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Michael Jackson’s Hometown to Name School for Him

michael-jacksonGARY, Ind. (AP) — Plans are in the works to name a school in Michael Jackson’s Indiana hometown for the late pop star.

The Gary Community School Board on Tuesday approved a memorandum of understanding with Jackson’s mother, Katherine Jackson. The agreement that Katherine Jackson signed last month says the district wants to inspire children to excel in the arts and education.

District superintendent Cheryl Pruitt said she’s working with the Jackson family on which school to rename.

Pruitt says the renaming came up in a conversation with Katherine Jackson, who donated $10,000 during the Gary Promise scholarship event hosted by Magic Johnson in April.

The family moved to California after the Jackson 5 struck it big struck it big in 1969 when Michael Jackson was 11 years old.

Omaha, Man Settle Excessive Force Lawsuit

omahaOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A judge has signed off on a $100,000 settlement the city of Omaha will pay to a man who sued the city and several police officers he accused of using excessive force in his 2011 arrest.

The city will pay Robert Wagner $32,000 in damages and $68,000 in legal fees and other costs. U.S. District Judge Joseph Bataillon signed the order Tuesday.

The videotaped arrest of Wagner in May 2011 outside an Omaha hospital emergency room led to accusations of police brutality.

A hospital security camera captured images of several Omaha police officers pinning down Wagner in the hospital’s parking lot. The video seemed to show one officer kicking him while he was restrained on the ground. Two officers were fired, but both were later reinstated following arbitration.

Work on I-80 Lincoln Interchange Set to Begin

i-80LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Work is scheduled to begin next week on Interstate 80 in northwest Lincoln.

The project includes reconstructing the interstate to six lanes and rebuilding the Northwest 48th Street interchange. Work also will be done on the Northwest 56th Street bridge.

The Nebraska Roads Department says motorists can expect nighttime lane closures. The work is expected to be finished in the fall of 2016.

Nebraska Researchers Get $10M to Study Infections

UNMCOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Researchers at the University of Nebraska Medical Center have received a $10 million grant to study antibiotic-resistant infections linked to implanted devices.

Researcher Ken Bayles says his team is working to find ways to get rid of the staph infection methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, that can form on medical devices before they are implanted in people.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated last year that MRSA kills about 11,000 people annually.

Roughly 1-to-5 percent of implanted devices are infected with bacteria. And if the bacteria can’t be treated with antibiotics, the device has to be removed, so the infection can be treated and then replaced.

Police Say Principal Caught Taking Drugs to Prison

police-lights-redNEW YORK (AP) — A New York City elementary school principal has been arrested on charges of trying to smuggle drugs into a maximum-security upstate prison.

Public School 28 Principal Sadie Silver and a man she was with were arrested Friday after state police said they carried heroin and prescription drugs into the Coxsackie Correctional Facility.

Police say the 40-year-old Silver and Michael Acosta had a 10-year-old child with them.

Silver and Acosta, who’s 34, face felony charges of promoting prison contraband and criminal possession of a controlled substance as well as a misdemeanor charge of endangering the welfare of a child.

Silver and Acosta have been released on bond. Information on their attorneys was not available.

Education officials have reassigned Silver to an administrative center away from students.

Banners on Omaha Grain Elevator Silos Now Gone

i-80OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Gone is the familiar sight of banners plastered on the side of towering grain elevator silos along eastbound Interstate 80 in Omaha.

The art ranged from geometric shapes to graphic designs of bacon and corn. In all, 26 banners covered the upper portions of the silos.

Workers from Davis Erection removed the banners this week.

The “Stored Potential” banners were a project of Emerging Terrain, a community development nonprofit that no longer operates in Omaha.

Emerging Terrain founder Ann Trumble, of Los Angeles, says the “Stored Potential” project, begun in 2010, was always meant to be temporary. She says the artists who designed the banners have already spoken for them, and some of the artists have other plans for their use.

Nebraska Man Gets 20-Year Sentence in Fatal Wreck

Amanda Asche
Amanda Asche

CENTRAL CITY, Neb. (AP) — A Nebraska man has been sentenced to two decades in prison for causing a fatal wreck that killed a Columbus woman last year.

31-year-old Christopher Hajek of Marquette was sentenced to 20 years in prison for a felony charge of vehicular homicide.

Hajek was also charged with a DUI and pleaded no contest in May. His driver’s license has also been revoked for 15 years.

Hajek was charged after authorities say he caused a 2013 accident that killed 22-year-old Amanda Asche on U.S. Highway 30 near Clarks.

Police say Asche was heading east on the highway when her vehicle was hit by Hajek’s pickup.

Couple Marries in Omaha’s Largest Cemetery

odd-newsOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A Nebraska couple has chosen an unusual venue for their wedding.

Janyl Jumadinova (juh-mah-DEEN’-oh-vah) and Oliver Bonham-Carter exchanged vows Saturday in Forest Lawn Cemetery. The ceremony took place in a 101-year-old chapel designed by an Omaha architect who helped design Joslyn Castle and the Joslyn Art Museum.

The bride is from Kyrgyzstan (KEER’-gih-stan) and holds a firm belief in spirits. Some of the groom’s ancestors are buried in the cemetery.

The couple married earlier this year in a small ceremony in Pennsylvania. They wanted to hold another ceremony so friends and family could bear witness.

Relatives of the couple traveled over 6,000 miles to attend.

Trucker Hurt in Crash at Nebraska Rail Crossing

File Photo
File Photo

HOMER, Neb. (AP) — A truck driver was injured when a locomotive ran into the trailer he was hauling in northeast Nebraska.

The accident occurred a little before 5 p.m. Monday at an uncontrolled crossing near Homer.

Dakota County deputies say the semitrailer’s cab cleared the tracks but the locomotive struck the trailer.

The truck driver was flown to Mercy Medical Center in Sioux City. His name hasn’t been released.

Nebraska Authorities Investigating Fatal Wreck

howard-co-sheriffST. PAUL, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say they’re investigating a wreck that killed a 21-year-old Nebraska man.

The Howard County Sheriff’s Office says Derek Holt from St. Paul died Sunday night after his vehicle was hit by another automobile traveling in the opposite direction.

The wreck occurred on Nebraska Highway 92, about two miles west of St. Paul. Holt was pronounced dead at a hospital.

The other driver was 29-year-old Justin Arrowsmith of Omaha. He was taken to one hospital and then transferred to another.

Authorities say it appears Arrowsmith’s vehicle may have crossed the center line. Both drivers were alone and wearing their seat belts.

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