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Mother With A Mission For An Overpass

An Omaha mother wants the city to build a pedestrian overpass at the intersection where her 13-year-old son was fatally injured.

Jennah Chase told television station KETV that she wakes up every day with a mission to ensure that no other child dies at the busy west Omaha intersection.

Jeremiah “J.T.” Butrick-Chase was hit by a car on Sept. 21 as he was headed to school.

But the city of Omaha so far has rejected her request.

City engineer Todd Pfitzer says statistics don’t indicate such overpasses make it safer for pedestrians. In fact, he says, statistics show the overpasses made it more dangerous, because drivers stop watching for pedestrians who might not be using the overpasses.

Chase is raising money to continue her fight for a safer intersection.

Cat 1 Hurricane Kills 21, Expected To Become Super Storm

Meteorologists say the pre-Halloween hybrid weather monster nicknamed “Frankenstorm” is looking more ominous by the hour for the East Coast. So utilities and local governments are getting ready.

Forecasters expect a natural horror show of high wind, heavy rain, extreme tides and maybe snow to the west beginning early Sunday. It should peak with the arrival of Hurricane Sandy on Tuesday near New Jersey and linger past Halloween.

Experts predict at least $1 billion in damage.

Hurricane Sandy, having blown through Haiti and Cuba, continues to barrel north. A wintry storm is chugging across the country from the West. And frigid air is streaming south from Canada.

When they meet Tuesday, they could create a big, wet mess that settles over the nation’s most heavily populated corridor.

 A weakened Hurricane Sandy lashed the central Bahamas late Thursday with violent winds and torrential rains, after raging through the Caribbean where it caused at least 21 deaths and forced postponement of a hearing at the Guantanamo naval base on Cuba.

State media in Cuba said Sandy toppled houses, ripped off roofs and killed 11 people in the eastern provinces of Santiago and Guantanamo as it roared over the island as a category 2 storm early Thursday. Nine deaths were reported in Haiti and one in Jamaica.

By late Thursday, Sandy had slowed to a category 1 hurricane, but forecasters warned that it will likely blend with a winter storm to cause a super storm in the eastern U.S. next week whose effects will be felt along the entire Atlantic Coast and inland to Ohio.

Some further weakening in Sandy was forecast during the next 48 hours, but it was expected to remain a hurricane.

Late Thursday, the hurricane’s center was 185 miles (300 kilometers) east-southeast of Freeport on Grand Bahama Island as it spun between Cat Island and Eleuthera in the central Bahamas. The storm’s maximum sustained winds had fallen to 90 mph (150 kph), and Sandy was moving north-northwest at 13 mph (20 kph).

Caroline Turnquest, head of the Red Cross in the Bahamas archipelago off Florida’s east coast, said 20 shelters were opened on the main island of New Providence.

“Generally people are realizing it is serious,” she said.

Power was out on Acklins Island and most roads there were flooded, government administrator Berkeley Williams said. He said his biggest concern was that a boat filled with basic supplies for the island had to cancel its trip until next week.

“Supplies were low before, so you can imagine what we are going through now,” Williams said.

On Ragged Island in the southern Bahamas, the lone school was flooded. “We have holes in roofs, lost shingles and power lines are down,” said Charlene Bain, local Red Cross president. “But nobody lost a life, that’s the important thing.”

Steven Russell, an emergency management official in Nassau, said that docks on the western side of Great Inagua island had been destroyed and that the roof of a government building was partially ripped off.

“As the storm passes over Eleuthera and Cat Island, they should get a pretty good beating,” he said. “There are sections of Eleuthera we are concerned about.”

The huge Atlantis resort went into lockdown after dozens of tourists left Paradise Island before the airport closed, said George Markantonis, president of Kerzner International, which manages the resort. He said the resort was now less than half full, but all its restaurants, casinos and other facilities were still operating.

Sooner Halvorson, a 36-year-old hotel owner from Colorado who recently moved to the Bahamas, said she and her husband, Matt, expected to ride out the storm with their two young children, three cats, two dogs and a goat at their Cat Island resort.

“We brought all of our animals inside,” she said, though she added that a horse stayed outside. “She’s a 40-year-old horse from the island. She’s been through tons of hurricanes.”

On Great Exuma island, guest house operator Veronica Marshall supplied her only customer with a flashlight and some food before Sandy bore down. The storm-hardened Bahamian said she was confident that she and her business would make it through intact.

“I’m 73 years old and I’ve weathered many storms,” she said.

Hurricane Sandy was expected to churn through the central and northwest Bahamas late Thursday and early Friday. It also might cause tropical storm conditions along the southeastern Florida coast, the Upper Keys and Florida Bay by Friday morning.

With storm conditions projected to hit New Jersey with tropical storm-force winds Tuesday, there is a 90 percent chance that most of the U.S. East Coast will get steady gale-force winds, flooding, heavy rain and maybe snow starting Sunday and stretching past Wednesday, U.S. forecaster Jim Cisco said.

Cuban authorities said the 11 dead included a 4-month-old boy who was crushed when his home collapsed and an 84-year-old man in Santiago province.

It was Cuba’s deadliest storm since July 2005, when Hurricane Dennis slammed into the island as a category 5 storm, killing 16 people and causing an estimated $2.4 billion in damage.

Santiago, Cuba’s second largest city near the eastern tip of the island, was spared the worst of Sandy which also slammed the provinces of Granma, Holguin and Las Tunas.

Cuban President Raul Castro ordered authorities to evaluate damage throughout eastern Cuba.

There were no reports of injuries at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, but there were downed trees and power lines, said Kelly Wirfel, a base spokeswoman. Officials canceled a military tribunal session scheduled for Thursday for the prisoner charged in the 2000 attack on the Navy destroyer USS Cole.

In Haiti, Joseph Edgard Celestin, a spokesman for the civil protection office, said the country’s death toll stood at nine, including three people who died while trying to cross storm-swollen rivers in southwestern Haiti. He did not provide specifics of how other people died.

Officials reported flooding across Haiti, where many of the 370,000 people still displaced by the devastating 2010 earthquake scrambled for shelter. More than 1,000 people were evacuated from 11 quake settlements, according to the International Organization for Migration.

Sandy was blamed for the death of an elderly man in Jamaica who was killed when a boulder crashed into his clapboard house, police said.

Man Dies In Forklift Accident

A 52-year-old Ashland man has died in a forklift accident at a mine in eastern Nebraska.

Authorities say the accident occurred about 10:15 a.m. Wednesday at the Martin Marietta Aggregate mine near Weeping Water in Cass County.

Cass County Sheriff William Brueggemann says Darold Abbott Jr. lost control of the forklift while hauling a large, empty trash bin when it fell off and the forklift kept going.

Bruggemann says that when the forklift hit a concrete base, the forklift rolled on its left side and pinned Abbott.

Abbott was pronounced dead at the scene.

Company spokeswoman Dana Guzzo  didn’t immediately return a call Thursday from The Associated Press.

Body Found In River Near Winnebago

Authorities are investigating the discovery of a man’s body in the Missouri River near Winnebago.

The Thurston County sheriff’s office says the body was found on Wednesday near Big Bear Park. Officials are working to identify the remains and determine whether foul play was involved.

UNMC Investigating Integrity Questioned Research

The University of Nebraska Medical Center continues to investigate some of its own research to resolve questions about the integrity of the data.

Officials confirmed the investigation in August after the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine raised questions about a study it published online in February. The study was done jointly by UNMC and researchers from Temple University School of Medicine in Philadelphia.

UNMC spokesman Tom O’Connor said this week that the investigation was still ongoing. But O’Connor declined to provide any details because the process is confidential until it is completed.

The study involved examined the role of some proteins involved in a lung complication associated with the AIDS virus.

Man Given Up To 50 Years Prison For Teen Sex Assault

A 44-year-old man has been given 30 to 50 years in prison for sexually assaulting teenage girls in southeast Nebraska.

The Beatrice Daily Sun reports that Ronald Lantz, of Fairbury, was convicted of three counts of sexually assaulting a child. He was sentenced last week.

Jefferson County District Court documents say Fairbury Police were notified about the assaults on Jan. 11, 2011. Two teenage girls say they were assaulted by Lantz during a sleepover at a Fairbury residence.

The documents say one of the girls also told a parent about a previous sexual assault by Lantz.

Man Pleads Not Guilty In Robbery Charge

An Iowa man has pleaded not guilty to a federal charge that he robbed a bank in northeast Nebraska.

The Sioux City Journal says, 67-year-old Max Lafferty, of Sioux City, Iowa, made his plea Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Omaha.

Lafferty is accused of robbing a Bank of the West branch in South Sioux City on Sept. 11. Police say he flashed a steak knife when he demanded cash from a bank worker and left the building with about $1,500. He was arrested about a block away.

Lafferty originally was charged in Dakota County Court, but the state case was dismissed after the federal charge was filed.

Man Denies Allegation That He Evaded Sales Tax

A man has denied allegations that he evaded sales tax on a sport utility vehicle he bought in Nebraska.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports that Mark Pieloch pleaded not guilty to a charge of failure to pay sales tax.

A judge earlier ruled against Pieloch’s motion to have the felony charge dismissed.

Court records say Pieloch failed to pay $2,900 in taxes in Nebraska on a 2009 Chevrolet Avalanche he bought in Lincoln.

He says he paid sales tax on the truck in South Dakota. But prosecutors say he should have paid the tax in Lincoln, where he has his primary residence.

Man has A Choice: Pay Almost $80,000 In Child Support Or Option B

A Lincoln man has been deemed in contempt of court orders to pay nearly $80,000 in child support involving 14 children.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports that a Lancaster County District judge on Tuesday ordered 49-year-old Shekem Amsu Khnemu to start paying up, or face jail.

Khnemu was arrested Tuesday and released from jail Wednesday. Before his release, Judge Jodi Nelson found Khnemu in contempt in each of 11 cases and sentenced him to up to 180 days for each case. She suspended the sentenced to give him a chance to pay the back child support. He must pay $500 a month and another $800 in back support by Dec. 1. If he fails to do so, he’ll be jailed.

A phone number could not be found for Khnemu.

New Blend Of Gasoline Now Available

The new blend of gasoline with 15 percent ethanol that was approved earlier this year is now available in Nebraska.

Motorists crossing Nebraska can now buy E15 fuel at Neal Hoff’s service station in Lexington. Uncle Neal’s Phillips 66 station started selling the new blend of fuel last weekend.

Kim Clark of the Nebraska Corn Board praised Hoff’s decision to offer E15 after the fuel that’s 85 percent gasoline cleared several regulatory hurdles.

In June, the Environmental Protection Agency approved the use of E15 in vehicles made since 2001.

But in northern markets such as Nebraska and Iowa, E15 can only be used after the weather turns colder, when federal regulators relax a vapor pressure requirement.

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