Friday,  June 21, 2013 • Vol. 14--No. 336 • 21 of 32

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• Owen Kerkvliet will join 53 other students from across the U.S. at the July 9 lunch as part of a nationwide recipe challenge to promote healthy lunches. Kerkvliet's winning recipe is called hidden veggie lasagna.
• Children ages 8-12 were asked to create an original lunchtime recipe that is healthy and affordable.
• More than 1,300 entries were received. The challenge was created as part of Michelle Obama's Let's Move campaign to help solve the problem of childhood obesity.

Tribe leader: Arrest won't deter anti-alcohol work
KRISTI EATON,Associated Press

• SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) -- The president of the Oglala Sioux Tribe in South Dakota says his recent arrest during a protest against alcohol sales in the Nebraska border town of Whiteclay won't deter him from voicing his disapproval of the possibility of allowing alcohol on the dry Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.
• Bryan Brewer was arrested Monday during a protest in Whiteclay on a 2012 warrant for writing a bad check for $191 to a veterinary clinic. The tribal official paid the amount, was released and the charges dismissed.
• In a statement, Brewer said he hopes his arrest will encourage tribal members to talk about an upcoming referendum vote and its possible effects on the reservation. The tribal council earlier this month approved a public referendum on whether to legalize alcohol on the reservation. A date for the public vote has not yet been scheduled.
• "The arrest does not deter me from continuing protesting in White Clay (sic), why should we stop?," he said in the statement. "Alcohol doesn't stop! My arrest only helps bring to light these issues and helps all of us to begin talking about the referendum vote, effects of alcohol and what we really want for our people."
• Federal law bans the sale of alcohol on Indian reservations unless the tribal council allows it. The tribal council legalized alcohol on the reservation for two months in 1970s, but the ban was quickly restored. An attempt to lift the ban in 2004 ultimately died after a public outcry.
• Alcoholism is rampant on Pine Ridge and is often identified as the culprit for the high rates of suicide, violence, infant mortality and unemployment among tribal members on the impoverished reservation. People sneak in beer and liquor from nearby border towns like Whiteclay. A lawsuit the tribe brought last year against four beer sellers in Whiteclay and some of the nation's biggest breweries was ultimately dismissed. The tribe alleges that the businesses were profiting from the alcoholism

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