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WJFW News

"Get the Bird in the Air" Submitted: 09/04/2012

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WESTON - Paramedics rarely get to see the fruits of their labor.

They do their job - stabilizing the patient and move on.

But that recently changed when a family reunited with the Ministry Healthcare team that saved their child's life.

The Marks's vacation became anything but that last year.

6-month-old Marcus's fall shifted the trip from a campsite in the Upper Peninsula to an emergency room in Marshfield.

"Nothing stood out as being majorly traumatic," Michelle Marks said at first after her son fell from their car.

That's was Michelle Marks first thought.

Her son Marcus had fallen out of their car and hit his head on a running board - but he seemed fine - at first. So they continued the drive to the campsite.

"When I got him out he seemed more lethargic, and he couldn't look at me," Michelle said.

"His eyes kind of went everywhere. He started vomiting, and we didn't waste any time."

They didn't waste time driving to the nearest hospital.

Neither did the crew at Ministry Eagle River Memorial Hospital.

"Right away Dr. Brodhead said 'get the bird in the air'," Marks recalls.

The Spirit Air Flight crew would be the difference.

"It's the difference between having a child that has lasting brain damage or one that is developmentally on track," Spirit Flight Nurse Colleen Herda said.

Herda worked on Marcus on the 45-minute flight from Eagle River to Marshfield.

"We saw ,it take off above the trees and just head off until we couldn't see it anymore," Marks said.

The group drove more than two hours to Marshfield, without Marcus. Doctors operated on Marcus in Marshfield as mom moved in.

"Basically he fractured his skull and it severed a blood vessel causing internal bleeding," Marks said.

"The doctors in Eagle River load the X-rays, the CT scans, and all of the information into the computer," Herda said.

"The neurosurgeon in Marshfield was able to pull those off, look at them, they made their plan of surgery and they had all of their ducks in a row before we even landed."

The system worked as it's supposed to. A life saved. 4 days in the ICU - heading home on Day 5.

"A lot of times we don't get to see the end results, people don't remember us," Herda said.

"We don't see the end results like we do here."

"They see him for such a brief time, then you don't see these people ever again," Marks said.

"I want them to know that they did a good job and that my son is still here running around because of everything they did."

Running around with just a simple scar to show for it.

Mom says he's taken an interest in helicopters, can't imagine why.

Story By: Matt Doyle

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 In Other News:
Case Against Alleged Computer Sex Predator Will Move Forward Submitted: 05/20/2013

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RHINELANDER - In March, Benjamin Lahti posted on Craigslist he wanted sex.

A girl claiming to be 15 years old responded to the 24-year-old Ironwood man.

They planned to meet in Minocqua.

That's when Lahti was arrested as part of a statewide internet sex predator sting.

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Massive tornado flattens homes, neighborhoods in Oklahoma Submitted: 05/20/2013

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - A monstrous tornado as much as a mile wide roars through the Oklahoma City suburbs, flattening entire neighborhoods, setting buildings on fire and landing a direct blow on an elementary school.

NBC News reports at least 37 people are confirmed dead as of 7:30 p.m.

The storm laid waste to scores of buildings in Moore, south of the city.

The National Weather Service says it had winds up to 200 mph.

People wearing neon-green vests were joined by residents in the search through rubble. Neighborhoods are flattened and homes blown apart.

Gary Knight with the Oklahoma City Police Department says an elementary school took a direct hit from the mile-wide tornado.

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Obama, Walker Approved at Identical Rate in Wisconsin Submitted: 05/20/2013

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WISCONSIN - President Obama and Governor Scott Walker couldn't be much further apart on the political spectrum.

But Wisconsinites seem to like them about the same -- in fact, at exactly the same rate.

The Marquette University Law School came out with a new poll taken earlier this month.

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Motorcylcist speeds away from Lincoln Co. Sheriff's Deputies at 100+ MPH Submitted: 05/20/2013

MERRILL - When most people see flashing red lights, they pull over.

Lincoln county deputies are looking for a motorcycle rider who didn't.

A Cafe Racer bike flew down highway 51 around 7pm last night going 84 miles per hour.

A deputy south of Tomahawk tried to pull the driver over, but the biker took off at over 100 miles an hour. For safety reasons, the deputy did not start a chase.

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Wausau Paper Signs Agreement to Sell Submitted: 05/20/2013

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RHINELANDER - Wausau Paper today announced that it has signed a definitive agreement to sell its specialty paper business to a new company sponsored by KPS Capital Partners L.P. (“KPS”), a New York-based private equity firm with significant experience in the paper industry.

The new company will be known as Expera Specialty Solutions, LLC (“Expera”).

KPS, as previously announced, has also entered into a definitive agreement to acquire the specialty paper business of Packaging Dynamics Corporation

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Rhinelander man killed in ATV crash Submitted: 05/20/2013

MERRILL - A Rhinelander man died in an ATV crash in Lincoln County this weekend.

The Sheriff's Office responded to a crash just after 6 Saturday night in the town of Harrison.

49-year old Randy Romenesko appeared to have lost control of his ATV and crashed into a tree. He was taken to Ministry Good Samaritan Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Police say Romenesko was wearing a helmet but wasn't properly secured. Speed may have been a factor, but police believe alcohol was not.

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Late Spring Shouldn't Affect Potato Crop Submitted: 05/20/2013

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ANTIGO - Most of us waited eagerly for spring so we could start our summer hobbies.

But farmers wait for spring so they can get to work.

John Schroeder runs a potato farm in Antigo.

He says the late spring could mean a bad harvest for crops like alfalfa, but potatoes should be just fine.

"It generally started a little wet and cold, he said. "We were probably three or four days behind planting right now, but we had a good week last week, so we're catching up."

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