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Dale Eugene Dike

Dale Eugene Dike, age 76 formerly of Hershey, NE, passed away Monday June 18, 2018 at Tiffany Square Care Center in Grand Island, NE.

Dale was born November 20, 1941 in North Platte, NE to Carl and Hazel (Ross) Dike.  He graduated from Sutherland High School with the class of 1960.  He joined the Army and served from August 1960 thru August 1963.  He married Twilla May Keslar on June 5, 1965.  Dale worked as a switchman at the Union Pacific Railroad.  He was active in the community of Hershey, being a member of the Fire Department, School Board, Village Board, Booster Club, American Legion and a member of the United Methodist Church Board.  He was also on the Sutherland Golf Board.  He loved Husker sports and practically lived at the golf course after his retirement.  Over the years he coached his wife and daughters’ softball teams.  He was actively involved with all his families’ activities and rarely missed an event.

Dale is survived by his wife Twilla of Grand Island; daughters Crystal (Rodney) VerHagen of Grand Island and Diana (Dallas) Zimmer of Bellevue; grandchildren Matt (Clarissa) VerHagen of Grand Island, Tanner (Mindy) VerHagen of Potter, and Austin and Zachary Zimmer of Bellevue; great grandchildren Jaser and T’LelaMae Rivera and Brooke, Chloe, Kaydence and Kolton VerHagen; siblings Don Dike, Marion (Donna) Dike, Lyle (Sharon) Dike, Ron (Sue) Dike, Lois McConnell, Mary (Wilber) Medbery; brother-in-law Cliff (Cindy) Keslar; sisters-in-law Joyce Penner and Judy Dike; as well as numerous nieces, nephews, and friends.

He was preceded in death by his parents Carl and Hazel Dike; mother-in-law Dorothy Keslar-Cobb; father-in-law George Keslar; father-in-law Floyd Cobb; brother Ivan Dike; brothers-in-law Forrest McConnell and Frank Keslar; and sisters-in-law Christine Dike and Deana Keslar.

Memorials are suggested in his name and online condolences may be shared at www.adamsswanson.com.  Funeral services will be 10:00 a.m. Thursday June 21, 2018 at the Hershey Methodist Church with Reverend Mark Baldwin officiating.  Burial will follow at Floral Lawns Memorial Gardens with military honors.  Visitation will be from noon until 8:00 p.m. Wednesday June 20, 2018 with Family Receiving Friends from 5:00 until 7:00 at Adams and Swanson Funeral Home which is in charge of arrangements.

Mary C. Higgins

Mary C. Higgins, age 62 of North Platte, passed away Tuesday June 19, 2018 at University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.  Christian Wake Services will be held 7:00 p.m. Friday June 22, 2018 at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church.  Mass of Christian Burial will be held 10:00 a.m. Saturday June 23, 2018 at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church with the Reverend Josh Brown as Celebrant.  Burial will follow at Floral Lawns Memorial Gardens.  Visitation will be Friday from noon until 5:00 p.m. at Adams and Swanson Funeral Home which is in charge of arrangements.

Nebraska advances execution plans despite secrecy concerns

By GRANT SCHULTE ,  Associated Press
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska officials are forging ahead with plans to execute the state’s longest-serving death-row inmate without disclosing where they obtained lethal injection drugs, despite a judge’s order this week to identify their supplier.

The Nebraska attorney general appealed the judge’s ruling on Tuesday as it pushes in a separate case to set a July 10 execution date for Carey Dean Moore.

State officials are scrambling to execute Moore before their supply of a key execution drug expires in August, while simultaneously fighting a legal battle that could force them to reveal who gave them the drugs. Gov. Pete Ricketts’ administration also has sued the Legislature to block a subpoena that would force the state corrections director to testify about Nebraska’s execution protocol.

Ricketts and Attorney General Doug Peterson have said the state is long overdue to execute Moore, 60, who has spent nearly four decades on death row for the 1979 shooting deaths of two Omaha cab drivers. But a leading death penalty critic contends state officials want to execute an inmate before the November election — and before they’re forced to disclose how they obtained their drugs.

“If they got these drugs in a legitimate way from a legitimate provider, then all they’d have to do is ask for another batch,” said Sen. Ernie Chambers, of Omaha. “If everything was legitimate, the supplier would say, ‘Sure, coming right up.'”

Chambers said the request to have the Nebraska Supreme Court set an execution date is politically motivated, given promises by the Republican governor and attorney general to revive capital punishment and their pending re-election bids this year. Ricketts and Peterson have denied the allegations, saying they’re trying to carry out the will of voters.

Nebraska’s last execution took place in 1997, using the electric chair, and the state has failed to carry out any others because of legal challenges and lack of access to the required drugs. Lawmakers abolished capital punishment in 2015, overriding Ricketts’ veto during his first year in office. But voters reinstated it the following year through a petition drive partially financed by the governor.

On Monday, a judge ordered the Department of Correctional Services to release public records that could identify the state’s supplier, including invoices, photographs of the drugs’ packaging, and correspondence between state officials and the supplier. Judge Jodi Nelson also ruled that the state can withhold any documents that directly identify members of Nebraska’s execution team, whose identities are confidential under state law.

The order came in response to lawsuits filed by the American Civil Liberties Union of Nebraska and the state’s two largest newspapers, the Omaha World-Herald and Lincoln Journal Star, after state prison officials denied their requests for the records.

“We appreciate that Nebraskans of goodwill hold divergent viewpoints on the death penalty, but the citizens’ referendum did not grant permission to state officials to cloak the death penalty in secrecy,” said Danielle Conrad, the ACLU of Nebraska’s executive director. The order to release the records “ensures transparency and accountability as the state seeks to carry out its most grave function.”

Corrections department officials have traditionally released such records without objection, and a bill that would have given them the legal authority to withhold them stalled in the Legislature last year. The Nebraska attorney general’s office argued that releasing the records could eventually lead to identifying an execution team member.

In April 2017, The Associated Press used a records request to identify and contact the manufacturer of one of Nebraska’s lethal injection drugs to see if the company was aware of how the department planned to use them.

A spokesman said the company never wanted its drugs to be used in executions and only sold it to Nebraska corrections officials because one of its distributors made a mistake. Fresenius Kabi spokesman Matt Kuhn said the company discovered the error through an internal audit and asked state officials to return the drug, but the state refused.

Suzanne Gage, a spokeswoman for Attorney General Doug Peterson, said state attorneys were pleased that the state doesn’t have to disclose records that identify execution team members.

“We respectfully disagree with the court’s analysis on the remaining records and plan to appeal,” she said.

Spokespeople for Ricketts and the Department of Correctional Services did not immediately return messages seeking comment.

Nebraska’s situation is unique among states with the death penalty because lawmakers have never given the department permission to withhold such records, said Robert Dunham, executive director of the Washington-based Death Penalty Information Center. Other state legislatures have enacted so-called shield laws to keep their suppliers’ identities confidential. Supporters say shield laws protect suppliers from intimidation and harassment by death penalty opponents, but Dunham described the practice as troubling.

“This is the type of questionable activity that undermines public confidence in the institution of capital punishment,” said Dunham, whose group has criticized the way states carry out executions. “We shouldn’t be hiding this information from the public when they have an interest in making sure the process is carried out fairly.”

Volunteer fire district near Lincoln needs more volunteers

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — There haven’t been any volunteers to answer calls for help in a fire and rescue district near Lincoln three times this year, and it could happen again.

The Southwest Fire and Rescue needs at least 10 more volunteers to cover the district serving more than 75 square miles (194 square kilometers) west and southwest of Lincoln, the Lincoln Journal Star reported.

Assistant Chief Adam Powers said it’s the first time in his 18 years working for Southwest that the station has let calls go unanswered, requiring a neighboring squad to respond. The district has seen its number of volunteer and EMTs drop almost by half to 21 since Powers joined, he said.

Volunteers are retiring or aging out while fewer new members are replacing them, Powers said. The district’s land area has also seen its population increase from 4,200 in 2000 to more than 4,500 this year.

“The constituents in our district get a hell of a deal for free. We hang our hat on that,” Powers said. “But if we can’t get people to volunteer, we would have to request a raise in our tax levy to fund someone being around the station during the day to take those calls.”

Losing volunteers is a common issue for many of the nearly 375 volunteer departments in Nebraska, said Bill Lundy, secretary-treasurer of the Nebraska State Volunteer Firefighters Association.

“But a lot of people don’t realize that in the state of Nebraska, if you call 911 for medical or fire, 80 percent of those (calls) are being responded to by volunteer fire departments,” Lundy said.

Southwest Fire and Rescue posted an online survey last week seeking input from its patrons and sharing information about operating a volunteer squad over such a large area. The district plans to hold several town hall meetings to share survey results and solicit feedback in September.

 

Nebraska State College board approves raises for leadership

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska State College Board of Trustees has approved raises for top leaders of the state college system.

The trustees gave approval Tuesday for 1.5 percent raises during a meeting at Hillcrest Country Club in Lincoln.

The move means Chancellor Stan Carpenter, who oversees the three-college system and has announced plans to retire, will be paid $270,589 if he works the full fiscal year. Carpenter was paid $266,590 this past year.

Peru State President Dan Hanson will receive $200,554, up from $197,590. Wayne State President Marysz Rames will make $212,227, up from $209,090. And Chadron State President Randy Rhine will earn $195,249, up from $192,363.

The raises match the 1.5 percent increase given to professional staff and faculty. Support staff will get 1 percent raises.

Man who sent strippers to neighbor’s home sentenced for porn

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A west Omaha man imprisoned for sending prostitutes dozens of times to strip on a neighbor’s front porch been sentenced for possessing child pornography.

Records say 46-year-old Douglas Goldsberry was given six years in prison on Monday in U.S. District Court in Omaha. He must serve 10 years of supervised release after leaving prison. He’ll serve his federal time at the same time he serves his state sentence.

Goldsberry had pleaded no contest in September to pandering. Authorities say Goldsberry hired prostitutes to bare their breasts and strip on his neighbor’s porch while

Goldsberry watched from his house. The family with two small children reported that women had shown up as many as 75 times since 2013.

Investigators of that case found the porn on two of Goldsberry’s digital devices.

Barbara Adams (Noble) German

Barbara Adams (Noble) German, 86, passed away May 19, 2018, in Colorado Springs, Colorado, after a short illness, with her husband, Cal, and other family members at her side.

Barbara was born in Lexington on Dec. 25, 1931, the third of James Curran and Helen Margaret (Jorgensen) Adams’ four daughters. Barbara grew up in North Platte, graduating from North Platte Senior High School in 1950, where she was active in vocal and instrumental music and was valedictorian of her graduating class. After high school, Barbara followed her two older sisters to the University of Nebraska in Lincoln, where she was a member of the Pi Beta Phi Sorority, Mortar Board, Phi Beta Kappa Society and editor of the 1954 University of Nebraska Cornhusker Yearbook.

In 1952, her father James C. Adams, a county agent and agriculture specialist, was invited by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations to spend a year working with farmers throughout Europe as they continued their recovery from the devastation of World War II. Along with her father, mother and younger sister, Barbara, she spent part of the 1952 school year living in Rome, Italy. After returning to Nebraska from Italy, Barbara continued her studies at the University of Nebraska, graduating with an honors degree in journalism in 1954.

While at the University of Nebraska, Barbara met fellow University of Nebraska student Donald Dale Noble of Holdrege, who became her first husband in 1954. After Don graduated pharmacy school and completed a ROTC military commitment, she and Don returned to Holdrege, where Don joined his father as a pharmacist and co-owner of Noble Rexall Drug Store. Barbara worked as a journalist and writer before starting a family. She and Don were the parents of three sons, Todd (1957), David (1959) and Jeffrey (1962). In addition to her roles as a busy mother to her growing family, a partner with Don in guiding the success of Noble Rexall Drug Store and an active volunteer and leader in the Holdrege community, Barbara also found time to serve on the Holdrege Public Schools Board of Education, including a term as the Board’s president. It is also during this time that both Barbara and Don came to know Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior.

Barbara’s life entered a period of challenge in 1969 when Don contracted a bacterial infection that put him in the hospital for several weeks and nearly ended his life. While Don survived this close call with death, his heart was permanently weakened by the infection to the point that he eventually died of congestive heart failure in 1976. With Don’s death, Barbara became a single parent to three boys and the major source of emotional support to Don’s parents who had just lost their only child. Through her Christian faith, Barbara served as a pillar of strength and encouragement to her children, her in-laws and others affected by Don’s death even though she was still grieving over the loss of Don herself.

In 1977, Barbara was reintroduced to an acquaintance from her days in Lexington and North Platte, Calvin K German, who had lost his wife, Jenny, to a brief illness around the same time as Don’s death. Barbara and Cal’s renewed acquaintance soon became a long-distance courtship with Cal running his large farming and ranching operation near Imperial while Barbara was living in Holdrege. Barbara and Cal married in Holdrege during the summer of 1978, beginning an almost 40-year union that only ended with her recent death. Barbara and Cal put together a blended family — her three sons and his three sons and two daughters — while living apart for most of the first three years of their marriage so that Barbara’s youngest son, Jeffrey, could finish high school in Holdrege. This required Cal’s three youngest children to move to Holdrege during the school year to live with Barbara and attend school in Holdrege while Cal stayed in Imperial operating the ranch. Barbara and Cal’s Christian faith and commitment to their children sustained their families through to Jeffrey’s high school graduation in 1981, after which Barbara permanently relocated to Imperial.

Barbara’s passions in life were music, the University of Nebraska, her family and most importantly, her Christian faith. Barbara indulged in each of these passions over the course of her life. She was a talented piano player and vocalist who enthusiastically lent her musical skills to schools, churches, choirs and anyone else needing an accompanist, singer or music director. She was active in the University of Nebraska Alumni Association, serving on the Board of the Alumni Association for many years, including a term as Alumni Association President. She was a beloved wife, mother and grandmother to her family and blessed visitors to her ranch home in Imperial with her warm hospitality, delicious meals and sincere love. But most importantly to her, Barbara loved her Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, and living for Him became her greatest priority in life after becoming a Christian. Barbara served Him in many ways at Imperial Bible Church, led numerous Bible studies, hosted many missionaries and spoke at Christian Women’s Clubs around Nebraska. Barbara was also instrumental in bringing the Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA) to Imperial by starting the FCA Huddle in Imperial and later serving for many years on the Nebraska State FCA Board. Barbara’s impact on the FCA in Nebraska continues to this day, as current Nebraska State FCA Director Chris Bubak first got involved with the FCA while growing up in Imperial. Through Barbara’s loving demeanor and servant’s heart, she positively impacted many, many lives over her 86 years of life. Those who knew Barbara grieve her loss but also celebrate the light of Christ that she brought to the world around her and rejoice in knowing that she has gone home to be with her Lord.

Barbara was preceded in death by her parents, James and Helen Adams; her first husband, Donald Noble; her brother-in-law, Richard Kuska; and two of her stepsons, Scot and David German.

She is survived by her second husband, Cal German of Imperial and Colorado Springs; her three sons, Todd (Bernadette) of Colorado Springs, David (Margaret) and Jeffrey (Rachel), both of Centennial, Colorado; her three sisters, Janet (Larry) Lindgren of Camarillo, California, Marcia Kuska of Taos, New Mexico, and Cynthia (Roland) Hoover of Bethesda, Maryland; her stepchildren, Linda (widow of Scot) German of Lynden, Washington, Eric (Brenda) German of Imperial, Andrea German (Kent) Roberson and Sue Lyn (Ramico) Blackmon, both of Colorado Springs; and numerous grandchildren, great-grandchildren, cousins, nieces and nephews.

In lieu of flowers, memorials are suggested to the Nebraska Fellowship of Christian Athletes at nebraskafca.org.

Services will be at 1 p.m. on Saturday, June 23, at the Imperial Bible Church with her son, Pastor Jeffrey Noble of Centennial, officiating.

Verne E. Taylor

Verne E. Taylor, 83, passed away Jan. 6, 2018.

Verne E. Taylor was born on Feb. 24, 1935, in North Platte to Nellie Glen and Harry Clifford Taylor.

Verne was a member of Kappa Gappa at Gallaudet College, class of 1960, National Fraternal Society of the Deaf, National Association of the Deaf and Ohio Association of the Deaf.

He was preceded in death by brothers, Cecil, Lester and Kenneth.

Verne is survived by his son, Verne E. Taylor Jr., grandchild, Caroline Jacqueline Stevens, great-grandchildren, Chandler, Sky, Summer Jade, grandchildren, Chelsea (Gabe) Uring, Gabrielle (Sean) Guy, Verne III, John Michael and James; his son, David (Vicky), grandchild, Pam (Austin), great-granddaughters, Harlow and Lucie, grandchildren, Zachary (Bethany), and Jacob; his son, Ricky (Jill), grandchild, Kimberly, great-grandchildren, Zeke, Trinity, James, and Xavier, grandchild, Mathew (Chelsae), great-granddaughter, Daizy; his son, Tim, grandchildren, Martin, Clarice, Emmalin and Katelyn.

Memorials are suggested to the Verne Taylor Fund at Ohio Association of the Deaf, Inc. P.O. Box 16181, Rocky River, Ohio 44116.

Inurnment will be at noon on Saturday, June 16, at the Plainview Cemetery, Maxwell.

Harry Dale “Jack” Ostergard Death Notice

Harry Dale “Jack” Ostergard, 89, passed away May 16, 2018, after a brief illness.

Jack was born on April 1, 1929, the second son of Harry and Ilene Ostergard. Jack grew up with five brothers on a ranch in Custer County. He attended Gothenburg High School and was a member of the State Championship Football team, class of 1945.

Jack served in the U.S. Navy during the Korean conflict, predominantly on the USS Curtis AV4.

He returned home to wed Mary Norsworthy in 1952. To this union three children were born, Greg who died at 2½ months, Ann and Ross. Jack and Mary celebrated 65 years of marriage last summer.

On retirement from ranching in the late 1990s, Jack developed new passions in real estate and in writing cowboy poetry, producing several books and delivering his poetry and humor in seven states. In addition, he worked to preserve the history of small towns in Nebraska and to promote public art. He was a 32nd degree Mason and a Shriner.

In 2010, Jack was inducted into the Dawson County Cattleman’s Hall of Fame and in 2015 the Sandhill Cowboy Hall of Fame.

Preceding Jack in death were his parents; his son, Greg; brothers, Don (husband of Sue Ostergard), Jim (husband of Betty Ostergard) and Dick (husband of Connie Ostergard); his parents-in-law, Roscoe and Gail Norsworthy; sister-in-law, Virginia Norsworthy; brother-in-law, John Norsworthy; nephews, Douglas Norsworthy and Steve Ostergard.

Jack is survived by his wife, Mary; children, Ann (Carl) Weekley of Lake Placid, Florida, and Ross Ostergard; two brothers, Ron (Kayleen) Ostergard and Larry (widower of Joan Ostergard); sisters-in-law, Connie and Sue Ostergard; brother-in-law, James Norsworthy; along with numerous nieces and nephews and John Loostrom.

In lieu of flowers, memorials are suggested to the First United Methodist Church, Gothenburg Senior Center, Gothenburg Fire Department or the Custer County Museum.

Services will be at 11 a.m. on Friday, June 22, at the First United Methodist in Gothenburg. The memorial book may be signed from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Thursday, June 21, at Blase-Strauser Memorial Chapel, Gothenburg, which is in charge of arrangements.

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