Thursday, July 8, 2010

ITS OFFICIAL: LEBRON JAMES IS HEADING TO MIAMI

Free agent drama is all over for good: LeBron James is going to join Miami Heat for upcoming 2010-2011 NBA season.

SOURCE: ESPN NBA

You can watch his interview HERE.

LeBron James put the NBA on notice Thursday night, joining Dwayne Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami.

Ending weeks of silence and drama, the two-time MVP said on his ESPN special from Greenwich, Conn. on Thursday night that he's decided to join the Miami Heat and leave the Cleveland Cavaliers after an unsuccessful seven-year quest for the championship he covets.




LeBron Discusses 'The Decision'
LeBron James will sit down with Robin Roberts on Good Morning America on ABC (Friday, 7 a.m. ET) to discuss the ins and outs of one of the most-talked about free-agent decisions in NBA history.

"The best opportunity to win and to win now and to win in the future also," James said. "Winning is a huge thing for me."

It's a huge victory for the Heat, who got commitments from Wade and Bosh on Wednesday. That duo, along with James, formed the upper echelon of the most-celebrated free-agent period in league history.

James said the contract numbers for all three were not finalized, but all three agreed to take less money to play alongside each other.

Still, Heat president Pat Riley landed them all, a three-pack of stars to help shape his quest for a dynasty in Miami.

And for Cleveland, a city scorned for generations by some of sports' biggest letdowns, James' long-awaited words represented a defeat perhaps unlike any other.

James is gone. Home sweet home no more.

He said he made the decision Thursday morning and knows it won't go over well in Ohio.

"They can have mixed emotions, of course," James said, adding that Akron will "always be home for me."

The Cavs drafted James No. 1 overall in 2003 out of St. Vincent-St. Mary's High School in Akron, Ohio.

Emmer to Hold Town Meeting with Servers

Source: Emmer for Governor Press Release

Emmer to Hold Town Meeting with Servers

Listening tour continues, hospitality workers encouraged to participate

Tom Emmer announced today he will hold a town meeting with servers in the hospitality industry next Wednesday to listen to their concerns regarding wages, tips, taxes and health care. This week Emmer met with business owners around the state as he focused the Freedom and Prosperity Project on jobs and the economy.

“The most important issue facing the next governor is creating jobs and getting our economy back on the path to prosperity,” said Emmer. “This week we met with business owners and next week we will listen to the employees, especially servers concerned about the tip credit issue. I’m looking forward to a robust discussion.”

What Town Hall Meeting with servers in the hospitality industry.

When Wednesday, July 14, 2010 · 3:00 pm to 4:30 pm

When Ol’ Mexico Restaurante and Cantina
One block north of Larpenteur on Lexington Ave
Roseville

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Leslie Peterson, a 'great storyteller' turned ally for deaf-blind


Leslie Peterson, a 'great storyteller' turned ally for deaf-blind
Leslie Peterson of Minneapolis was a longtime advocate and role model for people like himself.

By SARAH LEMAGIE, Star Tribune

Last update: July 2, 2010

Lifelong deafness and the gradual loss of his sight did not keep Leslie Peterson from a rich, independent life.

A past president of the Minnesota DeafBlind Association, Peterson, who died June 28, was a longtime advocate for that community, friends and relatives said.

Peterson often spoke to school and community groups, state officials and legislators. "He was a great storyteller," and he worked hard to secure funding for services to help people who were deaf and blind, said longtime friend and interpreter Nancy Evelyn.

Friends and relatives said he helped start a social club for people with deaf-blindness, as well as the association's annual Thanksgiving banquet, where last year he received a lifetime achievement award.

But "his greatest impact to people was simply being who he was, being a role model," said Paul Deeming, a services manager at DeafBlind Services Minnesota. "He is the most independent person who is deaf-blind that I know."

In the early 1980s, Peterson helped to successfully lobby state legislators to fund services for people who were both deaf and blind, said Sharon Plett, also a longtime interpreter.

Peterson, 67, of south Minneapolis, died of lung cancer, though he never smoked, said his daughter, Mitzi Uribe of Coon Rapids.

Peterson had a condition called Usher syndrome, a relatively rare genetic disorder characterized by deafness and gradual vision loss. He was born deaf and started losing his sight at age 14.
Though he was legally blind for decades, he retained some sight until two weeks before he died, his daughter said.

Peterson was born in Montana, the son of a pastor with a large family. After graduating from a school for the deaf, he attended a Bible college in Missouri.

He moved to Minnesota, initially to be near a sister in St. Cloud. He met his future wife, Patti, "on a blind date," Uribe said, laughing.

When they were courting, Peterson used to take the bus to Patti's parents' house in Robbinsdale and walk the last few blocks to their door, which "used to make her family nervous," Uribe said.
Peterson worked as a draftsman for several years -- a job that he loved, but which he eventually had to leave as his eyesight worsened, his daughter said.


"He was really at a point in his life where he had decided to take life by the horns and start preparing himself for being deaf and blind," learning to use a cane and read Braille, she said.
Peterson remained bold his entire life, though he knew the risks, his daughter said. "A lot of times, he would be on a bus and the bus driver would forget to tap him on the shoulder, and he would be completely lost in the community somewhere," she said.


He did his own banking, could install doors and build walls, and even tore down an old garage a few years ago.


"It look him two weeks, and he got lots of cuts and bruises, but he gained lots of muscle tone and he loved it," Uribe said.


He created his own communication system, a flip chart with various messages in large-print and Braille that he used to take the bus and get around in public, Deeming said. Dissatisfied with storebought canes for blind people, Peterson made his own, attaching a pizza cutter to the end so it would roll over sidewalk cracks.


An avid chess player, Peterson would play anyone, Deeming said. "I only saw one person, one time, who ever beat him," he said. Once, Deeming said, Peterson was the only person who showed up to a club meeting at DeafBlind Services Minnesota. Lacking a chess partner, he taught a staffer how to play -- wordlessly.


Peterson is survived by his wife and two children, along with many other relatives. A memorial service will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at Billman-Hunt Chapel, 2701 Central Av. NE. in Minneapolis, with a gathering one hour before the service.


Sarah Lemagie • 952-882-9016