Monday,  June 25, 2012 • Vol. 12--No. 347 • 21 of 25 •  Other Editions

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Efforts under way to link Appalachian Trail with 4,600-mile trail to ND, nation's longest

• WEYBRIDGE, Vt. (AP) -- The longest hiking trail in the United States stops 40 miles short of its most famous cousin, but a group is trying to bridge that gap.
• The North Country National Scenic Trail runs 4,600 miles from North Dakota to New York's eastern border. From there, it's about 40 miles across Vermont fields and mountains to the Appalachian Trail, the famous 2,170-mile hiking trail that runs from Georgia to Maine.
• Bringing them together now are a push from the organization that runs the North Country Trail; a changed attitude from officials in Vermont, where the connection was blocked decades ago; and a growing movement to connect the nation's longest

hiking trails.
• "This 40-mile gap is a gap in the system," said Bruce Matthews, executive director of the Michigan-based North Country Trail Association, which is working with the National Park Service, Vermont's Green Mountain Club and others to build the new connecting trail. "There's no logical reason for it."
• Despite being the longest hiking trail in the country, the North Country Trail isn't as well-known as others, partly because it's still a work in progress and partly because it has no defining feature, like the mountain range the Appalachian Trail is named for.
• ___

Politicians, police join thousands in march for gay pride in San Francisco, other US cities

• SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Loud sirens, flashing lights and countless rainbow flags and banners accompanied uniformed police officers, cheerleaders and politicians who marched in San Francisco's gay pride parade Sunday, the 42nd year the city has celebrated the lesbian, gay and transgender community.
• More than 200 floats made their way down Market Street, the city's main thoroughfare. A few marchers were dressed in elaborate, brightly colored outfits made from balloons, while many other participants and parade watchers wore hardly anything.

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