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Chadron Nebraska makes New York Times

CattleArmy

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Angel Franco/The New York Times
The lives of the 5,600 residents of Chadron, Neb., unfold item by item, week after week, in the police log of the local newspaper.

By DAN BARRY
Published: September 2, 2007
CHADRON, NE


George Ledbetter, editor of The Chadron Record, said the newspaper's Police Beat feature rivaled the obituaries in popularity.

Item from the blotter of the Chadron Police Department: Caller from the 900 block of Morehead Street reported that someone had taken three garden gnomes from her location sometime during the night. She described them as plastic, "with chubby cheeks and red hats."

When you reach Chadron you're glad for it, because this Nebraska town is a long way from anywhere. Drive north on Main Street, past the Police Department, and you hit prairie; drive south, past the state college, and you hit prairie. In between, 5,600 people embrace, avoid and endure one another in a compact place that began more than a century ago as a remote railroad town.

Here, as anywhere, the specifics of most encounters between residents evaporate with the moment, leaving only those precious, fleeting bits, snatched from the ether and pinned by some dispatcher sitting at a desk behind the Police Department's service window. A call comes in, the dispatcher types and another brief paragraph is added to the continuing Chadron epic.

Caller from the 200 block of Morehead Street advised a man was in front of their shop yelling and yodeling. Subject was told to stop yodeling until Oktoberfest.

It is in this regard that Chadron is blessed. For here, life's gradual unfolding is measured and honored by Police Beat, a longstanding feature in The Chadron Record, the weekly newspaper. It records those small, true moments lost in the shadows of the large — moments that may not rise to the Olympian heights of newsworthiness, yet still say something about who we are and how we create this thing called community.

Caller from the 400 block of Third Street advised that a subject has been calling her and her employees, singing Elvis songs to them.

Police Beat repeats, almost verbatim, some of the calls that the town's police dispatchers receive and then dutifully log, often in a literary style that synthesizes the detached jargon of the police with the conversational language of the people.

Caller from the 200 block of Morehead Street advised that a known subject was raising Cain again.

Every day, except on those days when they don't feel like it, the dispatchers fax copies of their calls log to the ink-perfumed office of The Record, just around the corner. There, a young reporter named Heather Crofutt selects the most interesting items, edits out the names and specific addresses and types them up for Police Beat. Although she is essentially transcribing the reports, she says, "People think I make it up."

Officer on the 1000 block of West Highway 20 found a known male subject in the creek between Taco John's and Bauerkemper's. Subject was covered in water stating he was protecting his family. Officers gave subject ride home.

George Ledbetter, the editor, says Police Beat rivals the obituaries in popularity, so much so that it has become an integral part of local culture. Not long ago, for example, the loud practice sessions of four Chadron State College musicians earned them a mention in the log. They instantly knew what to call their fledgling band: Police Beat.

Mr. Ledbetter struggles to name his favorite item; there are so many. But taken as a whole, he says, the feature is "such a reflection of human life."

Over the years, Chadron police officials have had a tolerate-hate relationship with Police Beat. One top-ranking officer complains that the feature seems to minimize the difficulty of police work. She says that while there are plenty of calls about animal encounters (Caller on the 900 block of Parry Drive advised a squirrel has climbed down her chimney and is now in the fireplace looking at her through the glass door, chirping at her.), there are plenty of calls about far more serious matters: child abuse, domestic violence, you name it.

But Police Beat often reflects how heavily some of us rely on law enforcement for just about everything (Caller from the 800 block of Pine Street advised that she had just left someone's home and she forgot her jacket, and requested an officer to get her coat), and demonstrates how deft the police can be at defusing potentially volatile matters:

Caller from the 100 block of North Morehead Street requested to speak to animal control because caller felt that someone was coming into his yard and cutting the hair on his dogs. Dispatch advised caller to set up video surveillance on his house. Caller said he planned on it.

What emerges, then, is a kind of weekly prose poem to the human condition, where annoyance about barking dogs is validated, where nighttime fears born of isolation are reflected, where concern about others is memorialized.

Caller stated that there is a 9-year-old boy out mowing the yard and feels that it is endangering the child in doing so when the mother is perfectly capable of doing it herself.

In short, Police Beat is a rough script to the tragicomedy that is everyday life. And if the details preserved in the ever-expanding Chadron epic do not always find us at our best, there are moments, recorded for posterity, when we seek redemption, we make amends. We try.

Two weeks after the theft of those three chubby-cheeked, red-hatted garden ornaments, a brief item in Police Beat reported a break in the case. Two girls refusing to identify themselves had "brought in some gnomes."
 
We had one funny one this week in the police blotter.

A woman said she was driving down the road when she noticed a mule was looking at her thru her passenger's side window. ( How fast was this mule going? :shock: :shock: )

She stopped , mule stopped. She started up...so did said mule and she later heard a ' clunk'.

Upon arriving at work she realized that the passenger side mirror was hanging by the elec. wires.

No one responded to ck on said mule! :cry: :cry:
 
NEW YORK TIMES. WOW!!

The Buffalo Bulletin, Buffalo, Wyoming had a couple of popular features.
One being Sagebrush Sven and the other being the Police Beat.
The Police Beat was so good, that the Williston radio station read it
on the air once a week.

Maybe Sagebrush Sven wrote the Police Beat...regardless, both
were really entertaining.
 
When I was Sheriff- I had heard so many folks always saying "there is nothing for law enforcement to do in this county", "nothing ever happens", "why do you need a night shift dispatcher", etc. etc.-- so I started a Dispatchers Diary section in the local paper--which listed all the calls coming thru dispatch.....

Woke a lot of folks up-- and became the number one reading section of the paper with many folks telling me they read that before they read anything else in the paper...

Current Sheriff has continued it and I have several that have told me if they ever stop doing it they'd probably quit buying the paper....
 
Caller stated that there is a 9-year-old boy out mowing the yard and feels that it is endangering the child in doing so when the mother is perfectly capable of doing it herself

I had to reply to that. People who don't let a 9 year old(or younger) do stuff are the same who wonder why they can't make their 16 year old behave. The downfall of the USA may well be caused by not spanking and not learning to work young enough to make an impression.
That caller would have had a conniption if they had watched my Dad milk 9 cows, feed the pigs and gather eggs every morning when he was 12. Then he went to school and took both 7th and 8th grades so he could graduate and take over the ranch because Grandpa was blind and his older brother wanted to enlist after Pearl Harbor. 12 years old and in charge of a ranch but nowdays a 9 year old can't even mow the lawn!
 
Our Campus paper had a blotter.. It was one of the most popular segments of the paper.. It was just campus stuff and some areas surronding it but there were some interesting things, lol... I think Bozeman did it too but I can't remember for sure..
 
Doug Thorson said:
Caller stated that there is a 9-year-old boy out mowing the yard and feels that it is endangering the child in doing so when the mother is perfectly capable of doing it herself

I had to reply to that. People who don't let a 9 year old(or younger) do stuff are the same who wonder why they can't make their 16 year old behave. The downfall of the USA may well be caused by not spanking and not learning to work young enough to make an impression.
That caller would have had a conniption if they had watched my Dad milk 9 cows, feed the pigs and gather eggs every morning when he was 12. Then he went to school and took both 7th and 8th grades so he could graduate and take over the ranch because Grandpa was blind and his older brother wanted to enlist after Pearl Harbor. 12 years old and in charge of a ranch but nowdays a 9 year old can't even mow the lawn!




How true Doug, and this is one of the reason, many of our young people have no respect for themselves or others.

Best Regards
Ben Roberts
 
Ben Roberts said:
Doug Thorson said:
Caller stated that there is a 9-year-old boy out mowing the yard and feels that it is endangering the child in doing so when the mother is perfectly capable of doing it herself

I had to reply to that. People who don't let a 9 year old(or younger) do stuff are the same who wonder why they can't make their 16 year old behave. The downfall of the USA may well be caused by not spanking and not learning to work young enough to make an impression.
That caller would have had a conniption if they had watched my Dad milk 9 cows, feed the pigs and gather eggs every morning when he was 12. Then he went to school and took both 7th and 8th grades so he could graduate and take over the ranch because Grandpa was blind and his older brother wanted to enlist after Pearl Harbor. 12 years old and in charge of a ranch but nowdays a 9 year old can't even mow the lawn!




How true Doug, and this is one of the reason, many of our young people have no respect for themselves or others.

Best Regards
Ben Roberts

My father includes my young son in many activities that make me shudder that to him are no big deal. It's not me not wanting him to work it's more the fear of him getting hurt. This young boy can drive the rake tractor while moving hay machinery, the atv, and even the hay wagon. Both of ours ride horses and the youngest can sort the 20 some nurse cow calves into 5 pens then let the milkcows in to be nursed. The only problem he has is with the grain buckets they are to heavy! Do I want him doing it.....the only reason it makes me so nervous is as a mother I'm afraid of him getting hurt. The work ethic he has even at this young age is amazing and he truly believes he helps make this ranch work and he does.
 
I agree with those of you that think this country is going down the wrong road regarding letting youngsters work. Of course, you have to be selective in what they do, but there is so much they are capable of.

I've long said that kids have been robbed of the satisfaction of achievement because they have been given so much. They haven't
had to work for something. The more you have to earn something (and wait to get it) the more valuable it is.

And we have to be careful not to SQUELCH that wonderful work ethic
that youngsters exhibit. If you don't encourage it, soon it will pass.

We had a young man work for us whose father is a WORK HORSE.
He is the hardest working man I have ever known. Yet his son, at
16 years of age, showed up for work the first day in his pickup. The radio was turned up and he didn't even know enough to shut the pickup off,
get out and report for work. Mr. FH had to so over, tell him to turn the radio off and get out of the pickup!!!! He is a good kid, but just didn't know how to work. So disappointing.
 
My father includes my young son in many activities that make me shudder that to him are no big deal. It's not me not wanting him to work it's more the fear of him getting hurt. This young boy can drive the rake tractor while moving hay machinery, the atv, and even the hay wagon. Both of ours ride horses and the youngest can sort the 20 some nurse cow calves into 5 pens then let the milkcows in to be nursed. The only problem he has is with the grain buckets they are to heavy! Do I want him doing it.....the only reason it makes me so nervous is as a mother I'm afraid of him getting hurt. The work ethic he has even at this young age is amazing and he truly believes he helps make this ranch work and he does.

Having a 2 year old I know the lump that comes in your throat. My daughter suddenly likes to climb up on the back of the couch(not against the wall) stand up there and jump onto the seat of the couch with a thud right on her backside. But the fact of the matter is that this is the first generation of kids in the hiostory of the world that has been protected to the Nth degree. Getting hurt is a part of growing up. My prayer is that when she gets hurt it won't be permanent but no matter, I can deal with that a lot easier than I could a kid who has no try.
 
My boy and girl are very good at getting lumps on their heads or whatever.. No fear sometimes.. Girl is growing out of a little and getting a bit more thoughtfull but still, have had to save her more than once, lol.. The boy, 18 months, keeps trying to ride the dogs like they are horses and I think I saw him eyeing the cattle the other day as they walked by... We are going to have to keep an eye on that boy, lol..
 
yea il sounds like our young boys are cut from the same cloth want to ride anything that will hold still long enough to get on. and if we take our eyes off of him for a second he is getting stuck somewhere or we have to take a trip to er to sew some skin back together and he is only two and a half
 

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