Craig Louis Baxter, age 28 of North Platte departed this life on January 4, 2016 in Lincoln, NE.
Craig was born on August 28, 1987 to Dr. Kim and Nancy (Pelster) Baxter in North Platte, NE. He attended McDaid Elementary School and graduated in 2006 from St. Patrick’s High School. While at St. Pat’s, he participated in football and basketball, as well as vocal music and many other sports and activities, including Student Council and National Honor Society. He was selected to the All-District Football Team and was chosen by his teammates to be co-captain of the St. Pat’s football team his senior year. He also received numerous music awards at conference and district competitions and was selected to All-State Chorus, as well as the UNK Honor Choir and the UNK Festival Choir. While in high school, he was selected to attend Boys State, as well as RYLA (Rotary Youth Leadership Award) camp where he won the individual talent competition.
Craig was very active at St. Patrick’s Church where, while growing up, he served as a music leader with his dad and Mikaela, his sister, eventually becoming an individual music leader as well. He had an exceptional talent for music, playing guitar and singing. His passion for music led him to become a natural performer and he put that to good use in many ways, often sharing his talent for charitable events and those honoring our veterans. He became an accomplished song writer as well and often incorporated many of his own original songs into his performances.
Following high school, Craig attended the University of Nebraska, where he earned his Bachelor’s Degree in Biology in 2011. While at UNL, Craig was a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. For three consecutive years Craig headlined “Concert for a Cause”, a charity fundraiser which he conceived himself and organized with the help of his fraternity brothers. This charity generated substantial funds for various worthy causes, including the TeamMates Mentoring Program. He was also selected to represent UNL as a member of their New Student Enrollment team, where he helped write and produce skits to help educate new students on college life. He took on a big role as a performer in many of these skits and also gave campus tours for new students and their family members.
Following graduation from UNL, Craig was accepted to attend the Southern College of Optometry (SCO) in Memphis, TN and was just beginning his final clinical externship when he passed away. He was scheduled to graduate this coming May and will be receiving an Honorary Doctorate degree posthumously at SCO’s commencement ceremony.
Craig definitely had a very giving heart. This showed through with his many close friends who have recalled how Craig was always there for them, reaching out to them whenever they were going through any sort of personal struggles, offering his support and love to them. This same caring heart guided him toward mission work, having traveled to Russia as a member of a UNL Catholic FOCUS mission trip to a very poor area of that country. Even prior to that, he had accompanied his dad on several different eye care mission trips to a number of underdeveloped countries. Through these experiences, he gained an even stronger sensitivity for the poor and underprivileged and he came to realize how good it made him feel to be of service to others. This is primarily what led him to pursue a career in optometry.
Craig had many passions in life besides the aforementioned and they almost always involved spending quality time with his family and friends. He loved snowboarding, downhill and cross country skiing, hiking, bicycling and backpacking. Upon graduation from SCO, he had planned on bicycling around the coast of Ireland, partly with his dad. He was a strong Husker football fan and an avid Green Bay Packer fan. He particularly admired Aaron Rogers, not only for his athleticism, but also for his humility and character.
Survivors include his parents, Dr. Kim and Nancy Baxter; his sister Mikaela (Dave) Meagher; his grandmother Anne Baxter; numerous uncles and aunts; as well as many cousins and close friends, and his beloved dog Bailey.
He was preceded in death by his grandparents, W. Neal Baxter and Leonard & Christine Pelster; and his aunt Jeannie Pelster.
In lieu of flowers, memorials are suggested to North Platte Catholic Schools, St. Patrick’s Catholic Church, Mid-Nebraska Community Foundation’s “Dr. Kim & Nancy Baxter Family Fund” for disadvantaged children, or the donor’s choice. Online condolences may be shared at www.adamsswanson.com. Christian Wake services will be at 7:00 p.m. Friday January 15, 2016 at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church. Mass of Christian Burial will be 11:00 a.m. Saturday January 16, 2016 at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church with the Reverend James Golka as Celebrant. Burial will follow at the North Platte Cemetery. Closed casket visitation will be from 9:00 a.m. until 9:00 p.m. Thursday January 14th and from 9:00 a.m. until 2:00 p.m. Friday January 15th at Adams & Swanson Funeral Home, which is in charge of arrangements.
Month: January 2016
Nebraska Woman Accused in Baseball Bat Assault Imprisoned
GERING, Neb. (AP) — A Scottsbluff woman accused of using a bat to beat a man over a drug debt last July has been sent to prison.
Court records say 50-year-old Angel Bering was sentenced on Monday to seven to 12 years in prison. She’d pleaded no contest and was convicted of two felonies: assault and use of a weapon. She was credited with 165 days already served.
Bering also is known as Tracy Bering.
Authorities say she struck the man because he owed her $1,400 for methamphetamine. Two men with Bering were charged with misdemeanor assault. Authorities say they used a knife to cut the back of the drug customer’s head and hit and kicked him.
Mom Files Lawsuit Over Drug Death of York County Inmate
YORK, Neb. (AP) — York County, its sheriff and a hospital have been sued by the mother of a man who died in May 2014 after being arrested for driving while under the influence of drugs.
The lawsuit filed by Patricia Jensen says jailers knew her son, 24-year-old Tyler Crespi, had taken drugs but didn’t give him proper medical care. Sheriff Dale Radcliff declined to comment on the lawsuit.
The lawsuit says jailers monitored Crespi in his cell instead of getting him medical treatment. The lawsuit also says Crespi eventually was found unresponsive and taken to the hospital, where he died of an overdose.
Man Gets 44-50 Years for Omaha Drug Deal Slaying
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A 26-year-old man has been imprisoned for his role in the drug deal slaying of another Omaha resident.
Online court records say Absalom Scott was sentenced on Tuesday in Douglas County District Court to 44 to 50 years in prison. He’d pleaded guilty to being an accessory to murder and possession of a firearm by a felon.
Scott and two other men were arrested after 59-year-old Frank Sanders was fatally shot in his home on July 20, 2014. Scott’s charges were reduced after he made a deal with prosecutors to testify against one of his accomplices.
Colfax County Deputy Dies in Accident Involving Deer Carcass
ROGERS, Neb. (AP) — A Colfax County deputy has died in a highway accident involving a deer near Rogers.
Colfax County Attorney Denise Kracl says 36-year-old deputy Dan Coughlin of Fremont was driving eastbound on Highway 30 Tuesday morning when his car struck a deer carcass in the road. The force from striking the deer caused the vehicle to cross the center line and collide with a westbound car.
LifeNet Air Medical Services and Schuyler Fire and Rescue provided medical care, but Coughlin was pronounced dead at the scene. Colfax County Sheriff’s Department and Nebraska State Patrol also assisted at the scene.
Coughlin had just completed his 12-hour shift at the Colfax County Sheriff’s Department before the accident.
The driver of the other car was treated at a hospital and released.
Nebraska State Patrol is investigating.
Huskers Top Gophers, 84-59

Lincoln – Shavon Shields’ 24 points and eight rebounds paced Nebraska to an 84-59 romp of Minnesota Tuesday evening.
Shields, who was making his 100th consecutive start for the Huskers, scored 19 of his points in the first half on 6-of-9 shooting, as the Huskers raced to a 21-point halftime lead.
Nebraska took control midway through the first half, using a 29-4 spurt to erase an early deficit, behind Shields, who scored nine points in the run to help NU take a 20-point lead in the first 14 minutes of the contest. Continue reading “Huskers Top Gophers, 84-59”
North Platte Weather-January 13
Mildred Lorraine Gade
Mildred Lorraine Gade, age 91, of Oberlin, KS, formerly of Sutherland, NE, passed away Monday, January 11, 2016, in Kansas.
Mildred was born November 5, 1924, to Roy Ellison and Alta Isabell Ward Walker in North Platte, NE where she grew up. Mildred graduated from North Platte High School with the Class of 1943. She then worked for United Airlines in Cheyenne, WY during World War II doing maintenance and fueling.
On April 13, 1946, Mildred married Victor Theodore Gade at Marysville, KS. They lived in North Platte until 1955 when they moved to Denver, CO. In 1978 they returned to Nebraska and settled in Sutherland. After 56 years of marriage Victor passed away in 2002. Mildred later moved to Kansas to be closer to their son.
Mildred was a member of the Sutherland Senior Center and Grace Lutheran Church and had recently joined Immanuel Lutheran Church in Norton, KS.
She leaves behind her children, Ron (Ruthanne) Gade and Patricia Sedlmayer, all of Loveland, CO, and Terry (Sandra) Gade, of Norcatur, KS; nine grandchildren, Alan (Jennifer) Gade, Brian Gade (Kim Newman), Amy (Pete) Vandervort, Adam Sedlmayer (Rachel), Nicholas Gade, Chavvahn Gade, Benjamin Gade, Stephen Gade and Laurence Spoo; five great-grandchildren, Bowen, Sydney, Stephen, Jordyn and Madeleine; her sister, Joan Driggs, of North Platte; and other family.
Along with her husband, Victor, Mildred was preceded in death by their son, Theodore Gade; and her parents, Roy and Alta Walker.
Funeral Service will be 1 p.m. Friday, January 15, 2016, at Grace Lutheran Church in Sutherland with Pastor Erin Dunlavy officiating. Burial will follow in Fort McPherson National Cemetery. Visitation will be 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday at Odean Colonial Chapel at C & Sycamore which is in charge of arrangements. Condolences may also be shared at odeanchapel.com. The family has established a memorial.
Iowa, Nebraska Post Record Corn, Soybean Crops

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — It is a record year for Iowa and Nebraska crop farmers.
The final harvest report released Tuesday by the U.S. Department of Agriculture says Iowa farmers brought in 2.5 billion bushels of corn, 4 percent higher than the 2009 record. Iowa has led the nation in corn production for 22 consecutive years. The average per-acre yield of 192 bushels also is a new record.
Soybean farmers did very well too producing a record crop and the nation’s largest soybean bounty, beating out Illinois for the first time since 2012. At 554 million bushels, this year’s Iowa soybean harvest exceeds the 2005 record by 5 percent. The per-acre yield also beat the 2005 record.
Nebraska also produced records with 1.69 billion bushels of corn and a 306 million bushel of soybeans.
Ex-Nebraska Bank Manager Sentenced for Embezzling $323K
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A former bank manager who admitted embezzling more than $323,000 from a branch in Wahoo has been sentenced to five years’ probation.
Deborah Gilg, the U.S. Attorney for Nebraska, said in written release Tuesday that 65-year-old Margaret Cherovsky was sentenced Monday in a federal courtroom in Omaha.
Prosecutors say FirstBank of Nebraska officials learned in 2014 that money was missing and discovered that Cherovsky had been depositing varying amounts over the previous 20 years into her accounts. Officials say she faked bank records to show that the money was mutilated or otherwise damaged and could no longer be circulated.
Cherovsky pleaded guilty in October after making a deal with prosecutors. Court records say Cherovsky paid back the more than $323,000 she had taken.


