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Short Takes: Five millionth milestone ‘a dream’ for Nebraska Diaper Bank

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Short Takes: Five millionth milestone ‘a dream’ for Nebraska Diaper Bank


Last week, Nebraska Diaper Bank gave its 5 millionth diaper to a mother of four at partner agency Heart Ministry Center.

“It frees up my money to be able to buy something nice for my kids,” the mom said.






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Tegan Reed, executive director for Nebraska Diaper Bank, gives the 5 millionth diaper to a mother at the Heart Ministry Center.



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Nebraska Diaper Bank celebrated 2 million diapers distributed in July 2022, meaning the nonprofit has distributed a record 3 million diapers in 15 months.

“Five million is really a dream,” said Tegan Reed, executive director of the Nebraska Diaper Bank. “It’s something that we’ve thought a lot about and a goal that we’ve had and here it is today. It means 5 million diaper changes on thousands and thousands of babies in the Greater Omaha area and even greater Nebraska as well.”

One in three families with young children experience diaper need in Nebraska, and one in two families with young children reported experiencing diaper need in the U.S., according to the newest study done by the National Diaper Bank Network.

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Since 2014, Nebraska Diaper Bank has worked to end diaper need by providing diapers and working collaboratively with local social service agencies, such as Heart Ministry Center.

The mother of four, who wished to remain anonymous, said the diapers will help not just physically but emotionally. She said it will relieve stress as she cares for a 7-month-old and potty trains a 3-year-old.

“I want them to know that it really does help because you can be in a depression from worrying about financial stuff and that helps relieve your mind from that, and that alone I feel like it’s a big thing. It’s a very big problem with people nowadays, like mental health, and just being able to help someone and not feel so stressed or anxiety and wondering when they’re going to be able to buy their next pack of diapers.”

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Nebraska Diaper Bank distributes 290,000 diapers to about 4,500 babies each month as part of the National Diaper Bank Network. Go to nebraskadiaperbank.org for more information.

Pottawattamie Conservation receives grant

Pottawattamie County Conservation has received $450,000 from Iowa’s Resource Enhancement and Protection program, which will be used to pay taxpayers back for the 2022 purchase of 93 acres directly adjacent to Hitchcock Nature Center.

The $1.175 million plot was sold to the county by the Ferguson family as a bequest of Doris Ferguson, who passed away last year. Her final wish was “to provide land for other people to use, to be in a natural setting, like it was back in early history, a landscape I fell in love with when we moved from Brooklyn, New York, in the 1960s.”

The grant, combined with substantial donations from the Pottawattamie Conservation Foundation and the Hitchcock Foundation, covers a majority of the purchase.

“Whenever possible, the conservation department seeks out grants to fund recreational land purchases and ease or eliminate the taxpayer burden on residents,” Pottawattamie County Conservation Executive Director Mark Shoemaker said. “Despite being the second-largest county in Iowa, half of the other 98 counties in the state manage more public land. We have a long way to go in properly serving our constituency and are extremely thankful for REAP and the powerful role it plays in helping preserve public land for future generations.”

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The 93-acre addition is part of a long-term plan to protect the unique and rare Loess Hills landform in Pottawattamie County and expand Hitchcock Nature Center. The REAP program has been instrumental in establishing the county park as a regional leader in low-impact recreation and land management with grant dollars supporting land acquisitions in 1992, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2003, 2007, 2010 and 2011. Since the county purchased Hitchcock Nature Center in 1991, more than $2.8 million REAP dollars have supported land acquisitions to expand the park, all of which were from willing landowners who saw the value in making their property available for public use.

The new addition to Hitchcock Nature Center includes remnant prairie, of which less than 0.1% remains in the state of Iowa, and contains 20 species on the Iowa Species of Greatest Conservation Need list. Last winter, conservation staff converted row crop on the property to a prairie reconstruction, which will be accessible for public recreation in next spring.

Summit to bring together area nonprofits

“Connecting Community with Opportunity” is the theme of the 17th annual Nonprofit Summit of the Midlands to be held Thursday at the Embassy Suites La Vista Hotel and Conference Center.

Hosted by the Nonprofit Association of the Midlands, the daylong summit annually brings together more than 300 nonprofit executives, employees, board members and volunteers from Nebraska and Iowa.

“The Nonprofit Summit of the Midlands is an opportunity for our nonprofit community to come together to foster collaboration, connect with other nonprofit organizations and collectively drive positive change,” said NAM CEO Anne Hindery. “The Summit this year will explore nonprofit connections that we all can leverage to continue to support those in need across the Midlands.”

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Tiffany Turner-Allen, the Executive Director of Nonprofit Prince George’s County in Maryland, will host a keynote presentation and workshop entitled “Celebrating Life! The Thoughts, Perspectives and Life Lessons of a Nonprofit Leader.”

As a Black woman with more than a decade of experience in both national and local nonprofits, Turner-Allen brings an innovative approach to racial equity work. Her discussion will provide a fresh perspective on the urgency of change and holistic healing through racial equity.

The summit also will feature presentations, breakout sessions and workshops on a variety of topics such as “Connecting Community with the Transfer of Wealth Opportunity,” presented by Nebraska Community Foundation; “Neurodiversity: Understanding and Inclusion,” presented by Autism Action Partnership; and “From Grant Review to Grant Writer: Develop Your Skills from the Other Side of the Table,” presented by Omaha Community Foundation.

NAM also will present its annual Catalyst Award which recognizes an organization that has made an impact in the nonprofit community. Recent winners include Girl’s Inc. and Kids Can Community Center.

Game and Parks offices open on Nov. 10

Nebraska Game and Parks Commission customer service offices will be open on Veterans Day, Nov. 10. That also is the day before the nine-day firearm deer season opens.

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That means hunters will be able to purchase deer permits at Game and Parks headquarters in Lincoln, district offices in Norfolk, North Platte and Alliance, service centers in Omaha, Kearney and Bassett, and at the Schramm Education Center south of Gretna. The offices will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

The November firearm deer season is Nov. 11-19.

Buccaneer Bay comes together to find dog

Joe and Melissa Giesick of Plattsmouth’s Buccaneer Bay subdivision came up with an idea that sounded good at the time. They wanted to get a companion for Melissa’s son CJ, who teaches special education in Atchison, Kansas.

Melissa, CJ and a couple of other family members traveled to a dog rescue southeast of Des Moines to pick up a Corgi named Echo on Sept. 29.

That was the day their week-long nightmare began.

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Shortly after the blended family members pulled into the driveway of their home , Echo managed to slip out of her collar and took off. Joe arrived soon after from refereeing a high school football game. Stunned, they sought help from Buc Bay residents via Facebook posts.

With help from many residents — most of whom they didn’t know — Echo was located over several days, but she continued her disappearing act.







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CJ Lundeen with Echo. It took help from the neighborhood to get her back.

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“It was like this whole community was invested in this dog,” Melissa said. “The people here were so unbelievably amazing. We had people constantly out looking.”

The turning point came around 4 p.m. on Oct. 6, when Melissa and her ex-husband (who volunteered to help look) spotted something in a trap. Sure enough, after a week of hiding, Echo was captured.

The next day, Echo was taken to the Plattsmouth vet and received a clean checkup, a new air tag and microchip. She then was reunited with CJ, who now has his new companion.

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Nebraska

Holiday Hoops: Huskers set for Diamond Head Classic in Hawaii

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Holiday Hoops: Huskers set for Diamond Head Classic in Hawaii


How about some Husker hoops during the holidays in Hawaii.

Nebraska (7-2 overall, 1-1 in Big Ten) begins its Diamond Head Classic slate on Sunday night in Hawaii against Murray State (6-4, 1-1 in Missouri Valley Conference). Tip for the game is set for 8 p.m. central time. It will be televised by ESPN with Roxy Bernstein and Sean Farnham on the call.

The Hawaiian Airlines Diamond Head Classic is a three-day tournament with games on Sunday, Monday and Christmas day on Wednesday. The action is played at SimpliFi Arena at the Stan Sheriff Center in Honolulu, the home of the hosting Rainbow Warriors.

Nebraska will play the winner of Hawaii and Charlotte in the second game on Monday. College of Charleston, Loyola (Chicago), Oakland and Oregon State make up the rest of the eight-team tournament field.

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Here’s a look at the bracket, which can be viewed here:

Each team in the tournament will play three games in four games. That’s a lot of basketball packed into a short amount of time. That’ll no doubt be a different feeling for the Huskers, who have a schedule with a December stretch of just three games in 21 days.

Obviously, getting off on the right foot in the opener against Murray State is a must for the trip to be considered a success.

“This first one obviously is very important, to try to stay on the right side of the stay bracket,” Fred Hoiberg said during a press conference Thursday before the team departed. “We’ll worry about the second game when we get there, whether it’s Hawaii or Charlotte, and then have a day off to prepare for the third game that we will play.”

Nebraska will catch Murray State on a two-game losing streak. The Racers fell on the road at Western Kentucky 81-76 in overtime last Saturday, then dropped a game at Indiana State on Wednesday 84-74.

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Hoiberg noted how Murray State dug itself in a hole early but never quit and made it a game at the end. The Racers trailed by as many as 22 points in the second half, 53-36 with 12:15 remaining, but slashed the Sycamores’ lead to a two-possession game, 78-74, with 1:37 left.

“It’s a team that shoots the ball as well or better than any team that we played to this point, and they’ve got quick, athletic guards that pose problems on both ends of the court,” Hoiberg said.

Nebraska is coming off a head-turning 85-68 victory against Indiana on Dec. 13, a solid rebound effort after getting embarrassed in a loss at Michigan State.

In the win over the Hoosiers, Brice Williams went off with an outing of 30 points, six rebounds and five assists. The 6-7 guard was named Big Ten Player of the Week and one of five USBWA Oscar Robertson National Players of the Week.

Williams also became only the second Husker in the Big Ten era to have at least 30 points and five assists in a game, joining Teddy Allen (2021).

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Murray State will come into the game averaging 78.8 points per game (7th in MVC) while shooting 47.7% from the field (7th) and 38.6% from 3-point range (4th). The Racers’ defense is allowing 67.0 points per game (3rd) and have done well defending the perimeter, holding opponents to 27.9% shooting from 3 this season.

“Their ability to shoot is the thing that really stands out,” Hoiberg said. “They shoot over 40 percent as a team. Their guards are really quick, and they do a great job getting into the paint.”

Hoiberg knows Murray State head coach Steve Prohm well. Prohm was who took over for Hoiberg at Iowa State when he took the Chicago Bulls head coaching job.

“I think he’s a great guy and I think he’s a hell of a coach,” Hoiberg said of Prohm. “So they do a really good job of spacing the floor. They run a lot of really good actions, especially for their shooters when they get it going. And their bigs, the guys that do play, they’re very active going to the glass. They will throw it in there depending on matchups. I’ve been impressed with this team and their overall quickness and ability to shoot the ball. Those are the things that worry you most about this group.”

With the forecast for Honolulu calling for sunny skies and 80-degree temperatures during the days of the tournament, the Huskers want to enjoy the experience of being in Hawaii during the holidays.

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But making sure winning basketball games and the tournament is the top priority.

“If we go out there and guys want to sit on the beach and do all that, we’re probably not going to be very successful,” Hoiberg said. “We’ve talked a lot to our guys about going out there, enjoying the experience and enjoying the process, but understanding when that ball goes up in the air, we got to be on point and we got to be ready to go.”

Nebraska preferred to fly to Hawaii on Thursday, but due to finals at UNL, the departure day was pushed to Friday. The Huskers landed in Honolulu on Friday afternoon local time.

Hoiberg said the Huskers had a light workout on the court after landing and will have a practice on Saturday before the Sunday game. The tight schedule won’t be an excuse, Hoiberg said, because every team in the tournament, outside of host Hawaii, is making the same trip.

“We’re all in the same boat on this trip,” Hoiberg said. “It’s something where the team that puts the distractions behind them — you got the time change, got a new ball that we’ve been practicing with all week — but it’s the same thing for everybody. It’s the short turnarounds, and the team that prepares the best will have the most success in the tournament this week.”

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On Tuesday, the off day on Christmas Eve, Hoiberg said there will be a team meal with some of the family members that also made the trip. They’ll find time to fit that in between a practice and multiple film sessions.



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Georgia Transfer Defensive Back Justyn Rhett Commits to Nebraska

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Georgia Transfer Defensive Back Justyn Rhett Commits to Nebraska


An SEC defensive back is headed to Lincoln via the transfer portal.

Former Georgia DB Justyn Rhett has committed to Nebraska. He has three years of eligibility remaining.

Rhett appeared in four games over two seasons for the powerhouse Bulldogs. He finishes his Georgia career with three tackles.

The 6-1, 200-pound DB got to Athens from the football factory out of Las Vegas, Bishop Gorman. A four-star prospect out of high school, Rhett was selected to play in Under Armour All-America Game and picked Georgia over Alabama, Michigan, Florida State, LSU, Tennessee, Oregon, Notre Dame, Oregon, and more.

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MORE: Nebraska Women’s Basketball Falls at No. 17 Georgia Tech

MORE: Dave Feit’s Historical College Football Playoffs: The Post-Osborne Nebraska Teams

MORE: Purdue Transfer Quarterback Marcos Davila Commits to Nebraska

MORE: Carriker Chronicles: Nebraska Big Day; Coaching Staff Is Better

MORE: Despite Final Four Loss, Nebraska Volleyball Has Plenty to Be Proud Of This Season

Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.



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900 Square Feet: Recapping Louisville-Pitt, Penn State-Nebraska

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900 Square Feet: Recapping Louisville-Pitt, Penn State-Nebraska


LOUISVILLE, Kentucky — One match left: Louisville, which knocked out Pittsburgh, plays Penn State, which ousted Nebraska with a five-set reverse sweep.

ESPN and Big Ten Network analyst Emily Ehman and VolleyballMag editor Lee Feinswog look back on an incredible Thursday night at the NCAA Division I Volleyball Championship:



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