
NC Downtown Summer Movie Series begins tomorrow
The 2024 Downtown Summer Movie Series is scheduled to begin tomorrow (Saturday, June 1).
The 2024 Downtown Summer Movie Series is scheduled to begin tomorrow (Saturday, June 1).
One hundred twenty-seven years of teaching experience and 151 total years of experience in an educational setting will be absent from the halls of the Nebraska City Public Schools classrooms and offices when the new school year begins in August.Six educators and one long-time district secretary retired when the current school year ended on Tuesday, May 14.
Recipients of the 2024 Kropp Charitable Foundation Scholarships have been announced.
The Nebraska City Creative District’s first 2024 will feature bluegrass music at the Nebraska City Veterans Memorial Building on Saturday, June 22.Tickets are on sale now on the Creative District’s website (nebraskacitycreativedistrict.com) for the 4 p.m.
Spring and summer storms take their toll on landscape plants.
Five Nebraska City area high school graduates each received a $2,000 Kimmel/Rotary Scholarship.
The 2024 Memorial Day Service at Nebraska City’s Wyuka Cemetery paid tribute to the values of duty, honor, and selfless service.American Legion Post 8 Commander Bruce Madsen welcomed the audience to the ceremony’s new location, the lighted flagpole encircled by symbols of the branches of the military: Army, Navy, Marines, Air Force, Coast Guard, and Space Force.
Nebraska City’s museum had 11,705 visitors in 2023.Dean Shissler, director of the Nebraska City Museum Association, provided attendance statistics to the Nebraska City City Council as part of his annual report to the council.Shissler delivered his report during the Monday, May 20, Nebraska City City Council meeting.Attendance increased by 56 visitors from 2022, said Shissler, who added that the MRB Lewis and Clark Visitor Center was the town’s most popular museum, with 7,164 visitors.
The Otoe County Board of Commissioners has extended the moratorium on applications for conditional use permits for commercial/utility grade solar energy systems to a total of six months.Commissioners approved extending the moratorium during the May 21 regular board meeting in order to give the Solar Energy System Zoning Review Committee time to review and revise the county’s zoning regulations, which were first approved in 2016, for such projects.