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Survivors of Conn. School Shooting Record Song for Charity

sandy-hook-victimsChildren who survived last month’s shooting rampage at Connecticut’s Sandy Hook Elementary School have recorded a version of “Over the Rainbow” to raise money for charity.

Twenty-one children from Newtown, Conn., sang the song Tuesday with singer-songwriter Ingrid Michaelson on ABC’s “Good Morning America.” Most of them are current and former students of the school where 20 first-graders and six staff members were killed.

They recorded the song at the home of two former members of the Talking Heads rock band. It went on sale Tuesday on Amazon and iTunes, with proceeds benefiting a local United Way and the Newtown Youth Academy.

Ten-year-old Kayla Verga says she’s singing for her friend, Jessica Rekos, who was killed in the rampage. She says it feels like Jessica is beside her, singing along with her.

France Orders Evacuation Of All French Nationals Living In Segou

The French embassy in Bamako sent an email ordering the immediate evacuation of all French nationals living in the Malian town of Segou.

The evacuation order was confirmed by the French owner of a hotel in Segou, who insisted upon anonymity because of the security situation. The hotel owner said that she received the order after the fall on Monday of the garrison town of Diabaly to the al-Qaida-linked rebels occupying northern Mali. Diabaly was seized by the extremists despite heavy bombardment by French special forces, bringing the militants to within 80 kilometers (49 miles) of the southern Mali town of Segou and within 400 kilometers (248 miles) of the capital, Bamako.

French President Francois Hollande authorized the airstrikes last week after the Islamists began their push south.

NE Woman Claims She Was Tricked Into Giving $26,000 To A Man She Met Online

A southeast Nebraska woman has reported being bilked out of more than $26,000 by someone she met on a dating website.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports that the woman told deputies that an exchange of messages, phone calls and text began in July.

The woman, who is in her 50s, says the man said he was a civil engineer who traveled the world. He eventually told her he needed to borrow $1,200 for taxes and then more money. She says he told her she would be named a trustee of his mother’s estate, from which he would get a big inheritance and pay the woman back.

The Lancaster County Sheriff’s Office says all she ever got from him were fraudulent documents. She and the man never met in person.

Beached Whale Euthanized In New York

Marine officials say two whales washed up on New York’s Long Island just hours apart. One was dead and the other was later euthanized.

Newsday says they were discovered Sunday on separate stretches of East Hampton beaches.

The Riverhead Foundation for Marine Research and Preservation said they don’t believe the two events are connected.

The first whale was found dead around 8 a.m. in Napeague. Officials say there were no outward signs of what may have caused the death of the 59-foot-long finback whale.

At around 2:30 p.m., officials got a report of a 5-foot-long juvenile pygmy sperm whale in nearby Amagansett. The foundation says it was euthanized because it had skin lesions and appeared “sickly.”

Necropsies will be performed on both mammals on Monday.

Body Found In Lincoln Pond (UPDATED)

UPDATE:

Authorities have identified a body found in a shallow pond in Lincoln as a retired Nebraska district judge.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports William Blue’s body was found Monday morning under a bridge over a creek near Legacy Estates, a retirement home.

The 86-year-old was a resident at Legacy, but he was not in assisted care and was able to come and go.

The newspaper reports police say Blue may have suffered a medical episode. Foul play is not suspected.

An autopsy is scheduled Tuesday.

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Authorities say the body of an elderly man has been found in a pond on the southeast side of Lincoln.

Police say a report on the body was made around 8:30 a.m. Monday. The pond is near a retirement estate, but it’s not clear yet whether the man lived there.

His name and other details about his death haven’t been released.

Bankruptcy In Nebraska Lowest Since 2007

Bankruptcy filings in Nebraska have fallen to their lowest level since before the Great Recession.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports the total hit 5,820 in 2012, down 12 percent from 2011. The figure was the lowest since 2007, when the total was more than 5,360.

Attorney Trev Peterson handles bankruptcies for a Lincoln firm. He says improved economic conditions, especially in the housing market, have led to fewer foreclosures and have played a big role in the drop in filings.

Omaha attorney Sam Turco says the federal mortgage modification program has helped keep people out of foreclosure and bankruptcy.

In a news release earlier this month, American Bankruptcy Institute Executive Director Samuel Gerdano predicted that filings will fall again this year nationally.

Coca-Cola Takes On Obesity

Coca-Cola became one of the world’s most powerful brands by equating its soft drinks with happiness. Now it’s taking to the airwaves for the first time to address a growing cloud over the industry: obesity.

The Atlanta-based company on Monday will begin airing a two-minute commercial during the highest-rated shows on CNN, Fox News and MSNBC in hopes of becoming a stronger voice in the intensifying debate over sodas and their impact on public health.

The ad lays out Coca-Cola’s record of providing drinks with fewer calories over the years and notes that weight gain is the result of consuming too many calories of any kind — not just soda.

Coca-Cola says the campaign will kick off a variety of moves that help address obesity in the year ahead.

Kerrey Takes Position In Higher Education

Following 10 years as The New School president in New York City and his failed Nebraska bid to return to the U.S. Senate, Bob Kerrey is going back to higher education.

Kerrey has taken a job as executive chairman of a startup in higher education, The Minerva Project. The for-profit university bills itself as more rigorous than Ivy League schools, with the ability to admit vastly more students for about half the cost of an Ivy League education. The school plans to begin classes in 2015.

Kerrey, a former Nebraska governor and two-term U.S. senator, says his new job will be based in San Francisco but will be part-time.

Newtown, Conn. Officials Deciding Fate of Sandy Hook Elementary

Newtown officials are turning their attention to the fate of an elementary school where a gunman killed 20 first-graders and six educators last month.

The first of two public hearings on what to do with Sandy Hook Elementary School is set for Sunday afternoon at Newtown High School.

Town Selectman Jim Gaston says there’s already been a lot of talk around town about the school’s future. Many say it should be knocked down and a public memorial built in its place. Others favor renovating the school and removing the areas where the slayings occurred.

Some schools where massacres occurred — including Columbine High School in Colorado and Virginia Tech — reopened after renovations. Others were torn down.

Sandy Hook students and staff have relocated to another school in a neighboring town.

Omaha Mom Cited for Leaving Toddler in Cold Car

A 21-year-old Omaha mom is facing a child neglect charge after leaving her 2-year-old daughter in the car while she shopped on a cold day.

The mom was ticketed at Oakview Mall earlier this month on a 21-degree day.

Police say a woman noticed the toddler in the vehicle on Jan. 3 after the child honked the horn and called police.

By the time a locksmith arrived, the girl’s mother was returning to the car. Police say she had left her daughter alone for at least 30 minutes.

The child had 11 coins in her mouth when the car was unlocked.

The mother told police that the girl was asleep when she arrived, so she decided to go inside alone and return an item.

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