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Argentine former cyclist Marcelo Alexandre carries the Olympic torch during the relay across Buenos Aires on April 11, 2008. The protest-dogged Olympic torch began its run through Buenos Aires under tight security meant to ward off the scuffles that marred its early legs. More than 2,500 police and other security personnel lined the 13-kilometre course through the Argentine capital to keep at bay demonstrators denouncing China's crackdown in Tibet. The relay in Buenos Aires is the only Latin American stop for the Olympic torch and the first time it has ever been to Argentina.  AFP PHOTO/JUAN MABROMATA
Argentine former cyclist Marcelo Alexandre carries the Olympic torch during the relay across Buenos Aires on April 11, 2008. The protest-dogged Olympic torch began its run through Buenos Aires under tight security meant to ward off the scuffles that marred its early legs. More than 2,500 police and other security personnel lined the 13-kilometre course through the Argentine capital to keep at bay demonstrators denouncing China’s crackdown in Tibet. The relay in Buenos Aires is the only Latin American stop for the Olympic torch and the first time it has ever been to Argentina. AFP PHOTO/JUAN MABROMATA
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ROCHESTER, Minn. — Al Franken won a resounding endorsement for the U.S. Senate on Saturday from Minnesota Democrats, promising a tough challenge to Republican Sen. Norm Coleman.

“To the people of Minnesota, let me say this: I’m not a perfect person,” said Franken, a former “Saturday Night Live” writer and performer. “I’m not going to pretend to have all the answers. But I’ll tell the truth, I will keep my spine, and I will work for you.”

Franken’s show of strength came as something of a surprise after a rocky few weeks in which some Democrats, led by U.S. Rep. Betty McCollum, criticized a racy column he wrote for Playboy magazine in 2000 and, earlier last week, joking comments he was reported to have made about rape that were included in a 1995 New York magazine article about “Saturday Night Live.” Franken tackled the controversy head-on in his nomination speech, where he said some of the things he said and wrote over 35 years as a writer were “downright offensive.”

“I understand that,” he said. “And I understand that the people of Minnesota deserve a senator who won’t say things that make them feel uncomfortable.” The Associated Press

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