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My life was almost taken : Victim of hit and run pushes to make Blackstone safer for pedestrians

ZIP Advertisement My life was almost taken : Victim of hit and run pushes to make Blackstone safer for pedestrians City Council Member Danny Begley said he plans to address options for the neighborhood at a July committee meeting Share Updated: 10:45 PM CDT Jul 2, 2021 My life was almost taken : Victim of hit and run pushes to make Blackstone safer for pedestrians City Council Member Danny Begley said he plans to address options for the neighborhood at a July committee meeting Share Updated: 10:45 PM CDT Jul 2, 2021 Hide Transcript Show Transcript MAKE THE AREA SAFER AND SO DOES AN OMAHA CITY COUNCILMAN. HEADLIGHTS BOUNCE OFF WINDOWS. I WAS CROSSING FARNHAM STREET TO GO BACK TO MY APARTMENT. ALEXANDRA: A VEHICLE HIT A WOMAN THAT SUNDAY NIGHT. YRM BEING TRANSPORTED TO THE HOSPITAL. I DON T REMEMBER THE FIRST NIGHT THERE. ALEXANDRA: THAT WOMAN IS LINDY.SA I CAN T RECALL ANY MEMORIES FROM ABOUT THE FIRST FOUR DAYS ALEXANDRA: AFTER A 14

Protesters prompted change, created controversy as they marched in Omaha

Seven arrested outside Omaha police union hall during protest that included pig heads

A flyer from the Omaha police union describing City Council candidate Cammy Watkins as a danger to public safety has provoked outrage among some on social media and a fracture in her opponent s campaign. Seven people were arrested Saturday night during a protest outside the Omaha police union hall that included leaving three pig heads in costume police caps on the grounds. An Omaha police spokesman said pending charges include trespassing, failure to disperse, disorderly conduct, obstructing, littering and unlawful assembly. Social media posts by some who attended the protest said all of the arrestees, including Alexander “Bear” Matthews, were bailed out of jail early Sunday.

Huntington s disease ravages Illinois family; walk Sunday in Naperville to raise money to fight disease

Rich Hein/Sun-Times It’s hard to keep track of how many loved ones Dave and Susie Hodgson have lost to Huntington’s disease. The Hodgsons, who live in Somoanuk, south of DeKalb, each have buried a spouse, both of their mothers-in-law, two sons from their first marriages and two siblings of Dave Hodgson’s first wife. And the deadly legacy of Huntington’s a brain disease with no cure that is passed from one generation to the next through a defective gene continues. One of Dave Hodgson’s daughters has the disease. Two others are at risk for inheriting Huntington’s. And it’s possible some of their three grandchildren, who range from 10 to 26 years old, could be diagnosed at some point.

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