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NSP Recognized Employees of the Year

Back row-Left to right: Lt. Colonel Tom Schwarten, Trooper Bill Price, Lt. Dennis Leonard, Colonel David Sankey Front row- Kim Heitmann ( not pictured, Jennifer Kirkpatrick)
Back row-Left to right: Lt. Colonel Tom Schwarten, Trooper Bill Price, Lt. Dennis Leonard, Colonel David Sankey
Front row- Kim Heitmann ( not pictured, Jennifer Kirkpatrick)

Sworn and civilian employees of the Nebraska State Patrol (NSP) were recognized as employees and supervisor/managers of the year during an October 30, ceremony in the Rotunda of the Nebraska State Capitol.

Trooper Bill Price, honored as the sworn employee of the year, is a 24-year veteran of the Nebraska State Patrol assigned to Troop B- Norfolk in the Field Services Division. As the Troop B Community Service Officer, Trooper Price has a direct impact on the safety of Nebraska citizens.  By developing and implementing programs aimed at young adults, Trooper Price works tirelessly to raise awareness and save lives by reducing the potential for serious injury and fatality crashes. Trooper Price is also credited with coordinating a display of Nebraska State Patrol history at the Elkhorn Valley Museum in Norfolk.

Kim Heitmann, Accountant I, State Headquarters- Lincoln, was honored as the civilian employee of the year. Employed with NSP since 2011, Kim is always one to go above and beyond the call of duty. In the past year she was asked to assume extra responsibilities while a fellow employee was out on medical leave which required her to complete multiple payroll cycles on her own with little or no assistance.  Kim’s dedication ensured the NSP payroll for more than 700 employees was processed in a timely and accurate fashion.

Lieutenant Dennis Leonard, a 27-year agency veteran, was honored as the sworn supervisor/manager of the year. Assigned to the Investigative Services Division in Troop C-Grand Island, Lt. Leonard has proven to be an effective leader. Over the past year, Lt. Leonard was called on to act as the statewide Investigative Services Captain. This duty assignment added additional travel and responsibilities which Lt. Leonard handled with professionalism and commitment, paving the way for a smooth transition and orientation when a new Captain was named.  Lt. Leonard is also credited with improving the security and communications operations as the Nebraska State Fair transitioned to its new home in Grand Island.

The civilian supervisor/manager of the year honor goes to Jennifer Kirkpatrick, who received the honor for her work as Research Manager in the Criminal Identification Division in Lincoln.  Since joining the Agency in June 2010, Jennifer has overseen a number of projects including the research and implementation of the upgrade to the statewide Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS). Her ability to work with multiple agencies to meet network needs was paramount to the projects’ success.

October is State Employee Recognition month. The award recipients were honored during a ceremony held in the Rotunda of the State Capitol. A reception following the ceremony was held at the Governor’s residence.

Jones Withdraws from State Senate Race

jones-for-senateLocal attorney Russ Jones has announced that he is withdrawing from the race for State Senate.

In a news release Wednesday, Jones said he decided to put family first.

Jones said he realized his campaign began after speaking with the North Platte Area Chamber of Commerce Legislative Committee on September 11th.

Shortly thereafter, he scheduled tour of North Platte Community College with President Ryan Purdy and Vice President Marcus Garstecki and was so impressed with the “progressive thought process of the administrators,” he realized how rewarding it would be to serve the 42nd District.

However, upon returning home and seeing his son, a Freshman in high school, Jones realized he had a tough choice to make.

After discussing the matter with family, friends and supporters, he decided that, while his son was alright with his run for the Legislature, he was not.

Jones said, “The decision to run was difficult, the decision to not run was not.”

As for the next couple of months, Jones says he will take time to meet with and thank his supporters.

Two candidates, Scott Dulin and Roric Paulman, are still in the running for the seat being vacated by Tom Hansen.

Hideo Kamino


kamino, hideo pic

Hideo Kamino, 93, of North Platte, NE, passed away Oct. 28, 2013, at Linden Court in North Platte.

He was born March 12, 1920, in Hershey to Tomokichi and Sao Kamino. On April 24, 1954, Hideo married Helen Y. Kanno in Morrill, NE. Hideo and Helen farmed in the Platte Valley area until they retired in the late 1980’s and eventually moved into North Platte in 2007.

Hideo enjoyed many activities including coin collecting, bowling, playing cards, time with the Buffalo Bill Stamp Club, and traveled extensively. He was also very active in the Episcopal Church of Our Savior and Farm Bureau.

Hideo is survived by his wife, Helen, his siblings, Sam (Ruth) Kamino of North Platte and Mary Kogiku of Riverside, CA; children, Patricia (Jeffrey) Pasternak of Oak Park, CA, and Terry Kamino of Omaha; seven nephews and five nieces.

In lieu of flowers or koden, memorials may be made to the Episcopal Church of Our Savior. Online condolences may be shared at carpentermemorial.com. Visitation will be held at Carpenter Memorial Chapel from 5 to 7pm, Thursday, October 31.
Those wishing to sign the memorial book may do so from Thursday from 8:30 am to 7:00 pm and Friday from 8:30am to 5:00 pm.

A private family service will be held on Friday, November 1st.
Carpenter Memorial Chapel is in charge of arrangements.

No. 25 NPCC Knights Open Season Friday in McCook

npcc-knightsThe No. 25 North Platte Community College men’s basketball team opens up the season this Friday as they travel to McCook to compete in the McCook Community College Fall Classic.

The Knights are ranked 25th in the NJCAA pre-season rankings. The ranking marks the second time the Knights have been ranked in the pre-season joining the No. 16 ranking before the 2009-10 season.

The Knights open on Friday November 1 as they take on the Northeast Community College Hawks at 6 p.m. in McCook. The Knights return to actionon Saturday as they take on Doane College JV at 2 p.m. also in McCook.

The Knights are coming off a school-record 30 win season and Region IX Championship. The Knights return leading scorer and rebounder Ethan Montalvo (15.7 ppg, 5.0 rpg) who was named to the All-Region IX Second-Team, the All-Region IX Tournament Team and the All-NCCAA First-Team.

Tim Simmons (10.4 ppg), Jake Maslo (4.8 ppg, 3.8 rpg), Jimma Lew (1.2 ppg), Tre’Vaun Hymer (transfer from New Mexico Junior College at Christmas) and Marcus Linson (Redshirt) also return as sophomores for the Knights. Ten new freshmen join the Knights program for the 2013-14 season.

The Knights remain on the road the following week as they travel to Garden City, Kan. to compete in the Garden City Classic on November 8 and 9. The Knights will take on Seward County Community College on Friday and the hosts Garden City Community College on Saturday.

The Knights begin a home stand of five games on Tuesday November 12 as they take on the York College JV at 7 p.m. before hosting Midland University JV and Doane College JV on November 15 and 16.

More Study Urged on Concussions in Young Athletes

ConcussionWASHINGTON (AP) — It’s not just football.

A new report says too little is known about concussion risks for young athletes, and it’s not clear whether better headgear is an answer.

Reports of sports-related concussions have been rising. The Institute of Medicine has taken a closer look, and finds that rates are higher for some sports.

In high school and college, football, ice hockey and lacrosse top the list for male athletes. For females, it’s soccer, lacrosse and basketball.

The report cites a gap in information about concussion rates in younger players before high school, and recommends a national system to better track sports-related concussions.

The report stresses wearing proper safety equipment. But it finds little evidence that current helmet designs, face masks and other gear really prevent concussions, as ads often claim.

No. 16 NPCC Lady Knights Host Hampton Inn Classic to Open Season

npcc-knightsThe No. 16 North Platte Community College Lady Knights basketball team open up their season at home this Friday and Saturday as they host the Hampton Inn Classic November 1 and 2.

The Lady Knights are ranked 16th in the pre-season NJCAA Division II rankings. It marks the first ranking at any time in program history.

The Lady Knights will start their season Friday night as they host Midland University JV at 7:30 p.m. As part of the Hampton Inn Classic Eastern Wyoming College and Fort Carson will precede the Lady Knights opener as they play at 5:30 p.m.

The Hampton Inn Classic continues on Saturday afternoon at 1 p.m. as Midland University JV faces Eastern Wyoming College. The Lady Knights face Fort Carson at 3 p.m. to conclude the Hampton Inn Classic.

The Lady Knights look to defend their Region IX Division II championship and District F Playoff victory that earned them a spot in the NJCAA Division II National Championships. The Lady Knights look to improve on their 15-16 record from a year ago.

DaVontaye Merritt returns as the Lady Knight’s second leading scorer and rebounder at 12.9 points and 8.1 rebounds per game. The Lady Knights also return their third leading scorer Courtney Widick (9.8 ppg, 4.3 rpg) and assist leader and fifth leading scorer Jordan Dickerson (3.4 apg, 7.7 ppg). Samantha Hyatt (2.2 ppg) also returns for the Lady Knights. Nine new freshmen join the program for the 2013-14 season.

The Lady Knights return to action the following weekend as they travel to Norfolk for the Hawks Classic where they will face Des Moines Area Community College and Iowa Lakes Community College on November 8 and 9. The Lady Knights next home game is November 19 at 5 p.m. as they host Northeast Community College.

AP Nebraska High School Football Rankings

fox-footballHere are the Associated Press Nebraska high school football rankings in Classes A through D2. Listings include name of school, season record, previous week’s ranking, previous opponent and result, and next opponent. (NR_Not ranked). The rankings are based on a formula that includes ratings from the Omaha World-Herald and Lincoln Journal Star plus experts for each class. Class A: Dale Miller, Grand Island Independent. Class B: Jeff Fielder, Scottsbluff Star-Herald. Class C1: Tom Behmer, Norfolk Daily News. Class C2: Brent Wasinius, Fremont Tribune. Class D1: Mark Obermeier, North Platte Telegraph. Class D2: Nick Blasnitz, Hastings Tribune.

CLASS A

1. Millard West, (8-1), 1, def. Bellevue East 55-26, Kearney.

2. Omaha North (8-1), 6, Millard North 38-24, Bellevue East.

3. Omaha Westside (8-1), 4, Papillion-LaVista South 42-27, Lincoln Southwest.

4. Millard North (4-5), 3, lost to Omaha North 38-24, Lincoln East.

5. Papillion-La Vista (6-3), 8, def. Millard South 22-19, Omaha Central.

6. Omaha Burke (6-3), 10, def. Bellevue West 38-37, Lincoln Southeast.

7. Grand Island (8-1), 7, def. Lincoln High 51-21, Bellevue West.

8. Omaha Central (6-3), 9, def. Creighton Preparatory School 28-7, at Papillion-La Vista.

9. Creighton Preparatory School (6-3), 2, lost to Omaha Central 28-7, Papillion-La Vista South.

10. Bellevue West (6-3), 5, lost to Omaha Burke 38-37, at Grand Island.

Others receiving votes: Lincoln East.

CLASS B

1. Gretna (9-0), 1, def. Mount Michael Benedictine 52-12, Omaha Gross Catholic.

2. Omaha Skutt Catholic (8-1), 2, def. Omaha Gross Catholic 24-14, Norris.

3. Ralston (8-1), 3, Omaha Roncalli Catholic 70-41, Elkhorn.

4. York (8-1), 6, def. Aurora 33-14, Scottsbluff.

5. Elkhorn (6-3), 8, Elkhorn South 28-21, at Ralston.

6. McCook (8-1), 7, def. Lexington 26-13, Crete.

7. Norris (6-3), 9, def. Seward 37-15, at Omaha Skutt Catholic.

8. Aurora (7-2), 5, lost to York 33-14, Plattsmouth.

9. Omaha Gross Catholic (5-4), 4, lost to Omaha Skutt Catholic 24-14, at Gretna.

10. Beatrice (6-3), NR, def. Crete 19-14, Elkhorn South.

Others receiving votes: Elkhorn South.

CLASS C1

1. Boone Central/Newman Grove (8-0), 1, def. Grand Island Central Catholic 35-7, Valentine.

2. Cozad (8-0), 2, def. Ogallala 57-12, Minden.

3. Syracuse (8-0), 3, def. Lincoln Lutheran 53-7, Raymond Central.

4. Norfolk Catholic (6-2), 5, def. Wayne 57-6, Gibbon.

5. Pierce (6-2), 9, def. West Point-Beemer 41-14, at Ogallala.

6. Adams Central (7-1), 7, def. St. Paul 49-7, Chadron.

7. Bishop Neumann (5-3), 8, def. Boys Town 60-14, Logan View.

8. Ashland-Greenwood (7-1), NR, def. Wahoo 7-6, Boys Town.

9. Gothenburg (6-2), NR, def. Kearney Catholic 28-27 (2 OT), Chase County.

10. Columbus Lakeview (6-2), NR, def. Columbus Scotus 17-16, Columbus Scotus.

Others receiving votes: Lincoln Christian, Kearney Catholic.

CLASS C2

1. Doniphan-Trumbull (8-0), 1, def. Ravenna 38-0, Centura.

2. Battle Creek (8-0), 7, def. Lutheran High Northeast 41-3, Bayard.

3. Archbishop Bergan (7-1), 3, def. Centennial 48-7, Weeping Water.

4. Blue Hill (7-1), 6, def. Wood River 41-6, Kimball.

5. Lutheran High Northeast (7-1), 2, lost to Battle Creek 41-3, Johnson County Central.

6. Hastings St. Cecilia (6-2), 8, def. Thayer Central 40-0, Thayer Central.

7. Sutton (6-2), 9, def. Superior 50-7, Southern Valley.

8. Hershey (8-0), 10, def. North Platte St. Patrick’s 25-14, West Holt.

9. Malcolm (6-2), NR, def. Aquinas Catholic 14-12, Ponca.

10. Aquinas Catholic (6-2), 4, lost to Malcolm 14-12, Oakland-Craig.

Others receiving votes: Hartington Cedar Catholic, North Platte St. Patrick’s, Oakland-Craig, Omaha Brownell-Talbot.

CLASS D1

1. Exeter-Milligan (8-0), 1, def. Pawnee City 60-8, Hartington.

2. Howells-Dodge (8-0), 2, def. Clarkson/Leigh 42-18, Clarkson/Leigh.

3. Creighton (8-0), 3, def. Niobrara/Verdigre 84-6, Bloomfield.

4. Bruning-Davenport/Shickley (8-0), 4, def. Harvard 44-19, Neligh-Oakdale.

5. Overton (8-0), 5, def. Alma 67-7, Clearwater/Orchard.

6. High Plains Community (7-1), 6, Nebraska Christian 53-6, Emerson-Hubbard.

7. Guardian Angels Central Catholic (7-1), 7, def. Omaha Nation 76-0, at Heartland.

8. Randolph (7-1), 8, def. Pender 78-26, McCool Junction.

9. Elm Creek (7-1), 9, def. Southwest 69-36, Niobrara/Verdigre.

10. Hemingford (8-0), 10, def. Maxwell 64-30, Franklin.

Others receiving votes: Freeman.

CLASS D2

1. Falls City Sacred Heart (8-0), 1, def. Deshler 74-0, Kenesaw.

2. Wynot (8-0), 2, def. Wausa 74-58, Wausa.

3. Giltner (7-1), 3, def. Cedar Valley 80-13, Lawrence-Nelson.

4. Shelton (7-1), 6, def. Wilcox-Hildreth 66-22, Sandhills/Thedford.

5. Humphrey St. Francis (7-1), 5, def. Bancroft-Rosalie 34-14, Bancroft-Rosalie.

6. Nebraska Lutheran (8-0), 9, Parkview Christian 48-12, Osceola.

7. Fullerton (6-2), 8, def. Pleasanton 63-22, Parkview Christian.

8. Lyons-Decatur Northeast (7-1), 10, bye, at Meridian.

9. Stuart (7-1), NR, def. Osmond 42-6, Garden County.

10. Lawrence-Nelson (6-2), NR, def. Amherst 22-14, at Giltner.

Others receiving votes: Amherst, Wallace.

BTN to Offer Extensive Basketball Coverage, Including Live from Media Day

Big-Ten-LogoCHICAGO – With basketball season around the corner, BTN will cover the nation’s best basketball conference like no other network, with live coverage of media day, season-long pregame and postgame shows and studio and original programs, including the return of BTN’s Emmy-Nominated original series, The Journey: Big Ten Basketball 2014.

On Thursday, BTN will provide live television and streamed coverage of the Big Ten’s 2013 Basketball Media Day. For the first time, BTN and BTN2Go will provide live coverage of the men’s coaches’ press conferences, while both the men’s and women’s coaches’ press conferences will be streamed live, free of charge, on BTN.com via the Big Ten Digital Network (BTDN)Mike Hallwill be in-studio hosting the day’s coverage beginning at 9 AM ET.

BTN studio and original programs returning January 2014 include:

·         Big Ten Basketball Report – Airing Thursday evenings with hosts Hall and analysts Stephen Bardo, Shon Morris and Dick Weiss, former longtime New York Daily News sports columnist and member of the College Basketball Writers’ Hall of Fame, who joins BTN analysts this season.

  • ·         Big Ten Basketball & Beyond – Airing Sunday nights with host Dave Revsine and analysts Jim Jackson and the Sporting News’Mike DeCourcy.
  • ·         #BTNLive – Airing Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and also simulcast Monday through Friday on FOX Sports Radio with hosts Revsine, Pizzo and Hall and a rotating slate of analysts.
  • ·         The Journey: Big Ten Basketball 2014 – Airing Sundays and debuting  on Jan. 12, 2014

BTN will televise 67 men’s conference basketball matchups this season, including four Big Ten Tournament games and an additional number of non-conference games. BTN’s “Super Wednesday” lineup, sponsored by Buffalo Wild Wings, will feature key matchups all season long. In addition, the network will have games on Tuesdays and Thursdays, presented by Quicken Loans, and frequent doubleheaders on Saturdays and Sundays. Additionally, The Big Ten Tip-Off Show airs game days on Wednesdays and Saturdays and The Big Ten Finale airs on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Saturdays during the season.

BTN will air 43 conference, six non-conference and 10 Big Ten Women’s Basketball Tournament games this season. The women’s basketball season will tip off at Noon ET on Nov. 17 with defending Big Ten Champion Penn State hosting eight-time NCAA Champion Connecticut.  The Big Ten Women’s Sports Report airs before games on Thursdays during conference play.

 

About BTN: A joint venture between the Big Ten Conference and Fox Networks, BTN is the first internationally distributed network dedicated to covering one of the premier collegiate conferences in the country. With more than 800 events, all in HD, the 24/7 network is the ultimate destination for Big Ten fans and alumni across the country, allowing them to see their favorite teams, regardless of where they live. BTN2Go is the 24/7 simulcast of BTN that delivers live and on-demand programming via the internet, smartphones and tablets to customers of participating video providers. Events include football, men’s and women’s basketball games; dozens of Big Ten Olympic sports and championship events; studio shows; and classic games. The network televises and streams more Olympic sporting events and women’s sports than has ever been aired on any other network. Original programming highlights activities and accomplishments of some of the nation’s finest universities. The groundbreaking Student U initiative provides real-world experience for students interested in careers in sports television. The network is in more than 52 million homes across the United States and Canada, including carriage by all the major video distributors, such as DIRECTV, DISH, Verizon FiOS, AT&T U-Verse, Charter Communications, Comcast Xfinity, Time Warner Cable, Cablevision, Cox Communications, Mediacom, RCN, WOW!, Rogers Cable, Shaw and Shaw Direct (Canada) and approximately 300 additional video providers across North America. For additional information, go to www.BTN.com.

NPCC Lady Knights Head to Region IX Division II Tournament

NPCC-Knights-LogoThe North Platte Community College Lady Knights volleyball team (20-13) heads to Beatrice Thursday morning to begin play in the Region IX Division II Tournament. No. 14 Central Community College Lady Raiders (25-10), the Southeast Community College Lady Storm (12-17) and the Dawson Community College Lady Buccaneers (6-25) are competing for the Region IX Division II crown.

The four teams will play a round-robin with the top two teams advancing to a Championship game. Whoever emerges from the round-robin with the #1 seed will need to be beaten twice by the #2 seed to earn the Region IX Division II Tournament Title.

On Thursday October 31 the Lady Knights will face host Southeast Community College at 7 p.m. to open the round-robin portion of the tournament. The Lady Knights have defeated the Lady Storm twice this season defeating Southeast in four sets on the road (27-29, 25-18, 25-19, 25-23) and five sets at home (24-26, 25-11, 20-25, 25-20, 15-13).

The Lady Knights return to action Friday morning as they play No. 14 Central Community College at 11 a.m. The Lady Knights have split with the Lady Raiders in their two meetings this season as they won at home in five (15-25, 28-26, 25-22, 19-25, 15-13) and lost on the road in three (16-25, 20-25, 21-25).

The Lady Knights will conclude the round-robin portion of the tournament as against Dawson Community College at 7 p.m. Friday evening. The Lady Knights have not faced the Lady Buccaneers yet this season.

North Platte’s matches on Friday can be heard on ESPN Radio 1410 with Robert Lovell on the call.

Should the Lady Knights finish in the top two teams after the round-robin they will play on Saturday October 2 at 1 p.m. for the Region IX Championship with the No. 2 seed needing to win two games to capture the title. The winner will advance to the District G Playoff to compete for a birth in the National Division II Tournament. The championship will also be heard on ESPN Radio 1410 if the Lady Knights are playing for the title.

David Greig Hurst


hurst

David Greig Hurst, 43, of Waco, Texas, peacefully passed away on Oct. 26, 2013. He was a son, a brother, a friend, a husband, but most importantly a father.

David Hurst was born in Houston, Texas, on Oct. 21, 1970. He graduated from Lamar High School and continued on to receive his Bachelor of Science degree at Emory University. He then advanced to receive his doctor of medicine at Texas Tech University and his resident in emergency medicine at the University of Kentucky. That is where he met Dana Aynes Hurst, of Columbus, Ohio, whom he married on Nov. 8, 2003.

It was from there that David started his professional career as an emergency room physician for eight years at Great Plains Regional Medical Center in North Platte. His heart was in the Sandhills and his passions were hunting, golfing, baseball and skiing. David and Dana started their family in North Platte, welcoming both Audrey and Parker into their lives in 2008 and 2010.

From North Platte, David and Dana moved to Waco, Texas, where David became the emergency room physician and director of Hillcrest/Scott and White Hospital. Many describe him as compassionate, a joy to work with, a mentor and someone who always displayed a positive attitude. The stories many have shared about David will carry on as his, to be shared with David and Dana’s children and give them memories of their father that will never die.

Although some may say David lost his battle with brain cancer, many that support and love him say he won and gained. By sharing his journey, he connected more than 4,000 individuals through his story. David’s is a story that is defined with living. He showed us to not let cancer declare your life, but to let your faith and love make your life. It is believed by his family, friends and “Team Hurst” members across the country, that David is peacefully in heaven glorifying the Father he glorified on this earth.

He was preceded in death by his grandparents, Hubert L. Pitts, Audrey Pitts-Kirkindoll, Ben Morris Hurst Jr. and Jewel C. Hurst.

David is survived by his mother and father, Ben Morris Hurst III and Carolyn Pitts Hurst, of Houston, Texas; his wife, Dana; two children, Audrey Aynesley Hurst, 5, Parker Benjamin Hurst, 3; his siblings, Charles Hurst and Kathryn Oster, of Houston, Texas; his nieces and nephews; and the rest of his relatives and friends.

The family suggests memorial contributions be made to the David Hurst Memorial online at wepay.com/donations/14639823 or to send a check, please make payable to UBS Financial David Hurst Memorial and mail to: UBS Financial Services, PO Box 23049, Waco, TX 76702. Funds for the memorial will go to several organizations where David’s memory will be carried on, including a remission bell at the new Hillcrest Cancer Center in Waco, Texas. Online condolences may be shared at WilkirsonHatchBailey.com.

Services will be at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 2, at First Baptist Church Woodway with Pastor Brady Herbert of Harris Creek Church, officiating. Wilkirson-Hatch-Bailey is in charge of arrangements.

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