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  • Palmer takes over electrical duties

    Special for the Sun-Telegraph|May 8, 2013

    Mike Palmer was named City of Sidney’s electrical superintendent effective Monday, May 6 following the retirement of Rod Fries. Fries retired Friday after 29 years of service to the City. Palmer will manage the nine man staff of the electric department and the power plant operations. He is a 15 year veteran of the Electric Department and has worked for the City of Sidney for 17 years. Palmer is a Sidney native and Sidney High graduate. He was the first city electrical department employee to c...

  • SRMC celebrates Nurses Week

    Lisana Eckenrode, Sun-Telegraph|May 7, 2013

    Each year Sidney Regional Medical Center (SRMC) celebrates the efforts that each SRMC area contributes to the continuum of care they provide during SRMC Week. A week full of special events planned for the members of the SRMC team. Kicking off the week, SRMC recognized the efforts of three nurses that were nominated for the Nebraska Nurses Association, District 5 “My Favorite Nurse” contest. Congratulations to Cheri Berry (SRMC Home Health and Hospice) and Rebecca Peters-Flohr (SRMC Acute Car...

  • Polar Bear Thaw

    May 7, 2013

  • Commissioners approve road projects

    Hannah Van Ree, Sun-Telegraph|May 7, 2013

    Cheyenne County Commissioners approved of the Cheyenne County Highway Superintendent’s 2013 One and Six Year Road Improvement Plan during their meeting Monday morning. Tom Noel explained the completed construction and maintenance projects from the 2012 hearing, as well as his future proposed projects. “Last year we took a bridge out and made it a low water crossing on 97,” he told the commissioners. The bridge in question was said to be deteriorating on Road 97 south of Road 18, and was replaced with the low water crossing. “We did 81 miles o...

  • Army Depot Redevelopment

    Lisana Eckenrode, Sun-Telegraph|May 7, 2013

    Lawyer Mike Bacon from Gothenburg presented draft number three of the redevelopment contract for the former Sioux Army Depot to the Potter village board on Monday night. Bacon insisted that the changes were modest; he didn’t understand that the city of Sidney provided water service to the site, so that was changed in the contract along with the addition that the village is not required to provide sewage, water or any of those services. Another aspect changed because there will be two bonds; one for the Dell Project and one for the rail. B...

  • TeamMates Mentoring Program receives funds from Cabela's

    Special for the Sun-Telegraph|May 7, 2013

    Cabela’s donated $7,000 to the local TeamMates Mentoring Program during a presentation that was held on April 30. Sean Baker presented the check on behalf of Cabela’s. The 2nd Annual TeamMates Mentor/Mentee Fun Day will be at West Elementary on Wednesday, May 15 at 1:30 p.m. students and their mentors will get to run the new obstacle course and eat snacks while the enjoy time together. The TeamMates Mentoring Program is a school-based one-to-one mentoring program that began in 1991. Tom and Nanc...

  • New noxious weed may threaten the area

    Hannah Van Ree, Sun-Telegraph|May 7, 2013

    Cheyenne County may soon be in the weeds. The board of commissioners and Weed Superintendent Brian Hiett discussed whether or not a new weed in the amaranth family should be put on the County’s Noxious Weed List at their meeting yesterday. Commissioner Harold Winkelman said that this weed was particularly a problem found in corn crops and soybeans, and that the “glorified pig weed” puts out thousands of seeds. “If you see one of those suckers growing out there you better go pull it because it became Roundup resistant and it also became T40 res...

  • County considers building inspection fees

    Hannah Van Ree, Sun-Telegraph|May 7, 2013

    Brad Rowan, the new Cheyenne County Planning and Zoning Administrator, met with Cheyenne County Commissioners Monday morning to discuss the procedure of issuing county building permits. “Presently there is no fee for inspections or issuing permits,” said the planning and zoning administrator. “I’d like to suggest we amend that to sister up to what I’m proposing for the city to do also.” Rowan explained to the commissioners that with his credentials, if the county updated it’s building codes the ISO rating would be lowered and in return it wou...

  • Sidney trash race collects tons of garbage

    Special for the Sun-Telegraph|May 7, 2013

    The Great Trash Race that was held in Sidney on May 4 was a couple of tons of success. The participants collected 244 bags of trash, which equaled 4380 lbs. or 2.19 tons of trash. Keep Sidney Beautiful recycled a half ton of metal from the event. This is up nearly one ton from last year’s race which had a total of 1.46 tons. The race is a part of Keep America Beautiful’s Great American Clean Up campaign. The goal of the race is to clean up litter in the community of Sidney and to educate the...

  • Veteran's history project

    Larry Nelson, Special for the Sun-Telegraph|May 4, 2013

    Editor’s Note: This story is one of many American Veteran accounts published in the Sidney Sun-Telegraph. The writer, who is from Potter, is conducting the interviews as part of the Library of Congress’ Veterans History Project. Leland Johnston was a ranch kid working in the Nebraska Sandhills near Thedford. He had been doing that since he was about 12 years old. When he was 18 he tried to get into the Army Air Corps but was turned down by that branch of service. The draft board did not turn him...

  • White is walking tall

    Hannah Van Ree, Sun-Telegraph|May 4, 2013

    Toward the end of each month you might catch a man walking around downtown Sidney at a height twice that of a normal person. Ty White’s height however is not due to giant genes or a major growth spurt during high school; instead he conducts projects around the city on his pair of stilts. White recently was recruited by members of the Cheyenne County Ladies Chamber to put up and change the festive street decorations drivers see on the light poles around the downtown area. His mother, Shirley W...

  • Jurors get case in Arias murder trial

    Associated Press|May 4, 2013

    PHOENIX — Jurors were given final instructions Friday in the trial of Jodi Arias, who is charged in the stabbing and shooting death of her one-time boyfriend in Arizona. They got the case after hearing closing arguments from both sides, with Arias’ lawyer imploring them to take an impartial view of his client and prosecutors describing Arias as a manipulative liar who meticulously planned the attack. Defense lawyer Kirk Nurmi on Friday asked the jury to take an unbiased look at the case and his client — even if they don’t like her — as the mu...

  • May 1873: Happy Anniversary! The Sidney Sun-Telegraph

    M Timothy Nolting, Special for the Sun-Telegraph|May 4, 2013

    It was the month of May in the year 1873 that the first published newspaper appeared in the frontier town of Sidney, Nebraska. The owner, editor, publisher, and pressman was one man, L. Connell, who distributed the four-column folio sheet under the banner of The Sidney Telegraph. The town of Sidney began as an end-of-track, Union Pacific railroad town in 1867 with all the drama and excitement that towns with those beginnings bring. Gamblers, whiskey peddlers, barrooms and brothels provided all the amenities that many hardworking railroad...

  • Disallowed evidence forces state to drop charges on Rodriguez

    Hannah Van Ree, Sun-Telegraph|May 4, 2013

    The State of Nebraska’s case against Joshua Rodriguez was decided by a jury trial this Tuesday, April 30 in Cheyenne County Court. The jury of six found Rodriguez not guilty of driving with a suspended license. Rodriquez had initially been charged with operating a motor vehicle during a period of suspension (a Class 3 misdemeanor,) possession of less than one once of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia in his vehicle (both infractions.) But according to court documents, his defense counsel, Sidney attorney Donald Miller, moved to s...

  • Chamber honors SVFD with 'heroes' award

    Lisana Eckenrode, Sun-Telegraph|May 3, 2013

    The Cheyenne County Chamber of Commerce created a new award in 2012, “Heroes Among Us.” This year’s recipients are all of the area fire departments because of the hard work that they did while they were fighting the wildfires in 2012 that burned nearly 6000 acres in Cheyenne, Kimball and Banner Counties. Awards are being given to the Sidney, Dalton, Potter, Gurley and Lodgepole volunteer fire departments. At the Chamber of Commerce banquet, all of the firemen were recognized and those firem...

  • Boston Marathon suspect's remains claimed

    Associated Press|May 3, 2013

    BOSTON — A mortuary familiar with Muslim services will handle funeral arrangements for Boston Marathon bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev, who died in a gunbattle with police after an intense manhunt, a funeral director said Friday. Peter Stefan, owner of Graham Putnam and Mahoney Funeral Parlors in Worcester, confirmed his facility will handle Tsarnaev’s arrangements, but he could not say whether he has possession of the body. Stefan said everybody deserves a dignified burial service no matter the circumstances of their death and he is pre...

  • National Day of Prayer observed in Sidney

    Lisana Eckenrode, Sun-Telegraph|May 3, 2013

    To observe the National Day of Prayer, a group from Sidney met in front of the City of Sidney offices on Thursday. Participant Martina Drewes said, “We are meeting at Noon because people have lunch breaks around that time and may be able to participate and people across the nation are beginning at the same time.” Organizer Jennifer Ernst says that the National Day of Prayer was established by President George W. Bush as a non-denominational day for everyone to come together to pray. Ernst fou...

  • New plants, annual event signal start of spring

    Hannah Van Ree, Sun-Telegraph|May 3, 2013

    Excited for spring, Teresa Grant, owner and operator of Sidney Floral and Gift Shop, and her master gardeners received their first load of plants and flowers yesterday as part of their second Sidney Floral and Greenhouse Too! event. The arrival of the truck full of plants yesterday marks the first day plants at the greenhouse will be available for purchase, and the event will last until June 15 - if the weather stays cool enough for the plants. “We will close June 15 and that’s tentative dependi...

  • Run supports Wounded Warrior Project

    Hannah Van Ree, Sun-Telegraph|May 3, 2013

    In Bridgeport, Neb. tomorrow many will gather and run in support of United States military veterans and those still serving. The Bridgeport Police Department has teamed up with staff at the Prairie Winds Community Center to host a program of events on Saturday, May 4 to raise money for the Wounded Warrior Project. The Wounded Warrior Project (WWP) is a nonprofit organization aimed at “honoring and empowering” soldiers that have been wounded while protecting and serving the U.S. According to WWP officials, the purpose of the organization is to...

  • Golden Living Center's May Day brightened by Brownies

    Lisana Eckenrode, Sun-Telegraph|May 2, 2013

    On May 1, members of Cheyenne County’s Brownie Troop 70 visited Golden Living Center and gifted all 51 of the residents with May baskets. Co-leader of the troop, Mary Ann Whitboldt, came up with the idea. Since Whitboldt works at Golden Age, she thought that gifting the residents with flowers would be a nice service project for the Brownie troop. The Brownies used plastic water bottles, painted them black with brightly colored designs before adding flowers. The gifts brightened the otherwise g...

  • Oral cancer on the increase

    Lisana Eckenrode, Sun-Telegraph|May 2, 2013

    Oral Cancer Awareness Month just ended without much notice. It is a disease that people should be aware of year-round. According to the Oral Cancer Foundation (OCF), oral cancer is the largest group of those cancers which fall into the head and neck cancer category. Approximately 42,000 people in the US will be newly diagnosed with oral cancer in 2013. This includes those cancers that occur in the mouth itself, in the very back of the mouth known as the oropharynx, and on the exterior lip of the mouth. This is the fifth year in a row in which...

  • Compassionate Friends begins summer break

    Special for the Sun-Telegraph|May 2, 2013

    The Compassionate Friends Sidney Chapter has begun its summer break and will not hold regular meetings until this coming fall. They will resume again with the start of the Annual Balloon release in August. Feel free to contact Randy Flamig at 308-254-4450 or Rob Robinson at 308-254-6354 for any needs or questions....

  • Dress Down Day funds

    May 2, 2013

  • Fresh off victory, NRA holds convention in Houston

    Associated Press|May 2, 2013

    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — The National Rifle Association has spent much of the past year under siege, ardently defending gun rights following mass shootings in Colorado and Connecticut and fighting back against mounting pressure for stricter laws in Washington and state capitols across the country. Now, after winning a major victory over President Barack Obama with the defeat of a gun control bill in the U.S. Senate, the powerful gun-rights lobby will gather in Houston this weekend for its annual convention. Organizers anticipate a rollicking, T...

  • Cabela's founder to step down

    Hannah Van Ree, Sun-Telegraph|May 2, 2013

    Cabela’s Incorporated officials announced in April a change in command as the company’s original pioneer, co-founder and chairman, Richard N. Cabela, is set to retire his role as Chairman and become Chairman Emeritus. The change will commence on June 5 during the company’s annual meeting of shareholders. His brother, co-founder and Cabela’s Vice Chairman, James W. Cabela will take over the role of Chairman following the meeting. Tommy Millner, Cabela’s Chief Executive Officer, said that the...

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