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  • Chadron State football to play in Cowboys Stadium

    Associated Press|Feb 1, 2013

    CHADRON (AP) — Chadron State will play West Texas A&M next September as part of the Lone Star Football Festival at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas. The Festival features games involving all Lone Star Conference members and a number of non-conference teams. The games are played in the $1.2 billion stadium that Jerry Jones built for his Dallas Cowboys and is televised across Texas. Chadron State coach Jay Long said Thursday his players are excited about the opportunity and that it’s exciting to tell prospective recruits the Eagles will pla...

  • Republicans hammer defense nominee Hagel

    Associated Press|Feb 1, 2013

    WASHINGTON — Republican senators hammered former GOP Sen. Chuck Hagel at his confirmation hearing Thursday on issues ranging from Israel and Iran to his support for a group that advocates the elimination of nuclear weapons. But with most Democrats in his corner, an unflustered Hagel seems headed for approval as defense secretary. Hagel, a former two-term senator from Nebraska, described his views as mainstream and closely aligned with those of President Barack Obama, the Democrat who nominated him. But several GOP members of the Armed S...

  • Nigeria starts dismantling its plane ‘graveyard’

    Associated Press|Jan 31, 2013

    LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — Landing in Nigeria’s largest city, one of the first thing visitors see as they peer out of their airplane’s windows is the moss-covered metal carcasses of what used to fly in Africa’s most populous nation. Workers at Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos call it “the graveyard,” an overgrown field filled with about a dozen cargo and passenger airplanes long since abandoned and left to rot by insolvent airlines. At least 65 abandoned airplanes, ranging from small commuter jets to one massive Boeing 747, sit at air...

  • 49ers’ Culliver apologizes for anti-gay remarks

    Associated Press|Jan 31, 2013

    NEW ORLEANS (AP) — San Francisco 49ers cornerback Chris Culliver apologized Thursday for anti-gay comments he made to a comedian during Super Bowl media day, saying “that’s not what I feel in my heart.” “I’m sorry if I offended anyone. They were very ugly comments,” Culliver said during an hour-long media session. “Hopefully I learn and grow from this experience and this situation.” He said he would welcome a gay teammate to the 49ers, a reversal of his remarks to Artie Lange two days earlier...

  • Huskers holding line on single-game tickets

    Associated Press|Jan 31, 2013

    LINCOLN (AP) — Nebraska football season ticket prices will remain the same on a per-game basis in 2013. The athletic department announced today that public season ticket holders will pay $56 a game for eight home games, or $448 total. University faculty and staff will pay $53 a game, or $424 total. Students will pay $23 a game, or $184 total. Single-game prices will be $60 each for non-conference games against Wyoming, Southern Miss and South Dakota State. The non-conference matchup with UCLA and Big Ten home contests against Illinois, N...

  • Patty Andrews of Andrews Sisters rallied troops

    Associated Press|Jan 31, 2013

    LOS ANGELES (AP) – Patty Andrews never served in the military, but she and her singing sisters certainly supported the troops. During World War II, they hawked war bonds, entertained soldiers overseas and boosted morale on the home-front with tunes like “Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy of Company B” and “I Can Dream, Can’t I?” Andrews, the last surviving member of the singing Andrews Sisters trio, died Wednesday at 94 of natural causes at her home in the Los Angeles suburb of Northridge, said family...

  • Girl shot by Taliban to undergo final surgery

    Associated Press|Jan 30, 2013

    LONDON (AP) — A Pakistani girl whose defiance of the Taliban turned her into an international icon is headed toward a full recovery once she undergoes a final surgery to reconstruct her skull, doctors said Wednesday. Dr. Dave Rosser of Birmingham’s Queen Elizabeth Hospital said that 15-year-old Malala Yousufzai needs the operation to replace the bone shattered when a Taliban gunman, angered at her objection to the group’s restrictions on girls’ education, sent a bullet through her skull. Rosser said that Malala had made a “remarkable recovery....

  • France takes key Mali cities; now the hard part

    Associated Press|Jan 30, 2013

    JOHANNESBURG (AP) — French-led forces have wrested control of three key cities in northern Mali from al-Qaida-linked militants, but the fighters have escaped with their weapons into a desert region the size of Texas and are poised to mount counterattacks. New military strategies will be needed to rout the jihadists from their desert hideouts. When the French leave their former colony, armed extremists are still likely to remain. No one has yet publicly announced a campaign to hunt them down in the Sahara and in Mali’s villages, where they are...

  • Brazil nightclub owner blames country for fire

    Associated Press|Jan 30, 2013

    SANTA MARIA, Brazil (AP) — The owner of a nightclub in southern Brazil where more than 230 people died in a fire last weekend deflected blame to “the whole country,” as well as to architects and inspectors charged with making sure the building was safe, his lawyer said Wednesday. Attorney Jader Marques said his client, Elissandro Spohr, “regretted having ever been born” because of his grief over the fire, but still blamed Sunday’s tragedy on “a succession of errors made by the whole country.” Police investigating the blaze have said it likely...

  • Giffords appeal for gun control

    Associated Press|Jan 30, 2013

    WASHINGTON — In a dramatic appeal, wounded former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords urged Congress on Wednesday to enact tougher curbs on guns, saying, “too many children are dying” without them. “The time is now. You must act. Be bold, be courageous, Americans are counting on you,” she told the Senate Judiciary Committee at Congress’ first gun control hearing since 20 elementary school children were shot to death in Newtown, Conn., late last year. She spoke haltingly, a result of the wounds suffered when she was shot in the head in an attempted a...

  • Karnow, Vietnam reporter-historian, dies at age 87

    Associated Press|Jan 29, 2013

    Stanley Karnow, the award-winning author and journalist who wrote a definitive book about the Vietnam War, worked on an accompanying documentary and later won a Pulitzer for a history of the Philippines, died Sunday morning. He was 87. Karnow, who had congestive heart failure, died in his sleep at his home in Potomac, Md., said son Michael Karnow. A Paris-based correspondent for Time magazine early in his career, Karnow was assigned in 1958 to Hong Kong as bureau chief for Southeast Asia and...

  • Ohio Players frontman ‘Sugarfoot’ Bonner dies

    Associated Press|Jan 29, 2013

    CINCINNATI (AP) – Leroy “Sugarfoot” Bonner, frontman for the hit-making funk music band the Ohio Players, has died. He was 69. The Ohio Players, known for their brassy dance music, catchy lyrics and flamboyant outfits, topped music charts in the 1970s with hits such as “Love Rollercoaster,” ‘’Fire,” ‘’Skin Tight” and “Funky Worm.” A spokeswoman for a Newcomer Funeral Home in the Dayton suburb of Kettering said Monday morning that the family hadn’t scheduled any public services. There was...

  • PED report links A-Rod

    Associated Press|Jan 29, 2013

    NEW YORK (AP) — Major League Baseball said it is “extremely disappointed” about new allegations of performance-enhancing drug use against Alex Rodriguez and other players contained in a newspaper report. The Miami New Times, a popular alternative weekly, said in a story Tuesday that it had obtained files through an employee at a recently closed clinic in south Florida that show Rodriguez purchased HGH and other substances. Rodriguez, the New York Yankees slugger currently recovering from hip surgery, has admitted using steroids from 2001-...

  • S&P closes above 1,500 for 1st time since 2007

    Associated Press|Jan 26, 2013

    NEW YORK (AP) — Passing another milestone on the nation’s long journey back from the Great Recession, the Standard and Poor’s 500 index closed above 1,500 for the first time in more than five years Friday after a wave of good earnings reports. It took scores of incremental gains, several stalled rallies and a few sickening falls, but the widely watched S&P, one of the broadest measures of the American stock market, finished at 1,502.96, up 8.14 points. The index had not closed above 1,500 since December 2007, the start of the worst econo...

  • Wis. sheriff urges residents to get gun training

    Associated Press|Jan 26, 2013

    A sheriff who released a radio ad urging Milwaukee-area residents to learn to handle firearms so they can defend themselves while waiting for police said Friday that law enforcement cutbacks have changed the way police can respond to crime. In the 30-second commercial, Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke Jr. says personal safety is no longer a spectator sport. “I need you in the game,” he says. “With officers laid off and furloughed, simply calling 911 and waiting is no longer your best option,” he adds. “You can beg for mercy from a violent...

  • Colo. offense can’t count toward Neb. DUI sentence

    Associated Press|Jan 26, 2013

    OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A Lincoln man’s Colorado conviction for driving while impaired can’t be used to enhance his Nebraska sentence for drunken driving, the Nebraska Supreme Court said Friday. The state’s high court ordered a new sentencing hearing for Travis Mitchell, 39, who was sentenced in 2011 to three to five years in prison for a fourth-offense drunken driving conviction. Lincoln police determined Mitchell was drunk in 2010 when he wrecked his car in Lincoln, and he was convicted the next year. At his April 2011 sentence enhancement hearing...

  • Foster: Don’t expect 100 percent play at Pro Bowl

    Associated Press|Jan 26, 2013

    HONOLULU (AP) — Houston running back Arian Foster says players are going to step up at the Pro Bowl this year, but don’t expect 100 percent effort. Foster said Friday after practicing with his AFC teammates that it’s unrealistic to expect full effort from the NFL’s top athletes when they’re limited in the plays they’re able to run. “This isn’t basketball — you can’t go play a pickup game of football,” Foster said. Foster said if the NFL expects 100 percent effort from its stars and league officials are willing to cancel the game if they don...

  • Ten things you need to know for Super Bowl XLVII

    Associated Press|Jan 26, 2013

    A lookahead of what to be aware of when the Baltimore Ravens and San Francisco 49ers meet in the Super Bowl on Feb. 3 in New Orleans: 1. LIVE OR LIP SYNC? Don’t walk away at halftime! Unless, of course, you want to miss Beyonce in concert. And who wants to do that? Watch closely to see if she’s really sings or lip syncs. Beyonce hasn’t said which she did when she performed the national anthem at President Obama’s inauguration. 2. DANCE, DANCE, DANCE Ravens fans will rock the building during Ray Lewis’ pregame Squirrel Dance, a YouTube s...

  • A look at countries where women are in combat

    Associated Press|Jan 25, 2013

    From France’s Joan of Arc to female resistance fighters in World War II and the black-clad women warriors of the Viet Cong, history is filled with stories of women fighting alongside men. In many modern armies, however, ground infantry combat is still largely a male preserve — either by regulation, practical issues such as physical requirements of living space or personal preference in volunteer forces. But change is afoot. Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, where supply troops, clerks and military police have ended up in battle regardless of gen...

  • Britain introduces same-sex marriage bill

    Associated Press|Jan 25, 2013

    LONDON (AP) — The British government published a bill to legalize same-sex marriage Friday, and said lawmakers will get their first vote on it in Parliament next month. The Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill extends marriage to gay couples but excludes clergy in the Church of England — the country’s official faith — from having to carry out the ceremonies. That is intended to placate religious opponents of same-sex unions — though it has not stopped criticism of the bill from religious leaders. “We feel that marriage is a good thing and we shou...

  • Big crowds turn out in St. Louis; pay respects to ‘The Man’

    Associated Press|Jan 25, 2013

    ST. LOUIS (AP) — Standing outside the Cathedral Basilica as thousands filed inside to pay their respects, Stan Musial’s grandson was thankful. “Just seeing all this,” Brian Schwarze said, “and I got to play catch with him.” “I mean, he was my grandfather. But I really do believe I’m starting to understand somewhat what he meant to the whole community,” he said. Many visitors seemed to treat Thursday’s six-hour public visitation as if it was Stan the Man’s final game day, decked out in team at...

  • Couric plays Te’o voicemails

    Associated Press|Jan 25, 2013

    NEW YORK (AP) — The person Manti Te’o says was pretending to be his online girlfriend told the Notre Dame linebacker “I love you” in voicemails that were played during his interview with Katie Couric. Taped earlier this week and broadcast Thursday, the hour-long talk show featured three voicemails that Te’o claims were left for him last year. Te’o said they were from the person he believed to be Lennay Kekua, a woman he had fallen for online but never met face-to-face. After the first message was played, Te’o said: “It sounds like a girl, do...

  • Nebraska board imposes new irrigation rules

    Associated Press|Jan 25, 2013

    NORFOLK (AP) — Some northeast Nebraska farmers are facing new irrigation rules. The rules were adopted Thursday night by the Lower Elkhorn Natural Resources District Board at its meeting in Norfolk. The district includes parts of Madison, Pierce and Wayne counties. The rules bar expansion of irrigation to new areas as well as bar offseason irrigation. There are irrigation educational requirements, and irrigators must install groundwater water monitors. Some of the irrigators will have annual limits on how much water they can pump. The board h...

  • Western Nebraskan pleads not guilty in arson case

    Associated Press|Jan 25, 2013

    ALLIANCE (AP) — A 40-year-old man accused of setting his western Nebraska home on fire has pleaded not guilty to an arson charge. Authorities say Isaac Gonzalez ignited a fire Dec. 13 in the basement of a house he rented in Alliance. Alliance officers pulled Gonzalez to safety through a window. He was hospitalized in Scottsbluff. After his release he surrendered to police on Jan. 8. He’s free on bond. The Class 3 charge carries a maximum prison term of 20 years. Gonzalez is due back in court on April 1. Damage of $100,000 to the house and its...

  • Will smart machines create a world without work?

    Associated Press|Jan 25, 2013

    WASHINGTON — They seem right out of a Hollywood fantasy, and they are: Cars that drive themselves have appeared in movies like “I, Robot” and the television show “Knight Rider.” Now, three years after Google invented one, automated cars could be on their way to a freeway near you. In the U.S., California and other states are rewriting the rules of the road to make way for driverless cars. Just one problem: What happens to the millions of people who make a living driving cars and trucks — jobs that always have seemed sheltered from the onslaug...

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