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No charges for those who wrongly convicted man in Kan. teens murder

Bledsoe-photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections
Bledsoe-photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections

OSKALOOSA, Kan. (AP) — Jefferson County Attorney Jason Belveal says he doesn’t expect to file charges against officials involved in an investigation that led to a man being wrongly convicted in the 1999 death of a 14-year-old Kansas girl.

Belveal says a former prosecutor, county sheriff and a Kansas Bureau of Investigation agent made mistakes while investigating the case of Floyd Bledsoe but he doesn’t believe the mistakes were intentional.

Bledsoe served more than 15 years in prison for the death of 14-year-old Zetta Camille Arfmann before his conviction was overturned and he was released from prison last year. His brother, Tom Bledsoe, admitted to the crime in notes he left before he committed suicide.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports the KBI is re-examining the case but it’s unlikely to address the original investigation.

Police, drug dogs search Kan. high school during morning “Lockout”

Manhattan High School
Manhattan High School

MANHATTAN – Law enforcement in Riley County and officials at Manhattan High School conducted a joint operation with multiple canine units, to perform a random search for illicit drugs on Tuesday morning, according to principal Greg Hoyt.

“This was a planned and coordinated effort between the school and law enforcement and was not prompted by any specific information regarding drugs or drug activity at the school, according to a letter to parents from Hoyt.

The building was placed into “lockout” mode during the drill and all exterior doors were locked to prevent anyone from entering the building during the search.

School officials monitored the front entryways during the drill to direct any incoming traffic. Students were not permitted to leave their classrooms, but regular instruction did continue for the duration of the drill. The drill was completed in approximately 45 minutes.

“Several positive indicants did arise and school administrators are following up in concert with law enforcement, according to  Hoyt.

Kan. driver expected to recover after sanitation truck rolls

photo Harvey Co. Sheriff
photo Harvey Co. Sheriff

HARVEY COUNTY- The driver injured in Monday’s rollover accident in Harvey County remains hospitalized with numerous broken bones but is expected to make a full recovery, according to Harvey County Sheriff T. Walton.

The waste sanitation truck rolled over near 12811 NW 36th Street. The driver reported overcorrecting to avoid driving into the ditch, according to Walton. The truck was hauling a full load.

The Lifeteam Air Ambulance transported the driver to Wesley Medical Center.

The name of the driver has not been released.

The accident remains under investigation.

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HARVEY COUNTY- One person was injured in an accident on Monday in Harvey County.

A waste sanitation truck rolled over near 12811 Northwest 36th Street, according to the Harvey County Sheriff’s office.

The Lifeteam Air Ambulance transported the driver to Wesley Medical Center.

The name of the driver and extent of injuries was not released.

The accident remains under investigation.

Court agrees to review Obama plan to shield immigrants from deportation

Supreme courtWASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court has agreed to an election-year review of President Barack Obama’s executive orders to allow up to 5 million immigrants to “come out of the shadows” and work legally in the United States.

The justices said Tuesday they will consider undoing lower court rulings that blocked the plan from taking effect in the midst of a presidential campaign already roiled by the issue.

The case probably will be argued in April and decided by late June, about a month before both parties’ presidential nominating conventions.

The immigrants who would benefit from the administration’s plan are mainly the parents of U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents.

Texas is leading 26 states in challenging the immigration plan.

New air service to begin flying from Salina

Screen Shot 2016-01-19 at 8.05.50 AMSALINA, Kan. (AP) — A Portland, Oregon-based airline has ended service to Great Bend and Salina, effective immediately.

Seaport Airlines announced Friday that it would no longer fly to the two Kansas cities and five other cities in California. The company blamed a pilot shortage for ending its service.

KAKE-TV reports Salina Airport Director Tim Rogers says Seaport’s poor service has led to a drop in passengers.

Rogers says Great Lakes Airlines will return to Salina, beginning April 1. Rogers says Great Lakes will fly to Denver in 30 seat Embraer turboprops.

Great Bend Airport Director Martin Miller says his city won’t know if it will get new airline service until the U.S. Department of Transportation decides whether it still qualifies for essential air service.

Kan. woman found dead in an apartment, suspect arrested

police murder crime

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Overland Park police are investigating the death of a woman whose body was found in an apartment as a homicide.

Police found the body of 35-year-old Jennifer Lopez of Overland Park Monday evening inside an apartment just south of Shawnee Mission North High School Monday evening.

Police say an acquaintance of the woman was arrested and is being held in the Johnson County jail pending charges.

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OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Overland Park police are investigating the death of a woman whose body was found in an apartment as a homicide.

Police were called to the apartment just south of Shawnee Mission North High School Monday evening and found the woman dead.

Police say an acquaintance of the woman was taken in for questioning.

Kansas teen hospitalized after ejected in rollover accident

KHPSTRONG CITY -A Kansas teen was injured in an accident just after 9p.m. on Monday in Chase County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Mazda Rx8 driven by Trevor Colt Burright, 19, Cottonwood Falls, was westbound in the 500 Block of 4th Street in Strong City at a high rate of speed.

The Mazda left the roadway into north ditch, struck a culvert by a driveway, went airborne, rolled and the driver was ejected.

Burright was transported to Newman Regional Medical Center. He was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

CDC: Strong signs birth defects are tied to mosquito virus

CDCHONOLULU (AP) — Health officials say a baby born in a Hawaii hospital is the first in the United States born with Zika virus.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Sunday it’s also the first infant born in the country with microcephaly  associated with Zika virus. It’s a birth defect where a baby’s head is smaller than expected. Babies with the condition often have smaller brains that might not have developed properly.

The state Department of Health announced Friday that the baby was born recently in an Oahu hospital. The mother likely had the mosquito-borne virus while living in Brazil and her newborn acquired the infection in the womb.

Neither the baby nor the mother is infectious. Officials say there’s no risk of transmission in Hawaii.

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RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — The U.S. Centers for Disease Control says researchers have found the strongest evidence so far of a possible link between a mosquito-borne virus and a surge of birth defects.

The CDC said that researchers found the dengue-like Zika virus in the babies of two women in Brazil who miscarried and two newborns who died. Those who were born had small heads, a rare condition known as microcephaly.

CDC’s director of mosquito-borne diseases is Dr. Lyle Petersen and he says that finding the virus in brain tissue is “very significant.”

Brazil’s government says 3,530 babies have been born with microcephaly in the country since October. The number was less than 150 in 2014.

Westar offers customers chance to try alternative energy

SolarTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Westar Energy is looking for customers interested in using some solar energy without having to install equipment.

The utility announced Monday it will build a solar array if enough customers agree by the end of March to buy at least 1 megawatt of power. That’s enough electricity to power 164 homes.

Westar spokeswoman Gina Penzig says anywhere in Westar’s territory could participate in the program.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports a household would pay about $10 per month to receive about 15 percent of its electricity through the solar community project. The incentive is that the rates would be locked in for as long as the customer is enrolled, regardless of how regular rates fluctuate.

Customers can enroll by visiting Westar’s website, WestarEnergy.com/communitysolar.

Document proving WWII military sex slaves now at KU library

Goodman- image Univ. of Kansas
Goodman- image Univ. of Kansas

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A 1945 report proving that Japan had government-controlled brothels during World War II has been added to a University of Kansas library.

Longtime university history professor Grant Goodman was a 20-year-old second lieutenant in the Army’s Military Intelligence Service when he translated the report about the brothels — some featuring enslaved “comfort girls” from across Asia.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that decades later and before his 2014 death, Goodman shared the document with the world in an article. The attention is credited with contributing to Japan’s 1993 formal apology to former prostitutes now known as “comfort women.”

Just last month, Japan for the first time pledged government money — $8.3 million — to a foundation supporting the few remaining sex slaves from Korea, now in their 80s and 90s.

Kan. woman hospitalized after I-70 crash, car travels down embankment

I-70 accident on Monday- photo CJonline.com
I-70 accident on Monday- photo CJonline.com

SHAWNEE COUNTY- A woman from Manhattan was injured in an accident just before 4p.m. on Monday in Shawnee County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Nissan Sentra driven by Katie Jo Jarvis, 26, Manhattan, was east bound on Interstate 70 one mile east of Valencia.

After changing lanes, the Nissan struck the driver’s side door of a 2015 Subaru Legacy driven by Clinese A. Thompson, 40, Topeka.

After the collision, the Nissan veered through the median across opposing traffic lanes, over the embankment and came to a rest after damaging a fence on the access road below.

Jarvis was transported to Stormont Vail. Thompson and two passengers in the Subaru were not injured.

All were properly restrained a the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Effort to curb overuse of antibiotics amid cold, flu seasons

CDCLAURAN NEERGAARD, AP Medical Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — It’s cold season and the miserable trudge in seeking antibiotics because their mucus turned green, or the cough has nagged for weeks.

Despite years of warnings, doctors still overprescribe antibiotics for acute respiratory infections even though most are caused by viruses that those drugs cannot help.

Now doctors are getting new tips on how to avoid unnecessary antibiotics for these common complaints — and to withstand the patient who’s demanding one.

Sure bronchitis sounds scary. So describe it as a chest cold. And no, color changes don’t mean it’s time for an antibiotic.

“Antibiotics are terrific. Thank God we have them for really bad things. But we need to be judicious in the way we use them,” said American College of Physicians President Dr. Wayne J. Riley, an internal medicine professor at Vanderbilt University.

Rather than sending patients off with little advice about what to do while their bodies fight off a virus, how about a prescription instead for some over-the-counter or home remedies that just might ease the cough or the pain?

“We’re calling for the symptomatic prescription pad,” Riley said, describing information sheets that suggest simple aids like humidifiers and plenty of fluid, have a space to scribble directions for an OTC drug — and tell patients when to return if they’re not getting better. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has a sample on its website.

Antibiotics are losing their effectiveness, and inappropriate prescribing is one factor. Repeated exposure can lead germs to become resistant to the drugs. The CDC estimates that drug-resistant bacteria cause 2 million illnesses and 23,000 deaths each year in the U.S.

Another reason not to use them unnecessarily: side effects. Antibiotics are implicated in 1 of 5 emergency-room visits for bad drug reactions, CDC says. Particularly troubling is an increase in severe diarrhea caused by C-diff, the Clostridium difficile bug that can take hold in the gut after antibiotics kill off other bacteria.

CDC has seen improvement from pediatricians in antibiotic prescribing but overuse remains a big problem for adults, especially with respiratory illnesses, said Dr. Lauri Hicks, who heads CDC’s “Get Smart” antibiotic education campaign.

Monday’s guidelines, from CDC and the American College of Physicians, move beyond simple statements that antibiotics don’t work for viruses like the common cold or the flu. They lay out how doctors begin deciding if antibiotics are warranted for some other common respiratory complaints, explain that decision to patients and offer guidance on symptom relief.

Among the advice, published in Annals of Internal Medicine:

—Acute bronchitis is airway inflammation, irritation that makes you cough, sometimes as long as six weeks. The guidelines say not to perform special testing or prescribe antibiotics unless pneumonia is suspected, something often accompanied by a fast heartbeat, fever or abnormal breathing sounds.

Over-the-counter symptom relief includes cough suppressants such as dextromethorphan; mucus-thinning expectorants such as guaifenesin; and antihistamines or decongestants.

—Sore throats are hugely common but adults are far less likely than children to have the strep throat that requires an antibiotic. A rapid strep test is available if patients have suspicious symptoms such as persistent fever, night sweats or swollen tonsils.

Pain-relieving options for adults include aspirin, acetaminophen, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen, and throat lozenges.

—Sinus infections can be very painful but usually clear up without antibiotics even if bacteria are to blame. The guidelines say antibiotics should be reserved for patients with no signs of improvement after 10 days, severe symptoms such as fever higher than 102, or what’s called double-sickening, when someone starts to recover and then gets worse.

Possible symptom relievers include decongestants, nasal sprays, saline nasal irrigation and pain medications.

Riley often has to explain how to tell if cough and cold relievers contain a sedating antihistamine, and that nasal sprays clear congestion quickly but that using them for too many days can trigger rebound symptoms. He asks if patients are taking multiple products that contain acetaminophen, best known as Tylenol, because too much can damage the liver. Often, his patients say an over-the-counter drug isn’t working when in fact, they didn’t take it as directed.

“There is a dizzying array” of drugstore symptom relievers, so don’t make miserable patients sort through them without help, said CDC’s Hicks.

“There isn’t a right answer that works for everybody,” she said. But sometimes something as basic as a humidifier “can make a difference in terms of how you feel when you wake up in the morning.”

Criticized book on George Washington’s slave pulled

photo Scholastic
photo Scholastic

HILLEL ITALIE, AP National Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Scholastic is pulling a controversial new picture book about George Washington and his slaves, the publisher tells The Associated Press.

“A Birthday Cake for George Washington” was released Jan. 5 and had been strongly criticized for its upbeat images and story of Washington’s cook, the slave Hercules. Its withdrawal was announced Sunday.

The book had received more than 100 one-star reviews on Amazon.com and the trade publication School Library Journal had called it “highly problematic” and recommended against its purchase.

“A Birthday Cake” was written by Ramin Ganeshram, whose previous works include the novel “Stir It Up” and the nonfiction “FutureChefs.” Vanessa Brantley Newton’s is the illustrator.

In a Scholastic blog post, Ganeshram had written that the story was based on historical research and meant to honor the slaves’ resourcefulness.

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