2088c1dfbf83257f470285bba4b04a9e0b1041fa
kuhn
  Thu Oct 18 10:16:20 2012 -0700
fixed misspelling pointed out by a user
diff --git src/hg/htdocs/indexNews.html src/hg/htdocs/indexNews.html
index 86d43a9..116e4be 100755
--- src/hg/htdocs/indexNews.html
+++ src/hg/htdocs/indexNews.html
@@ -35,31 +35,31 @@
 		of this information in the UCSC Genes details page accessible from the
 		Genome Browser, and in the columns of the Gene Sorter. Since very few
 		people are still accessing the Proteome Browser, we've decided to
 		retire it to focus our work on these other two tools. Access to the
 		databases that supported the Proteome Browser (uniProt and proteome)
 		will still be available through the Table Browser and our public MySQL
 		server.
 		</p>
 		<hr>
 
 	   <!-- start archives -->
 		<font face="courier" size="3"><b>16 August 2012 -
 Announcing a Genome Browser for the Medium ground finch </b></font>
 		<p>
 		We have released a browser for the Medium ground finch, 
-		<em>Geospiza fortis</em>, reknowned as one of naturalist Charles
+		<em>Geospiza fortis</em>, renowned as one of naturalist Charles
 		Darwin's Galapagos finches. This species, which has been the 
 		subject of many evolutionary studies, is one of a group of 
 		birds that evolved over a few million years from a single 
 		ancestral species into multiple species whose beak sizes and
 		shapes are specialized for using different food resources. The 
 		phenotypic diversity of these birds contributed to Darwin's 
 		theory of evolution. The significance of this genome assembly is
 		described in the August 16, 2012, 
 		<a href="https://cbse.soe.ucsc.edu/news/article/1939" 
 		target=_blank>press release</a> issued by the UCSC Center for 
 		Biomolecular Science and Engineering (CBSE). 
 		<A HREF="goldenPath/newsarch.html#081612">Read more</A>.
 		</p>
 		<hr>