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Weather: October 25, 2012

Today Partly sunny, with a high near 35. Northwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
Tonight Mostly cloudy, with a low around 20. North northwest wind around 5 mph becoming calm after midnight.

BOX BUTTE GENERAL HOSPITAL REPORTS EPIDURAL STEROID INJECTIONS SAFE

 

Box Butte General Hospital (BBGH) Nurse Anesthetist Chuck Frisch, CRNA, DNP, DAAPM, CH, reports that patients who have received (or are scheduled to receive) epidural pain blocks at BBGH have no cause for worry in regard to news reports about the recent meningitis outbreak following epidural pain blocks.

“The steroids we use for epidural pain blocks are not manufactured by the company involved in the recall,” Mr. Frisch said. “Anyone who has received an epidural pain block at BBGH or is scheduled for the procedure has no reason to be concerned.”

According to the Society for Pain Practice Management (SPPM), it is believed that all infected patients received an injection with preservative-free methylprednisolone (80mg/ml) manufactured by New England Compounding Center, located in Framingham, MA.

SPPM reports the Massachusetts company had shipped the implicated product to 23 states. Nebraska is not on the list.

According to a recent update on the meningitis outbreak from the SPPM, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has been coordinating a multistate investigation of meningitis among patients who received epidural steroid injections (medication injected into the spine). In several patients, the meningitis was found to be caused by a fungus that is common in the environment but rarely causes meningitis. Fungal meningitis occurs when the protective membranes that cover the brain and spinal cord are infected with a fungus. Fungal meningitis can develop after a fungus spreads through the bloodstream from somewhere else in the body, as a result of the fungus being introduced directly into the central nervous system, or by direct extension from an infected body site next to the central nervous system.

Anyone who has recently received (or is scheduled for) an epidural pain block at BBGH who still has a concern is welcome to contact Mr. Frisch at 308.762.6660.

— Brian Kuhn, BBGH Marketing

SPOTTED TAIL FIRE HUMAN IGNITED

The Spotted Tail Fire was human caused and was triggered by actions on public lands prohibited by current fire restrictions on National Forest System Lands, which is a federal offense.

The individuals involved in the incident have come forward; have been cited by federal law enforcement and are in the process of adjudication.

Jane Darnell, Forest Supervisor said, “The Spotted Tail Fire is an unfortunate reminder that we have unprecedented fire conditions that remain volatile, even in late October.  We implemented fire restrictions early this spring as a tool to limit activities that could lead to public danger, natural resource or structural damage.  Violations are serious, and we are fortunate that quick action helped limit consequences in this incident.”

Darnell offered appreciation for the public watchfulness and immediate assistance that allowed effective investigation, as well as cooperation of local law enforcement.

The Spotted Tail Fire started October 20, five miles south of Chadron on Forest System Lands, burned 83 acres and was contained October 22.

ALLIANCE PARENT-TEACHER CONFERENCE DAY

Today (Thursday) is Parent-Teacher Conference day in Alliance.

The Alliance Public Schools Parent-Teacher Conferences will run from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.

St. Agnes conferences will run from 2 p.m. to 7 p.m.

There will be no school at Alliance Public and St. Agnes on Friday, Oct. 26 for fall break.

Hemingford Public Schools Parent-Teacher Conferences will now take place Monday, October 29, from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. Students will be dismissed at 1 p.m

HEMINGFORD BOY TO BE PART OF NU VS. MICHIGAN RADIO BROADCAST

A Hemingford boy will appear on the Husker Sports Radio Network just before the kickoff of this Saturday night’s Nebraska vs. Michigan football game in Lincoln.

8-year-old Taren Hunter, a second-grader at the Hemingford Elementary School, was chosen to be the Bank of the West Sports Kid.

Hunter, the son of Shawn and Riki Hunter, will be the guest of announcers Greg Sharpe and Matt Davison, and will announce live on air the opening kickoff and return men for the Huskers and Wolverines.

Taren also receives four tickets to Saturday night’s game, a parking pass, pre-game sideline visit, hospitality at the Husker Sports Marketing pre-game party located in the Wick Alumni Center, anda gift card to use at the University Bookstore.

Taren also will receive an autographed football signed by the radio broadcast crew.

Saturday night’s game will kickoff at 6:05 p.m., MDT, so Hunter will be on air around 6 p.m.

The Nebraska vs. Michigan game will air on AM 1400, KCOW.

CHADRON DRUG BUST LEADS TO FOUR ARRESTS

Chadron Police Officers conducted an investigation into the illegal distribution of narcotics last night, which resulted in the seizure of drugs and the arrest of four people.

Chadron police officers were able to purchase a small amount of marijuana from 18 year-old Carlos Carmona in the early evening hours of Wednesday October 24, 2012.

Carmona went to a residence located  at 109 Mears Street in the City of Chadron where he received marijuana and subsequently sold it to the Chadron Police Department.

Carmona was accompanied by 22 year-old Joshua Carder  during the drug sale to police.

Following to the delivery of marijuana, Carmona and Carder threatened a witness and were subsequently arrested without incident. Carmona was arrested for a delivery of marijuana a Class III felony and terroristic threats a Class IV felony and Carmona was also detained by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency (ICE). Carder was arrested for being an accessory to a felony a Class IV felony and terroristic threats a Class IV  felony.

Following Carmona’s sale of marijuana to Chadron officers, officers seized the house located at 109 Mears Street and subsequently applied for and served a search warrant on the residence in the early morning hours on Thursday October 25, 2012. Officers seized marijuana packaged for sale, marijuana pipes, U.S. Currency, and cellular phones.

Offices arrested 22 year-old Joe King  for a delivery of marijuana a Class III felony, possession with intent to deliver marijuana a Class III felony and child abuse a Class IIIa felony and 20 year-old Brandee Jackson for possession with intent to deliver marijuana a Class III felony and child abuse a Class IIIa felony.

A two year old child was turned over to a family member.

Chadron Police were assisted by the WING/HIDTA Drug and Violent Crime Task force, which is partially funded through a grant by the Nebraska Crime Commission, the Dawes County Sheriff’s Department and the Nebraska State Patrol.

You can follow the Chadron Police Department on Facebook at www.facebook.com/chadronpolice or on Twitter @chadronpolice.

ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE COMING TO CSC

Chadron State College will be moving dirt during its upcoming “Zombie Apocalypse,” but it won’t be to unearth spooky corpses.

A highlight of the institution’s homecoming celebration, with the theme of Zombie Apocalypse, will be the groundbreaking for the renovation and expansion of the Armstrong Physical Education Building.

The ceremony will be at the southwest corner of the building directly after Saturday’s football game between the Eagles and the Western New Mexico Mustangs. The game kicks off at 1:30 p.m.

Excitement has been building for the Armstrong project, the first phase of which includes a new 2,100-seat sports arena to the south of the existing structure.

Homecoming organizers expect a lively participation from students and the greater community, despite the subjects of the theme.

“Zombies are popular these days, and with homecoming being so close to Halloween it will be a fun theme,” said Dr. Rick Koza, the CSC faculty member who leads the homecoming committee. “We expect to get a lot of involvement from the community.”

An annual highlight of homecoming is the parade, set for Saturday at 9:30 a.m. CSC’s chapter of the Blue Key honor society organizes the parade. Entries need not pre-register for the parade, but must be lined up along First Street before 9 a.m. to participate.

Area firefighters, who have battled numerous catastrophic wildfires in the region this summer and into the fall, have been chosen to serve as the parade marshals.

“We just can’t say enough about the work the firefighters have done to keep the region and community safe during these dry conditions,” Koza said. “We’re proud to recognize them during our homecoming celebration.”

As the parade ends at the corner of 10th and Main, a variety of clubs and organizations will sponsor games and activities on the Dean’s Green. The event, which will have food, has been aptly named Carn Evil.

Leading up to the parade Saturday will be the annual Eagle 5k Run/Walk. Registration will be 7-7:45 a.m. at the corner of 12th and Main streets.

Another way the community can get into homecoming is to show its CSC spirit in the annual contest for yard art and business art. People who want their entries judged may contact Laure Sinn, CSC student activities coordinator, at 308-432-6455. The judging will begin Thursday at noon.

The homecoming festivities will begin with the Cardinal Key honor society’s annual lighting of C Hill on Wednesday at 6 p.m. near the Lindeken Clock Tower. Thursday night will feature the annual Spirit Rally at 6:30 p.m. in Armstrong Gym. The rally will feature the crowning of the homecoming king and queen.

Ashley Riesen and Adam Neumann, 2011 Chadron State College homecoming queen and king, help unveil the winners of the bed sheet decorating contest. The annual contest is one of the many fun events occurring for homecoming this week. (Photo by Justin Haag)

 

CSC also will honor seven successful CSC graduates with its Distinguished Alumni Award and Distinguished Young Alumni Award. Another 13 will be inducted to the CSC Athletic Hall of Fame. The honorees will be recognized during a luncheon in the Student Center on Saturday.

One of the groups gathering for homecoming is alumni of the “Golden Era” who graduated 50 years ago. Also meeting this week will be “The Survivors,” a group of alumni from the eras of the Great Depression and World War II.

A coffee for alumni, which is free of charge, will be in the Student Center at 8 a.m. Saturday.

—Justin Haag, CSC Information

Chadron State College 2012 Homecoming Schedule

ARON RALSTON TELLS CSC AUDIENCE TO “EMBRACE BOULDERS”

Chadron State College Galaxy Series Aron Ralston
Aron Ralston speaks about his harrowing experience as a projection in the background shows his arm pinned beneath the boulder. (Photo by Justin Haag)

Adventurist Aron Ralston, who endured unthinkable sacrifices to survive an accident in the Utah wilderness, told audience members at Chadron State College on Tuesday to embrace their own “boulders,” just as he has come to appreciate the one that caused him to lose much of his right arm.

Ralston’s presentation, the first installment of this year’s Galaxy Series of fine arts and cultural events at Chadron State, drew a near-capacity crowd in Memorial Hall. The Boulder, Colo., resident spoke and answered questions for more than an hour and a half about the experience, which happened in 2003.

“We are all going to encounter adversity, encounter challenges, traumas, loss, grief, finals week, and all of the rest of it,” Ralston said. “These boulders are not something to be pushed away. Not something to feel like a burden, but rather maybe be something you embrace. Perhaps they’re something that you might even smile at, or welcome.”

Ralston recounted the five days his right arm was pinned beneath the weight of the half-ton boulder, and provided graphic detail of the thoughts and actions that led to him severing the limb with a dull knife in order to survive. He also told of the joy he experienced once free from the boulder, and the ensuing five hours of hiking and rappelling that led to his rescue.

“What you probably don’t know about me is the respect that I have for that experience,” he said. “When I walked out of that canyon, almost 10 years ago now, indeed I left something behind, but I didn’t lose anything.”

Ralston interspersed humor with the dark account, acting out the scenes of the experience. He spoke about the lows, which at one point prompted him to carve his epitaph in the nearby crevice wall. A high point, he said, was finally coming up with the idea to use the force of his body against the weight of the boulder to break the bones in his arm, making it possible for the knife – part of a cheap multi-tool which had become dull after chipping away at the rock – to cut through his arm.

The worst pain he’d previously experienced, he said, was having his hand slammed in a car door as a child. “That was my 10. Now, it was a zero.”

Despite the pain, Ralston describes the experience in the Blue John Canyon as the greatest thing that ever happened to him.

He said the boulder’s first gift was showing him what is most important – relationships with family and friends. He said his memories of loved ones, and the desire to return to their side, kept him going through the darkest periods. He also told an out-of-body experience in which he encountered a vision of who he now believes to be his future son Leo, now 2 ½.

Ralston said his mother, who went to great lengths to pinpoint his whereabouts and notify authorities, served as a vital component of his rescue in addition to serving as inspiration to live.

“We don’t do anything alone,” he said. “As remote and as isolated as I was in the bottom of that canyon, what I have learned is that we are never alone. We are always connected. The love that surrounds us, the energy that fills this universe, that is what binds us. We will always have that with us.”

Since narrowly escaping death, Ralston has become the only person to accomplish the feat of climbing the 59 highest mountains of Colorado in winter. He’s the only person with a disability to have skied from the summit of Denali, and the first amputee to row a raft through the Grand Canyon.

Ralston’s story is told in his book “Between a Rock and a Hard Place,” which served as inspiration for the movie “127 Hours.”

—Justin Haag, CSC Information Services

Listen:

Aron Ralston-1

Aron Ralston-3

WEATHER – OCT. 24th

      Today: A 40 percent chance of showers, mainly after noon. Cloudy, with a high near 45. North northeast wind 9 to 17 mph, with gusts as high as 26 mph.

Tonight: Snow likely, mainly before midnight. Cloudy, with a low around 28. Blustery, with a north wind 10 to 20 mph, with gusts as high as 28 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New snow accumulation of 2 to 4 inches possible.

ALLIANCE MAN BOUND OVER TO DISTRICT COURT ON CHILD ENTICEMENT CHARGE

An Alliance man has been bound over to District Court for trying to entice teenage girls into having sex with him.

Felony charges filed against 21-year-old Phillip Holden include sexual assault by use of an electronic device and enticement by electronic communication device.

Court records state that on September 26, the Alliance Police Department responded to a complaint made by the Alliance Middle School principal regarding suspicions of a man soliciting sex from female students on facebook. An Alliance police investigator conducted a sting operation to confirm the principal’s suspicion, and Holden was arrested and jailed.

Police then obtained a search warrant for Holden’s apartment and recovered several items of a sexual and pornographic nature.

Following a probable cause hearing Oct. 23 in Box Butte County Court, Judge Russ Harford bound Holden over to district court to stand trail.

Holden has been released from the Box Butte County Jail after posting ten percent of a $15,000 bond.

The judge also ordered Holden not to have any contact with females under the age of 19, either in person or by electronic device, with the exception to the order being family members.

Holden’s first district court appearance is scheduled for November 14.

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