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Curiosity Rover In The Spotlight, Soon To Begin Drilling

nasaAll eyes are on the NASA rover Curiosity. It is poised to begin drilling into a Martian rock soon.

There’s less attention being paid to another Mars rover — Opportunity. The older rover is quietly embarking on its tenth year of exploration.

Compared to Curiosity, Opportunity is smaller and doesn’t carry the same high-tech tools. But since landing in January 2004, it has made many discoveries including that Mars was once warmer and wetter than today.

Opportunity and its twin Spirit were only supposed to explore for three months, but both outlasted their original mission. Opportunity remains healthy and is studying interesting rocks in a massive crater. Spirit lost communication with Earth in 2010 shortly after getting stuck in Martian sand.

Proposed Bill Would ‘Give Nebraska-Based Companies An Edge’

Gavel_booksLawmakers will consider a bill this year that would give Nebraska-based companies an edge over out-of-state companies when bidding on state contracts.

State Sen. Heath Mello of Omaha introduced the “Buy Nebraska Act.” He proposed the measure after he was contacted by a south Omaha data-entry firm, which had lost out on a Nebraska Game and Parks Commission contract by less than $20. The contract went to an out-of-state business.

Mello says 46 other states have some type of resident-bidder preferences in either their laws or procurement rules, and his bill is intended to keep jobs in Nebraska.

The state awards more than $2 billion in contracts for goods and services each year. Mello says the state doesn’t track how much of that money flows out of Nebraska.

NE Man Killed, 5 Injured in Head on Collision

police-lights-redAuthorities are investigating a head-on collision in northeast Nebraska that killed one man and injured five other people.

The Pierce County Attorney says 83-year-old Ralph Schmidt of Norfolk died in the Friday evening crash in U.S. Highway 81.

The crash happened when a southbound SUV crossed the centerline and collided with Schmidt’s truck just north of the intersection of Highways 91 and 98.

Schmidt’s passenger, 70-year-old Robbie Heinemann of Norfolk, was critically injured in the crash. She was taken to Norfolk and then Sioux City for treatment.

The driver of the SUV, 60-year-old Sara Krahn, was flown to a Sioux City hospital. Her passengers, 61-year-old Isaac Krahn, 30-year-old Lisa Sawatsky and 3-year-old Jordan Sawatsky, were treated in Norfolk. All of them are from Winkler, Manitoba, Canada.

 

Dealer Accidentally Shoots Man at Gun Show

gun-showAuthorities say an accidental shooting at an Ohio gun show has left one man wounded.

Police in Medina say a gun dealer was checking out a semi-automatic handgun he’d bought Saturday when he accidentally pulled the trigger.

Police Chief Pat Berarducci says it appears the bullet struck the floor, then a longtime friend of the gun dealer. The man was wounded in the arm and leg.

Berarducci says the man was taken by helicopter to a Cleveland hospital. His condition isn’t known.

Police say the gun’s magazine had been removed from the firearm but one round remained in the chamber.

Medina is about 30 miles south of Cleveland.

 

Lincoln Firefighter/School Bus Driver Charged with Possession of Child Pornography

lincoln-police-badgeA Lincoln firefighter and substitute school bus driver for the public school system has been charged with possession of child pornography.

The Associated Press reports, Lincoln police arrested 52-year-old Daniel King after an investigation revealed a computer at his home had been used to download child pornography in December.

Court documents indicate investigators found other files consistent with file sharing and child pornography on the computer and external drive.

King is expected in court on Feb. 7.

He was a substitute school bus driver for Lincoln Public Schools since 2009. School officials say they removed King from the list of possible drivers.

The city’s public safety director says King is on leave from the fire department.

King’s attorney did not immediately return a phone call placed Saturday afternoon.

Long Lost 19th Century Whiskey Sent Away To Be Recreated

bottleTalk about whisky on ice: Three bottles of rare, 19th century Scotch found beneath the floor boards of Antarctic explorer Ernest Shackelton’s abandoned expedition base were returned to the polar continent Saturday after a distiller flew them to Scotland to recreate the long-lost recipe.

But not even New Zealand Prime Minister John Key, who personally returned the stash, got a taste of the contents of the bottles of Mackinlay’s whisky, which were rediscovered 102 years after the explorer was forced to leave them behind.

“I think we’re all tempted to crack it open and have a little drink ourselves now,” Key joked at a ceremony handing over the bottles to Antarctic Heritage Trust officials at New Zealand’s Antarctic base on Ross Island.

The whisky will be transferred by March from Ross Island to Shackelton’s desolate hut at Cape Royds and replaced beneath the restored hut as part of a program to protect the legacy of the so-called heroic era of Antarctic exploration from 1898 to 1915.

Bottled in 1898 after the blend was aged 15 years, the Mackinlay bottles were among three crates of Scotch and two of brandy buried beneath a basic hut Shackleton had used during his dramatic 1907 Nimrod excursion to the Antarctic. The expedition failed to reach the South Pole but set a record at the time for reaching the farthest southern latitude. Shackelton was knighted after his return to Great Britain.

Shackelton’s stash was discovered frozen in ice by conservationists in 2010. The crates were frozen solid after more than a century beneath the Antarctic surface.

But the bottles were found intact — and researchers could hear the whisky sloshing around inside. Antarctica’s minus 22 Fahrenheit (-30 Celsius) temperature was not enough to freeze the liquor.

The bottles remained unopened as they were returned Saturday — if Shackelton couldn’t have a dram, no one could — but their contents nevertheless formed the basis for a revival of the blend.

Distiller Whyte & Mackay, which now owns the Mackinlay brand, chartered a private jet to take the bottles from the Antarctic operations headquarters in the New Zealand city of Christchurch to Scotland for analysis in 2011.

The recipe for the whisky had been lost. But Whyte & Mackay recreated a limited edition of 50,000 bottles from a sample drawn with a syringe through a cork of one of the bottles. The conservation work of the Antarctic Heritage Trust has received 5 British pounds for every bottle sold.

The original bottles had flown in two combination-locked containers with Key to Antarctica in a U.S. Air Force transport plane from Christchurch on Friday.

Antarctic Heritage Trust manager Lizzie Meek, who was part of the team that found the whisky, recalled its pleasant aroma.

“When you’re used to working around things in that hut that perhaps are quite decayed and some of them don’t have very nice smells, it’s very nice to work with artifacts that have such a lovely aroma,” Meek told the ceremony by radio from explorer Robert Scott’s Antarctic hut which she is restoring.

“And definitely the aroma of whisky was around very strongly.”

Obama Wants You To You To Volunteer In Your Community

obamaPresident Barack Obama wants Americans to take time out and volunteer for community service projects to give back to others.

Obama is highlighting a National Day of Service and the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. on Saturday, the beginning of a whirlwind weekend of inaugural events marking the end of his first term and start of his second.

The president and first lady Michelle Obama stained a bookshelf at Burrville Elementary School in D.C. They were joined by about 500 volunteers for the school makeover project.

Obama praised the volunteers, from adults to children, for understanding the importance of giving back.

Omaha Police Make Two Arrests In Connection To Dec 2nd Murder

omahapopoOmaha police say they have arrested two men charged with felony murder in connection with the Dec. 2 death of two men found inside an auto body business.

In custody are 39-year-old Terrell Newman and 36-year-old Derrick Stricklin.

A police statement says they were arrested Friday by the Metro Fugitive Task Force after warrants were issued for their arrest.

Police provide no additional details saying their investigation is continuing.

Online court records show both men have Omaha addresses. They are charged with murder and use of a firearm to commit a felony in warrants issued Friday.

Records do not list attorneys for them.

Earlier police had identified 40-year-old Bernardo Noriega and 47-year-old Carlos Morales as the victims of a homicide. They were found inside Morales’ Genuine Auto Body business.

 

Third Trial Set For Lincoln Man Accused Of Sexual Assault

Gavel_booksA Lincoln man has asked a judge to bar prosecutors from trying him for a third time on a sexual assault charge after the case twice ended in a mistrial.

The Lincoln Journal-Star reports Lamar Neal’s first trial ended after the prosecutor asked questions of his 16-year-old accuser that revealed information previously undisclosed and criminal conduct for which Neal was not charged.

Two days later, Judge Steven Burns again declared a mistrial, finding prosecutors had not disclosed evidence to the defense.

Neal’s attorney alleges prosecutors deliberately disregarded court orders and seeks to halt prosecution. A hearing is set for next week.

A third trial has been set for February.

A year ago, a girl told Lincoln police Neal forced her to have sex. Police arrested him in April.

Same-Sex Military Couples Struggle for Recognition

the-pentagon-2Overall, the repeal of the “don’t ask, don’t tell” has gone smoothly during the nearly year and a half that gays have been allowed to serve openly. For some same-sex military couples, however, frustrations are mounting.

Because of the 1996 law denying federal recognition to same-sex marriage, these couples do not get benefits that straight married couples get, such as housing allowances and health care coverage for a non-military spouse.

Pentagon officials say they are bound by the Defense of Marriage Act. But advocacy groups say there are numerous steps that could be taken now to treat struggling same-sex couples more fairly.

Among the proposed steps are issuing official military IDs to same-sex spouses, ensuring spouses have full access to on-base social programs, and letting same-sex couples qualify for military housing.

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