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Make sure to check that your route is clear before heading out today!
May 10, 2021 4:48 am
LINCOLN, Neb. (KLKN)- Starting today, Monday, May 10, there’s a lane closure in Lincoln on North 27th Street between Theresa Street and Old Dairy Road.
Lanes on these roads will be closed for bridge repairs over Salt Creek. This work is scheduled to be completed in September.
The left and right turns may be restricted at various times. Fairfield Street will have limited access but traffic on North 27th Street will be maintained.
Bus stops on the StarTran route 27-North 27th will be impacted during this work.
KLKN-TV
April 8, 2021 9:37 am
LINCOLN, Neb. (KLKN)- On Tuesday, around 5:49 p.m., Lincoln police saw a vehicle near N 27th and Cornhusker Highway committing multiple traffic violations.
Officers say they saw the vehicle pull into a Walmart parking lot on N 27th street and saw another person get into the car.
LPD reported stopping the driver, Robert Kotschwar, 32, and the passenger, Jacob Jones, 26.
According to police, Kotschwar told them there were drugs and brass knuckles in the car. After looking, officers reported finding 43 grams of meth divided into multiple baggies, a scale, $64, 9 Alprazolam pills, and the brass knuckles.
Jones reportedly told police a false name, but they used an AFIS device to get his real identity.
It stabilized us — How the state of Nebraska gave away $1 billion, and who got it fremonttribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fremonttribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Renovated building in Lincoln celebrates auto history Follow Us
Question of the Day By LIBBY SELINE - Associated Press - Sunday, January 31, 2021
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - The building on the corner of 16th and O streets, which once featured bricked-in windows and a leaking roof, now has new life as apartments and commercial space - and a home on Lincoln’s list of historic places.
About a century ago, Lincoln had one of the highest per capita automobile ownership rates in the nation, and prominent attorney Edmund Strode purchased the property downtown to serve as a repair shop and dealership. The Strode Building has hosted numerous auto-related businesses since it opened in 1917, according to the Lincoln Journal Star.