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Great Nebraska Tractor Ride Starts, Ends in Wayne

tractorWAYNE, Neb. (AP) — More than 175 drivers are expected to gather in Wayne to begin the Great Nebraska Tractor Ride — an easygoing caravan of mechanized workhorses through part of northeastern Nebraska.

Carol Fuoss said she and her husband, Roger, will enjoy the chance to “drive and see things.”

The Fuosses belong to the Tri-State Old Iron Association, an antique tractor group based in Yankton, South Dakota, which sponsors a number of tractor rides. The ride begins Friday and ends Saturday at the Wayne County Fairgrounds in Wayne.

A similar ride began Monday in the Waterloo, Iowa, area.

Pavement Work Planned on US 34 in Nebraska

road-workSEWARD, Neb. (AP) — Roadway work is expected to slow traffic next week on U.S. Highway 34 in southeast Nebraska.

The Nebraska Roads Department says the work near Seward is expected to take six days.

The speed limit will be reduced, and a pilot car and flaggers will be used to control one-lane traffic.

Hastings City Council Votes to Ban Yard Parking

yard-parkingHASTINGS, Neb. (AP) — The Hastings City Council has passed an ordinance to ban parking in front and side yards.

The ordinance passed unanimously at the council’s meeting on Monday night. The ordinance would still allow for yard parking if it was part of a home’s approved development plan. Parking areas intended for multi-family dwellings would also be excluded from the ban.

Hastings City Attorney Dave Ptak says the city made some changes to its initial proposed ordinance after receiving calls from residents who had questions about it.

Heineman’s Resume Doesn’t Match NU Hiring Profile

dave-heinemanLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The resume of Gov. Dave Heineman may not reflect the desires of the university regents looking for the next president of the University of Nebraska system.

On Monday the university released a presidential profile that outlines the qualities and experience the Board of Regents wants in the person who will replace J.B. Milliken, who has left to become chancellor of the City University of New York.

Regents chairman Howard Hawks says the ideal candidate “will have a deep understanding of and experience in higher education and proven success in leading a major organization.” Hawks says the profile was in the works before the governor announced last month that he would seek the job.

The governor has a bachelor’s from West Point.

 

Officials: Man Killed Woman; Dismembered, Ate Body

police-lights-redMANCHESTER, Tenn. (AP) — Authorities say a Tennessee man is accused of killing a woman, dismembering her body and eating part of her corpse.

Coffee County District Attorney Mickey Layne tells The Associated Press on Tuesday that 37-year-old Gregory S. Hale was arrested at his home late Sunday and is charged with premeditated first-degree murder and abuse of a corpse.

Layne says a neighbor told police he’d had a conversation with Hale and had reason to believe a homicide had been committed.

When officers arrived at the home, Layne says they found remains on the grounds. They then questioned Hale and took him into custody.

Layne says Hale has an attorney and is being held in jail on $1.5 million bond.

Former Neb. Jailer Convicted in Naked Inmate Video Case

jailLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A 54-year-old Lincoln man who had videoed a naked female inmate while working as a jailer has made plea deal and been convicted of a misdemeanor.

Online court records say Michael Going is scheduled to be sentenced on Aug. 1. On Friday he pleaded no contest to attempted official misconduct after prosecutors lowered the charge.

Police say Going used his smartphone to record the 46-year-old woman on May 29 last year after she disrobed and sat naked in a holding cell.

Man Acquitted of Fatal Lincoln Stabbing

gavel-moreLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A 48-year-old man has been found not guilty in the stabbing death of a friend in a Lincoln apartment.

A Lancaster County District Court jury on Monday acquitted Ivan Fourhorns of second-degree murder and a weapons charge. He was accused of fatally stabbing 58-year-old Joe Solomon on July 23 last year.

Police had said Solomon and Fourhorns got into an argument after drinking alcohol with others at the apartment. Fourhorns testified that he wasn’t in the room when someone stabbed Solomon in the chest.

Woman, 34, Jailed for Enrolling in School as Teen

odd-newsLONGVIEW, Texas (AP) — A 34-year-old woman who posed as a teenager to enroll as a sophomore at an East Texas high school has pleaded guilty to failure to identify.

A judge in Longview on Tuesday sentenced Charity Johnson to 85 days in jail in a plea agreement.

Johnson was arrested May 13 after a woman who allowed Johnson to stay at her apartment called the police when she discovered Johnson was not a teenager. New Life Christian School officials said Johnson enrolled last October with a guardian and indicated she was 15 years old.

Johnson told police she was born in 1997 and officers issued her a trespass warning. Authorities later determined she was much older.

Johnson has served nearly a month in jail.

Longview is about 130 miles east of Dallas.

Nebraska Boy Kept in Makeshift Cage, Official Says

otoe-county-sheriffBURR, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say a southeast Nebraska couple kept a 3-year-old boy in a makeshift cage for hours at a time.

23-year-old Louis Arms and 22-year-old Kelsi Gaube were arrested and face charges of child abuse.

An Otoe County jailer said Arms remained in custody on Tuesday. Gaube has bonded out of jail. A phone listing for her couldn’t be found. Court records don’t list attorneys for either of them.

Otoe County Attorney David Partsch says a sheriff’s deputy found the makeshift cage Saturday when responding to a report in Burr about a disturbance. The cage was in a closet that had crib bars rigged across it.

Partsch says deputies think Arms and Gaube called the structure “The Prison” and would keep the boy in it.

Report: Diabetes Numbers in US Continue to Rise

Medical-ChartNEW YORK (AP) — The number of Americans with diabetes has increased again — now more than 29 million people have the illness.

That’s an increase of about 3 million from three years ago.

In new report released Tuesday, federal scientists calculated that more than 9 percent of Americans have diabetes — or 1 in 11 people. The report estimates that about a quarter of them haven’t been diagnosed yet and don’t know they have diabetes.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention used a 2012 national survey and other data to come up with the new numbers.

Diabetes is a disease in which sugar builds up in the blood. The most common form is tied to obesity, and the number of diabetics has ballooned with the rise in obesity.

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