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KU News: Spencer Museum, Charlotte Street announce Rocket Grants 2024 call for artists

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

Contact: Elizabeth Kanost, Spencer Museum of Art, 785-864-0142, [email protected], @SpencerMuseum

Spencer Museum, Charlotte Street announce Rocket Grants 2024 call for artists

LAWRENCE — The Spencer Museum of Art and Charlotte Street have announced the 2024 open call for Rocket Grants, with applications accepted through June 24.

Artists interested in applying can attend an information session at 6 p.m. May 23 at the Spencer Museum or at 6 p.m. June 14 at Charlotte Street, 3333 Wyoming St., Kansas City, Missouri.

With support from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Rocket Grants provide direct funding to artists in the Lawrence and Kansas City area who are creating exceptional, under-the-radar and artist-centered projects in public spaces. Artists, curators, collectives and collaborative groups residing within an 80-mile radius of the Kansas City metropolitan area are eligible to apply.

The Rocket Grants program awards grants of $6,000 to individuals or artist groups for projects that exist outside established venues such as museums, galleries, theaters or arts districts. Artists are encouraged to address the community at large or choose a smaller targeted audience.

The long-term goals of the Rocket Grants program are to encourage emerging and nontraditional artistic practices in the Lawrence and Kansas City area, to contribute to a thriving arts community, and to build bridges between geographic and cultural communities.

“It was so inspiring to see all of the Rocket Grants come to fruition this year – and to have the Fruit Tree Community Choir be a part of this endeavor to grow public art in our region. Rocket Grants is so important for this work of funding local artists and nurturing a creative ecosystem,” said Hazlett Henderson, a 2023 Rocket Grant recipient whose project planted fruit trees outside the Lawrence Public Library.

Rocket Grants projects are selected by a jury of four arts professionals working both locally and nationally. Proposals are evaluated on criteria including innovation, thoughtful context, feasibility and meaningful impact.

To apply, artists must submit a Letter of Interest (LOI) online by June 24. The LOI should include a project summary, the artists involved, the intended audience, the specific context of the work, budget needs and relevance of the project. The jury will assess submissions and invite selected projects to complete a full application in July 2024. Rocket Grants recipients will be announced in September 2024.

For any questions regarding the application process, please contact Kimberly Kitada by email.

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

Phone: 785-864-3256

Fax: 785-864-3339

[email protected]

http://www.news.ku.edu

 

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

 

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs

 

KU News: China’s ‘puzzling’ sanctions approach decoded using new data

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

Contact: Jon Niccum, KU News Service, 785-864-7633, [email protected]

China’s ‘puzzling’ sanctions approach decoded using new data

 

LAWRENCE — The United States and China might best be described as “frenemies.” But while outright military hostilities are currently kept in check, intensifying economic competition between the two superpowers can be observed in their use of sanctions.

“Governments can use economic interactions as carrots or sticks. Essentially, a sanction is a stick,” said Jack Zhang, assistant professor of political science at the University of Kansas.

“You use these to take away economic benefits, whether that’s through trade by withholding exports or through finance by freezing assets.”

Zhang explores this factor in a paper titled “Measuring Chinese economic sanctions 1949–2020: Introducing the China TIES dataset.” It introduces both a new dataset on sanctions involving China and a research framework for expanding knowledge about non-Western economic sanctions more generally. It’s published in Conflict Management and Peace Science.

“There is a big difference between U.S. and Chinese sanctions,” said Zhang, who co-wrote the paper with KU doctoral candidate Spencer Shanks. “Chinese sanctions are often informal in nature, and China denies they’re doing a lot of them.”

The U.S. is the country that imposes the most sanctions “by a long shot,” according to Zhang. The Office of Foreign Assets Control (part of the Department of the Treasury) plays a primary role in administering and enforcing many such programs.

“Especially after the end of the Cold War, it’s the instrument that presidents have reached for the most and the fastest. Like we have multiple sanctions against Russia right now, and there are new sanctions being implemented against Iran, North Korea, Cuba, etc. We also consider the Trump-era tariffs on China and export controls on technology to be sanctions,” he said.

The European Union as a bloc issues the second-greatest number of sanctions, but China’s unilateral use is a close third and will likely soon surpass the EU, Zhang said..

Why are Chinese sanctions far more prevalent in the last decade than in the past?

“To be able to use sanctions, you need to have economic benefits that you can withhold. China has become much more of a global economic player over the last 20 years,” Zhang said.

“If you think about sanctions, you only have leverage if you are hurt less by the thing that you’re threatening to withhold. Small countries can, in theory, choose to embargo trade, but then they may need that trade more than the sending country.”

The Chinese Economic Sanctions dataset (aka China TIES) includes 135 episodes where China is the sender and 88 episodes where it is the target from 1949 to 2020. Zhang and Shanks use the Threat and Imposition of Economic Sanctions dataset (TIES v.4) as a baseline for identifying and coding sanctions episodes, and they provide a set of standardized narratives documenting each episode with secondary sources. The result is a dataset that is interoperable with TIES but also contains new variables that better capture the informal nature of many Chinese sanctions.

“I see this almost as an expansion set,” Zhang said.

“But there are two things we’re adding. One is temporal coverage. TIES is the workhorse dataset in the literature, but it only goes up to 2005. Most of these new Chinese economic sanction episodes and behaviors in the last 15 years are not covered. The second thing is that the original TIES data set doesn’t do a very good job of documentation, which makes it difficult to deal with informal sanctions.”

Ironically, sanctions rarely work the way they are intended.

“A common finding is that the threat of a sanction is more effective than the imposition of one for change of policy,” he said. “But with China, there isn’t this dynamic of threats that we usually see – which is puzzling. If threats often work better than actually imposing sanctions, why not go through the threat stage?”

A professor at KU since 2019, Zhang is also the founder and director of the KU Trade War Lab. His research explores the political economy of trade and conflict in East Asia with a focus on explaining why interdependent countries use military versus economic coercion in foreign policy disputes.

“One of the important contributions that I hope our paper will be able to show is to contextualize China sanctions behavior in an international context and in international benchmarks,” Zhang said. “I also think our approach strives to establish a new gold standard for how to build these quantitative datasets that are rooted in expertise in the region.”

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

Phone: 785-864-3256

Fax: 785-864-3339

[email protected]

http://www.news.ku.edu

 

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

 

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs

Telegraph, Telephone, Telemedicine

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Technology has come a long way in the past 200 years. The telegraph was invented in 1837 and made rapid long range communication possible. Messages could be sent around the world through a series of connected wires. The telegraph had medical applications in the Civil War. It was used to order medical supplies and report information about injuries and casualties to medical teams. This was cutting edge technology at the time, but it now is considered an obsolete method of communication.

Alexander Graham Bell patented the telephone in 1876. By 1900 there were nearly 600,000 telephones in use. At the end of 1910 there were over 5.8 million active telephones. The telephone was seen as a tool to connect doctors and patients together over a distance. A report in The Lancet Journal from 1879 described how a doctor could use the telephone to listen to a baby’s cough and diagnose croup.

In 1924 The Radio News Magazine predicted a two way video encounter with a “radio doctor” using a television-like device. In 1959 the University of Nebraska became the first place to use two-way video communications for telemedicine applications. This was done using closed circuit television to connect medical students at the main campus in Omaha with patients at the Norfolk State Hospital 112 miles away. However, Telemedicine as we know it today did not get its start until the 1970’s.

Telemedicine can also be used to send radiology images remotely to radiologists who can be in a different state or even a different country. With the improvement of cellular technology, EKGs can be sent from the back of an ambulance to the hospital. So before a patient even sets foot inside the door of the hospital, the Emergency Room doctors and Cardiologists can be prepared. This can not only save time, but can save lives when someone is having a heart attack.

With the COVID 19 pandemic, there was an increased push to use telemedicine for virtual visits in the clinic setting. Telemedicine has also been used when patient transfer from smaller hospitals to larger tertiary care centers is not possible or when dangerous winter driving conditions make transfers unsafe. This technology helps bridge the gap in medical care between rural areas without specialists and urban medical centers.

The jump from telegraphs to telemedicine with virtual visits is a big one. I can only imagine what the next 200 years of technological advancements will bring to how we deliver health care. No matter how we interact, there will always be a doctor ready to connect and help you, stay healthy out there.

Jill Kruse, D.O. is part of The Prairie Doc® team of physicians and currently practices as a hospitalist in Brookings, South Dakota. Follow The Prairie Doc® at www.prairiedoc.org and on Facebook and Instagram featuring On Call with the Prairie Doc®, a medical Q&A show providing health information based on science, built on trust, streaming live on Facebook most Thursdays at 7 p.m. central.

After spotty April rains, Kansas wheat still has the blues 

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Conditions can change quickly in the wheat fields of Kansas.

Rewind to the white Christmas of 2023 when Saline County posted 1.53 inches of moisture during December. Standing water and ice graced the greening landscape just after New Year’s Day, and by the state’s birthday on Jan. 29, patches of snow were everywhere.

But when tax day arrived in mid-April, wheat crop conditions in Kansas ranged generally from hopeful to doubtful.

“A month ago, I had high expectations for this crop. My optimism has diminished immensely,” wrote Gary Jorgensen, a seed salesman from Alliance Ag & Grain of Spearville, Kansas, in an April 16 email to a friend.

“Oh there are good fields. Some look great,” he continued. “Yet, with the growth they have and no significant rain in the forecast, it’s only a matter of time. We all hurt to see someone suffer and succumb to a slow, but inevitable, death. That’s how I’m feeling about this crop.”

Making it worse, Jorgensen added that he is seeing some fields with evidence of barley yellow dwarf and wheat streak mosaic viruses.

Crop ratings plummeted as conditions became more dusty.

“This isn’t a pessimistic outlook from me, but a realistic observation,” Jorgensen wrote.

As April came to a windy and stormy end, the prognosis only changed in places lucky enough to receive a proper spring drenching, such as a number of southeast Kansas cities being placed in flood warnings on the 27th and parts of Clay County that were gifted with 3 to 4 inches of rain.

“That would’ve been great around here,” said Jason Gans, who farms in southern Ottawa County with his father, Billy, and brother, Jacob Gans.

“It’s still bone dry,” he said. “You could track a person in the dust. We got just a sprinkle, maybe 10 to 15 hundredths. Friday it was 35 of 40 hundredths, but it was dry by noon,” he said Sunday, April 28. “The wheat’s still hanging in there, but it needs a long drink. That wheat’s pretty dang resilient.”

Fields most everywhere else have the blues, a common description for an outbreak of chronic thirst.

“My kids have a 4-H wheat plot near U.S. (Highway) 24 and U.S. 81 (in Cloud County),” said Jay Wisbey, agricultural Extension agent for Saline and Ottawa counties. “We got an inch and a half there late last week, but we still have cracks in the soil. When we got that rain, most of Ottawa County got less than three quarters, some less than a half inch.

“It’s worse out west, said Vance Ehmke, a farmer and seed dealer in Amy, near the Lane and Scott county line.

“There’s some good wheat around, but it’s getting worse,” he said. “April is normally our wettest month of the year, and we got absolutely nothing. North Lane and north Ness (counties) are really, really bad.”

Even with moisture, the crop is beyond much repair.

“Two inches of rain wouldn’t do it a bit of good; maybe increase yield one to two bushels (an acre), up to three or four,” Ehmke said. “The die has been cast.”

Photos submitted for this report are telling. One scene of a lush field roughly a mile north of Interstate Highway 70 on Old Highway 81 shows healthy plants with wheat heads rising above the foliage.

“We’ve got a whole variety of wheat fields, some better than others, where they’ve had more moisture,” Wisbey said. “There is some great looking wheat, but even that field’s gonna need rain. We haven’t gotten enough yet.”

Forecasts have provided decent chances for precipitation every seven to 10 days in north-central Kansas. Case in point was that on May 2, the online Weather Underground posted a 70% chance for rain in Minneapolis, Kansas, and an 80% chance for Glasco in Cloud County.

Rain is crucial, the Extension agent said, especially for farm and ranch ponds.

“We need every rain that can come through at this point,” Wisbey said. “There is not a farmer around who is going to complain about rain.”

In Lane County, “Eighty percent of the wheat looks fine for now, and 20% looks terrible,” said Louise Ehmke, Vance’s wife.

The wheat price rallied about 60 cents a bushel as April wrapped up.

“It’s a little better; still kind of discouraging,” Gans said.

As the Monday, April 29, markets neared closing, the price bounced from $6.26 to $6.31 a bushel at grain terminals in Salina, while the country elevator price at Delphos Co-op was from $6.10 to $6.11.

“It’s still more than two dollars a bushel less than a year ago at this time (2023 new crop wheat price: $8.50 a bushel),” Wisbey said. “Price always matters, but if you don’t get any rain, you don’t get any bushels.”

Wheat tour pegs Kansas production at 290.4 million bushels

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courtesy: Kansas Wheat

The latest edition of the Wheat Quality Council’s Hard Red Winter Wheat tour gave nearly 70 people from all aspects of the industry an opportunity to get a peek at the crop’s potential.

After three days of touring Kansas’ traditional wheat production region—by consensus—they put the wheat crop at 290.4 million bushels with an estimated yield of 46 bushels per acre. Tour attendee Aaron Harries, vice president of operations at Kansas Wheat, said the 2024 crop is drought-affected.

An average Kansas crop produces about 310 million bushels, he said. A year ago, fewer than 200 million bushels were produced. A picture of central Kansas wheat near Hutchinson.

“It’s certainly light years ahead of what we had last year,” Harries said. “The difference is there won’t be nearly as many abandoned acres. We approached 30% (abandonment) last year. “The other key difference is that more of it will be harvested this year because we were in a much better starting point last fall.”

The drought was so pronounced in late 2022 the crop did not come up. “This year we started with good stands in a lot of places,” Harries said. “Unfortunately, it’s just gone downhill this spring, but it looks like we’ll have a better harvest.”

 

Winter moisture helped

Wheat growers have some optimism because of winter moisture, but they know the lack of moisture in recent months hurts other crops they are planning to plant this spring.

“They think beyond wheat crops, obviously, and in central Kansas, and a lot of places, there’s just no subsoil moisture,” Harries said. “From Lindsborg west over toward Great Bend and northwest, that’s some of the worst of the drought conditions.”

Pockets of good wheat

The best wheat appears generally to be along the U.S. Highway 36 corridor in northern Kansas, from the reports filed by the observers on that route, he said. Another notable area was the Interstate 135 corridor in central Kansas. That looked decent, he said, but he noted that in pockets of Saline County and Ottawa County, farmers have in past years produced yields of 70 to 80 bushels per acre. Unfortunately, 2024 won’t be one of those years.

Harries noted that on the second day of the tour he took the path of Kansas Highway 27 that included Syracuse and Johnson City and other southern counties, and although it was drought-impacted, it was notable that a year ago those were areas had high abandonment.

“Some of it looks better than it has any business looking,” Harries said. “Another common theme throughout the tour was a tip of the cap to the wheat breeders because we’ve got some pretty good genetics out there that are holding up to the pressure of what we’ve been through.”

 

Pest pressure

Stripe rust has been widespread but has not appeared to have impacted the crop like it could have. Some producers opted to spray, while others were hesitant because of the costs in comparison to the income potential. Wheat streak mosaic was not as prevalent as most on the tour thought it might be. Where it was showing up was in localized areas and not on a regional basis, he said, and growers were treating it.

“A bit of a surprise there was quite a bit in north central Kansas,” he said.

He added that those on the tour did see a lot of freeze damage in almost every part of the state. Temperatures were cold enough March 25 and 26 that it did impact the crop. Normally that would not have occurred, but the crop was probably seven to 14 days ahead of schedule  and, because it had entered an advanced growth stage, it made fields more susceptible to the cold.

“It’s going to shave a little bit off the yield, and it’s hard to calculate that kind of damage yet,” he said.

Harries said the tour was a success because of diverse representation from multiple sectors in the industry and included officials from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.