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Nebraskaland Days Kicks off to a fantastic start!

NORTH PLATTE (North Platte Post) – With a clear sky over head, food vendors set up, and plenty of sun screen Nebraskaland Days opens up with a bang at the Lincoln County Historical Museum! The opening ceremony was accompanied by Miss Nebraska Kayla Batt, as the National Anthem was sung on stage followed by an Auction.

At the Lincoln County Historical Museum family and friends walked the roads seeing the area filled with life! The buildings were opened and you can see all the historical buildings insides. Fun was to be had and sights to see!

33 mile detour planned for construction on 1 mile of highway.. Genius…

BLUE HILL, Neb. (AP) — A 33-mile-long detour has been arranged to handle traffic diverted from a road work on a mile of Nebraska Highway 4 in south-central Nebraska.

The Hastings Tribune says the work will begin Monday on the mile running east from the Highway 4 junction with U.S. Highway 281.

The Nebraska Roads Department says the roadway will be repaved and new lighting and guardrails will be installed. The project is expected to be finished in mid-September.

The detour includes stretches of U.S. Highway 281, U.S. Highway 136 and Nebraska Highway 78.

Project manager Lyle Kohmetscher says the long detour is needed because the area has so few paved roads, which are required for truck traffic.

Geocaching workshop scheduled @ Gretna, NE

GRETNA, Neb. (AP) — A geocaching workshop has been scheduled at the Ak-Sar-Ben Aquarium Outdoor Education Center south of Gretna in eastern Nebraska.

In geocaching, people use GPS devices to search for hidden items.

The event is scheduled for 10 a.m. to noon on June 16. After learning the basics, participants will spend time geocaching elsewhere in Schramm Park State Recreation Area, where the aquarium is situated.

People may bring a lunch. GPS devices will be provided.

Justice March planned today in Pine Ridge, SD

PINE RIDGE, S.D. (AP) — An annual Justice March from Pine Ridge to Whiteclay, Neb., to honor and remember two men found dead is slated for Saturday.

The bodies of Wally Black Elk Jr., and Ron Hard Heart were discovered June 8, 1999, near Whiteclay. Their deaths are unresolved.

Oglala Sioux Vice President Tom Poor Bear is Black Elk’s brother and Hard Heart’s cousin. Poor Bear has organized a march every year since 1999 to bring awareness to their unresolved deaths.

Saturday’s march will start at 12 p.m. at Billy Mills Hall in the village of Pine Ridge. Supporters will then trek two miles to cross into Whiteclay.

U of N cutting credit hours needed for most degrees!

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The University of Nebraska is cutting the number of credit hours required for most degrees.

Local media says Provost Linda Pratt says NU will implement a policy for new students this fall that reduces the required number of credit hours to graduate from 125 to 120.

It’s designed to allow undergraduates who take a full course load of 15 credit hours per semester for eight semesters to graduate in four years. Pratt the policy is aimed at saving students and their families money, as well as allowing financial aid programs to serve more students.

Pratt has given exceptions to 18 programs for a variety of reasons. Those are 11 engineering programs, four NU Medical Center programs, a landscape architect program and two music programs.

Lawsuit settled between Iowa woman and Nebraska’s Cass County

PLATTSMOUTH, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska’s Cass County and an Iowa woman have settled a lawsuit that said the county didn’t respond properly to the abuse she endured in the county jail.

Amy Miller of the American Civil Liberties Union in Nebraska said Friday the cash settlement amount for Claudia Leiva-Deras, of Storm Lake, Iowa, was confidential.

In a statement, the county denied it was “deliberately indifferent” to Leiva-Deras’ medical needs or her other allegations. The county said the costs of defending itself led it to resolve the case without any admission of liability.

The lawsuit filed Jan. 3 for the 27-year-old Leiva-Deras says she was attacked repeatedly by another inmate over several months in 2009. Leiva-Deras was being detained because of questions about her immigration status, which were later resolved.

Omaha woman acquitted of homicide

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A 26-year-old woman has been acquitted of homicide in the crash death of an Omaha woman.

Online court records say Raysheena Samuel, of Omaha, had been charged with misdemeanor vehicular homicide after the Feb. 3 accident that killed 50-year-old Kathryn Hardiman. On Wednesday a jury found Samuel not guilty.

Police say Samuel ran through a stop sign and hit Hardiman’s car at an intersection off an Interstate 480 exit ramp. Samuel told investigators that her vehicle’s brakes failed.

Health Alert issued for two southeast Nebraska Lakes

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — State officials have issued a health alert for two lakes in southeast Nebraska.

The two lakes are Rockford Lake, which is southeast of Beatrice in Gage County, and Swan Creek Lake No. 5, which is near Tobias in Saline County.

Officials say water samples showed high levels of a toxin released by blue-green algae. The levels exceeded the state’s threshold.

Some types of toxic blue-green algae can produce dangerous toxins.

People can still camp, fish and boat on lakes under an alert, but they should not have full-body contact with the water.

Drinking toxin-tainted water can cause vomiting, diarrhea, respiratory failure and, rarely, death.

Omaha firefighters can’t legally participate in roadside collections for charities

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Supreme Court has upheld a finding that Omaha firefighters  can’t legally participate in roadside collections for charities on city time using city-owned uniforms and equipment.

The ruling targets so-called “boot drives,” in which uniformed firefighters ask people at traffic intersections, malls and supermarkets to drop money in firefighters’ work boots to go to organizations like the Muscular Dystrophy Association.

In 2010, the Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission issued an opinion saying the practice violated state law.

The state firefighters union and Muscular Dystrophy Association challenged that finding, and the Lancaster County District Court dismissed the action, saying the court lacked jurisdiction to review a commission advisory opinion.

The Nebraska Court of Appeals agreed, and on Friday, the state’s high court upheld the dismissal for lack of jurisdiction.

I-80 crash sends family to Bryan West

LINCOLN Neb- (North Platte Post)- Most commuters taking I-80 eastbound home yesterday were later than usual arriving home. A accident sending a family and a 13 month old baby occurred around 4:30 yesterday afternoon.

The accident happened near the Northwest 48th street exit when a dump truck in the construction zone came in contact with a Mazda sending the car off the road into a ditch shortly after the Mazda struck a Ravine, flipping the vehicle. A Nebraska State Patrol Spokeswoman Deb Collins says the family in the car was from Kearney.

The family driving the Mazda were taken to Bryan West Hospital. The Truck driver was not injured.

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