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Teen hospitalized after falling asleep at the wheel

Screen Shot 2014-07-03 at 5.13.15 AMPAOLA- A Kansas teenager was injured in an accident just after 3 p.m. on Sunday in Miami County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Chevy passenger car driven by Caspian O. Tressin, 16, Paola, was westbound on Kansas 68 one mile west of the roundabout on Old Kansas City Road.

The driver fell asleep, woke up and overcorrected, striking a guardrail and the vehicle rolled onto its top.

Tressin was transported to Miami County Medical Center.
The KHP reported she was properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Report: Service bungled White House shooting case

photo- courtesy White House curator
photo- courtesy White House curator

WASHINGTON (AP) — Because of a string of security lapses, the U.S. Secret Service didn’t realize for four days that a man had fired a high-powered rifle at the White House in 2011.

Following an investigation The Washington Post concludes the Secret Service bungled the response to the shooting. An Idaho man was sentenced to 25 years in prison for firing at least seven bullets at the White House on November 11, 2011. The president and Michelle Obama were away, but one daughter was home.

The Post reported a White House usher expressed concerns about the safety for Malia Obama, who was to arrive within minutes of the incident.

In a statement to The Associated Press, the Secret Service said it beefed up White House security following a review of the incident.

Zombies occupy Statehouse steps for fundraiser

Courtesy photo
Courtesy photo

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The undead have taken to Topeka streets to fight hunger and poverty.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that hundreds of people with rotting faces and severed limbs participated in the Saturday night fundraiser.

The participants were accompanied by members of the Capital City Reapers Zombie Response Team, who donned black uniforms and combat gear. The group of undead impersonators ended their march on the Statehouse steps, where they posed as victims of the vigilant zombie fighters.

The annual event attracted zombie hunters as young as age 5. Participants were asked to bring canned goods or make a $5 donation to Let’s Help, a community nonprofit that seeks to break the cycle of poverty.

Zombie walk organizer Louie Creek says the event is a “way to give.”

 

Strip-club raid an issue in Kansas governor’s race

Brownback and Davis
Brownback and Davis

JOHN HANNA, AP Political Writer

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican Gov. Sam Brownback’s Democratic challenger is on the defensive over disclosures that he was inside a southeast Kansas strip club during a 1998 drug raid and was found in a back room with a nearly naked woman.

The GOP says the incident raises questions about Davis’ character, while Davis supporters say Republicans are desperate over a potential Brownback loss.

Democrat Paul Davis was 26, single and a young attorney in a firm representing the owner of the club near Coffeyville. The owner spent six years in federal prison, but Davis was not arrested.

Davis is now 42, and says he was “in the wrong place at the wrong time.” He released a statement from a participant in the raid saying Davis was not involved in any wrongdoing.

KU sees more students report sexual assaults

University of Kansas
University of Kansas

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas is receiving more sexual assault reports from students after the school’s handling of an alleged on-campus rape set off protests.

The Kansas City Star reports that the recent complaints include two reports of stalking, seven of sexual harassment, one of sexual assault, one of date violence, one of domestic violence and seven so recent the office had not yet categorized them.

The reports began rolling in after a student who said she was raped in 2013 complained of her attacker’s lenient punishment. The university has declined to comment on the case. Other women have come forward to say the school didn’t take sexual violence seriously.

The university is among 76 schools being investigated by the federal government for their handling of sexual assault cases.

 

Liver transplant reallocation plan on hold

 

Rep. Kevin Yoder- KHI news photo
Rep. Kevin Yoder- KHI news photo

By Andy Marso
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — A plan to redistribute donor livers from areas where donor numbers are higher, like Kansas City and the South, to organ-needy coastal areas is on hold after protests from members of Congress representing the areas that would have seen transplant wait times increase.

That group included U.S. Rep. Kevin Yoder, a Republican who serves the Kansas City area. Yoder said last week’s meeting of the United Network for Organ Sharing’s Liver and Intestinal Organ Transplantation Committee resulted in tabling a proposal to change to the way the organs are distributed.
“It’s my understanding the result of last week’s UNOS forum was to further review the process, and no changes will be made in the immediate future,” Yoder said in an emailed statement. “I still believe the best solution moving forward is to work to increase organ donor rates across the country and ultimately save more lives. I would like to see other states replicate the processes used by Kansas organizations such as the Midwest Transplant Network and Gift of Life.”

Richard Gilroy, a University of Kansas Hospital physician who sits on the liver transplant committee, confirmed that after a series of votes the committee decided it was not ready to recommend a change to the way organs are distributed.

“What the ultimate decision was is that we are currently still looking at redistricting, but the model that was proposed in its current form isn’t moving forward,” Gilroy said.

Regional variation

There are 11 regions for organ sharing in the United States, and the amount of time a person in need of a liver transplant might wait varies widely from region to region.

In the Kansas City area, it might be a matter of months, while on the coasts wait times can run five years or longer. According to Yoder’s office, about 6,000 liver transplants are performed annually and about 12,000 Americans await a liver transplant.

According to a UNOS concept paper on the proposed reallocation, 1,523 patients died while awaiting a liver transplant in 2013 and another 1,552 were removed from the transplant eligibility lists because they had become too sick for a transplant to have a high likelihood of success.

The proposed realignment was developed through a computer-generated algorithm that projected about 500 fewer deaths per year by evening the wait times nationwide. Those who currently have short wait times could survive longer before their transplant, according to the projections, allowing those who currently have longer wait times and greater risk of death to receive organs sooner.

But Gilroy said some on the committee had serious questions about the algorithm’s limitations in predicting continued organ donation patterns.

“People change their behaviors,” Gilroy said. “The model, which is fragile, fails to predict what’s going to happen, and you could see the opposite happen. You could see more deaths.”

Gilroy said some on the committee also had concerns about the cost and risks of waiting longer for transplants and the cost and risks of transporting organs farther. When an organ has to travel by plane, the transplant teams “fly in any weather,” he said, and in recent years nine people on those teams have died in two crashes.

“So if we have three times the number of flights, we have three times the possibility of transplant teams going down,” Gilroy said.

Gilroy said the committee is looking at other organ distribution models, including one based on concentric circles or geographic radius from the donation site. But he said it would be months before it had anything to present publicly.

Proposal generated concern

Concern about the proposed computer-algorithm model caused an unusual amount of interest in UNOS. More than 300 people registered for a public forum on the liver transplant idea Sept. 16 in Chicago. Others listened online.

Before that forum and the committee meeting that followed the next day, Yoder and about 50 of his congressional colleagues took the rare step of writing a letter protesting the proposed reallocation to Mary Wakefield of the Health Resources and Services Administration. UNOS is a nonprofit, but Wakefield’s agency, under the U.S. Department for Health and Human Services, administers the UNOS contract to manage the nation’s organ transplant system.

In the letter, Yoder acknowledged the “large geographic disparity in the rates of organ donation,” but said regions with high donation rates should not be punished by seeing their organs go to others.

“Kansans, and the Midwest as a whole, are historically generous organ donors and UNOS should not adopt proposals that punish successful programs and decrease access to organs where donation rates are highest,” Yoder said. “We must implement programs that raise the organ donor consent rate in the areas of the country where disparities in wait times are the greatest.”

To increase donation rates elsewhere, Yoder and others are encouraging other regions to adopt grassroots donor education programs, like one promoted by Overland Park-based Gift of Life. That nonprofit organization, with four employees, was formed by families with children in need of transplants.

KC program plays a role

Keith Anderson, executive director of Gift of Life, said its signature outreach program, Lifesavers, has reached more than 200,000 people in the Kansas City area by sending speakers to 90 area high schools and talking to students about what it means to sign up to be an organ donor when they get their driver’s licenses. The students are then encouraged to talk with their parents about organ donation.

Gift of Life uses surveys to track the effectiveness of the program, he said, and about 74 percent of the students reached say they want to become donors.

Anderson said most cities have organ transplant hospitals and an “organ procurement organization” responsible for the logistics of transporting organs from donors to those hospitals. But few have organizations like Gift of Life, dedicated solely to organ donation education.

“Those three things together are really what make it work,” Anderson said. “Most cities only have two of the three.”

Anderson said Yoder “did step up to the plate” in encouraging further review of the proposed reallocation plan, and Gilroy played a key role as a member of the UNOS liver committee.

“His message as a member of the committee has been you can look at the mathematical models, but if the other states are not doing anything for community education, they’re not doing anything to increase organ donations,” Anderson said.

Nixon’s Ferguson response widely criticized

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon has been inundated with public criticism following the fatal police shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown in a St. Louis suburb.

As protests mounted following the Aug. 9 shooting, so too did the frustration directed at Nixon.

Records obtained by The Associated Press show that Nixon’s office received thousands of phone calls and hundreds of emails, letters and faxes from people across Missouri and even the world. Most of the correspondence was critical of the governor — first for not acting quickly enough as police used tear gas on protesters and later for appearing to call for the prosecution of the officer.

Nixon told the AP that getting criticized comes with the job and that he was focused on getting the situation in Ferguson under control.

1000 veterans line up for free marijuana

Screen Shot 2014-09-28 at 11.17.24 AMCOLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — A marijuana giveaway for veterans attracted about 1,000 people to a Colorado Springs hotel.

The “Grow 4 Vets” giveaway aimed to bring cannabis-based treatments to veterans with service-related conditions as an alternative to pain medications.

The Gazette reports that veterans were given a bag of items that included cannabis oil, an edible chocolate bar and seeds to grow plants.

Marijuana activists have tried unsuccessfully to have post-traumatic stress disorder added to the Colorado list of medical conditions that qualify for joining the medical marijuana registry. Now that pot is legal for all adults over 21, organizers are free to give away marijuana.

Not all who received the bags were veterans. A $20 dollar donation for nonveterans was encouraged.

Weis out as Kansas Football Coach; Bowen Named Interim Head Coach

 

Clint Bowen- University of Kansas Photo
Clint Bowen- University of Kansas Photo

University of Kansas Media Release

Lawrence, Kan. – Charlie Weis has been relieved of his duties as Head Football Coach at the University of Kansas, KU Athletics Director Sheahon Zenger announced Sunday. Weis was in the third year of a five-year contract.

Zenger named KU defensive coordinator Clint Bowen interim head coach.

“I normally do not favor changing coaches mid-season,” Zenger said. “But I believe we have talented coaches and players in this program, and I think this decision gives our players the best chance to begin making progress right away.

“I appreciate what Coach Weis did with several facets of our football program,” Zenger continued. “But we have not made the on-the-field progress we believe we should. I believe new leadership gives our coaches and players the best chance to make a fresh start.”

Zenger informed Weis of his decision Sunday morning, and then spoke to the rest of the coaching staff. “I am grateful for the KU fans, alumni and donors who continue to support our coaches and players.”

“As we continue to elevate the national stature of the University of Kansas, our pursuit of excellence extends beyond our research and instructional missions,” said KU Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little. “KU alumni, students, fans and supporters expect that Kansas Football will match the other areas in which we excel as a university. After consulting with Dr. Zenger, I am in agreement that it is time for new leadership of our football program.”

One teen dead, 3 hospitalized after Nodaway Co. accident

Fatal crashMARYVILLE- One teen was killed and three injured in an accident just after 11 p.m. on Saturday in Nodaway County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2002 Mercury Cougar driven by Ty B. Willtrout, 18, Maryville, was eastbound on Route V four miles west of Maryville. The vehicle ran off the south side of the road. The driver overcorrected, the vehicle overturned and ejected a female passenger.

Sydnie M. Messner, 17, Graham, was pronounced dead at the scene

Willtrout was transported to Heartland Regional Medical Center.

Two additional passengers in the vehicle Ashley L. Scott, 17, Maitland, and Dalton M. Hall,  17, Maryville, were transported to St. Francis Medical Center.

The MSHP reported they were not wearing seat belts.

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