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Month: February 2024

U.S. airman dies after setting himself ablaze outside Israeli Embassy in Israel-Hamas war protest

By Associated Press WASHINGTON | An active-duty member of the U.S. Air Force has died after he set himself ablaze outside the Israeli Embassy in Washington, D.C., while declaring that he “will no longer be complicit in genocide.” The 25-year-old airman, Aaron Bushnell, of San Antonio, Texas, died from his injuries, the Metropolitan Police Department

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Diverse coalition favors plan diverting $50 million in Kansas revenue to water, land conservation

By Kansas Reflector via My Courier-Tribune TOPEKA — Dozens of Kansas business, farm, wildlife and nonprofit interests came together in a campaign to convince the Legislature to add Kansas to the list of 35 states with a consistent, sustainable funding source for voluntary conservation initiatives. Their proposal is a whopper — it would make use

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Artificial intelligence already plays a part in Kansas City health care, without much regulation

By Missouri Independent via My Courier-Tribune In September, the mom of a 4-year-old boy made national news when she used ChatGPT to diagnose her son’s pain, teeth grinding and leg dragging, a diagnosis that had eluded 17 doctors over three years. It’s an increasingly common scenario: Patients are looking to artificial intelligence for health care

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Barrage of gunfire as officers confront Houston megachurch shooter, released body cam footage shows

By Associated Press HOUSTON — Body camera footage released by Houston police on Monday showed off-duty police officers with weapons drawn as they confronted a woman who opened fire at celebrity pastor Joel Osteen’s Houston megachurch earlier this month before she was gunned down. The footage also showed blurred images of the shooter’s young son,

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Board rejects four-day school plan

By Marcus Clem The St. Joseph Board of Education shot down on Monday a school district plan to adopt the four-day class calendar, preserving the status quo at least for now. Whitney Lanning, Latonya Williams and Rick Gehring voted “yes,” while Kenneth Reeder, Kim Miller, David Foster and Isaura Garcia voted “no.” Superintendent Gabe Edgar

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Board vote

By NewsPress Now The four-day school week debate will come to a close in St. Joseph, at least for now, as the board voted Monday to choose which way to go for the next academic year. Superintendent Gabe Edgar asked the board to approve the plan, designed to reduce total class days per year to

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Ex-FBI informant charged with lying about Bidens to remain jailed while he awaits trial, judge rules

By Associated Press LOS ANGELES — A former FBI informant charged with fabricating a multimillion-dollar bribery scheme involving President Joe Biden’s family must remain behind bars while he awaits trial, a judge ruled Monday, reversing an earlier order releasing the man. U.S. District Judge Otis Wright II in Los Angeles ordered Alexander Smirnov’s detention days

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Sports briefs

By NewsPress Now Duke’s Scheyer wants court-storming measures Duke coach Jon Scheyer wants the Atlantic Coast Conference to implement measures to prevent court-storming after star big man Kyle Filipowski was hobbled following a collision with a fan during a weekend loss at Wake Forest. Scheyer said Monday that Filipowski was “a little bit sore” following

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Business news in brief

By The Associated Press U.S. sues to block merger of Kroger and Albertsons The Federal Trade Commission is suing to block a proposed merger between grocery giants Kroger and Albertsons. The FTC says the $24.6 billion deal would eliminate competition and lead to higher prices for millions of Americans. The commission filed a lawsuit Monday

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