Mother Daughter Boutique Offers Perfect Mother’s Day Spot
by Paul Heft
Arelatively new boutique in West Omaha is creating jobs not only for the employees but for vendors who just need a place to sell their work. NJ & Co. is run by a duo consisting of mother and daughter. Nicole Leathers handles the business while Jane White, her mother, manages merchandise and displays. Leathers said the store’s demographic ranges from college-aged girls to women in their 70s.
NJ & Co. opened their doors in August 2012 sporting six total vendors. Three women go to market and select inventory for the store’s niche while some vendors work there.
NJ & Co. illuminates a sense of vintage home décor and repurposed furniture. The fashions are influenced by the different vendors, but there is an underlying retro meets modern look to it all. You can find old-fashioned bird cages for the café or perhaps a frock for a special occasion.
Leathers feels West Omaha is a prime location for the store. “I feel like we’re filling the home décor niche,” Leathers said. In fact, nothing at the store is mass produced.
More important is what Leathers and White are doing for the vendors. “We provide these women with an upfront entry point where they can learn to succeed without losing money,” Leathers said.
The vendors include MOD Boutique, Painted Dog, Twice Nice, Bocachi, Ali Rae’s and Beaded Creations by Marcia.
Mod lives by the motto “style is eternal,” so mothers and daughters can shop together for jewelry, tops or leggings. Painted Dog believes in recycling and giving back to the environment; they repurpose furniture using only biodegradable stripping products.
Twice Nice also refurbishes old décor and brings the metamorphosis full circle with stain and finishing. Bocachi believes in scouting for old treasures while offering tops, dresses, jackets, accessories and more.
Ali Rae offers shoppers tunics, jewelry, scarves and purses. Beaded Creations by Marcia specializes in making interchangeable beaded watch bands. Expect some funk and bling with industrial chic.
Opening your own business is always a risk. Leathers was nervous about opening because of the economy, but she finally decided, “to hell with it!” Leathers added that she hopes the boutique draws people away from malls to support local shops.
White previously owned seven Hallmarks and some accessory stores in Wisconsin, so the duo had some experience behind them. “My mother’s background made it less scary opening,” Leathers said.
NJ & Co. offers “Girl’s Night Out” the first Thursday of every month. The store stays open until 8 p.m. for shopping, snacks and spirited beverages.
Shortly before Christmas the store offers a men’s shopping night. Maybe it’s because men wait until the tail end of December to buy gifts. Maybe they have a soft spot for décor. Regardless, men’s night has been NJ & Co.’s most successful endeavor so far. Gift wrapping is always provided, regardless of the day.
NJ & Co. is the perfect place for Mother’s Day. Shopping shouldn’t be too hard, since the store merges older tastes with young flair. After all, NJ & Co. offers furnishings, frocks and finds. Stop in today at 17650 Wright St., Suite No. 4.
posted at 10:41 am
on Wednesday, May 08th, 2013
Four Artists Featured at Art Bar
Old Market Tavern hosts a night of great art and potluck
by James Derrick Schott
Katie Kros can sum up quickly why she uses art as expression. “I’ve never been good with words," Kros says, "so I let my art speak for me.”
Kros will be one of four artists, including Jenny Suing, Joe Stickman and Paul Heft, who will be showcasing their artwork at the latest installment in the art series, Art Bar, Wednesday, April 24, at the Old Market Tavern. The purpose of Art Bar is to give new and emerging artists an opportunity to exhibit and sell their work in a unconventional, yet relaxed setting.
Katie Kros uses a variety of mediums but prefers charcoal. She considers it a bold and classic way to convey emotion through shading. Acrylic is another favorite of hers; she paints to release those “inner demons” artists are always talking about. Kros utilizes dramatic color contrast and experiments with splatter designs. Kros has recently dipped into fashion with Dominikat Clothing. Painting provides Kros with a free-flowing stream of emotion. When drawing it’s more of a specific moment in time she’s focusing on.
The second artist is Jenny Suing. Suing’s parents always enjoyed art, so she grew up with that influence. After attending Boystown, Suing realized just how much her art teacher inspired her. Abstract art and Surrealism has always captivated her. Suing looks up to Frida Kahlo as a strong female artist. Her biggest piece depicts Kahlo, which took months to complete. Suing is intrigued by eyes, insects and texture. Art helps Suing turn off her mind and help with sobriety. She sent out Christmas card designs to donors across the U.S. one year at Boystown.
Joe Stickman has been an artist ever since he could pick up a pencil. He has progressed from standard drawing and colored pencil portraits to creating pieces using metal, plastic and paint. As an artist, Stickman excelled in his classes through high school. He knew from the beginning that he wanted to build a career utilizing his talents. In 1997 Joe Stickman enrolled at Universal Technical Institute of Commercial Art. He graduated in 1999 with his Associates Degree. Upon graduation Joe began working at a sign company in Omaha and he continued working in the sign business until he started Stickman Graphics & Signs, Inc in 2003. Stickman often uses recycled materials in his art. His pieces have been sold and displayed at various locations. His unique use of materials and paints sets his work apart from many artists. Many people are surprised to learn that Stickman is also colorblind. He has not let that get in the way of his true passion of creating and has found a way to still create art in a form and color that only he can see.
Paul Heft has always wanted to dip into painting, so a few months ago he did. Definitely new to the field, Heft enjoys mixing dark colors like red, black, purple and navy blue to make gradual mixing and shades, hopefully evoking emotion. He also is intrigued by using bright neon colors against the stark contrast of black. Heft experiments with text. He uses lyrics from songs; some from his favorite bands and some of his own lyrics. Heft feels he can excel at art that doesn’t have much form; drawing and painting distinct shapes have always been a challenge for him, so he sticks with a loose, abstract feel. His favorite mediums are acrylic on canvas. He feels his art is best when he isn’t pressured by the outcome. It’s all about shutting off your mind.
Besides getting to take in all the original art, Art Bar'ers can compete in the Potluck Challenge by bringing a potluck dish to the event, with patrons selecting the best dish. The winner will recieve a special prize. Also, the Old Market Tavern will be kicking off its special Summer Beer Sampler Week by offering $2 bottle special on certain summer lagers, including Leinenkugel Summer Shandy.
Art Bar begins at 8 p.m. at the Old Market Tavern, located at the corner of 10th and Jackson in the Old Market next to Fringes salon. For more informationt, click here.
posted at 02:26 pm
on Wednesday, April 17th, 2013
Irish Tradition on the Move
The Last St. Pat’s Day at Sullivan’s in Midtown
by Paul Heft
Sullivan’s bar, a long-time St. Patrick’s Day tradition, has served the midtown community since 1954, and the current owner is planning to continue that trend in a new location across the street. Owner Dan Houlihan has managed the establishment since 2001 when the chance presented itself. Houlihan had been working his way up in bars and restaurants for years before that. “I thrive on the high energy, fast-paced nature of the job as well as the social aspect,” he said.
After taking over, Houlihan transformed Sullivan’s into a popular Midtown hangout and it has been that way ever since. The neighborhood is now home to many young thriving businesses, such as Black Squirrel Tattoo, Icon Studio for Hair and Oxide Design. Houlihan says one business, however, never fit well into the neighborhood. A bar located directly across the street from Sullivan’s was notorious for bringing violence and other problems to the area. After a lengthy battle with that establishment, it was closed and Houlihan purchased the property. “I’m looking forward to owning the building and not just renting it. The 40th and Farnam area is about to expand so that solidified my decision,” Houlihan said.
Benefits of moving include more space, better configuration and improved layout. To restore the 100-year-old building, Houlihan “knocked it down to bare, brick walls and unearthed some unique architecture.”
How does Houlihan juggle the current bar while working on relocation? He greatly praises and respects his staff. Houlihan says there’s no way he could do this without them.
“It’s bittersweet leaving this location because it’s been here for decades. However, the area is changing, and we’re trying to embrace that change,” Houlihan said.
A group of young investors decided to redo the area. Houlihan said urban densification is a growing theme in America. People are waiting to get married and not having babies as young. It would appear Omaha’s eastern half will continue to grow and change over the years. Houlihan said both he and the investors expect the area to be radically different even a year from now.
The new Sullivan’s should open by late summer, according to Houlihan. The bar hasn’t suffered any extremes from the tough economy. Houlihan insists any good establishment can weather the storm; however, there have been challenges. They include new DUI laws and adapting to the smoking ban.
Sullivan’s is, no doubt, an Irish bar, and St. Patrick’s Day will be thoroughly celebrated there. The bar opens at 6 a.m. with drink specials all day. Expect free corn beef sandwiches by noon and a secret family recipe for Irish soda bread. Houlihan said drink prices definitely won’t be raised and festive activities like face painting will also be available. Sullivan’s is on the right track as it looks to the future. Sullivan’s is currently located at 3926 Farnam St. Stop by on St. Patrick’s Day for some true Irish fun.
posted at 02:58 pm
on Friday, March 15th, 2013
CREDITS: STYLING BY JARED SPENCE, MODELS BY DEVELOP MODEL MANAGEMENT, BIKE COURTESY JIM BLUM
LEFT: On Audrey: Bella Dahl denim buttondown, Henry & Belle Kelly signature skinny jeans, Denim Saloon. All jewelry, Fringes Salon Spa and Boutique. On Nolan: Superdry Slim fit jeans, Bench buttondown, Bench track jacket, Superdry sneakers McLovin-A Store for Men. THIS RIGHT: On Audrey: Bella Dahl ombre top, Paige floral print denim, Denim Saloon. All jewelry, Fringes Salon Spa and Boutique. On Nolan: Superdry chambray buttondown, Superdry Sneakers, Bill Adler leather belt, McLovin. Citizens of Humanity “Sid” jeans, Denim Saloon. Hair by Hillary Ann and makeup by Chevy both of Sirens at the Loft Salon & Day Spa.
Everything’s Gone Green for St. Patrick’s Day
by Jared Spence
St. Patrick’s Day is just around the river bend. Usually, I would rant about the absurdity of starting a drinking binge at 7 a.m. and wearing ridiculous leprechaun hats and plastic shamrock beads, but my health and image concerns aside, St. Patty’s Day is an occasion to be festive! But there’s no need for you to look like a walking advertisement for Oriental Trading Company (okay, maybe the image concerns are still on the table). Here are my tips for adding a little luck to your look on March 17. Thinking green has never been so sexy.
Magic at your fingertips
Even a St. Patrick’s Day look just isn’t complete without a coat of glossy lacquer on your fingertips. I am obsessed with nail technician Imagine Uhlenbrock’s work at The Nail Shop. See my favorite nail lady for a flawless St. Pat’s Day manicure complete with hand-painted nail art and designs that are to- die-for. The Nail Shop, 105 S. 9th St. Omaha 402.595.8805
Making scents of Irish luck
Bond No. 9’s “I Love NY for Earth Day” fragrance is a breath of fresh air. Inside this fresh green bottle is an ambrosial blend of tangerine, tuberose, and amber. Let the lure of Bond No. 9 sweep you away to greener pastures. Von Maur, 10010 California St. Omaha, 402.390.0381
A lucky pair
Colored denim is the perfect alternative to looking like the Jolly Green Giant. It’s also a great kick start to your spring wardrobe. A pair of Citizens of Humanity jeans in spruce green for him and Henry & Belle skinny jeans in kelly green for her fit the bill, but I can’t promise these perfect fit jeans will save you from being pinched. Denim Saloon, 4914 Underwood Ave., Omaha, 402.885.8880
A tattoo you won’t regret
Don’t let the name fool you. Hair tattoos are not real tattoos, just a shaved design into the hair. Still scared? No need to be. Michael Hartig at Fringes Salon is an expert at etching and coloring detailed designs into the heads of clients with precision and flair. Have him throw a shamrock into your hair for a fun twist or even a Cross Pattée to really show off your Irish pride. Fringes Salon Spa and Boutique, 518 S. 10th St. Omaha, 402.345.0404
Bag that fortune
You’ve got to keep your St. Patty’s Day cash somewhere. Clare Vivier’s flat clutch is the golden spot. For the chic bar-hopper this jade green patent piece is the perfect handheld companion. This subtle bag packs a style punch with its glossy finish and is sure to become your new go-everywhere good luck charm. Clarevivier.com
Step out on the good foot
Keep your fingers crossed for sunny skies and you may be able to wear DV by Dolce Vita’s beaded sea foam sandals. DV is known for crafting magically comfortable shoes without sacrificing style, perfect for the all-day walkathon that lies ahead. Post & Nickel, 11015 Elm St. Omaha, 402.333.5206
posted at 08:53 am
on Wednesday, March 13th, 2013
From left to right: Sharif Liwaru, Sarah Moore, Nikole Roach of UNO's Attendance Collaborative
Collaborative shares attendance best practices
by Kietryn Zychal
“Attendance is one area where 90 percent does not equal an A,” according to Sharif Liwaru, Elementary Schools Director at UNO’s Attendance Collaborative. That is because a 90 percent attendance rate equals 20 days of absence -- the number that triggers a referral to the County Attorney as mandated by LB 933.
“A kid missing a couple days of school every couple of weeks may not seem like a lot of days gone, but academically, it has a greater impact than many parents are aware of. There is now increased communication between the school and parents about what it takes to be successful and what attendance expectations are.
"The preferred rate should be 95 percent of the time. Five percent absenteeism is less than 10 days per year. If they can keep it under 10 days, that’s good attendance,” Liwaru said.
UNO launched the Attendance Collaborative in 2009 with funding from Building Brighter Futures as a vehicle to study the problem of high absenteeism and to come up with a pilot program for improving attendance in Douglas and Sarpy county schools. In addition to Liwaru, the team includes Sarah Moore who focuses on middle schools and Nikole Roach at the high school level. The success of local school districts is important to UNO. “The impact of graduation rates is so direct on the university’s applicant pool that they wanted to be involved,” Liwaru said. “They were a neutral party, but still greatly affected by the issue.”
According to the collaborative, every year 1.2 million students drop out of school nationwide, which is 7,000 students every day. The Nebraska Department of Education reports that the statewide drop out rate is 10 percent, but the rate for Douglas County is closer to 25 percent. Absenteeism is the first indicator that a student will drop out of school.
Pilot Programs
Since its inception, the collaborative has been studying a sample of schools with an eye on developing pilot programs or best practices that can be implemented district wide.
“We are currently serving 18 schools within OPS, three within Ralston and two within Millard,” Moore said. “What we do is provide support at the school level. We don’t work directly with the students. We help schools enhance and create sustainable strategies to improve attendance. We look at what already exists, including state law, district level policies and procedures, and additional strategies they have in place. We examine those with the school and through research of national practices we help enhance those efforts,” she said.
“Through those efforts with those 23 schools we have created a ‘Guide to Achieving Excellent Attendance,’” Roach added. “It’s a culmination of the most effective strategies that are taking place at the elementary, middle and high schools.”
Each building has a School Engagement and Attendance Team (SEAT) that is encouraged to determine what works best for their institution. The Attendance Collaborative serves as a clearinghouse for idea sharing among the various schools.
“We missed you!”
One of the core values of the Attendance Collaborative is positive messaging. “We encourage staff to tell the students ‘We want you here. We missed you,” instead of “Why weren’t you here?” Roach said.
Another value is personal engagement. Teachers and administrators greet students when they arrive at the school building. Home room has been transformed from a place to take attendance into an opportunity for one teacher to monitor and mentor the same group of students from freshman through senior year.
Parents are kept informed about their children’s attendance through letters, phone calls and personal contact. One high school utilizes robo-calls to let parents know immediately if their child has missed a class they were expected to attend.
Additionally, there are four non-profit organizations sponsoring six Youth Attendance Navigators who work directly with students in the schools. Completely Kids is at Norris Middle School. The Urban League is at Monroe Middle School, Benson High and Northwest High. The Latino Center of the Midlands is at South High. The “Y” is at McMillan Middle School. “Hopefully, there will be additional funding to have more YAN’s in the future,” Moore said.
The community is also engaged in promoting attendance through engagement. Mentoring and after-school programs are critical to keeping students interested in school.
The good news is that perfection is not expected. “We encourage schools not to concentrate on perfect attendance,” Liwaru said. “Statistically, there is no academic difference between 0 and 8 days missed. We don’t want people to come to school when they are sick or to miss going to their grandmother’s funeral.”
Graduation rates have improved in OPS by a few percentage points in the past year. “It’s not going to improve dramatically overnight,” Liwaru said. “But we are in this for the long haul.”
posted at 01:58 pm
on Monday, March 11th, 2013
Zach Wahls and Moms
Zach Wahls brings his message of equality to UNO human rights lecture series
by Leo Adam Biga
With gay marriage being assailed during an Iowa House Judiciary Committee public hearing in 2011 Zach Wahls offered counter testimony that not only charged the proceedings but the national dialogue about the issue.
Raised by same sex partners, Wahls made the case that sexual preference has nothing to do with effective parenting. He used himself as a case in point. The 21-year-old University of Iowa student and Eagle Scout, who happens to be straight, owns and operates his own tutoring business, Iowa City Learns, that hires local high school students to tutor peer students.
What Wahls spoke that afternoon became a YouTube sensation and ever since he's emerged as a leading LGBT advocate.
His 2012 book, My Two Moms: Lessons of Love, Strength and What Makes a Family, distills his thoughts and experiences as the son of a lesbian couple. The book's message picks up where his testimony ended, when he said "the sexual orientation of my parents has had zero impact on the content of my character," and frames his frequent public talks. He's the featured speaker for the March 12 Shirley and Leonard Goldstein Lecture on Human Rights at the Thompson Alumni Center at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. His 7 p.m. address is free and open to the public.
Wahls will emphasize what unites people, not divides them.
"I obviously grew up in a family that is in some ways very different from the median American family," he says, "but at the end of the day I think there's much more that makes us similar to most other American families than makes us different. So my remarks are really going to be focused on trying to find this common ground."
The 2011 plea he made before Iowa legislators did not stop the Republican-controlled Iowa House from passing the same sex ban, which the Democrat-majority Senate has thus far blocked. But the argument he made for gay marriage and parenting resonated far beyond the confines of that state debate.
"My family really isn’t so different from any other Iowa family," he told lawmakers. "When I’m home, we go to church together. We eat dinner, we go on vacations. But we have our hard times too. But we’re Iowans. We don’t expect anyone to solve our problems for us. We’ll fight our own battles. We just hope for equal and fair treatment…
"So what you’re voting for here is not to change us. It’s not to change our families, it’s to change how the law views us, how the law treats us. You are telling Iowans, 'Some among you are second-class citizens who do not have the right to marry the person you love.' I’m sure we’re going to hear a lot of testimony about how damaging having gay parents is on kids. But not once have I ever been confronted by an individual who realized independently that I was raised by a gay couple."
His remarks went viral online overnight. Life hasn't been the same since. He's given national media interviews and appeared on The Daily Show and the Ellen DeGeneres Show.
"It's an interesting place to find one's self, no doubt about it, especially at such a young age," he says of the notoriety. "The thing a lot of folks don't necessarily understand is that when you are the son of a same sex couple, especially in a place like Iowa or Wisconsin, where I was born, you are already an ambassador simply because there aren't a whole lot of us. And so growing up I was really the only kid that a lot of folks knew who had gay parents and that put a certain amount of pressure on me when I was younger."
Active in the Scouts for Equality campaign to end the ban on gays in the Boy Scouts, he's hopeful a policy change is near. He says the organization is listening to the Scout community and trying to formulate equality language to be voted on May 24 at the meeting of its national council.
He's embraced the activist role that's come his way and is encouraged by the support he's encountered in his many travels.
"Over the last two years now I've had this incredible opportunity to go all over the country and have a conversation with people who are similar to me, who are different from me about this question and this debate the nation is currently having about marriage and family and tried to make some sense of it.
"My message really resonates with people both on the left and the right politically. In my generation I've found there are increasingly very few people who view this as a partisan issue and it think that is a very good thing. As I've had the chance to speak with young conservatives and liberals and libertarians I've found there's interest in coming together to find solutions and a desire for collaboration and problem solving and less interest in fighting this culture war that's dominated American politics."
He says his advocacy role "has absolutely changed me," adding, "When my generation was growing up we were always told by our guidance counselors that we could change the world. I think a lot of us thought it was b.s.. We didn't necessarily think it was true and this showed me that well, actually, it is true. There is nothing more powerful than an idea thats time has come."
Several times now, he says, people have told him his words have helped change their minds about gay marriage and parenting and he calls this feedback "a very powerful reminder of the ability we all have to impact other people's lives and to expose them to different ideas and new points of view."
Follow Wahls on Facebook and via his website, www.zachwahls.com.
Read more of Leo Adam Biga's work at leoadambiga.wordpress.com.
posted at 08:22 am
on Monday, March 04th, 2013
It’s all about fashion this week in the Big O
by Paul Heft
Omaha Fashion Week, now in its sixth year, has new tricks up its sleeve. New designers are expected this year, including Kate Walz, who just returned from New York, and Jeff Hanson, who will be showing his line of hand-painted dresses. Sixteen designers will be present in all. About 400 models show up each year with 1,000 hands in total putting on the show. Of note is opening night’s Cancer Survivor Show, which features 80 models.
Wednesday of Fashion Week is industry night, which features MOOD fabrics from New York. Thursday is the Children’s and Bridal Show, and Friday is Ready to Wear. Amanda Valentine from Project Runway will be there on Friday, which is a huge highlight of fashion week, and Saturday has been sold out for weeks. “Knowing Amanda is from Nebraska really helps inspire young people,” said Nick Hudson, co-producer of Fashion Week.
Talent definitely comes from the Midwest, Hudson adds, and the coasts approve. For example, Erin Thomas has showcased two outfits on the Sports Illustrated Swimwear Edition. Hudson believes Fashion Week does have an impact on Omaha slowly becoming more trendy, and it will probably increase with every year it is held. ,
posted at 10:35 am
on Thursday, February 28th, 2013
Christian Shuster
Designer Christian Shuster returns to Omaha Fashion Week and looks to bring his clothing line nationwide
by Jared Spence
Christian Shuster, the designer of the christianMICHEAL menswear label is the name on the tip of all the fashionable tongues right now. He was the talk of the runways at Omaha Fashion Week last year when he made his Omaha debut; now he is back for round two with a whole new approach. The self-taught Kansas City native is known around his hometown and the Midwest for the necktie label he launched in 2000, and since then has been building a name for his clothing line as well. Known for his precise tailoring and creative looks, Shuster is on his way to making a big splash in men’s fashion.
Omaha Fashion Week 2012 was Omaha’s first introduction to christianMICHEAL. The collection was very period and literal with the inspiration. What else can people expect to see from the label?
“The label has always been about the style-conscious man. Last year was very period inspired, but at the same time I wanted to do something a little avant garde. I wanted, for my first runway production, to do something a little over the top as well. This year, I want to show some depth and range as a designer. I want my looks to be seen from the runway and envisioned to go straight to retail, so they are 100 percent ready to wear.
The Reader: What was your inspiration for this collection?
A lot of my inspiration came from by the fabric selection I was finding. I was able to come across some beautiful wools and plaids. My mind started wrapping around that outdoor man — almost an American lumberjack meets English fox hunter type of thing. I looked a little bit to the turn-of-the-century English time period, but with some of the colors and prints it’s almost got an American ‘70s feel.
What can we expect to see this season?
I’m doing what I call an American sporting meets English fox hunting collection. It’s almost a sort of English country cottage look. There are quilted hunting jackets with corduroy patch shoulders and things like that. There are a lot of double breasted wool pea coats with herringbone weaves, plaid pants paired with solid colored jackets, and traditional three piece suits with a houndstooth print. We’re going to push the envelope a bit in the way of color and print, but we’re really falling on some classic styling lines with tailored jackets, pants, and vests.
Who is the christianMICHEAL man?
The christianMICHEAL man is 25-45 years old, active, hardworking and style-conscious but with just a little need of direction. Also someone who enjoys something very clean and tailored, appreciates a good fit, and who is not scared of making a statement in the right way.
What is your style advice to all of the men out there?
Know your body type and know the fit of your body. Fit is such a big part of menswear in looking clean and tailored. And don’t be scared to try new things. Don’t believe the rules that your dad and grandfather told you. Push the envelope and try to mix and match. Menswear is about being a headstrong and confident man.
Being a menswear designer, do you ever struggle with generating fresh ideas?
Not really. I draw inspiration from a lot of areas. I think that’s one of the biggest voids in menswear that you don’t see a lot of new things. I am a believer in never staying stagnant and always looking for what is new and what is next, especially with something that can be as stale as menswear. There are enough style conscious, fashion forward men today and there’s just not a voice for them. I’m trying to be the next great American designer for men.
In addition to Omaha Fashion Week, what is the christianMICHEAL brand up to?
My main focus after fashion week is going to be taking the label to market and taking the label to retail in stores not only across the Midwest but across the nation.
What are your goals with the brand? Where would you like to see it go?
Ultimately, christianMICHEAL wants to be a wholesale American men’s label sold nationwide in retailers across the states. We’ll definitely get there. ,
posted at 10:14 am
on Thursday, February 28th, 2013
Chevy and her Sirens Team
Teams of stylists, makeup artists and models help make Omaha Fashion Week happen
by Paul Heft
Chevy, or Siobhan Naughton Kozisek, owns Sirens salon and is ready to take on Fashion Week for the sixth year. She graduated from Capitol in 1997, where she took a liking to doing makeup over anything else. She’s been at it for over 14 years, often with makeup and waxing being her calling. She started working with media and film, too, so maybe she found just the right combination.
“I’m glad I never knew it would take so much to get here. I might have given up,” says Chevy, but she certainly persevered.
Chevy prefers Fashion Week when it falls in the warmer months because the weather allows for more options. “We’re always doing media and filming our work, so it’s better when we can be outside.”
Although Chevy never really gets to see the runway show, she always feels the energy of the back room while the models are getting airbrushed and adorned.
Chevy feels like the Old Market is a great setting for Siren’s salon, which specializes in everything but emphasizes artistic influence. She feels that the salon can reach its full potential in that location, free to go in whatever direction the stylists please. “I feel like people recognize us as Siren’s now. We try to have our own signature to everything.”
Siren’s and Chevy have taken a liking to Glo Minerals, a makeup product with natural ingredients that is tender on the skin. Glo is said to have some vibrant pigments not accessible through other brands.
The salon frequently uses this medium, but Chevy says the styles of makeup always vary from person to person. “I don’t let my clients see my work until I’m completely done,” Chevy said. She doesn’t specialize in just smoky eyes or heavy eyeliner; she’s covering the whole board.
Chevy says many stylists have been with her since Siren’s opened. This year Chevy is excited to work with designer Kate Walz, who is visiting from New York. “We’re also very excited to see the bridal line this year.”
Inspiration can be influenced based on the upcoming event, but often times it just comes from inside, Chevy says. Sometimes the salon gets a request; other times they are given more artistic freedom.
Fashion Week will be another one of those times where Siren’s and Chevy are bound to succeed — not only from talent but from earned experience.
posted at 03:40 pm
on Wednesday, February 27th, 2013
Neal Duffy on tour with the Neon Trees and Maroon 5. Check out his DJ alter ego W.E.R.D. hitting the decks at House of Loom this Saturday, March 2.
Our very own Neal Duffy enjoys traveling the globe making big bands sound better
by Paul Heft
Neal Duffy is the guy making your concerts sound crisp and pristine. He’s making every instrument and vocalization reverberate across the auditorium. Currently, he’s on tour with Neon Trees, who will open for Maroon 5 in Omaha March 3. He’s been with Neon Trees for two years since he caught his big break.
Duffy received his education in sound at the School and Audio Workshop in Ohio, then transferred to Iowa Western, where he got on-air experience. “Working with audio and sound is a science,” Duffy says. “Some people don’t realize that.” While the science behind sound will stay the same, the tools vary.
His first work with a live band was with the Jazzwholes. Duffy also toured with Tilly and the Wall, an act Omaha knows well, while earning his certification to be a yoga teacher. Then, Marciano, the manager of the Tilly and CSS tour, offered him a break with Neon Trees.
Duffy had first encountered Neon Trees back in May 2010 when they opened for 30 Seconds to Mars. That was the first time Neon Trees had experienced Omaha.
“I was ready to take a break from the music industry before this,” Duffy explained. He had become disheartened with the materialism and creative compromise that has become rampant in the music business. So Duffy took the offer he wasn’t necessarily expecting, but he still does yoga to this day.
“Before Neon Trees, I was used to mixing for clubs of maybe 5,000,” Duffy said. “Now it’s arenas of 20,000.” Sound systems are different everywhere, but Duffy wouldn’t want it any other way because he firmly believes you should always be learning. “I want a job that lets me learn every day. Otherwise, I wonder why I’m doing it.”
Duffy needs to have heard the album he’s mixing live inside and out. In order to recreate it live, he examines all the layers of production to see how a live crowd could best hear it.
Duffy said the largest hurdle in his work is being completely satisfied with your mix that night. “Audio boards have endless options. I feel like I could always tweak something and make its sound different or change the levels.”
One of Duffy’s first tours outside the Midwest was with the Clumsy Lovers, a Canadian Band. This took him to the West Coast and Canada. Duffy has also been to Asia, Australia, the whole U.S., and Europe. His favorite destination was Bali, where he surfed the royal blue waters. Other favorites include Japan, Spain, London, Paris and the Great Wall.
Duffy is a hobbyist photographer on the side when he’s not doing sound, being DJ W.E.R.D or at Lotus House of Yoga.
Duffy’s dream was to run sound at Madison Square Garden, one of the most massive arenas in the world. That just happened on Feb. 16 on the current tour with Neon Trees and Maroon 5.
Duffy has been all over the world, but he hasn‘t run sound for a big show in Omaha yet. “Even though I’ve been all over the world, I’m really excited to be running sound for the Omaha show in March.” There is a first for everything, even if it leads you back home. ,
posted at 12:09 pm
on Wednesday, February 27th, 2013
Spruce is cozily stuffed with lots of luxurious items.
Spruce is a welcome addition to Midtown
by Jared Spence
Tucked away in a little brick building in a most unassuming spot, Spruce, an interior and gift boutique, is almost discreet enough to pass by without knowing. But the little shop on 50th and Leavenworth manages to burst enough personality from the front windows to pique the curiosity of passersby.
Spruce is a treat for the senses. Entering the store, I was greeted with an abundance of colors, patterns, and the scents of Nest candles wafting in the air. The mirrors hanging on the walls and metallic furniture pieces reflect the sunlight pouring in from the windows, setting the stage for the wondrous journey that lies within the quaint space.
The store has a little bit of everything, which instantly reminded me of a little lifestyle boutique, Trocadero, that once lived in the Old Market.
The store is cozily stuffed with chic vignettes of tables and ottomans with gorgeous table lamps and luxurious throw pillows. It has a charming balance of sleek and gilded décor mixed with nature inspired items. Ceramic turtle shell figures and snake print photo frames sit on mirrored dressers behind decoupage plates with quotes, while whimsical sundries and copper Moscow Mule mugs line the shelves on the opposite side of the room.
Fashion, interior, and architecture coffee table books are scattered about, where I was pleased to find titles like Rizzoli’s Weekend Retreats. You’ll also discover scarves, handbags and jewelry pieced in amongst all of the home items, which once again took me back to my former Old Market haunt.
Spruce has a refreshing approach to affordable luxury and owner Amy Sporrer has a keen eye for detail. Don’t pass this delight by next time you are in the area. You are sure to find a thing or two that you can’t live without.
posted at 11:46 am
on Wednesday, February 20th, 2013
Cochance and Black Jonny Quest (right)
by Jessica Hill
If I had a nickel for every time I overheard someone mutter the phrase “there’s nothing to do in Omaha”, I’d have enough nickels right now to buy an Hermes Birkin bag. And yet, on any given weekend, I’ll wind up with a Facebook event invite list so long that I could probably read ‘Crime and Punishment’ from start to finish in less time than it takes me to actually sort through all of them. (Granted I only own the Sparknotes version, but still…) For quite some time the question continued to plague me: with so much going on in Omaha, how could anyone still be under the impression that this city is uneventful? I think I’ve finally solved the mystery.
One of modern society’s most brilliant psychologists Barry Schwartz developed a theory called “the paradox of choice”. The theory states that: when presented with too many options (no matter how great each individual option is) the outcome will almost always result in a feeling of discontentment regardless of which option the individual chooses. Schwartz also theorized that people will often become so overwhelmed when faced with multiple options that they’ll end up choosing nothing at all. This theory can probably be applied to Omaha’s night life, specifically the local art scene. With so many concerts and art shows to choose from, you’re bound to miss out on something. Schwartz says the only way to avoid this “paradox of choice” is to combine all of your options so that, in the end, you’re left with just one. Recently, that’s exactly what Miguel Cedillo did for Omaha when he created The Omaha People’s Party (OPP).
Hard to define but probably best described as a multimedia pop up show, OPP isn’t a single event but rather an ongoing project that aims to provide a platform for local artists. Cedillo’s brainchild was successfully brought to life and materialized for the first time a few weeks ago at the New BLK gallery with some help from Gerard Pefung and a variety of different artists. Local painters, musicians, fashion professionals and filmmakers united together under one roof to support and promote local art.
“I think this event is a combination of everything our local artistic community already loves and does well”, said Cedillo. “Now, we’re simply reaching out to different corners of that community. Music, art, film and fashion are the four main pillars of OPP. Those four pillars will be featured in some way, shape or form during every single pop up show. Ideally, we would like to have a new show every 6-8 weeks. The main featured artists will be kept a secret. We’ll eventually reveal the featured artists, location and time of The OPP in an announcement shortly before the event is set to start. The mystery will, hopefully, help to create some anticipation.”
The first OPP's main featured artist was Black Jonny Quest. The pop up show coincided with the release of his first solo album "Smells Like Good News", which is available for download now.
With free entry, a complimentary open bar and a room full of local artists all eager to donate their time and talent toward the cause, it wasn’t hard to see why the first ever OPP garnered such an impressive crowd. Local painters like Erick UnCool participated in a live art show downstairs while Dirty Diamonds and Op2mus provided live music. Conchance, Black Jonny Quest, Kethro and Dojorok (who, all together, form the Midtown Marauders) took over as the main attractions towards the end of the night.
“The incentive for coming out and performing at an event like this is pretty much just the event itself. Just liking the concept behind the event and wanting to be a part of it,” said local hip hop artist and multiple OEA winner Conchance. “Anything like this that encourages local artists and musicians, I’ll support. Also, I’m pretty close with a lot of the people who helped organize this. They’re all good friends of mine. So, if they ask me to do something for OPP again in the future, I’ll do it. I want to help or be involved in any way that I can.” Fans of local art, music, fashion and film should see this as a way to discover new artists, musicians, fashion designers and filmmakers that they may not have otherwise been exposed to. Venue and bar owners in Omaha can use an event like this to their advantage by offering to provide the location (which will almost undeniably be good for business). And most importantly, new artists can utilize The OPP events to showcase their work and broaden their fan base.
“When it comes to finding new artists to feature in our future pop up shows, I encourage feedback from the community. If there’s an artist that people would like to see featured, even if it’s an artist I’ve never heard of before, I want to know about it,” says Cedillo. “We have a Facebook page that people can go to. They can post pictures and videos from the first pop up show and they can make suggestions for who they’d like to see featured in the future on our official Omaha People’s Party page.”
**Make sure to visit the event’s facebook page for exclusive pictures and video, and check the page periodically for announcements regarding the next OPP’s secret featured artist and location!
posted at 01:41 pm
on Thursday, February 14th, 2013
If it feels hotter, that’s because it is
Global warming breaks new records, patterns of extreme weather increase
by Kietryn Zychal
After the hottest start to a year ever recorded in the United States, local activists gathered to point out the obvious from a symbolic spot.
Career National Weather Service meteorologist John Pollack is devoting his retirement to educating the public about climate change, suggesting ways to lower carbon emissions. Standing in front of the “high and dry” Salute to Labor statue on the riverfront that was underwater last summer during the flood of 2011, Pollack warned that “the Earth is catching a fever.”
“The average temperature during the past 12 months in the lower 48 states has been 2.9 degrees Fahrenheit above normal” Pollack told reporters, “While that may not seem all that significant, think of how your body feels with a 101.5 temperature, 3-degrees above our normal 98.6.”
Pollack was joined by Tim Rinne of Nebraskans for Peace and David Corbin of Physicians for Social Responsibility. They held up a banner from the organization 350.org, which takes its name from the fact that 350 parts per million of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is what scientists consider safe for humanity. The currently level is 392 ppm.
In June, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) confirmed in its State of the Climate report that the first six months of 2012 were the hottest on record in the United States since record keeping began in 1895, producing drought conditions over much of the country. A sample of record breaking temperatures in Nebraska includes McCook’s all-time high of 115 on June 26th and Omaha’s July 6th high of 104.
Pollack cited the figure that 98 percent of climate scientists agree recent weather-related disasters -- heat waves, droughts, wildfires, and a derecho (straight-line windstorm), are part of a pattern made more frequent by global warming. The 98 percent figure came from a 2010 study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of 1,372 climate researchers who conduct research and publish in peer-reviewed journals.
Hotter weather has an effect on Nebraska’s signature industry, agriculture. Higher temperatures reduce yields per acre, especially when corn is pollinating. Livestock suffer and die in extreme heat. Violent weather patterns cause damage to crops, structures, and the economy at large.
Extreme weather is hard on the taxpayer. The U.S. Forest Service is projected to have a record year of spending on burned-area recovery efforts largely due to wildfires in New Mexico and Colorado. The Department of Agriculture also will assume additional financial obligations in Colorado.
In addition to being a weather scientist, Pollack and his colleagues are working to advocate for change, focusing on solutions to reduce carbon emissions now. “As a nation, we need to very quickly implement energy-efficiency measures by insulating homes and businesses and shift to utilizing Nebraska’s vast renewable wind and solar energy resources rather than rely on out-of-state coal and oil for our energy supply,” he said.
David Corbin, who ran for OPPD board but lost, cited some specifics of Nebraska’s energy potential. Nebraska still has the 4th best wind resources in the U.S. and the 13th best solar resources. Iowa supplies 25 percent of its energy needs from wind power, but Nebraska generates only 4 percent. Iowa firms invested in wind because of tax subsidies, explained Corbin, but Nebraska is the one state that only has public electrical power so there is no tax incentive to invest in wind farms. According to Corbin, OPPD CEO Gary Gates said recently that private firms could build wind farms and sell the electricity to OPPD, “That’s progress,” Corbin said.
Pollack, Corbin and Rinne have a vision that western Nebraska, which has the strongest wind in the state, could supply energy to eastern Nebraska where the population needs it. “What benefits Nebraska most?” asked Rinne. “Shipping coal from Wyoming or paying farmers out west for wind power?” They also envision building transmission lines to move wind energy from west to east.
“We can do everything we need to do to get off carbon,” Pollack said, “If we exercise the political will to do it.”
posted at 09:10 am
on Tuesday, July 17th, 2012
Douglas County Election Commissioner Runs With Labor And Paper
by Kietryn Zychal
It takes months of planning, last minute details and tight organization to make an election go smoothly. “Election Day is the part that everybody sees,” said Election Commissioner Dave Phipps in his office at the Douglas County Election Commission on 115th and Davenport Streets. “Nobody wants to really know what happens and how you get to that point.”
“They just want to know that they can go to their polling place, get their ballot, vote it and be done for the day.”
Phipps and his staff take hundreds of steps to get to the big event. “For us, election season starts five or six months before and goes for five or six weeks afterward to make sure everything is cleaned up and accounted for. We have a relatively small staff to take care of all that.”
Elections in Douglas County are run with labor and a mountain of paper. Voting is done by paper ballot and registration requires filling out a form in advance of Election Day, signing it and mailing it back. Registration forms can also be completed at a library, Department of Motor Vehicles office or by a volunteer Deputy Registrar, all to later be entered into the computer at the Election Commission (EC). As a presidential election approaches, voter registration and re-registration requests increase exponentially. “There are so many people who vote only in that one election,” Phipps said. “We get tens of thousands of requests.” People move, get married or divorced, change their political party. There are usually 60 or 70 temps hired in the months leading up to a presidential election.
There are only 13 permanent employees at the Election Commission. The organizational chart is thin, with two rows under Phipps. The Deputy Democratic Commissioner, Lisa Wise, The Elections Manager Justine Kessler and the Public Relations Coordinator, Maria Anderson report directly to him. There are six departments to handle technology (GIS mapping), polling places, poll workers, voter registration, office administration and accounting. Most of the salaries are in the $30,000 - $40,000 range with one 20-year employee making $9,000 less than the Election Commissioner himself at $78,000.
In addition to voter registration, they handle requests for early voting ballots, interact with candidates who want to run for office, determine the locations of polling places, update the website, generate precinct maps based on voting statistics with GIS software, handle hundreds of vote-by-mail elections, print ballots, prepare boxes of supplies for all the polling places and make sure the disability equipment for blind voters is programmed to work properly. The budget for personnel, including the temporaries and poll workers hired on Election Day was $1 million for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2012. The rest of the budget -- $250,000 -- includes printing, mailing, and all other contract services from computer software to the moving trucks that delivered supplies to the precincts.
On Election Day itself, Phipps gets up at 4 a.m. and is in the office by 5:30. At 6 a.m. the telephone operators start to arrive. Poll workers are either long-time volunteers who enjoy the public service or they are drafted to work, similar to being selected for jury duty. A drafted poll worker is required to serve for four elections. Poll workers make minimum wage, $7.25 per hour, typically working a 13.5 hour day with no overtime. They receive about an hour and a half of training a few weeks before the election, so there are often call-in questions about set-up and procedure. Five poll workers, no more than two from any one political party, are assigned to each polling place, including an Inspector who has worked an election in the past,
At 7 a.m. the first set of replacement poll workers arrives at the Election Commission to be sent out in the field if necessary. At 8 a.m. the polls open, and operators take calls from voters with questions such as “Where is my polling place? How do I get there?” Or, “What’s my party?” When voters are not listed in the registration book at the polling place in their precinct, a worker will call the Election Commission to find out where to send that person. If they are in the right spot but not listed, they are allowed to vote a provisional ballot, placed in a envelope so the EC can verify the registration before counting the ballot.
At 2 p.m., everything stops at the polling places for the mid-day ballot transfer. The ballot box is opened and the number of ballots counted in front of everybody. The metal ballot box is then sealed for the rest of the day. Ballots are put in a cardboard transfer case and sealed with a paper seal, signed by two poll workers from opposite parties who both drive to one of 16 collection centers where two poll workers from opposite parties are collecting boxes from a dozen or more polling places, before delivering them to the Election Commission.
“It cuts down how much we have to count in the evening,” explains Phipps. In 2006, the Secretary of State encouraged the counties not to do a midday transfer, resulting in a 24-hour work day with staff counting ballots until 5:30 a.m.
Eight counting machines costing $65,000 each -- the model 650 from Omaha’s own Election Systems & Software -- were purchased by the Nebraska Secretary of State through federal funds provided by the Help America Vote Act.
At 8 p.m., the polls close and the slot in each ballot box is locked and sealed to be driven to the Election Commission in a single car by two poll workers of opposite parties. The five drop boxes for early voting ballots -- three in libraries, the Charles B. Washington in North Omaha, the South Omaha branch and the Bess Johnson in Elkhorn, and drop boxes at the Millard Public Schools Foundation and outside the Election Commission, are also closed.
As cars pull up, ballot boxes are loaded into carts and delivered by a local Boy Scout troop to the counting room. The supply box and the large auto-mark disability voting machine must also be returned to the Commission.
Also at 8 p.m. the Commission announced the results from the midday transfer. At 8:45, a second announcement is made which includes the results of the early voting ballots. The vote tally is updated every 45 minutes thereafter until all the ballots are counted.
Traditionally, most of the ballots are back to the EC by 9:30 p.m. During a primary election, the counting usually stops before midnight. For a presidential election, it typically goes until 2 a.m. Any provisional ballots from voters whose address or information changed will be verified in the seven day period following the election.
posted at 12:00 pm
on Tuesday, June 05th, 2012
2012 Douglas County Poll Closing Analysis: Process, Methodology And Analysis
by John Heaston
Read the full story here.
2012 Voter File:
The initial voter data for 2012 obtained by The Reader was not useable for this initial analysis because it did not have polling location for each voter listed. It did have a large amount of voting data that would prove useful later.
The Reader obtained a new file with voters and polling places linked below. This file contained 314,969 voters and the date suggests it is from a polling place mailing list as of 2012-03-05. This data has all voters and their polling place. Shape files are also available upon request.
2008 Voter File:
In order to do a comparison of the voter’s distance from their polling places, The Reader obtained a 2008 voter file from just prior to the 2008 general election with linked polling places. This file contained 315,257 voters and is linked below.
Both files are large and the Election Commissioner requests that voter files not be used for commercial purposes. If it’s your intention to contribute to this analysis in the public interest, please email us the details of your interest to share access to these files.
GIS Data:
Note: All GIS processes were conducted in ArcMap 10.
All GIS data from the Election Commissioner included 2012 polling places and precincts along with 2010 polling places and precincts. Deciding to use the 2008 voter file for comparison to 2012, a new 2008 polling place file was created based on the 2008 voter file. A point file was created by using the 2008 voter data and running a pivot table on polling places and address. With a list of all polling locations in 2008, we were able to geocode (place on the map based on address). A new polling places file was created because the polling places file for 2010 didn’t match the voter file for 2008. Some polling places changed between 2008 and 2010.
Data Creation Process:
Geocode
The first step was to geocode all of the voters in the two file (2008 and 2012) to generate a distance to polling place value and determine what Census Tract each voter was in to give them demographic data from the census. We used an address locator created from a 2011 street file and parcel file for Douglas County. Douglas County GIS has wonderful data available here.
http://www.dcgis.org/ArcGIS/rest/services
After running the geocoding process in ArcMap 10 we were able to match the voters to the rates below:
2008
Total in Voter File 315,257
Total Matched 312,169
Percent In This Analysis 99.02%
2012
Total in Voter File 314,969
Total Matched 312,497 (312,499 were actually matched and two were later remove)
Percent In This Analysis 99.22%
Some voters we not matched because their address could not be found. While there are likely some remaining voters who have been incorrectly matched in both years, the majority of the address were matched with a 100% match rate. The mismatched voters will not have a dramatic impact on the results.
Straight Line Distance
The next step in the process was to give each voter a distance to their polling place. With no quick and easy way to give each voter a distance based on their travel by road, a straight line distance method was used. In this method, each polling place and the voters connected to that polling place were placed on the map by themselves. This consisted of one point for the polling place and a point for each voter connected to it. These two data sets were then spatially joined so that “Each point will be given all of the attributes of the point in the layer being joined that is closest to it, and a distance field showing how close that point is (in the units of the target layer).” In order to speed this process up, multiple polling places were done at once as long as they were far enough apart as to not allow a voter to be joined to the wrong polling place. These exported files contained only a few polling places and their voters with a distance. Once each polling place was done for the given year, they were joined back together to form a new voter file with all matched voters and a distance to their polling place.
This process was done using the matched voters in 2012 and the 2012 polling place shapefile provided for the 2012 data. The 2008 data was done using the matched voters in 2008 and the 2008 polling place shapefile that we created. The resulting data, if viewed for all voters at one polling place in ArcMap 10 would look like the screen shot below if shown with the shortest distance in green and the longest distance in red.

Census Data
The final step in the setup of these data sets was a process of joining census data to each voter. Because we did not have individual demographic data for each voter, we used Census data from the 2006-2010 American Community Survey (ACS). We downloaded a number of tables from the American FactFinder website http://factfinder2.census.gov/faces/nav/jsf/pages/index.xhtml that pertained to the demographics that we wanted to use to analyze change in distance. These tables include data on poverty, race/ethnicity, employment, education and median household income. These data tables were condensed and combined into one file that was then joined to the census tract GIS layer in ArcMap 10. Once joined to the census tract GIS layer, voters could be joined to census tracts and, in turn, joined to the data pulled from the ACS. This process, similar to joining the voter points to polling points, uses voter points and census tract boundaries to join voters to the census tract that “it falls inside”. In other words, the voter was given all attributes of the ACS based on what census tract that they fell inside of. Below are the fields of census data added:
|
PovPop
|
Population for whom poverty status is determined
|
|
PopBP
|
Population Below Poverty
|
|
PerPopBP
|
Percent Below Poverty for the Population for whom poverty status is determined
|
|
PovPop18O
|
Population 18 and Over for whom poverty status is determined
|
|
PopBP18O
|
Population 18 and Over Below Poverty
|
|
PerPopBP18O
|
Percent Below Poverty for the Population 18 and Over for whom poverty status is determined
|
|
TotalPop
|
Total Population
|
|
MinorityPop
|
Minority Population (All people who are Not Hispanic or Latino and White Alone)
|
|
PerMinority
|
Percent Minority
|
|
PerBlack
|
Percent Black Alone Population (Not Hispanic or Latino)
|
|
PerHispanic
|
Percent Hispanic or Latino or any race or combination of races
|
|
Per25O_HSGr
|
Percent of the population 25 and over that is a high school graduate or higher
|
|
Per25OBacGr
|
Percent of the population 25 and over that has a bachelor's degree or higher
|
|
Pop16O
|
Population 16 and over
|
|
PerEmp_160
|
Population 16 years and over who is Employed
|
|
PerUEmp_160
|
Population 16 years and over who is Unemployed
|
|
Households
|
Total Households
|
|
HHMedianInc
|
Median Household Income
|
Below is an example of what that might look like for one polling place. All of the voters from the Beadle Middle School are in census tract 74.60 and thus were give the poverty percentage, minority percentage and median household income of that census tract according to the 2006-2010 ACS.
This process was done for the 2008 and 2012 voter files using the 2006-2010 ACS data. Because we wanted to maintain the same areas in the distance comparison between years, it was important that we used the same ACS data for both voter files. It was initially suggested that we should be comparing the voter data by precinct between 2008 and 2012, however, because these boundaries changed between the years, a comparison would between them would not work. Using the census method, voters counted in >50% minority census tracts in 2008 and 2012 should be people in the same geographic area.
Analysis:
Export
Once these modified voter files were finished, the data was exported into excel for analysis. These two files are available under the same guidelines as above in regards to voter files.
Pivot Table Comparison
The primary method of analysis is the pivot table feature in excel. The pivot table tool allows you to summarize data by defined columns and rows. In all cases my column was the average distance of voters to polling place as defined by my row, or, the defined area based on census tracts of specific median income, minority percentage, poverty percentage, education percentage, employment percentage or county quadrant. Using the table below as an example, the pivot table allowed us to calculate the average distance of every voter from their polling place (as defined by the straight line distance calculation defined above) in all census tracts where less than <10% of people age 25 and over (according to the 2006-2010 ACS) had a bachelors degree. We also did this for the remaining data breaks as they were initially defined by for minority percentages ( < 10%, >= 10% and < 20%, >= 20% and < 50% & >= 50%).
|
2012
|
|
|
|
Percent of the population 25 and over that has a bachelor's degree or higher: 2006-2010
|
Average Distance
|
Total Voters
|
|
< 10%
|
0.645057199
|
21,171
|
|
>= 10% and < 20%
|
0.534769123
|
32,928
|
|
>= 20% and < 50%
|
0.70689284
|
167,631
|
|
>= 50%
|
0.725866065
|
90,767
|
|
Grand Total
|
0.690077736
|
312,497
|
These analyses were conducted for both the 2008 and 2012 voter files and then compared between years. Because the same ACS data was joined to voters in each year, the same areas are being compared between years just with slightly different voters and changes in polling place distance. This analysis can be seen in the file named Comp_2008vs2012. Any additional census data (or commute time data) could be joined to the voter files by census tracts and then analyzed. Additionally, the data could be broken down in any number of ways that has not been previously done by us.
The Analysis can be summed in this document: VoterComp_2008vs2012
And is narrated below:
Voters in the northeast and southeast quadrant of the county as divided roughly by 72nd and Dodge streets experienced a 43% and 45% increase respectively in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012. Voters in the northwest and southwest quadrants experienced a 19% and 21% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place respectively from 2008 to 2012. The northeast and southeast quadrants made up about 35% of the total voters in 2012.
Voters in Census tracts with median household income between $0 and $24,999 experienced a 30% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012. Voters in Census tracts with median household income between $25,000 and $49,999 experienced a 53% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012. Voters in Census tracts with median household income between $50.000 and $74,999 and those over $75,000 experienced a 14% and 17% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012 respectively. Voters in census tracts with incomes below $50,000 made up about 43% of the total voters in 2012.
Voters in Census tracts with less than 10% of the population over the age of 24 with a bachelors degree or greater experienced a 68% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012. Voters living in Census tracts where the population over the age of 25 with a bachelors degree or greater was between 10% and 20%, 20% and 50% and over 50% experienced a 35%, 32% and 12% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012 respectively.
Voters in Census tracts with 20% to 50% and over 50% minority populations experienced a 47% and 53% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012 respectively. Voters in Census tracts with less than 10% and between 10% and 20% minority populations only experienced a 27% and 9% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012 respectively. Voters in census tracts with over 20% minority populations made up about 40% of the total voters in 2012.
Voters who were Republican experienced a 24% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012 while Voters who were Democrat and Libertarian experienced a 32% and 41% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012 respectively.
Voters in Census tracts with less than 10% of the population over the age of 17 in poverty experienced a 17% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012. Voters in Census tracts with 10% to 20% and greater than 20% of the population over the age of 18 in poverty experienced a 45% and 62% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012 respectively.
Voters in Census tracts with less than 10% of the population over the age of 15 unemployed experienced a 23% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012. Voters in Census tracts with 10% to 20% and greater than 20% of the population over the age of 15 unemployed experienced a 61% and 39% increase in the straight line distance to their polling place from 2008 to 2012 respectively.
posted at 12:00 pm
on Tuesday, June 05th, 2012
Regenerative Medicine Helps the Body to Heal Itself
Medical Futurist Alan Russell Speaks April 11 as part of Holland Lecture Series
by Steve Brewer
Regenerative medicine is a new way of treating injuries and diseases, using specially-grown tissues and cells, along with artificial organs. The goal is helping the body to regenerate itself.
It’s an emerging field with great potential, according to the McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh.
“These approaches can amplify our natural healing process in the places it's needed most, or take over the function of a permanently damaged organ,” according to the Institute’s web site.
Alan Russell is the founder of the McGowan Institute, and a leader in regenerative medicine.
He will speak in Omaha at 7:30 p.m. on April 11 as part of the free Holland Lecture Series at the Holland Center.
Research is also being done locally in regenerative medicine, including work at the University of Nebraska Medical Center and Creighton University.
Alan Russell
Russell’s biography calls him a medical futurist and a pioneer in regenerative medicine. Crossing the fields of chemistry, biology, and materials science, Russell’s research lab studies how to help damaged tissues and organs to rebuild themselves.
For example, he is currently developing an artificial ovary so that women with cancer may undergo radiation treatment and still be able to have children.
Russell has also attracted attention beyond the scientific community. Rolling Stone magazine named him one of the “100 People Who are Changing America,” and he spoke at the TED Conference in 2006 on regenerating our bodies.
In that TED talk, Russell said, “Regenerative medicine is an extraordinarily simple concept. It’s simply accelerating the pace at which the body heals itself in a clinically-relevant time scale.”
This work makes Russell a logical choice as speaker for the Holland Lecture Series, according to Steve Hutchinson, chairperson of the Holland Lecture Committee.
“Part of what we want to accomplish is to inform people about where the science is going, and to raise questions about the implications of that science,” he said. “We think he’ll be interesting, and it will increasingly impact people’s lives. It’s time to start getting informed and think about the implications.”
The Holland Lecture Series is free to the public. It is sponsored by the First Unitarian Church of Omaha, and is funded by local philanthropist Dick Holland.
The series has its roots in the Frank R. Hoagland Lectures, which were held at the Unitarian Church between 1954 and 1964.
“When Dick Holland was a young guy, he attended the Hoagland Lectures. They were trying to bring provocative ideas into the community, and he wants to bring that back,” Hutchinson said. “That’s why he decided to sponsor this series.”
The Holland Lecture Series began in 2005, and has since brought to Omaha two well-known speakers annually. According to Hutchinson, these lectures provide open discussion of provocative ideas that are not usually heard in Nebraska.
Tickets are free, but must be reserved through the Holland Center box office. Reservations will become available on March 26. You may reserve up to six tickets, and can make reservations by calling (402)345-0606 or online at omahaperformingarts.org/tickets.
Stem Cells
Hutchinson believes the combination of scientific, economic, and ethical issues presented by regenerative medicine make it worthy of public discussion.
“We had someone speak on stem cells in 2005, but we wanted to go back and touch upon that, because a great deal has happened,” Hutchinson said. “Regenerative medicine does include stem cells, but is much broader than that. The whole field has really come into existence over the last couple of years.”
The McGowan Institute divides regenerative medicine into three areas: medical devices and artificial organs, tissue engineering, and cellular therapies.
Stem cells are the best known aspect of regenerative medicine. According to the National Institutes of Health, stem cells are unspecialized cells capable of developing into many different cell types in the body, such as muscle, red blood, or brain cells.
“In addition, in many tissues they serve as a sort of internal repair system, dividing essentially without limit to replenish other cells as long as the person or animal is still alive,” according to the NIH’s stem cell information web site.
The use of stem cells in research has attracted controversy in the past, because some are taken from human embryos. Other stem cells are taken from adults.
In 2006, researchers identified a way to genetically reprogram some cells to assume a stem cell-like state. These new types are called pluripotent stem cells, and may be used in future research.
University of Nebraska Medical Center
The phrase “wouldn’t it be great if…” comes up frequently in conversation with David Crouse.
Crouse is a professor of genetics, cell biology and anatomy at the University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC).
“Many health problems are related to the loss of function of tissues and organs. These problems persist because something is wrong or missing,” Crouse said. “Wouldn’t it be great if we could solve these problems by replacing those tissues or repairing them?”
About 20 researchers at UNMC dedicate at least part of their work to regenerative medicine, particularly to stem cells.
This work is interdisciplinary. In addition to medicine, researchers come from backgrounds including biomaterials, engineering, and cellular biology.
“This is a regenerative medicine initiative, not a program,” said Crouse. “There are quite a few graduate students working on these projects, including PhD students and postdoctorates.”
Related research has been conducted for years at UNMC, but its formal initiative began in 2008 when Nora Sarvetnick was hired to lead its efforts.
“She has a group of researchers with one floor in Durham Research Tower II,” Crouse said. “Even though they are in different academic departments, they are located together. This kind of science is more driven by concepts than departments.”
The basic ideas of regenerative medicine go back decades. One of its first common applications was the repair of severe burns. Crouse said physicians originally took unburned skin from a healthy part of the body to replace burned skin.
Over time, organ transplantation developed from this basic idea of trading good tissue for bad tissue.
UNMC is now a major force in organ transplantation, but Crouse and his colleagues focus on newer and less developed aspects of RM research.
For example, Crouse said that cell transplantation may one day replace organ transplantation.
“We can transplant livers. Wouldn’t it be nice if you could transplant just liver cells?” Crouse said. “You could just inject them into the blood and they would find their way to the liver and fix the problem. It’s been done in animals, but not yet in humans.”
The liver is a large organ, and obtaining enough liver cells would be a challenge, but Crouse believes the benefits of avoiding surgical trauma will eventually make cell transplantation therapy successful.
In the same way, cells from other major organs and tissues could be transplanted and allowed to heal the unhealthy part of the body.
One group at UNMC is currently researching the regeneration of retina tissue related to sight damage, and another is studying the possibilities of using cells on Parkinson’s and other neurological diseases.
The U.S. military is now funding RM research, and UNMC is in early stages of getting involved.
“There is horrible damage caused in military actions,” Crouse said. “The military can now get people to survive this damage, but they have missing or nonfunctional limbs or organs. The military is investing money and effort into recruiting scientists who can find solutions to these kinds of problems.”
The hope is that regenerative medicine might be able to help those suffering from crushing or other trauma, including military actions, auto accidents, and sports injuries.
“Wouldn't it be great to treat that? We are just beginning in this area,” Crouse said.
Creighton University
A number of researchers at Creighton University are also studying regenerative medicine, across several departments.
One of these is researchers is David He, a professor of biomedical science, who is studying the possibilities of regenerating hearing.
According to the National Institutes of Health, our ability to hear depends on bundles of hair cells in the inner ear. These hair bundles convert sound vibrations into electrical signals, which travel to the brain by way of the auditory nerve. When hair cells are damaged by disease or injury, people experience hearing loss.
Although fish and birds are able to grow new hair cells, mammals typically cannot.
“Our hair cells are vulnerable to noise. Teenagers use iPods. Military people are exposed to noise. Chemotherapy kills these cells,” He said. “Before this happens, we can prevent the cells from becoming damaged.”
He’s work focuses on regenerating hair cells, helping the body to repair them and possibly restore hearing loss.
While stem cells are instrumental in many types of RM research, He does not believe they are the best choice for the auditory system.
“The inner ear is a unique structure. Stem cells are unable to regenerate themselves. You have to introduce new cells,” He said. “I am focusing on repairing your existing cells through gene therapy.”
Damaged auditory cells will eventually lose their function and die, but it might be possible to spur a regenerative process and reverse the damage. He said that cells need a genetic signal to regenerate themselves, and his goal is to introduce that signal where needed.
“We can put the gene into a virus,” He said. “When the virus is introduced into living tissue, it will integrate its genetic materials with host genetic materials. These code genes will eventually trigger cell repair or stabilize cells when they are injured. You are putting a new gene into tissue, and those new genes help the injured cells.”
One obvious side effect of this method is that it requires the use of a virus. People normally think of a virus in negative terms, because of the direct and indirect effects it introduces into the body.
“A virus is scary,” He said. “We would have to modify the virus to reduce any toxic effect. The major problem is that the virus will continue to reproduce itself, and that would cause damage. If you can prevent that problem, this can work. We still have to modify the virus to make it safe.”
It might eventually be possible to use nanotechnology devices to carry the genetic signal into the damaged cells, without using a virus.
This kind of RM research on auditory cells has been done in animals, but not yet in humans.
When the auditory cells of guinea pigs were damaged, they lost their hearing, according to He. When gene therapy was introduced, partial hearing was regained by most of the guinea pigs within about one month.
“Maybe in five years this can be used in humans,” He said.
A Hot Topic
David Crouse at UNMC calls regenerative medicine a hot topic in health care. New journals and books are being published regularly, and new research departments are starting up nationwide because of available funding.
“If you do a web search with the words ‘regenerative medicine,’ you will get a lot of hits,” Crouse said. “People are living longer and therefore having more degenerative issues consistent with older age. People are getting into accidents more than in the past.
“As long as you have young people doing things that hurt them and old people aging, regenerative medicine will be needed.”
posted at 11:51 am
on Wednesday, February 15th, 2012
Green solutions may lie buried in the sludge of a century-old sewer system
by Brandon Vogel
When it rains in Omaha, it pours raw sewage, industrial waste and toxic chemicals into nearby waterways. The city’s century-old sewer system is designed to either put it there or into your basement. Neither is an inviting option.
But that design is changing thanks to a federal mandate from the Environmental Protection Agency. The oldest part of the city — nearly everything east of 72nd St. — currently works on a combined sewer system (CSS) where one pipe handles both storm water and sewage. During dry conditions it works great. Sewage is carried away from homes and businesses to one of two treatment plants where it is treated and then safely released into the Missouri River and Papillion Creek.
If it rains heavily enough, however, the storm water rushing down drains in the street mixes with the raw sewage in the same pipe and frequently overwhelms the system in what the EPA calls a Combined Sewer Overflow (CSO)event. The combined runoff – typically 85 percent storm water, 15 percent sewage, according to the city – then flows directly to the Missouri River and its tributaries throughout the area.
Omaha isn’t alone. Nearly 800 other communities are undergoing similarly massive sewer separation projects as part of the EPA's CSO Control Policy. Since 2002, Omaha has averaged 86 overflows a year, pumping 3.5 billion gallons of sewage and storm water annually into receiving streams. The goal is to reduce that number to about four a year by 2024.
No matter where you look, it’s a big and expensive project. Atlanta is spending $3 billion to control its CSOs. Cleveland is protecting the Cuyahoga River with a $1.6 billion project. Omaha officials estimate the city will spend nearly $1.7 billion over the next 15 years to address 51 square miles of aging sewer lines in East Omaha. The Sewer Maintenance Division of the Public Works Department, with a staff of 64 employees and a $2.9 million budget in 2011, is in charge of making the change happen.
“I believe it’s probably the biggest public works project we’ve ever undertaken,” says Marty Grate, the city’s environmental services manager. “This is like building the West Dodge Expressway, a $100 million project, every year for 15 years.”
Just like that expressway, the sewer project will disrupt daily life. Streets will be torn up. Traffic will be diverted. But Grate says the project will ultimately improve more than just the city’s water quality. Omaha’s CSO Control Project is an opportunity for the city to get a little bit greener as well.
Old Omaha
There was a time in Omaha's history when raw sewage flowed through the streets — not by accident, but by design. Or, rather, lack thereof.
For the first few decades of the city’s existence, Omahans simply emptied their outhouses and privies through trenches that poured directly into the street. Human waste pooled in wagon ruts during rainy weather and baked in alleyway cesspools during the hot summer months. Faced with a calamity of unsanitary conditions and citizen complaints, the City Council proposed Omaha’s first sewer system in 1878, according to city records.
The city tried to do it right. The original plan called for separate sewer systems for storm water and sewage at a cost of nearly $1 million dollars, a $20 million project today. But with Omaha’s explosive growth in the early 20th Century, the plan was abandoned in favor of a much quicker and more common solution – the combined sewer system.
Until the mid-1960s, all of Omaha’s wastewater emptied directly into the Missouri River without treatment. The city began to build separate sewer systems in developing West Omaha and constructed two treatment plants that sterilized all of the city’s wastewater prior to release into the waterways to service East Omaha under normal conditions.
Combined sewers were the exception, and the City of Omaha, along with the other cities, operated under special permits from the EPA and state regulators due to the limitations of their antiquated system.
But as concrete replaces grass and cities continue to grow, so does the amount of storm water runoff. By 1994, the EPA had developed its first control plan to address the growing dangers of combined-sewer overflow and had set a series of minimum controls for cities to meet by 1997. Omaha met that deadline, but a new one emerged in 2005. Because of increased federal requirements in the Clean Water Act, the EPA gave Omaha two years to have a draft of its longterm plan to address overflow issues in place. In 2009, the city submitted its completed plan to the Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality, the state organization charged with monitoring the project.
The Health Factor
Pat Nelson doesn’t look at a rainstorm the way most people do. She’s been working with storm water for more than 20 years, and as the compliance team lead with Clean Solutions Omaha, it’s her job to ensure the city meets all of its state and federal water-quality requirements.
“The perfect place for storm water to go is into the surrounding natural bodies of water,” she says. “That’s just part of the natural hydrological cycle.”
But when storm water and sewage mix you introduce a potentially potent cocktail of pollutants into the water system. Rain water can pick up pollutants from a variety of sources as it washes over yards and streets, gathering industrial waste particles from the air, car fluids, fertilizers, pesticides, and pet and animal waste. Raw sewage is a breeding ground for the E. coli virus, the most common pollutant found in overflow material. Combined is a filthy mix of heavy metals, chemicals and bacteria in our lakes and rivers.
The National Resources Defense Council reports that combined-sewer overflows contain more than 100 times the concentration of fecal coliform colonies than treated waste water. At its worst, high fecal coliform concentrations can lead to a variety of human health risks from ear infections to food poisoning, and can endanger fish and other aquatic life.
The Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality maintains a biennial list of impaired waterways that do not meet state water quality standards when tested for pollutants. In 2006 and 2008, Omaha’s segment of the Missouri River and Papillion Creek — the two major waterways receiving CSO runoff — were listed as Category 5 waterways, the EPA’s most severe pollution ranking, due to elevated levels of E. Coli. In 2010, both waterways were upgraded to Category 4 for E. Coli levels, but remained on the Impaired Waterways list because they contained other chemical pollutants.
Based on those risks, the backbone of Omaha’s CSO control plan is to keep storm water and sewage separate through a variety of control mechanisms. In addition to sewer separation — approximately $700 million of the total $1.7 billion cost according to Grate — the city will also install a 5-mile long underground concrete tunnel along the Missouri River to accept CSO runoff.
That’s the gray part of the equation, but Nelson says a large part of cleaning up Omaha’s waterways happens before storm water even reaches the sewer system.
And that’s where Omaha becomes more environmentally sustainable.
More Grass, More Green
A number of institutional and individual solutions can help reduce a city’s storm water runoff, but they all primarily focus on soaking up as much water as possible before it reaches the storm drains. Few things do this better than vegetation.
But that presents a challenge for city engineers facing firm regulatory requirements and deadlines. Everyone wants green solutions where possible, Grates says, but those efforts must be supported by structural controls that can deliver precise results. Like most cities, Grate says Omaha is working to the balance the gray solutions already in place with constantly evolving, and perhaps cost-cutting green solutions.
Emily Holtzclaw is one of the engineers making that happen. As a water resources engineer and project manager with environmental engineering firm CH2M HILL, Holtzclaw does everything from work with computer models of the Omaha sewer system to conduct field visits as workers are lowered 50-feet underground to check the condition of century-old pipes. The solutions she comes up with might be multi-million-dollar projects or they may be as simple as making sure the city doesn’t have any manhole covers with holes in them. But the connecting thread, she says, is a devotion to become more environmentally sustainable.
“We’re working to find other ways to deal with storm water. And one of our first tasks is always to identify and, if possible, use the green solution,” Holtzclaw says. “We’re always looking to save space and save cost and do something that’s more environmentally supportive.”
In the first phase of the longterm control plan, the city is undertaking three major projects based on environmental sustainability. Last summer, Omaha received a $200,000 grant from the Nebraska Environmental Trust to restore ponds that were drained in 1931 at Spring Lake Park in South Omaha and to add a planned wetlands area to the site. Native plants with deep root systems are better equipped to soak up water, and Grate says the plan “lets nature reduce the runoff we have to deal with.” The city estimates the four-year, $1.5 million project could eventually save $2 million in overall CSO project costs.
Nature is doing part of the work in sewer separations near Aksarben Village and Saddle Creek Road, as well. Rather than build an entirely new, separate sewer system, engineers are using the natural landscape to direct storm water to the waterways.
Three dry detention areas in Elmwood Park will collect storm water, reducing peak-time runoff and safely depositing solids in the water before it reaches the Elmwood Park Creek. The city estimates the project will save $1 million.
An above-ground, open channel will work similarly west of Saddle Creek Road, allowing soil and vegetation to clean the storm water naturally prior to its entry into Little Papillion Creek. The Saddle Creek extension is estimated to save $2 million in infrastructure costs.
But the bill for Omaha’s CSO project is still potentially enormous and how the city will pay for it is debatable. The federal mandate to fix the system was unfunded, leaving the city and its citizens to pick up all of the cost.
For now, the plan is to gradually increase the city’s sewage fees for residents. The average residential rate in Omaha in 2010 was approximately $15 per month. By 2017, the city estimates sewer fees could reach $50 per month — more than a 200 percent increase over the next seven years.
Some local politicians are fighting to reduce that cost. In late March, Mayor Jim Suttle traveled to Washington D.C. to lobby for federal funding for the project. On March 22, the City Council approved a resolution asking Nebraska’s Congressional delegation to lobby for a 50-50 federal cost share for the project.
Omaha State Sen. Heath Mello has a proposal before the Nebraska Legislature that would return state sales taxes associated with the increase — a windfall of about $48 million over the next 15 years — to the city of Omaha to help defray costs.
But for now, the only certain cost-cutting measure is to go green whenever and wherever the city can. The key to cleaner, safer, more modern Omaha may lie in the mud and sludge of a century-old sewer system.
“We’re not putting in green solutions because they’re cool but because they improve the project, they benefit the city and they’re cost effective,” Nelson says. “We’re going to see more and more of these solutions as time goes on.”
posted at 03:53 pm
on Tuesday, April 05th, 2011
by Eric Stoakes
posted at 01:42 pm
on Wednesday, June 19th, 2013
by Eric Stoakes
posted at 01:40 pm
on Wednesday, June 19th, 2013
by Eric Stoakes
posted at 01:39 pm
on Wednesday, June 19th, 2013
by Eric Stoakes
posted at 01:36 pm
on Wednesday, June 19th, 2013
by Eric Stoakes
posted at 01:32 pm
on Wednesday, June 19th, 2013
Kids Eat Free: Pull Up A Seat
Summer Meals Program Grows
by Cheril Lee
Only 10 percent of the children in the state of Nebraska who are eligible for the summer meals program actually take advantage of it.
Hunger Free Heartland is out to change that by spreading the word about its Summer Food Service Program.
Sue Arment, Director for Hunger Free Heartland, says the program is open to kids ages 1-18. There are no ID checks and no paperwork or documentation is required. Children can simply go to one of the participating sites and eat.
“First of all, we know that in the summer it’s really a struggle for some families to feed their children, especially those that have been dependent on the free and reduced lunch program during the school year. There was a study done recently that showed families are now spending an average of more than $300 a month on food,” said Arment.
The USDA regulates the meals served through the Summer Food Service Program. Arment said that means the meals are nutritious and offer kids proper portion control. It also means that the USDA reimburses the sponsors of each open site for all the meals served.
She said the Summer Food Service Program is run similar to the National School Lunch Program.
In addition to making sure kids get the proper nutrition, many of the open sites are also offering them activities throughout the summer. Arment feels this makes it easer for children to go back to school in the fall and be successful from an academic perspective.
Hunger Free Heartland is a coalition that was convened a little over three years ago by the ConAgra Foods Foundation after the company discovered that childhood hunger was a really big issue in Nebraska.
According to Arment, ConAgra decided they wanted to do something so they put together a group of nonprofit leaders in the community and the result was the coalition of Hunger Free Heartland, which launched in 2010. She says the group is comprised of many different entities from private companies and nonprofit groups to government organizations and schools.
Hunger Free Heartland’s primary mission is to be a catalyst to change by collaborating on solutions with the community to end childhood hunger.
Oddly enough, Arment said there is actually a strong link between hunger and obesity. She said they are two sides of the same coin and that Hunger Free Heartland is trying to highlight awareness about the connection between hunger and obesity.
“What we’ve found is that, in many cases, parents struggle with buying food so they opt to buy nutrient-poor food (which is less expensive) so we find that many of our hungry children are actually overweight or obese. Through the summer meal program we are really trying to get them to eat healthier meals with realistic serving sizes,” Arment said.
The Summer Food Service Program is offered at more than 220 sites across the state, with almost half here in the Omaha metro area. Some sites offer meals in conjunction with summer school while others offer programs like reading or recreational activities. It all depends on where the children go.
And for those kids who cannot make it to the sites, Hunger Free Heartland offers its Kids’ Cruisin’ Kitchen, which will come to them.
Arment is proud of the program, now in its third year.
“In many cases our children struggle with getting to a location. Transportation can be a huge issue. Some parents don’t want them walking long distances (from a safety perspective), which is understandable. So we are trying to reach them where they can easily access it,” she said.
Kids’ Cruisin’ Kitchen is a collaboration among the Food Bank for the Heartland, Salvation Army and Hunger Free Heartland. The three work together to bring meals to areas that are underserved.
Meals are loaded onto disaster relief trucks and are passed out by volunteers at various locations. Each truck hits three sites a day. Arment said the trucks travel from places like Highland Park and Plattsmouth to Crestview and Millard. Last year, Kids’ Cruisin’ Kitchen served more than 10,000 meals to children. And this year they hope to increase that total.
The best way to find open sites for meals is to call 2-1-1 on the telephone and Spanish language support is available. Arment said there’s also a list of sites at hungerfreeheartland.org. Additionally, an updated list is sent out each week from the Department of Education. Alternatively, you can text “free food” to 877877 to get information.
“There are so many benefits to the Summer Food Service Program, including the healthy nutrition the kids will receive. And the enrichment programs are awesome because kids can continue learning over the summer, not to mention the social interaction with their peers and other adults. It’s just a great program and not enough kids are taking advantage of it. That’s why we are trying to raise awareness,” said Arment.
For more information, visit hungerfreeheartland.org.
posted at 12:33 pm
on Wednesday, June 19th, 2013
Reverend Raven & The Chain Smokin' Altar Boys rev up their Chicago boogie & blues at The 21st Saloon Thursday, June 20.
by B.J. Huchtemann
Matt Whipkey is a notable player on the local rock scene with the ability to move into roots-rock and twang equally well. He also gets beyond the studio into strong companions to his musical visions like making Super 8 films, cool videos and creative original packaging. Now he goes vinyl. Earlier this year he launched a Kickstarter campaign to fund a passionate and ambitious double-vinyl project designed as an homage to Peony Park. The landmark amusement park formerly at 78th & Cass closed in 1994. The project exceeded its goal by almost half the original amount. Penny Park: Omaha, NE: Summer 1989, pressed on pink vinyl, is his romantic embroidering on the amusement park days and nights those of us in our late 20s and beyond remember.
In the Kickstarter notes Whipkey observes “There had to be a girl, there is always a girl, one with a name that brings it all back home, Penny Park,” adding that this project, “transports the listener to a time when your only concern was summer, summer, summer.” The album is a project of The Whipkey Three with Travis Sing on bass and Scott “Zip” Zimmerman on drums.
Quantities are limited for the double-vinyl release. There will also be iTunes downloads and a limited number of CD copies. Whipkey hosts a record release party on Saturday, June 22, 9 p.m. at Waiting Room with special guests including Moses Prey, Jessica Errett, Tara Vaughan and Fizzle Like a Flood.
Hot Notes
Reverend Raven & The Chain Smokin' Altar Boys rock their up-tempo, Chicago boogie blues at The 21st Saloon Thursday, June 20, 5:30 p.m. Soul man Terry Evans plays next Thursday, June 27.
Johnny Rawls, 2010 Blues Music Award winner for Soul Blues Album of the Year, plugs int at Kilt’s at Clancy’s, 777 N. 114th Street, Friday, June 21, 9 p.m.
40 Sinners unleashes some raucous, guitar-fueled blues at The Hive Saturday, June 22, 9 p.m.
Junkstock offers thrifting and junk hunting plus local live music performances. Admission is $5 per day. Located at 315 S 192nd St. near Elkhorn, before you go, please see the details at junkstockomaha.com.
Lincoln’s Zoo Bar hosts Popa Chubby Thursday, June 20, 6-9 p.m. and slide guitar sensation Eric Sardinas Wednesday, June 26, 6-9 p.m. See zoobar.com for details, more shows and 40th Anniversary schedules.
K.C.’s Grand Marquis has a CD release party at Omaha Jitterbugs’ dance Friday, June 21, 9 p.m. at the Eagles Club, 24th & Douglas. See jitterbugs.org.
posted at 08:01 am
on Wednesday, June 19th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 01:06 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 01:06 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
DJ Relic Soul Dance party
by Paul Clark
posted at 01:05 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 01:04 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 01:04 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 01:04 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Stereofidelics, More Man Now Than Machine
by Paul Clark
posted at 01:02 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:59 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:59 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
What Made Milwaukee Famous, Hollis Brown
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:57 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:57 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:56 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:54 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:54 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:51 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:49 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Bennie and The Gents w/ Hot Tail Honeys
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:49 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:48 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:47 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:46 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:45 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:44 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
The Burning of Rome, Pharmacy Spirits
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:44 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:40 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:40 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:39 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:38 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:34 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:33 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:33 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Tyler Hilton, Josh Stephens
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:28 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Jeazlepeats, Dave Leverett, Cameron Ward
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:28 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Charlie Siren, A Summer Better Than Yours
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:27 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Red Cities, Dirty Talker, Angel and Devils
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:27 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
The Union Suits, The Ear Strippers, Willy Citro & The Dusters, Root Marm Chicken Farm Jug Band
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:25 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
AZP, More Machine Now Than Man
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:24 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Software Giant, Pure Brown
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:23 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:19 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:18 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:17 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Blue House with Rent To Own Horns
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:17 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:16 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:12 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:12 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:10 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Ricky Lodestar, Billy Saffyre, The Union Suits, The Ear Strippers
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:09 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Landing On The Moon, Sons of an Illustrious Father, Lexie Roth
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:08 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Saturn Moth, Talking Mountain, The Superbytes
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:08 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Sprite Nightmare, Ground Tyrants, Steps to mars
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:07 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 12:04 pm
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 11:55 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 11:54 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
loom’s Annual White Party + White Block Party
by Paul Clark
posted at 11:45 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
OK Party Comedy Battle Royale IX
by Paul Clark
posted at 11:44 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Cursive, Digital Leather, See Through Dresses
by Paul Clark
posted at 11:43 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 11:43 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
The Whipkey Three, Moses Prety, Jessica Errett and Tara Vaughan, Fizzle Like A Flood
by Paul Clark
posted at 11:42 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
The Cave Singers, Mount Moriah, Jesse Sykes
by Paul Clark
posted at 11:41 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Mt Eden, Buckhunter, Elephantz, AMPliFLY
by Paul Clark
posted at 11:40 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 10:30 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Jazz in June w/ Jackie Allen
by Paul Clark
posted at 10:23 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Save the Swim Team, Survay Says, DSM-5, Black Hawks
by Paul Clark
posted at 10:17 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 10:13 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
AUDITION: Omaha Variety Show
by Paul Clark
posted at 10:10 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
S.S. Web, Beaver Damage, Gallows Majesty, Section 8
by Paul Clark
posted at 10:02 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 10:02 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
The Royalty with Purple, Guilty Is The Bear, The Decatures
by Paul Clark
posted at 10:01 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
The Luminaries, Purveyors of Conscious Sound, Linear Symmetry, Clev Trev
by Paul Clark
posted at 09:59 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Jerry Joseph & The Jackmormons
by Paul Clark
posted at 09:59 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 09:51 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Paul Clark
posted at 09:50 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Kyle Eustice
I hate to admit it, but there was a time in my life when I wore hemp jewelry. I liked Phish. I went to kick it in the parking lots at numerous shows, from here to Chicago. I could tolerate a 45-minute version of “Harry Hood,” which was originally an 8-minute long track. I had to be really, really stoned. Otherwise, there was no way that would have ever made sense to me. Despite going to a Rainbow Gathering and 13 Phish shows, I never once made it to a Widespread Panic show. Although I can imagine they would be similar to what I witnessed during that weird, pseudo-hippie phase I experienced. Since its 1986 inception, Widespread Panic has become one of the nation’s preeminent jam bands and established a healthy cult following. Often referred to as “road warriors,” Widespread Panic holds the record for most sold out shows at Red Rocks Amphitheater in Colorado and is seemingly always on tour. – Kyle Eustice
Widespread Panic, June 21, at Pinewood Bowl, Lincoln, 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $35.50 and up. Visit www.pinewoodbowl.org for more information.
posted at 09:38 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Kyle Eustice
It’s already been 16 months since Cursive’s last album, I Am Gemini, was released on Saddle Creek Records. While the album didn’t necessarily perform as well as it could have, the dedication frontman Tim Kasher gave to the project was admirable on its own. Since then, Kasher and the rest of the boys have been busy doing what they do best: playing shows. And, wow, they’ve played a lot of shows in their hometown of Omaha, but for some reason, it never gets old. Perhaps it’s Kasher’s magnetic, yet somehow flawed, charm, bassist Matt Maginn’s down-to-earth persona, or guitarist Ted Stevens’ intense focus on each note he plays that make them so appealing live. Personally, I’ve seen them more times than I can count, but each show is memorable. To me, the only thing missing is cellist Gretta Cohn, who hasn’t been seen with them since 2005. Either way, Cursive’s longevity speaks for itself. –Kyle Eustice
Cursive with Digital Leather, June 23, at The Waiting Room, 6212 Maple St., 9 p.m. Tickets are $13/ADV and $15/DOS. Visit http://www.onepercentproductions.com for more information.
posted at 09:11 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Matt Whipkey’s new album looks back to Omaha’s summertime destination, Peony Park
by Chris Aponick
Before Matt Whipkey journeys back in the halycon sunset of Omaha's most iconic amusement park, there's the cold, suburban present to encounter first.
The Big Red Restaurant, 8100 Cass St., sits in a building long since renovated past its life as part of the Peony Park grounds. There's not a trace of that history in the building, which is now a shrine to keno and flat-screen sports telecasts.
Behind the building lies an expansive parking lot and a Hy-Vee grocery store, erected on what once was a summertime Mecca for Omaha's teenagers -- Peony Park.
That's where Whipkey transitions to the past and the story of his new album, Penny Park: Omaha, NE: Summer 1989.
Whipkey's album bursts to life with an opening line that sets the scene and introduces his main character, almost all in one fell swoop.
"School's out summer 1989, Penny Park with her pirate eyes. The boys swore she was out of sight."
The album cruises Omaha's streets from Cass to Blondo to Howard and then tracks back south onto Center Street. Through those thoroughfares, Whipkey unwinds a narrative of the girl all the guys fall in love with, from nights at Peony Park to movies at the now-defunct Cinema Center, just off 84th and Center.
The life of the album began with a shared idea between Whipkey and Fizzle Like a Flood's Doug Kabourek.
Initially it was going to be a split album, with one half written by Kabourek and the other half written by Whipkey.
Whipkey ran with the idea though and ended up with three extra sides worth of songs.
"At the end of this last summer it kind of became clear it was going to be two records," Whipkey says.
Whipkey says he took the task of writing a narrative about Omaha's amusement park and those who flocked to it as a personal challenge.
The time and place where Whipkey set the songs also opened up new songwriting avenues. Whipkey, whose catalogue tracks towards an Americana, roots and bar rock vein, began working on a few songs with beats, synth lines and other sonic signifiers that connected to the late 1980s timeframe of his new album.
Whipkey's own Peony Park memories fall a little bit later, as the park closed when he was in 7th grade and therefore, he missed out on experiencing the amusement park in his teenage years.
"I didn't get to fully enjoy those bright nights and those cool, cool concerts that came through," Whipkey says.
But he both heard stories from those who experienced the park and combed through newspaper archives to fill in some details on what Peony was like during those twilight 80s. For many Omahans, the park was a central location of their adolescence.
"Some kids just flat out grew up here," Whipkey says.
While Whipkey says he zeroed in on 1989 for these tales, he feels like the themes of the album could place these stories at any time.
The album's whole sound is tied to the vibe of the park's vital June through August peak.
"We definitely we're going for a summer sound," Whipkey says.
The songs ride on major key arrangements and the vibrant musicianship of Whipkey's cast of musicians, anchored by collaborators, drummer Scott "Zip"
Zimmerman and bassist Travis Sing. Whipkey says the two have been fixtures in his band for last three years, with Zimmerman playing in the band for the past six.
"Their ability is second-to-none," Whipkey says, adding that they've been consistent and diligent about making Whipkey's songs excell.
The main character in the songs is basically a combination of the most memorable traits of all those summertime teenage crushes, Whipkey says.
It's something about the girls at the park that cemented the summertime allure of amusement park rides and hanging out at the sprawling pool. Whipkey says his hope is that between the widescreen narrative and the bits of lyrical specificity in certain songs, that listeners will find a common connection to Penny Park.
Just about everyone that experienced Peony Park had their Penny Park, he says.
"Most people can figure out who she is for them," he says.
As Whipkey began crafting new songs for the album, he also gave new life and meaning to older songs that hadn't found a correct place on older albums. But now the messages of these unreleased songs were not too far off from the themes rising up on the story of Penny Park.
"They concerned a certain sense of youthfulness," Whipkey says.
To fund the release of the album, Whipkey then turned to the crowd-funding website Kickstarter, where he raised $6,000 to help pay for the vinyl pressing of the double album.
The end result of the Kickstarter campaign is that Whipkey pressed more than 200 copies of the album on colored 150-gram vinyl and has them enclosed in a double-gatefold sleeve with a full-color insert and a CD.
It was a big turn for Whipkey, who says he had mixed feelings about crowd funding before making the album. He did more than a half dozen releases without needing Kickstarter, so why was this different?
That answer also came from the park, as he was tapping into a piece of Omaha's history. It was more than just a Whipkey album, he says.
The main thought is that people outside of his usual audience might care about hearing these songs and reliving their own summertime memories. It's those personal connections to the park that Whipkeys says is important.
"It's practically public domain in what it means to folks," Whipkey says.
The Whipkey Three play their album release show with Moses Prey, Jessica Errett &Tara Vaughan and Fizzle Like a Flood Saturday, June 22nd at the Waiting Room Lounge. Tickets are $7 at the door. For more information, visit onepercentproductions.com.
posted at 08:49 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
Dark Side of the Runway or There She Is, Miss American Idiot
by Tim McMahan
A few notes from last week...
Nostalgia and my prurient curiosity were the reasons we switched channels between Game 5 of the NBA finals and the Miss USA beauty pageant Sunday night.
I remembered the pageant growing up, seeing a teary-eyed Bob Barker (Burt Parks hosted the Miss America pageant, a completely different animal) serenade a teary-eyed Miss Wherever as she strolled down the runway grasping a bouquet of American Beauties, her crown teetering on her bouffant, set aglow by an ocean of flash bulbs.
That was in the ‘70s, when a new tide of feminism was sweeping the country. The Equal Rights Amendment had just been approved by Congress and was out to the states for ratification. Women were fighting for -- among other things -- equal pay for equal work. I remembered thinking that walking-meat shows like the Miss USA pageant would soon to be a thing of the past as newly liberated women-kind would never put up with such obvious, base examples of objectification and sexual chauvinism.
And yet here I was, 30-some years later, watching yet another parade of tits and ass on my hi-def 65-inch flat-panel screen. What happened? Well, you could say “Men, that’s what happened. They control the media,” but you’d be wrong. The reason beauty pageants not only exist -- but thrive in this day and age -- is because women watch them. Women love them, despite the fact that they make women look like, well, idiots.
Case in point, Miss Utah. By now we’ve all seen her major blooper during the dreaded “one question” portion of the contest. A recap for the cave dwellers among you who missed it: Shortly after the all-important swimsuit competition, the finalists were lined up on stage and asked one tough, thought-provoking question by a celebrity judge. This time it was reality TV "star" NeNe Leakes. The question: “A recent report shows that in 40 percent of American families with children, women are primary earners, yet they continue to earn less than men. What does this say about society?”
I watched through laced fingers as Miss Utah babbled incoherently for 15 seconds about leaders and jobs and men and “how to create educate better so we can solve this problem. Thank you.”
I turned to my wife and said, “They’re your people.”
* *
Point of clarification regarding Monday’s Omaha World-Herald “Community Connection” story tucked away on the back page of the Midlands section:
OWH staffer Kevin Coffey wrote a profile of man-about-town music fan and photographer Christopher “Fletch” Fletcher.
Kevin talked about good ol’ Fletch’s 268 concerts attended in one year and how his love of music ignited his love of rock photography. So good a shooter is Fletch that he was assigned to cover the illustrious South By Southwest Music festival a few years ago. I remember it well because I was in Austin for the same festival, covering it for The Reader.
So was Fletch.
But for whatever reason, the article didn’t mention that, or that just about all of Fletch’s assignments come from The Reader. Kevin, of course, knows this fact, but what you may not know is that the Omaha World-Herald has a rule (written or unwritten, I do not know) that its writers can’t mention The Reader or any other local non-World Publishing publication in its pages, even if the information is a central fact in the story. Can’t publicize the competition. It’s bad business.
Make of that what you will, but I can’t say I blame them for being afraid of us. There’s no question that the sheer mention of The Reader in the OWH’s hallowed pages could leverage one of its advertisers to jump over the railing of that great gray Titanic and begin advertising within the pages of our tiny fishing sloop.
Yes, OWH, be afraid. We are small, but mighty.
* * *
More evidence of the evolution (or de-evolution, depending on your point of view) of the music industry: Monday streaming music service Spotify scored a victory by acquiring the music of major artist Pink Floyd. The classic ‘70s prog rock band is finally making its entire back catalog available to Spotify listeners.
As reported by the UK newspaper The Guardian: “Spotify’s per-stream payouts for songs played by its users are low. At the accepted industry average of just under 0.4p per stream. 1 million Spotify downloads pays out around £3,800 - small beer for a band like Pink Floyd, whose career album sales are counted in the hundreds of millions.”
Why would the Floyd take such a pittance for its wares? Spotify’s “Chief Content Officer” Ken Parks said the band caved because they’ve come to the realization that Spotify and other streaming services are “the future of music consumption” and that it will help them reach a new demographic and “secure their legacy.”
Ah, but how will that legacy be harmed by the inferior quality of streaming music? Pink Floyd always held the highest standards when it came to recording quality. I can’t help but pity young music fans who will discover Dark Side of the Moon or Animals or Wish You Were Here or The Wall by listening to the masterpieces as tinty compressed music files streamed via computer or smart phone to tiny ear buds.
The wonder and awe of Pink Floyd was meant to be heard unfettered, uncompressed, though giant walnut loud speakers or wearing heavy, padded high-fidelity head phones, preferably late at night with your eyes closed, the only concern in the back of your head: How to navigate your pitch-black bedroom when it's time to turn to Side Two. That's a legacy to be proud of.
Over The Edge is a weekly column by Reader senior contributing writer Tim McMahan focused on culture, society, the media and the arts. Email Tim at tim.mcmahan@gmail.com.
posted at 08:06 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
by Krista O'Malley
Starting Friday June 21st through Sunday June 23rd, Let’s all meet at JunkStock, located at 315 South 192nd in Elkhorn. Enjoy some great local Food Vendors such as Localmotive Food Truck, Smoke N Pizza and Mockingbird Cupcakes. Admission is $5 per day or $12 for the three-day event. All kids 12 and under are free and the event is Pet friendly.
“JunkStock is the Midwest's premiere event for architectural salvage, antiques, repurposed jewelry, one-of-a-kind vintage pieces, primitives, shabby chic, vintage clothing, and all things old and unique. Vendors from all over the Midwest gather on at this repurposed dairy farm to showcase their goods.”
To get the full low-down visit http://www.junkstockomaha.com.
Join the folks at Kimmel Orchard in Nebraska City for A Very Cherry Jubilee Saturday June 29th and Sunday June 30th. From 9:00 a.m. to close, there will be live music, children’s activities and a Cherry Pit Spit Contest. Also, there will be hayrack rides that take you into the Cherry trees to pick your own cherries. You can bring your cherries back to the barn and the 1964 Cherry Pitting Machine will pit and bag your cherries for you. Kimmel Orchard is located off highway 75 just north of Nebraska City. If you would like more information, you can call 402.873.5293 or visit their website at http://www.kimmelorchard.org.
posted at 06:17 am
on Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
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