit against of the 10th Amendment of the US Constitution.

    ?

    Posted: Jun 27, 2013 5:07 AM CDT Updated: Jun 27, 2013 4:27 PM CDT

    By MARY CLARE JALONICK and CONNIE CASS
    Associated Press

    WASHINGTON (AP) ? Kids, your days of blowing off those healthier school lunches and filling up on cookies from the vending machine are numbered. The government is onto you.

    For the first time, the Agriculture Department is telling schools what sorts of snacks they can sell. The new restrictions announced Thursday fill a gap in nutrition rules that allowed many students to load up on fat, sugar and salt despite the existing guidelines for healthy meals.

    ?Parents will no longer have to worry that their kids are using their lunch money to buy junk food and junk drinks at school,? said Margo Wootan, a nutrition lobbyist for the Center for Science in the Public Interest who pushed for the new rules.

    That doesn?t mean schools will be limited to doling out broccoli and brussels sprouts.

    Snacks that still make the grade include granola bars, low-fat tortilla chips, fruit cups and 100 percent fruit juice. And high school students can buy diet versions of soda, sports drinks and iced tea.

    But say goodbye to some beloved school standbys, such as doughy pretzels, chocolate chip cookies and those little ice cream cups with their own spoons. Some may survive in low-fat or whole wheat versions. The idea is to weed out junk food and replace it with something with nutritional merit.

    The bottom line, says Wootan: ?There has to be some food in the food.?

    Still, 17-year-old Vanessa Herrera is partial to the Cheez-It crackers and sugar-laden Vitaminwater in her high school?s vending machine. Granola bars and bags of peanuts? Not so much.

    ?I don?t think anyone would eat it,? said Herrera of Rockaway, N.J.

    There are no vending machines at Lauren Jones? middle school in Hoover, Ala., but she said there?s an ?a la carte? stand that sells chips, ice cream and other snacks.

    ?Having something sweet to go with your meal is good sometimes,? the 13-year-old said, although she also thinks that encouraging kids to eat healthier is worthwhile.

    The federal snack rules don?t take effect until the 2014-15 school year, but there?s nothing to stop schools from making changes earlier.

    Some students won?t notice much difference. Many schools already are working to improve their offerings. Thirty-nine states have some sort of snack food policy in place.

    Rachel Snyder, 17, said earlier this year her school in Washington, Ill., stripped its vending machines of sweets. She misses the pretzel-filled M&M?s.

    ?If I want a sugary snack every now and then,? Snyder said, ?I should be able to buy it.?

    The federal rules put calorie, fat, sugar and sodium limits on almost everything sold during the day at 100,000 schools ? expanding on the previous rules for meals. The Agriculture Department sets nutritional standards for schools that receive federal funds to help pay for lunches, and that covers nearly every public school and about half of private ones.

    One oasis of sweetness and fat will remain: Anything students bring from home, from bagged lunches to birthday cupcakes, is exempt from the rules.

    The Agriculture Department was required to draw up the rules under a law passed by Congress in 2010, championed by first lady Michelle Obama, as part of the government?s effort to combat childhood obesity.

    Nutritional guidelines for subsidized lunches were revised last year and put in place last fall.

    Last year?s rules making main lunch fare more nutritious faced criticism from some conservatives, including some Republicans in Congress, who said the government shouldn?t be telling kids what to eat. Mindful of that backlash, the Agriculture Department left one of the more controversial parts of the rule, the regulation of in-school fundraisers like bake sales, up to the states.

    The rules have the potential to transform what many children eat at school.

    In addition to meals already subject to nutrition standards, most lunchrooms also have ?a la carte? lines that sell other foods ? often greasy foods like mozzarella sticks and nachos. That gives students a way to circumvent the healthy lunches. Under the rules, those lines could offer healthier pizzas, low-fat hamburgers, fruit cups or yogurt and similar fare.

    One of the biggest changes will be a near-ban on high-calorie sports drinks. Many beverage companies added sports drinks to school vending machines after sodas were pulled in response to criticism from the public health community.

    The rule would only allow sales in high schools of sodas and sports drinks that contain 60 calories or less in a 12-ounce serving, banning the highest-calorie versions of those beverages.

    Low-calorie sports drinks ? Gatorade?s G2, for example ? and diet drinks will be allowed in high school.

    Elementary and middle schools will be allowed to sell only water, carbonated water, 100 percent fruit or vegetable juice, and low fat and fat-free milk, including nonfat flavored milks.

    Republicans have continued to scrutinize the efforts to make school foods healthier, and at a House subcommittee hearing Thursday, Rep. Todd Rokita, R-Ind., said the ?stringent rules are creating serious headaches for schools and students.?

    One school nutritionist testified that her school has had difficulty adjusting to the 2012 changes, and the new ?a la carte? standards could also be a hardship.

    The healthier foods are expensive, said Sandra Ford, president of the School Nutrition Association and director of food and nutrition services for a school district in Bradenton, Fla. She also predicted that her school district could lose $975,000 a year under the new ?a la carte? guidelines because they would have to eliminate many of the popular foods they sell.

    In a report released at the hearing, the Government Accountability Office said that in some districts students were having trouble adjusting to the new foods, leading to increased waste and kids dropping out of the school lunch program.

    The food industry has been onboard with many of the changes, and several companies worked with Congress on the child nutrition law three years ago.

    Angela Chieco, a mother from Clifton Park, N.Y., sees the guidelines as a good start but says it will take a bigger campaign to wean kids off junk food.

    ?I try to do less sugar myself,? Chieco said. ?It?s hard to do.?

    ___

    Associated Press writer Stacy A. Anderson contributed to this report.

    ?

    Link?

    http://www.newson6.com/story/22700334/new-rules-aim-to-rid-schools-of-junk-foods

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    Source: http://ccampeador.wordpress.com/2013/06/28/goodbye-mms-hello-granola-bars-as-school-snacks/

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    Wednesday, June 26, 2013

    Samsung Galaxy S 4 Developer Edition for Verizon now shipping for $650

    Samsung Galaxy S 4 Developer Edition for Verizon now shipping for $650

    Samsung's online listing for the Galaxy S 4 Developer Edition is back, and now you can actually follow through on a purchase. The device, currently available for Verizon customers, can be yours for the princely sum of $649.99. This isn't the Google Edition running stock Android that we first heard about at I/O; instead, the Developer Edition includes the TouchWiz UI and Android 4.2.2, but ships with an unlocked bootloader, letting you play around with custom ROMs and the like. Add it to your cart at the source link below.

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    Via: TechnoBuffalo

    Source: Samsung

    Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/25/gs4-developer-edition-now-shipping/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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    'Rockpocalypse' game gets bigger, badder, better with new updates

    Rockpocalypse game update available for download now

    In "Rockpocalypse," you've gone to battle as The Rock to stop a mysterious contagion from taking over Hollywood and laid the smackdown on the unruly hordes across the movie studio lot.

    Now, an?electrifying update is available for the FREE 3D combat game that will give you an even more powerful arsenal to take down your opponents, plus immersive new levels to explore.

    Download Rockpocalypse on the App Store

    Download Rockpocalypse on Google Play

    With numerous fresh weapons and accessories, you'll turn The Brahma Bull into a more dangerous fighting machine as you go to war against new enemy types hell-bent on destruction. And you can take the hard-hitting brawls out into uncharted territories with two different environments that take you off the movie studio lot.

    Feeling run down? Pie won't be the only item to satisfy The Great One's growing hunger. New Thunder Cookies will help you power up your game and surprise your ravenous enemies. Munch and punch your way to victory as The People's Champion recharges for those extra-tough showdowns.

    With new weapons, new levels and new power-ups, there's more variety and intensity than ever before. If you haven't played "Rockpocalypse" yet, there's never been a better time to get in the action. If you're already a player, you'll take The Rock to unprecedented heights as a one-man wrecking crew. Download "Rockpocalypse" for FREE on iPhone?, iPad? and all your favorite Android devices today!

    DOWNLOAD ON THE APP STORE?|?DOWNLOAD ON GOOGLE PLAY

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    Source: http://www.wwe.com/mobile/rockpocalypse-update-available-for-download

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    Tuesday, June 25, 2013

    Malibu fight involving Scottie Pippen investigated

    MALIBU, Calif. (AP) ? Former Chicago Bulls star Scottie Pippen was questioned Monday about a fight that occurred over the weekend between him and an autograph seeker outside a Malibu restaurant, authorities said.

    Pippen came in voluntarily to a substation after he was named as a suspect in an investigation of an assault with intent to commit great bodily injury, Los Angeles County sheriff's officials said.

    Pippen, 47, was cooperating with the investigation, sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore said.

    The victim was taking pictures inside Nobu restaurant late Sunday while Pippen dined with his family, said sheriff's Capt. Patrick Davoren.

    When Pippen went outside to the parking lot, the man continued to take pictures and sought the Hall-of-Famer's autograph, Davoren said.

    An argument ensued that led to the altercation, investigators said.

    The man was taken to a hospital with a head injury and was treated and released.

    Investigators were interviewing several witnesses who apparently saw what transpired. Criminal charges could be filed.

    "Right now it's under investigation," Whitmore said. "We have to interview everybody to find out what happened."

    Nobu has been a Malibu mainstay for nearly 15 years and is frequented by celebrities. The restaurant recently moved to a beachfront location that offers views of the Pacific Ocean from nearly every seat.

    Inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2010, Pippen won six NBA titles with Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls and was on a list of the league's 50 greatest players announced in 1996.

    He is a special adviser to the team's president and chief operating officer. The Bulls declined to comment Monday.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/malibu-fight-involving-scottie-pippen-investigated-212051234.html

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    Sony Xperia Z Ultra: hands-on with a 6.4-inch Android phone (update: video)

    Sony Xperia Z Ultra handson with a 64inch Android phone update video

    Sony's been explaining the design story behind its new Xperia range at a UK briefing, how it's trying to balance both the dematerialization of tech (touchscreens, gesture interfaces) and a design that's both desirable and beautiful -- and Sony's certainly got the latter down on its new smartphone. The Xperia Z Ultra follows the lines of the rest of the Z series. It has the same "OmniBalance" plane, uniform screen surface, but this time it measures in at 6.4 inches across, but still running at 1080p resolution. Yep, it does feel substantially bigger than the original Xperia Z -- check out our comparison gallery, the new Ultra model dwarfs it. You're looking at a screen width almost identical to a passport and that 6.5mm profile helped fit it into pockets. We managed to cram it into our trouser pockets without an issue. It's certainly a bigger device than the likes of LG's Optimus G Pro or Samsung's Galaxy Note II and you're going to have to test it out for yourself to see if you'd be willing to talk into this Xperia like phone -- it's going to catch the eye.

    There's also Qualcomm's notable Snapdragon 800 powering the device on a relatively large 3,000mAh battery, while Sony's simplified the design dropping a few of those much-maligned protective flaps, at least on the headphone socket. There are more impressions and a hands-on video after the break!

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    Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/25/sony-xperia-z-ultra-hands-on/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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    O3b satellite launch is postponed

    Adverse weather has delayed the launch of an innovative new space network.

    A Soyuz rocket was due to put four satellites in orbit for the O3b company, to provide communications to parts of the world that have poor fibre-optic infrastructure.

    But unfavourable winds at the Sinnamary spaceport in French Guiana have forced a 24-hour delay.

    O3b says the aim of its new network is to change the broadband experience for millions of people.

    Its first four satellites will be followed by a further four in September, and then another quartet next year.

    They will handle primarily voice and data traffic for mobile phone operators and internet service providers. The spacecraft will pick up this traffic as they pass overhead and then relay it to ground stations, or teleports, for onward connection to global networks.

    Although other satellites routinely do this, O3b is taking a markedly different approach.

    By flying in a Medium-Earth Orbit of 8,000km, the satellites will be a quarter of the distance from Earth than is the case with traditional geostationary (GEO) telecommunications spacecraft, which sit some 36,000km above the planet.Adverse weather has delayed the launch of an innovative new space network.

    This should reduce substantially the delay, or latency, of the signal as the voice or data traffic is routed via space.

    "The network was designed to avoid much of the difficulty that satellite connectivity provides today which is this delay," said O3b CEO Steve Collar.

    "We've all been on a satellite call and you have that 600 milliseconds delay, which doesn't sound like much but it's enough to make that connection almost unusable. It's just as much of a problem on data networks. If you are on the internet and are searching for a site, it affects your behaviour if you get slow responses. You'll stop using the service. We wanted to fix those problems and the only way to fix them is to bring the satellites closer to Earth."

    O3b is promising round-trip transmission time of a little more than 100 milliseconds.

    The satellites will operate in the high-frequency Ka-band and have the capability to deliver 10 beams, at 1.2Gbps per beam, to each of O3b's seven operational regions.

    The company expects to start services at the end of the year, once it gets eight spacecraft in orbit, but the intention is to put up perhaps as many as 20 eventually.

    It has taken about six years to put the O3b project together. Important backers include not only Google but SES, one of the big players in the traditional satellite communications business.

    O3b was born from founder Greg Wyler's frustration with the difficulty of connecting a modern teleco in Rwanda to the global fibre optic network, and the constraints that placed on performance.

    O3b actually stands for "other three billion" - the number of people whose poor communications experience is expected to improve over the coming decade. O3b sees itself as an important agent of that change.

    "There are two billion people in the world that are connected to the internet today; there are five billion who are not; and three billion who will be in the course of the next 10-15 years," said Mr Collar. "The other three billion is our target - that's who we're trying to reach, and that's where our name comes from."

    The Jersey, Channel Islands-based outfit has raised more than $1bn to build its space and ground infrastructure.

    O3b's largest debt facility, over $0.5bn, is provided by HSBC, ING, CA-CIB and Dexia, and is underwritten by the French export credit agency, Coface. The agency is supporting three new space constellations, all of them built by Thales Alenia Space.

    The 700kg spacecraft that TAS is building for O3b are based on the 24 spacecraft it has just finished for the Globalstar satellite phone network.

    One of the challenges of running the system is tracking platforms as they move across the sky.

    "The constellation will be spread equally around the equator which means you have to pick the satellite up as it comes over the horizon and follow it to the other side; and as soon as it goes out of visibility there is already another satellite waiting to be picked up," explained Philippe Nabet, the TAS programme manager on the O3b project.

    "There will be three antennas at the ground stations - two to track the satellites; the third is a spare."

    Tuesday's attempt at a launch will take place at 15:54 local time (18:54 GMT)

    Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos

    Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-23028083#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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    Demand Media acquires e-commerce marketplace for $94 million

    By Jennifer Saba

    (Reuters) - Demand Media, the owner of content websites eHow, Livestrong and Cracked, said on Monday it had acquired the e-commerce marketplace Society6 for $94 million in cash and stock as the company diversifies its business model.

    Society6 marks Demand's first real foray into e-commerce. With a community of about 300,000 members, Society6 helps artists sell their goods such as iPhone cases, T-shirts and prints directly to consumers.

    For example, an artist belonging to Society6 uploads an image of a product. Once a purchase is made, Society6 gives the order to an external manufacturer and shipper who then sends it to the buyer. Founded four years ago in Los Angeles, Society6 reported about $15 million in revenue and $4 million in operating income in 2012.

    Also on Monday, Demand said it had revised down its second-quarter forecast due to a reduction in search engine referral traffic. Revenue is expected to be in the range of $100 million to $101 million compared with the previous range of $105 million to $107 million.

    Demand has been a closely watched experiment on how content is inexpensively created and distributed. Freelancers paid by Demand write articles and produce videos to appear at the top of Internet search results that in turn generate advertising.

    Founded in 2006, Demand has became known as a source of "quick-hit" articles and videos on subjects like summertime dangers for pets.

    The company has faced challenges over the past few years because of its reliance on Google. The search engine giant has been steadily making changes to its algorithm with the aim of weeding out content it considers to be of low quality.

    During the first quarter, approximately 40 percent of Demand's total revenue was derived from advertising arrangements with Google.

    Over the past several months, Demand has been moving to vary its revenue base to lessen its reliance on advertising - and Google. The company, for instance, acquired Creativebug in March, a network of artists who produce how-to videos on crafting skills, such as knitting and making jewelry. The videos are accessed by subscription.

    "We really started looking at these models late last year," Rosenblatt said about subscription and e-commerce sites. "We stuck our toe in the water with Creativebug."

    Demand has launched other paid initiates including one at eHow that matches people looking for expert advice in real-time and a weight loss program at Livestrong.

    Demand owns a registrar business that sells top level generic Internet domain names like ".actor," and ".social." Earlier this year it announced plans to separate that division in a spinoff.

    Shares of Demand, which closed at $8.17 on Monday, have fallen nearly 20 percent over the past 12 months.

    (Reporting by Jennifer Saba in New York; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/demand-media-acquires-e-commerce-marketplace-94-million-221648193.html

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    The Children of Pahiatua

    An American Army Public Health nurse with a group of children in a camp for Polish displaced persons at Bensheim,Germany on June 19, 1945. An American Army Public Health nurse with a group of children in a camp for Polish displaced persons at Bensheim,Germany on June 19, 1945. Other Polish children ended up in New Zealand as refugees.

    Photo by Universal Images Group/Getty Images

    WELLINGTON, New Zealand?A fish restaurant in New Zealand seemed an odd place to discuss a war that took place several thousand miles away and several decades ago, but there we were: Sea bream was served, sauvignon blanc was poured, the rain drummed down outside, and I listened while three septuagenarians smiled, laughed, and told me of the unimaginable tragedy they had lived through as children.

    All three were born in eastern Poland, and all three were arrested and deported, along with hundreds of thousands of other Poles, after the Soviet invasion in 1939. Soviet soldiers and police packed their families into boxcars and exiled them to Siberia or central Asia, where many died of illness or starvation. Only in 1942, after Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union, were survivors released and allowed to form a Polish army in exile. After crossing the border into Iran, the adults formed themselves into fighting units and began to travel back to Europe via Palestine.

    But their children could not fight. Some were already orphans, having lost their parents to hunger or disease. More would lose their parents, or lose track of their parents, in the course of the war. An international appeal went out: Thousands of Polish children could not remain in Isfahan forever. Among others, New Zealand?a country that had never before accepted refugees?responded.

    On Oct. 31, 1944, their ship pulled into Wellington harbor. More than 750 orphans, from toddlers to young teenagers, and 100 adult caretakers, teachers, and doctors disembarked. Hundreds of New Zealanders met them at the port, cheering and waving flags. More people lined the roads and waved as the Polish orphans drove through the countryside to a refugee camp created for them in Pahiatua, a village in the southeastern corner of New Zealand's North Island. There they stayed together, studied together, organized Polish scouting troops, and waited for the war to end so they could go home.

    In one sense, this story does not have a happy ending. The war ended, but Poland did not regain its independence. Eastern Poland, where the children of Pahiatua had been born, became part of the Soviet Union. The western part of the country became a Soviet satellite state. Most inhabitants of the Pahiatua camp had nothing, and no one, to return to.

    But in another sense there was a happy ending?one that we might usefully contemplate. In recent years, the gap in educational attainments of rich and poor Americans has grown wider, largely because of the enormous resources many of us pour into our children. Success, we have come to believe, depends on excellent schools, carefully organized leisure and, above all, on high-concentration, high-focus parenting.

    The orphans of Pahiatua did not have any of these things. On the contrary, they had witnessed the deaths of parents and siblings, experienced terrible deprivation, and lost years of education before finding themselves in an alien country on the far side of the world. And yet they learned the language, they assimilated, they became doctors, lawyers, farmers, factory workers, teachers, and businessmen. Krystyna Tomaszyk?a Pahiatua child who became a pioneering social worker?told me over lunch that she was proud of their success. "We all had difficult childhoods. But none of us became criminals or vagabonds. We fit in."

    There were reasons for that success. New Zealand boomed after the war: Logging and mining expanded, and work was easy to find. The Polish children had an unusually warm reception here at an unusual moment: Knowing where they had come from, people went out of their way to be kind.

    But more than 70 years later, the now-elderly children of Pahiatua have an additional explanation. Zdzislaw Lepionka now believes that "the fact that we weree kept together, that we sang Polish songs and did scouting drills together? that was a kind of therapy." Lepionka was 3, he thinks?there are no records?at the time of his family's deportation. His mother died in exile; he lost track of his father, whom he never saw again. But he and those of his siblings who boarded the boat to Wellington long ago founded families and careers of their own. Decades later, he is still in touch with many of the "Pahiatua children," who still offer one another moral support.

    Is an idyllic childhood a prerequisite for a happy life, or are there other roads to contentment? Are parents the key to future success, or are there other ways to get there? Is a turbulent childhood always a recipe for adult failure, or can some people overcome tragedy? I saw many amazing things in New Zealand?a volcano, a geyser, and some extraordinary lush, green landscapes?but none made me think more than that Wellington lunch.

    This month, Slate is sharing stories of people who started over?like budget wonk Ina Garten, better known as the Barefoot Contessa?in our "Second Acts" Hive. We want to hear your tales, too. Please go here?to submit your story about starting over.

    Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/briefing/second_acts/2013/06/the_children_of_pahiatua.html

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    Saints Row IV banned in Australia due to 'unjustified' evil

    Saints Row IV banned in Australia due to 'unjustified' evil

    For every tearful accountant at Saints Row HQ, there must be a gleeful marketing person punching the air, playing mini golf and doing whatever else marketing people do when they're full of glee. Conflicted emotions aside, however, game publisher Deep Silver can now claim the notorious distinction of having its latest title, Saints Row IV, rejected outright by the Australian Classification Board (ACB). It's the first such refusal since the ACB implemented a new R18+ rating, which is meant to allow for adult themes within games but which evidently couldn't cope with Saints Row's peculiar depictions of sexual violence (which were "not justified by context") or its drug-themed reward system (which is "prohibited by the computer games guidelines"). According to The Guardian, this effectively means Saints Row IV is banned from sale in retail stores in Australia, but Joystiq has received word from Deep Silver saying it intends to create a "reworked" version of its open world game specifically for that country. Meanwhile, the regular version has been given PEGI 18 and ESRB M ratings elsewhere, and it looks to be on track for an August release date.

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    Source: Joystiq, The Guardian

    Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/25/saints-row-iv-refused-rating-in-australia/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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    First look at the new AOL Reader beta, a surprisingly pleasing way to get your RSS fix

    AOL Reader

    Google Reader will come to an end on July 1, one week from now. We're not that short on options to continue receiving our RSS fix, but one that quietly emerged in recent days is AOL Reader. Currently in beta form, and web only, access to the new service is now available. You're told to log in and request an invite, but it seems as though verifying your email address is about all you need to do to get in and take a look. So, we did.

    AOL Reader is currently only available on the web, though an iOS application is promised for the future. You can import your current subscriptions from Google Reader, though you'll need to export the data first via Google Takeout (something we'd highly recommend doing anyway before July 1.) Google exports a series of files, but the one you'll need is the one titled as "subscriptions.xml." Should you have any issues importing this to AOL Reader, try changing the extension from .xml to .opml, and you should be good to go.

    While functional, Google Reader's web interface always felt somewhat basic, and a little chaotic. AOL Reader takes a similar form factor, but with a much prettier design. It's actually a surprisingly pleasing way to read your RSS feeds. There's a selection of viewing options, including list, card, pane and full views, a dark and light theme to customize the appearance to your own personal tastes and a choice of different font sizes. AOL Reader is much, much easier on the eye than Google Reader.

    An interesting touch, perhaps to be appreciated more by the power users, is a bunch of keyboard shortcuts. Pretty much full navigation of AOL Reader can take place without touching the mouse, and to help us get started there's a handy guide as to which keys do what.

    We're still only scratching the surface, but AOL Reader is a surprisingly good product. Having come from quite literally nowhere, what we have is a nice looking, perfectly functional, free RSS client. It may be late to the party, especially since the Feedly train continues to roll, but if you're undecided on where to go after Google shuts down Reader, AOL is worth a look. And of course, we still haven't seen the accompanying iOS apps yet. But this is a good start. Go ahead and give it a try, and let us know what you think!

        


    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/s5PrXpgYDPo/story01.htm

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    Man completes tightrope walk near Grand Canyon

    LITTLE COLORADO RIVER GORGE, Ariz. (AP) ? Aerialist Nik Wallenda completed a tightrope walk that took him a quarter mile over the Little Colorado River Gorge in northeastern Arizona on Sunday.

    Wallenda performed the stunt on a 2-inch-thick steel cable, 1,500 feet above the river on the Navajo Nation near the Grand Canyon. He took just more than 22 minutes, pausing and crouching twice as winds whipped around him and the rope swayed.

    "Thank you Lord. Thank you for calming that cable, God," he said about 13 minutes into the walk.

    Wallenda didn't wear a harness and stepped slowly and steady throughout, murmuring prayers to Jesus almost constantly along the way. He jogged and hopped the last few steps.

    The event was broadcast live on the Discovery Channel.

    Winds blowing across the gorge had been expected to be around 30 mph. Wallenda told Discovery after the walk that the winds were at times "unpredictable" and that dust had accumulated on his contact lenses.

    "It was way more windy, and it took every bit of me to stay focused the entire time," he said.

    The 34-year-old Sarasota, Fla., resident is a seventh-generation high-wire artist and is part of the famous "Flying Wallendas" circus family ? a clan that is no stranger to death-defying feats.

    His great-grandfather, Karl Wallenda, fell during a performance in Puerto Rico and died at the age of 73. Several other family members, including a cousin and an uncle, have perished while performing wire walking stunts.

    Nik Wallenda grew up performing with his family and has dreamed of crossing the Grand Canyon since he was a teenager. Sunday's stunt comes a year after he traversed Niagara Falls earning a seventh Guinness world record.

    Wallenda wore a microphone and two cameras, one that looked down on the dry Little Colorado River bed and one that faced straight ahead. His leather shoes with an elk-skin sole helped him keep a grip on the steel cable as he moved across.

    About 600 spectators watching on a large video screen on site cheered him on as he walked toward them. A Navajo Nation ranger, a paramedic and two members of a film crew were stationed on the canyon floor and watched from below.

    The ranger, Elmer Phillips, said Wallenda appeared to be walking like any normal person would on a sidewalk. But he said he got a little nervous when Wallenda stopped the first time.

    "Other than that, a pretty amazing feat. I know I wouldn't even attempt something like that," Phillips said. "Very nicely done."

    Before the walk, a group of Navajos, Hopis and other Native Americans stood along a nearby highway with signs protesting the event.

    The event was touted as a walk across the Grand Canyon, an area held sacred by many American Indian tribes. Some local residents believe Wallenda hasn't accurately pinpointed the location and also said that the Navajo Nation shouldn't be promoting the gambling of one man's life for the benefit of tourism.

    Discovery's 2-hour broadcast showcased the Navajo landscape that includes Monument Valley, Four Corners, Canyon de Chelly and the tribal capital of Window Rock.

    "When people watch this, our main thing is we want the world to know who Navajo people are, our culture, traditions and language are still very much alive," Geri Hongeva, spokeswoman for the tribe's Division of Natural Resources, said before the walk.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/man-completes-tightrope-walk-near-grand-canyon-020400936.html

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