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Authorities say 19-year-old man drowned in Nebraska lake

Hall-County-SheriffGRAND ISLAND, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say a 19-year-old man has drowned in a private sand-pit lake in Hall County.

The Hall County Sheriff’s Department said in a news release that deputies responded to a call of a man in the water around 6:15 a.m. Sunday.

About three hours later, the body of Devon Klein, of Grand Island, was pulled from the water.

Members of the Grand Island Rural Fire Department, Grand Island Fire Department, and both the Grand Island and Kearney Dive Rescue Teams helped in the recovery of Klein’s body.

Authorities continue to investigate the circumstances of Klein’s drowning, and an autopsy has been ordered.

Zoo officials: Nebraska safari park in line for overhaul

henry-doorly-zooASHLAND, Neb. (AP) — The Henry Doorly Zoo & Aquarium is planning to overhaul its safari park near Ashland, but officials have not announced what those plans will entail.

Zoo CEO and executive director Dennis Pate said he and his staff have started working on a master plan to reconfigure the Lee G. Simmons Conservation Park and Wildlife Safari.

The plan is due out by the end of the year.

The $3.5 million park opened in June 1998, focusing on North American species. It now features animals such as bison, black bears, eagles, wolves, elk, deer and sandhill cranes.

It is open seasonally from spring until fall and drew 143,668 attendees last year.

Gibbon center placed on National Register of Historic Places

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GIBBON, Neb. (AP) — The Gibbon Heritage Center, built more than 125 years ago, has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The center was originally built in 1889 as the Gibbon Baptist Church. The red brick, Gothic-style structure was built with the labor of men in the congregation.

In 1966, the congregation outgrew the building, and local business owners D.E. and Lillian McGregor bought it.

The building was used for various purposes until May 12, 1975, when the McGregors presented the deed to the city and established an annual building maintenance gift.

The building now contains collections of photographs and archives of histories of organizations, clubs and churches, as well as a collection of Gibbon Reporter newspapers dating to the late 1800s.

2 Nebraskans charged with taking stolen vehicles to Iowa

Jail-Bars-and-Cuffs_mediumCOUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — Two Nebraska residents have been arrested in Iowa, accused of taking three stolen vehicles on a camping trip.

35-year-old Mark Berlett, of Omaha, and 26-year-old Brooke Vacanti, of La Vista, were arrested around 4:15 p.m. Wednesday at Hitchcock Nature Center in Honey Creek.

Berlett is charged with theft and a second offense of operating while intoxicated. Vacanti is charged with theft, possession of illegal prescription pills and of drug paraphernalia.

Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s deputies say they found a sport utility vehicle, a pickup and a travel trailer — all of which had been reported stolen — at the pair’s campsite.

Both remained at the Pottawattamie County Jail on Saturday and could not be reached for comment..

Nebraska wildlife management area ends target shooting

Nebraska_game_and_parksNEBRASKA CITY, Neb. (AP) — State officials have announced that target shooting will no longer be allowed at a southeastern Nebraska wildlife management area.

Hamburg Bend Wildlife Management Area in Otoe County is now closed to target shooting.

The Nebraska Game and Parks Commission says the closure comes at the request of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which owns the property, as well a sanitary improvement district that managed the Missouri River levee on the site.

They asked that target shooting be prohibited because of safety concerns for neighboring landowners and area users, as well as erosion of the river levee.

Target shooting is permitted on wildlife management areas in the state unless restricted or prohibited by posted signs or by special area regulations.

Officials nix reopening Elkhorn River access points

elkhorn-riverOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Officials say Papio-Missouri River NRD Elkhorn River access parks in eastern Nebraska will not reopen as planned Saturday.

The parks have been closed due to high water in the river causing potentially hazardous boating conditions.

NRD General Manager John Winkler says in a news release that unexpected heavy rain overnight Friday and early Saturday has again raised water levels in the Elkhorn River. Winkler says officials hate to close the sites during the Father’s Day weekend, but “public safety has to rule the day.”

The sites remaining closed include Elkhorn Crossing near 252nd Street and Bennington Road, Graske Crossing off West Dodge Road and the West Maple Road site.

Burned out building could be ready for retailers next spring

fireOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The owner of a downtown Omaha building severely damaged by fire last winter says it could be rebuilt and ready for retail occupants as soon as next spring.

Mark Mercer, owner of the building, says Nouvelle Eve, a women’s boutique that had been in the building’s southwest corner, might be able to move back next spring or summer.

He says the space that once held the popular M’s Pub will take longer to reconstruct. Mercer and his wife, Vera, lost their home on the top floor of the building.

City of Omaha officials and safety regulators have said a Minnesota excavation company caused the fire when they struck a natural gas line Jan. 9 in front M’s Pub in the Old Market area.

$20M grant to UNL seeks to improve crop productivity

UNLLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The University of Nebraska-Lincoln has been awarded a $20 million grant over five years to lead a Nebraska-based research effort focused on improving crop productivity.

The grant was awarded by the National Science Foundation’s Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research. It will fund the new Center for Root and Rhizobiome Innovation.

Researchers from UNL, the University of Nebraska Medical Center, University of Nebraska at Kearney and Doane University in Crete will study root and soil microbe interactions. The hope is to develop new biological tools to improve crop performance.

The grant will also fund three new faculty positions, two at UNL and one at UNK.

The team initially will focus on corn, but their findings and biological tools will be applied to studying and improving other crops, including soybeans.

Toxic algae warning issued at Harlan County Reservoir

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REPUBLICAN CITY, Neb. (AP) — State officials have issued a health advisory at Harlan County Reservoir after high levels of toxic blue-green algae were detected earlier this week.

Meanwhile, a health advisory issued earlier this month at Pawnee Lake in eastern Nebraska has been lifted.

The elevated algae levels at Harlan County Reservoir were detected during testing by the Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality. During this same round of testing, blue-green algae levels at Pawnee Lake were shown to have dropped to normal levels.

Visitors to Harlan County Reservoir should avoid full body contact activities such as swimming, wading, skiing and jet skiing. Boating, fishing and camping have been deemed safe.

The lake will be tested weekly through the summer months, and the health advisory will be lifted if the algae levels return to normal.

Ex-police officer accused of con job over medical expenses

hastings-police-goodHASTINGS, Neb. (AP) — A former Hastings police detective has been accused of conning people out of thousands of dollars to pay what he said were medical expenses that officials say were covered by insurance.

Court records say 46-year-old Jerry Esch is charged with theft. A Hastings phone listed for Esch is no longer in service. Court records don’t list the name of an attorney who could speak on his behalf.

Nebraska State Patrol investigators say in court documents that Esch wrote a deceptive post on an internet crowdfunding website, asking for help in paying $27,000 in medical expenses not covered by insurance during his battle with melanoma. His doctors had to amputate part of his right leg.

But Hastings officials told investigators that Esch’s story didn’t square with the city’s policy for police.

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