Friday, May 3, 2013

Watch the World Trade Center's Spire Rise 104 Stories into the Air

The spire that will make the One World Trade Center the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere was raised to the top of the structure today like a giant candle on a towering cake. We were at the construction site to watch the magic unfold.

The last piece of the spire is 408-feet-tall, weighs 12 tons, and will bring the WTC to a massively patriotic 1,776 feet. Not only does it make Freedom Tower the third tallest in the world, it's the building's broadcast facility, made from 18 section of steel, including three communication rings, and a maintenance platform. All and all, lower Manhattan's giant exclamation point weighs 1,485 tons.

While the spire wasn't actually put into its final position today?that'll happen in the near future?this morning some of the most badass construction workers to ever don Timberland boots hoisted the piece from the ground floor all the way up to the top of the building's 104 stories.

The whole ride, remarkably enough, only took about 20 minutes. Here's how it went from beginning to awe-inspiring end, in video and pictures.

From a cherry picker just above the construction site, workers inspected the LED-filled spire to made sure everything was in place, and attached an American flag to the bottom.

Then, in the most amazing game of tug-o-war ever, on the ground, a stacked, hardhat-clad worker pulled a rope, hand over hand, to set the spire into the harness that would take it to the top.

Then, amid cheers, it was elevator up.

Outwardly gruff site workers couldn't hide excitement and pride?you could see it through the selfies they took with the spire soaring in the background.

Rightfully so. As you watched the spire climb to the top, you couldn't help but contemplate the sheer size of One WTC. At just the halfway through the spire's ride, you almost had to do a backbend to see the final piece. Now it's almost installed in its throne, the crowning achievement of an architectural gem.

And here's 15 minutes of action in one convenient GIF:

Images by Michael Hession
GIF by Nicolas Stango

Source: http://gizmodo.com/watch-the-world-trade-centers-spire-rise-104-stories-i-487249511

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Obama using ?permission structure? to cut through 'gobbledygook'

President Barack Obama during a news conference in Washington (Charles Dharapak/AP)?Permission structure? wasn?t the oddest thing to come out of President Barack Obama's mouth this week. That honor goes to Obama?s assurance that NBA veteran Jason Collins, having come out as gay, ?can bang with Shaq,? which had West Wing aides wincing. Still, the jokes flew. Is that "structure" like having a safe word? Isn't it better to have a forgiveness structure?

"Permission structure," an arcane term drawn from the "game theory" branch of political science, which studies how people make decisions, shed quite a bit of light on how this president thinks about the limits of his power at the dawn of his second term.

You can think of it as a fancy way to say ?politics.? And you?ll be seeing it in upcoming debates on everything from immigration reform to battles over the government?s finances. It's likely to be a feature of the next round of the gun debate, since Obama served notice in Mexico on Thursday that he would try again on that front. (You know who else used ?permission structure?? Some Mitt Romney supporters. See below).

Obama used the expression as part of a defiant response to a reporter asking whether he still had the ?juice? needed to get his agenda through Congress, where Republican opposition can doom any bill.

Ever since the GOP?aided by a handful of red-state Democrats?killed bipartisan legislation that would have modestly tightened background checks on would-be gun buyers, the media has been wondering.

"Maybe I should just pack up and go home. Golly," Obama said wryly in response to the 'juice' question. "As Mark Twain said, rumors of my demise may be a little exaggerated at this point."

Obama noted that some Republicans who might be inclined to work with him?on gun violence or on a "grand bargain" to stem the tide or red ink swamping the country's finances?face considerable political hurdles.

"Their base thinks that compromise with me is somehow a betrayal. They?re worried about primaries. And I understand all that," Obama said. "And we're going to try to do everything we can to create a permission structure for them to be able to do what?s going to be best for the country."

So what does the president mean when he says "permission structure"?

Obama aides told Yahoo News that it means creating the political conditions that enable Republicans to compromise with Obama. It's a blend of personal outreach of various sorts to "gettable" Republicans?whether a "charm offensive," or "arm-twisting" or "deal-cutting"?with aggressive efforts to go around Congress to court the public.

On immigration reform, for instance, the president often says he's not getting everything he wants in part to enable GOP lawmakers to argue that they aren't just doing his bidding. That's because, for the majority of Republicans facing re-election, the biggest political danger isn't a Democratic opponent who might work more with Obama, but a primary challenge from a fellow Republican who might fight harder against this president.

Pennsylvania Republican Sen. Pat Toomey, who co-authored the gun legislation, bluntly acknowledged the challenge Obama faces in working with GOP lawmakers. In an interview this week, Toomey said the background check bill had died in part because "there were some on my side who did not want to be seen helping the president" accomplish any of his goals.

It also means building pressure on Republicans by enlisting voters in their home states or districts to reward them for supporting compromise and punishing them for opposing it. Former Obama speechwriter Jon Favreau detailed that aspect in this column, entitled "Leading From Below."

Here's Obama making that argument?and even using the expression?in a March 13 speech to Organizing for Action, the national political machine built from his 2012 campaign apparatus.

After describing his efforts to go around top congressional Republicans and reach out to rank-and-file Republican voters as a way to break through Washington's partisan "gobbledygook," Obama added: "I actually think some of the leadership want their membership to create a permission structure."

He added that "they don't like getting too far ahead of their leadership, so we're reaching out to these individual members so that they create a space where things can get done. But the same principle applies doubly when it comes to the American people ... if the American people are speaking out, organized, activated, that may give space here in Washington to do the kind of work?hopefully bipartisan work?that's required."

Now, that's not 100 percent clear. So here's White House press secretary Jay Carney, explaining it at his briefing Wednesday.

"Permission structure, if you will, is basically a broad proposal that allows Republicans, like Democrats, to go along with some things that they do not love, would not be top of their list in terms of legislation, in order to achieve the broader objective," Carney said. "I think that this is a phrase that is in common usage here."

Indeed. And apparently for quite some time.

A Nov. 17, 2008, New Yorker magazine explanation of how Obama won the White House that year includes this passage: "His aides had a term for the process of getting voters comfortable with a President Obama: 'Building a permission structure.'"

It meant answering voters' questions about Obama, and overcoming their concerns about voting for a young, relatively untested junior senator.

In a Nov. 4, 2007, New York Times piece on Obama's primary fight with Hillary Clinton, Obama used the term to describe the challenge of wooing voters away from Clinton, a trusted and familiar face to many Democrats.

Obama concedes that he has a problem. ''We have not fully made our case yet,'' he admits. ''I think the American people know in their gut that we need significant change, and I think they'd like to believe what I'm saying is possible.'' But they need, says this former law-school professor, ''a permission structure.'' They need to know that they'll be safe with Barack Obama. Or unsafe with Hillary Clinton.

What about Team Romney?

A search of the Nexis database of news reports finds several instances of the Romney campaign's efforts to built a "permission structure" to allow voters who backed Obama in 2008 but struggled during his first term to turn against him in 2012.

Romney's approach, obviously, didn't carry the day. Will Obama's?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/obama-pursues-permission-structure-politics-second-term-184548518.html

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The Secret to Ultra-smooth Ice Cream: Liquid Nitrogen [Video]

Its texture is at once ice-cold and silky. But how does basic chemistry make this frosty, popular treat a reality?


Because of its ultra-low boiling point of negative 196 degrees Celsius, liquid nitrogen can be used to flash-freeze food without damage to cells

A soft, creamy treat Because of its ultralow boiling point: ?196 degrees Celsius, liquid nitrogen can be used to flash-freeze food without damage to cells Image: Wikimedia Commons

Last year Americans spent roughly $20 billion on ice cream. With the return of fair-weathered spring, grocery stores are once again stocking up on the popular, refreshing treat.

Rather than heading to the grocery store, you can concoct super-creamy forms of this American favorite almost instantly at home, provided you have a key ingredient: liquid nitrogen. Yale University professor of mechanical engineering and materials science Ainissa Ramirez demonstrates how to make the treat?while conducting a mini science experiment?within minutes.

?

Liquid nitrogen, aka LN2, is an odorless, colorless, nonflammable element famous for its extremely low boiling point: ?196 degrees Celsius. Because it vaporizes at such a low temperature, the gas it emits is frigid. Food-makers can therefore use the stuff to flash-freeze fresh items, such as herbs, which prevents water inside from forming large ice crystals that would damage cell membranes. It?s also used to give ice cream its velvety texture.

In this video, part of her Science Xplained series, Ramirez shows how just a few drops of liquid nitrogen can rapidly transform a bowl of milk or cream into a thick, frozen dessert.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=31eec97d78381cb7effc88659e700a45

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Bug's view inspires new digital camera's unique imaging capabilities

May 1, 2013 ? An interdisciplinary team of researchers has created the first digital cameras with designs that mimic those of ocular systems found in dragonflies, bees, praying mantises and other insects. This class of technology offers exceptionally wide-angle fields of view, with low aberrations, high acuity to motion, and nearly infinite depth of field.

Taking cues from Mother Nature, the cameras exploit large arrays of tiny focusing lenses and miniaturized detectors in hemispherical layouts, just like eyes found in arthropods. The devices combine soft, rubbery optics with high performance silicon electronics and detectors, using ideas first established in research on skin and brain monitoring systems by John A. Rogers, a Swanlund Chair Professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and his collaborators.

"Full 180 degree fields of view with zero aberrations can only be accomplished with image sensors that adopt hemispherical layouts -- much different than the planar CCD chips found in commercial cameras," Rogers explained. "When implemented with large arrays microlenses, each of which couples to an individual photodiode, this type of hemispherical design provides unmatched field of view and other powerful capabilities in imaging. Nature has developed and refined these concepts over the course of billions of years of evolution." The researchers described their breakthrough camera in an article, "Digital Cameras With Designs Inspired By the Arthropod Eye," published in the May 2, 2013 issue of Nature.

Eyes in arthropods use compound designs, in which arrays of smaller eyes act together to provide image perception. Each small eye, known as an ommatidium, consists of a corneal lens, a crystalline cone, and a light sensitive organ at the base. The entire system is configured to provide exceptional properties in imaging, many of which lie beyond the reach of existing human-made cameras.

The researchers developed new ideas in materials and fabrication strategies allowing construction of artificial ommatidia in large, interconnected arrays in hemispherical layouts. Building such systems represents a daunting task, as all established camera technologies rely on bulk glass lenses and detectors constructed on the planar surfaces of silicon wafers which cannot be bent or flexed, much less formed into a hemispherical shape.

"A critical feature of our fly's eye cameras is that they incorporate integrated microlenses, photodetectors, and electronics on hemispherically curved surfaces," said Jianliang Xiao, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at University of Colorado Boulder and coauthor of the study.

"To realize this outcome, we used soft, rubbery optics bonded to detectors/electronics in mesh layouts that can be stretched and deformed, reversibly and without damage."

The fabrication starts with electronics, detectors and lens arrays formed on flat surfaces using advanced techniques adapted from the semiconductor industry, said Xiao, who began working on the project as a postdoctoral researcher in Rogers' lab at Illinois. The lens sheet -- made from a polymer material similar to a contact lens -- and the electronics/detectors are then aligned and bonded together. Pneumatic pressure deforms the resulting system into the desired hemispherical shape, in a process much like blowing up a balloon, but with precision engineering control.

The individual electronic detectors and microlenses are coupled together to avoid any relative motion during this deformation process. Here, the spaces between these artificial ommatidia can stretch to allow transformation in geometry from planar to hemispherical. The electrical interconnections are thin, and narrow, in filamentary serpentine shapes; they deform as tiny springs during the stretching process.

According to the researchers, each microlens produces a small image of an object with a form dictated by the parameters of the lens and the viewing angle. An individual detector responds only if a portion of the image formed by the associated microlens overlaps the active area. The detectors stimulated in this way produce a sampled image of the object that can then be reconstructed using models of the optics.

Over the last several years, Rogers and his colleagues have developed materials, mechanics principles and manufacturing processes that enable classes of electronics that can bend, twist, and stretch like a rubber band. This device technology has been used in fields ranging from photovoltaics, to health/wellness monitors, to advanced surgical tools and digital cameras with designs of the mammalian eye.

"Certain of the enabling ideas build on concepts that originated in our labs a half dozen years ago," Rogers remarked. "Ever since, we have been intrigued by the possibility of creating digital fly's eye cameras. Such devices are of longstanding interest, not only to us but many others as well, owing to their potential for use in surveillance devices, tools for endoscopy, and other applications where these insect-inspired designs provide unique capabilities."

The other co-lead authors of the paper are Young Min Song, Yizhu Xie, and Viktor Malyarchuk, all of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Co-authors include Ki-Joong Choi, Rak-Hwan Kim and John Rogers at Illinois; Inhwa Jung of Kyung Hee University in Korea; Zhuangjian Liu of the Institute of High Performance Computing A*star in Singapore; Chaofeng Lu of Zhejiang University in China and Northwestern University; Rui Li, of Dalian University of Technology in China; Kenneth Crozier of Harvard University; and Yonggang Huang of Northwestern.

The research was funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the National Science Foundation.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Illinois College of Engineering, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Young Min Song, Yizhu Xie, Viktor Malyarchuk, Jianliang Xiao, Inhwa Jung, Ki-Joong Choi, Zhuangjian Liu, Hyunsung Park, Chaofeng Lu, Rak-Hwan Kim, Rui Li, Kenneth B. Crozier, Yonggang Huang, John A. Rogers. Digital cameras with designs inspired by the arthropod eye. Nature, 2013; 497 (7447): 95 DOI: 10.1038/nature12083

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/NbaqFGdyeWc/130501131949.htm

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Scientists assemble genetic playbook for acute leukemia

May 1, 2013 ? A team of researchers led by Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis has identified virtually all of the major mutations that drive acute myeloid leukemia (AML), a fast-growing blood cancer in adults that often is difficult to treat.

The findings, published online May 1 in The New England Journal of Medicine, pave the way for developing better treatments for AML based on the genetic profile of a patient's cancer. They also could lead to ways to more accurately predict the severity of disease in individual patients.

"We now have a genetic playbook for this type of leukemia," says study co-leader Timothy Ley, MD, associate director for cancer genomics at The Genome Institute at Washington University School of Medicine. "We don't know all the rules yet, but we know all the major players. This information can help us begin to understand which patients need more aggressive treatment right up front and which can be treated effectively with standard chemotherapy."

Some 200 patients newly diagnosed with AML were involved in the study, funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) as part of The Cancer Genome Atlas project. Nearly 150 researchers were involved in the effort.

A second Cancer Genome Atlas paper will be published May 2 in Nature. That research, also led by Washington University, shows that adding genomics-based testing to the standard diagnostic workup could change the recommended course of treatment for some women.

The scientists sequenced the DNA of each patient's leukemia cells and compared the data to DNA from that same patient's healthy cells. In this way, they found the mutations that only occurred in the cancer cells and contributed to the development and progression of AML in each patient. They also looked for defects in RNA (a close chemical cousin of DNA) and other changes that alter the expression of genes without actually changing the DNA.

"These results provide important new insights into the genomics of a deadly and difficult-to-treat cancer, and underscore the power and scope of The Cancer Genome Atlas project," says NIH Director Francis S. Collins, MD, PhD.

Compared to other adult cancers, AML is caused by relatively few mutations, the new study shows. Cancer cells in the AML patients had an average of 13 mutated genes, far fewer than the several hundred typically found in breast, lung and other solid tumors.

By studying a large number of AML cases, the scientists predict they have found nearly all of the major mutations that occur in patients with the disease.

"If only 5 percent of AML cases have a particular gene that is mutated, there is a greater than 99 percent chance that we encountered that mutation at least once in this study," says co-leader Richard K. Wilson, PhD, director of Washington University's Genome Institute. "There are still rare mutations that remain to be discovered, but we expect they will fall into the same genetic pathways or gene sets that we identified as being very strongly associated with AML."

The researchers found more than 1,800 genes that were mutated at least once in the 200 samples, a discovery that hints at the many different routes that lead to AML. But only 23 of the genes were significantly mutated, and another 237 were mutated in two or more of the samples.

"We didn't realize how few recurrent mutations there were, and no one was thinking even a few years ago that AML was associated with a high frequency of mutations in genes that encode epigenetic modifiers," Ley says. "This new information helps narrow the search for likely drug targets and markers that can help predict the severity of AML."

To make sense of their findings, the researchers organized the genes into nine categories based on their function or the known pathways involved. These include tumor suppressor genes, signaling genes and epigenetic modifiers, the latter of which is the most frequently mutated class of genes in the study. Epigenetic changes influence when genes are turned on and off but don't alter the DNA sequence.

To their surprise, the scientists identified patterns of cooperation and mutual exclusivity between certain genes or sets of genes. For example, a combination of mutations in three genes -- FLT3, NPM1 and DNMT3A -- were fairly common in patients and may represent a unique subtype of AML.

An estimated 14,600 Americans will be diagnosed with AML this year and some 10, 400 will die. Unfortunately, few good markers exist to help guide treatment decisions for many patients.

Doctors routinely assess the severity of AML by looking at patients' leukemia cells for broken or rearranged chromosomes, an indicator of very aggressive cancer. But more than half of all AML patients fall into a diagnostic category called "intermediate risk." Their cancer cells have chromosomes that look normal or have very minor changes. And while some do well on standard chemotherapy, many others do poorly, underscoring the critical need for better ways to determine prognosis.

"Anything we can do to improve risk classification in this disease is really important because there is a cure for some patients -- a stem cell transplant from a matched donor -- but it is risky and costly and should only be used in patients who need it," Ley says. "For these patients, it's crucial to get the transplant early in the course of the disease."

Ley, Wilson and their colleagues at The Genome Institute pioneered cancer genome sequencing. Since the Washington University team published the first cancer genome in 2008, the team has found many genetic mutations linked to AML and other tumors that never would have been suspected to be associated with cancer.

Now that scientists have a more complete list of genes altered in AML, the researchers expect other researchers will begin examining AML patient samples banked at their own institutions to understand the relationship between the mutated genes and treatment outcomes.

"We've never had such a complete picture of AML," says Wilson. "Now, researchers can mine this data to determine whether individual mutations or sets of mutations can be used to predict prognosis or be targeted by new or existing drugs."

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Grant numbers U24CA143845, U24CA143858, U24CA144025, U24CA143882, U24CA143866, U24CA143867, U24CA143848, U24CA143840, U24CA143835, U24CA143799, U24CA143883, U24CA143843, U54HG003067, U54HG003079, U54HG003273, and P01CA101937). Additional support came from the Barnes-Jewish Hospital Foundation.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Washington University in St. Louis. The original article was written by Caroline Arbanas.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Ley, T, Wilson R, et al. Genomic and Epigenomic Landscapes of Adult De Novo Acute Myeloid Leukemia. New England Journal of Medicine, 2013 DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1301689

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/genes/~3/ysGhVfgbASk/130501144431.htm

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Thursday, May 2, 2013

The Best Things to Buy in May

Spring is a great time to stock up on some new furnishings and other household items, especially in May. Here are the best things to buy this month.

Every month, we look back at the best times to buy anything during the year, and pull out items each month to remind you what's coming. Obviously, none of this is to say you should go on a shopping spree?but if you've been holding off for a lower price on something, these are the things that get the sale treatment in May.

All Spring

  • Televisions and Other Electronics: The Japanese fiscal year ends in March, which means Japanese-made goods?like the electronics we all love so much?are going to be on sale as they try to get rid of old stock. If you didn't grab a TV during the pre-Super Bowl sales, now's the time to grab one. Author Mark Di Vincenzo notes that these sales are probably even better than the February ones anyway, as long as you're comfortable buying last year's model.
  • Houses: According to Bankrate, spring is a great time to buy a house. Prices aren't quite as low as they can be in the winter, but you'll have a much larger selection to choose from, so you can take the time to find your perfect dream home. The spring weather makes the yards look great, and everyone comes out of the woodwork looking for a new home, which makes competition fierce. A lot of families start buying and selling at this time so their kids have time to make the transition during summer vacation, too.
  • Cookware & Kitchen Accessories: As graduation season draws closer, you'll see a lot of sales for common graduation gifts. Kitchen tools and cookware are at the top of the list, says Bankrate, so even if you aren't heading off to college next year, take advantage of the graduation-centric sales to stock up on any must-have kitchen tools now.
  • Digital Cameras: CES has come and gone, and while last year's digital cameras start going on sale in February, you're probably going to find the best deals during the second quarter of the year, according to Digital Photography School and Digital Camera HQ. Not sure what camera you want? Check out our Hive Five for DSLR and mirrorless 4/3 cameras.
  • Thrift Items: It's spring cleaning time, which means you can not only sell all your old junk, but buy other people's junk too! If you're a thrift store shopper, now's a good time to get even better bargains than usual, since places like the Salvation Army will be getting lots of new inventory.
  • Vacuum Cleaners: Speaking of spring cleaning, if your vacuum just doesn't have the sucking power that it used to, it's the perfect time to buy a new one. New vacuums usually don't come out until June, so Bankrate says you should grab the old models now as they're clearing them out (though if you can wait, Dealnews says Black Friday will see the lowest prices).

May

  • Office Furniture: Both Furniture Brains and DealNews note that office furniture tends to start dropping after Tax Day, and gets lower and lower once you get into June. If you've been looking to ergonomically optimize your workspace, now's the time?and you might start with one of the five most popular office chairs.
  • Mattresses: Even though mattresses usually come out all year round, May often sees some pretty great price drops, according to DealNews. And, as long as you do your pre-shopping research, there's no reason you can't still get a great one.
  • Refrigerators: Most big appliances go on sale later in the year, but refrigerators are the big exception. New models are on their way, says Money Crashers, which means last year's models are on sale. So, there's no better time to get a good discount on a barely outdated fridge for your newly rebooted kitchen.

We'll be posting updates for you guys every month, so you're aware of the deals going on all year round. If you're curious to see what's coming up, you can always check out our full best time to buy guide to see the entire year at a glance. And, if you know of any deals we didn't mention, share them in the comments below.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/hpJw2GqfcXk/the-best-things-to-buy-in-may-5907155

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Internet Business for Old Age ? Secure Your After Retirement Life ...

[unable to retrieve full-text content]There is no better option than an internet business for retired ones. Online business is always popular and well-known for its comfortable job. You can work online by sitting at your home and can start your work anytime as per ...

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Wednesday, May 1, 2013

S. Dakota tribe can't afford to buy Wounded Knee massacre site

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) ? The president of a South Dakota tribe facing a deadline on whether to buy a piece of land where 300 of their ancestors were massacred more than a century ago says his tribe does not have the money for the purchase.

The Oglala Sioux faced a Wednesday deadline to buy a 40-acre piece of the Wounded Knee National Historic Landmark on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

Owner James Czywczynski (see-ZIHN'-skee) had said if the tribe did not agree to the $4.9 million asking price for that parcel and another parcel, he would open up bidding to outside investors.

Tribal president Bryan Brewer tells The Associated Press the tribe will not purchase the land, which has been appraised at less than $7,000 apiece.

Czywczynski has not responded to calls for comment.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/official-sd-tribe-cant-pay-wounded-knee-183843920.html

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