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Bloodless Joints?

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How much blood flows through your joints? Would you be surprised if I told you “None”?

That’s right! Inside the joint there is a clear, viscous, slippery fluid that lubricates the joint surface, but no red blood flows inside the joint. Doctors do not want to see blood in a joint. When there is blood inside a joint it is usually because of trauma. That means tissue has been injured and blood vessels have been broken, bleeding into the clear cavity.

“How,” you may ask, “can a joint get oxygen and nutrition if there is no blood in the joint?”

Articular (joint) cartilage has no direct blood supply. There is plenty of blood flowing “around” a joint, bringing oxygen, glucose, vitamins and minerals to the area and clearing out waste products, but these must diffuse through tissue membranes to get in to and out of the joint space. The cartilage receives its nutrition and oxygen from the clear joint fluid. When the joint is “loaded” with pressure, some fluid is squeezed out of the cartilage, and when the pressure is released, fluid flows back in carrying oxygen and nutrients with it.

The interesting thing is that this diffusion goes very slowly if that joint is not moving and pumping on tissue. This is why exercise is so crucial to joint health, just like it is crucial to all tissue health. It becomes even more so when that joint is injured. There must be good circulation and activity to absorb old, clotted blood inside an injured joint, “draining” the waste products and replacing them with the clear lubricating fluid. Additionally, damaged tissue heals but leaves scar tissue behind. If that scar tissue is not stretched and exercised, that joint will never regain its mobility.

Likewise, an injured or arthritic joint may hurt when you exercise, but without exercise it cannot maintain its internal health. As scar tissue forms from the arthritic damage to the cartilage, the joint moves less freely, like a rusty hinge. But exercise “oils” the joint, so to speak, creating lubrication while maintaining range of motion. This is not unlike that old car behind the barn that has not been driven for decades. It will have an engine that is frozen with rust, yet the antique Model A that your friend drives every Sunday still purrs along because it has been used – moved, maintained, and lubricated. Your joints need the same.

Kenneth A. Bartholomew, M.D. is a contributing Prairie Doc® columnist. He lives in Fort Pierre, South Dakota and serves on the Healing Words Foundation Board of Directors, a 501c3 which provides funding for Prairie Doc® programs. He specializes in family medicine with more than 40 years of experience. Follow The Prairie Doc® at www.prairiedoc.org and on Facebook featuring On Call with the Prairie Doc® a medical Q&A show streaming live on Facebook most Thursdays at 7 p.m. central.

KU News: University of Kansas hosting events to honor veterans

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

Headlines

University hosting events to honor veterans

LAWRENCE – In honor of Veterans Day, the University of Kansas will host and participate in a variety of events Nov. 4-12. They will include the Lawrence Veterans Day parade Nov. 4 and a vigil and wreath-laying ceremony on the KU Lawrence campus Nov. 10. Other events include a gala at the Dole Institute of Politics, Salute to Service games with discounted tickets from Kansas Athletics and additional events at the Lawrence and KU Medical Center campuses.

Multiple KU teams perform well at Harvard debate tournament

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas Debate squad flashed its depth at the prestigious Harvard College Debate Tournament from Oct. 28 to 31, with multiple KU teams finishing in the top 10 at the tournament. Sophomores John Marshall, Lawrence, with Jiyoon Park, Topeka, finished in fifth place. Seniors Graham Revare, Shawnee, with Will Soper, Bucyrus, and freshmen Brooklynn Hato, Overland Park, with AJ Persinger, Lawrence, tied for ninth place. Other KU students who participated in the tournament are from Lawrence and Pittsburg and from Lee’s Summit, Missouri.

 

Registration now open for CPPR’s Alternative Futures for Kansas: A Civic Imagination Workshop

LAWRENCE — The Center for Public Partnerships & Research at the University of Kansas is hosting the Alternative Futures for Kansas: A Civic Imagination Workshop on Nov. 15. This in-person workshop is open to the public, and its featured speaker is Jake Dunagan, Governance Futures Lab director at the Institute for the Future. The workshop will take place from 9 a.m. to noon in the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union and will explore two researched future scenarios.

 

Full stories below.

 

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Contact: April Blackmon Strange, Lt. Gen. William K. Jones Military-Affiliated Student Center, 785-864-6715, [email protected], @KUvets

University hosting events to honor veterans

LAWRENCE – In honor of Veterans Day, the University of Kansas will host and participate in a variety of events Nov. 4-12. Events are open to the public, unless otherwise noted.

“This series of events is one of the many ways KU embraces our military-affiliated community,” said April Blackmon Strange, KU Military-Affiliated Student Center director. “We hope KU and community members will join us in one or more of these activities as we recognize and honor those who have served in the U.S. armed forces.”

Nov 4:

· Lawrence Veterans Day parade, 11 a.m. in downtown Lawrence. A KU ROTC color guard will participate. KU student veterans and Gold Star family members are invited to participate as well. For more information, to RSVP or to request mobility assistance, call the Lawrence Parade Association at 785-576-3765. Those walking in the parade should meet at 623 Massachusetts St. by 10:30 a.m.

 

Nov. 5:

· Tribute to Veterans Gala, 6-8:30 p.m., Dole Institute of Politics. The gala will include a salute to veterans from the KU ROTC programs as well as an evening with the Moonlight Serenade Orchestra. For more information, contact the Dole Institute at 785-864-4900 or [email protected].

 

Nov. 6:

· Communication Skills Panelist Discussion, noon-1 p.m., Zoom, with three experts who are all part of Toastmasters International and are veterans themselves. The entire KU Medical Center and KU communities are welcome to attend this event, hosted by KU Medical Center’s Registrar’s office. The panelists are Ron Blanton, Navy; David Wootan, Air Force; and Harold Osmundson, Navy.

 

Nov. 6-10:

· Belonging @ KU Serving Campus Care Packages pick up, various locations. To recognize KU’s student veterans and nontraditional students and the contributions they bring to campus, several offices are giving out care packages with essential and snack goods in observance of Non-Traditional Student Week and Veterans Day. Student veterans and nontraditional students can sign up online to receive a care package, while supplies last, by Nov. 6. Care packages are sponsored by the Office of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion & Belonging; Hawk Link; Military-Affiliated Student Center and Student Involvement Leadership Center.

 

Nov. 8:

· National Veterans Service Officer veterans’ disability ratings brown bag lunch info session, 11 a.m.-noon, 351 Summerfield Hall (next door to the Military-Affiliated Student Center) and one-on-one visits to answer specific questions, noon-2 p.m. A national VSO will be on campus to discuss disabilities veterans may have received on active duty and how to get them evaluated. Feel free to bring your lunch to the info session.

· Salute to Service Women’s Basketball Game vs. Northwestern State, 6:30 p.m., Allen Fieldhouse. Military members and their families can purchase specially priced tickets to this game. For questions or more information, please call 800-34-HAWKS.

 

Nov. 9:

· Veterans Day Taps Ceremony, 11 a.m., KUMC campus. Army Sgt. Aaron Leonard will play Taps in the Murphy Courtyard.

· National Student Veterans of America’s Visibility Exchange, 11 a.m.-3 p.m., Burge Union. SVA is committed to promoting inclusion and initiating national conversations. Over the 2023-2024 academic year, they are leading these discussions on 20 campuses nationwide. SVA members at KU and area schools are invited to this free event, which focuses on fostering connections, diversity and visibility on campus. Those interested in participating can register for this event on MySVA. For questions or more information, please contact Ray Queen, SVA outreach specialist, at 202-223-4710, ext. 502, or [email protected]. KU SVA members or those interested in learning more about KU SVA can email [email protected] or visit RockChalkCentral.

 

Nov 10:

· Marine Corps birthday cake, 11 a.m., Wescoe Beach. KU Student Veterans of America will celebrate the Marine Corps birthday with free cake for all, while supplies last.

· ROTCs’ war memorial sites vigil, 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. KU ROTC cadets and midshipmen will be posted in uniform at KU’s war memorial sites along Memorial Drive.

· Veterans Day wreath laying ceremony, 11 a.m., Campanile. Join the KU community for a traditional wreath-laying ceremony to recognize those who have served in the U.S. armed forces.

· Salute to Service Men’s Basketball Game vs. Manhattan, 7 p.m., Allen Fieldhouse. Military members and their families can purchase specially priced tickets to this game. For questions or more information, please call 800-34-HAWKS.

 

Nov 11:

· KU Salute to Service football game vs. Texas Tech, time TBD, David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium. Military members and their families can purchase specially priced tickets to this game. For questions or more information, please call 800-34-HAWKS.

 

Nov. 12:

· Annual KU Vets Day 5K, 9 a.m., begins and ends at David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium, commemorating the 70th anniversary of the Korean War Armistice. A virtual run option is available for anyone who is unable to make it to campus. The first 800 participants to register will receive a finisher’s medal. Pre-registration is encouraged; arrive by 8 a.m. for on-site registration. Volunteers are needed for the event as well and can sign up through the 5K website’s “volunteer” section.

 

Ongoing:

· The Kansas Veterans Virtual Memory Wall at the Dole Institute continues the late U.S. Sen. Bob Dole’s commitment to honoring Kansas veterans past and present. Submissions are always welcome of veterans who have served our country from World War II until today who have a Kansas connection: whether they were born, lived, stationed or served in Kansas. Submit a veteran profile at Kansas Veterans Virtual Memory Wall or contact [email protected] or 785-864-4900 for more information.

 

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The official university Twitter account has changed to @UnivOfKansas.

Refollow @KUNews for KU News Service stories, discoveries and experts.

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Contact: Scott Harris, KU Debate, 785-864-9878, [email protected], @KansasDebate

Multiple KU teams perform well at Harvard debate tournament

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas Debate squad flashed its depth at the prestigious Harvard College Debate Tournament from Oct. 28 to 31, with multiple KU teams finishing in the top 10 at the tournament. Sophomores John Marshall, Lawrence, with Jiyoon Park, Topeka, finished in fifth place. Seniors Graham Revare, Shawnee, with Will Soper, Bucyrus, and freshmen Brooklynn Hato, Overland Park, with AJ Persinger, Lawrence, tied for ninth place.

KU had five teams qualify for the 90-team field competing at the tournament, and all five teams had winning records and finished in the top 32. Schools competing at the tournament included Baylor University, Binghamton University, the University of California-Berkeley, California State University-Fullerton, California State University-Long Beach, Cornell College, Dartmouth College, Emory University, George Mason University, Georgetown University, the University of Georgia, Gonzaga University, Harvard University, the University of Houston, the University of Iowa, James Madison University, the University of Kentucky, Liberty University, Macalaster College, the University of Michigan, Michigan State University, Minnesota University, New York University, Northwestern University, the University of Rochester, Samford University, the University of Southern California, the University of Texas, the University of Texas at Dallas, Trinity University, Wake Forest University, the University of Wyoming and Wichita State University. KU was the only school to have three teams qualify for the single-elimination rounds.

The team of Marshall and Park won six of eight debates over two days of preliminary rounds and qualified for the top-16 team single-elimination round bracket as the sixth seed. They defeated a team from Wake Forest in the octafinals before losing to a second Wake Forest team on a 2-1 split decision in the quarterfinals. Marshall was the 10th place individual speaker, and Park was the 17th speaker.

The team of Revare and Soper won seven of eight debates in the preliminary rounds and advanced to the elimination rounds as the fifth seed. They lost to Harvard University on a 2-1 split decision in the octafinals. Revare was the 13th speaker, and Soper was the 18th speaker.

The team of Hato and Persinger won six of eight debates in the preliminary rounds and advanced to the elimination rounds as the 14th seed. They lost a 2-1 split decision to Binghamton University in the octafinals.

The teams of junior Jacob Wilkus, Lawrence, with freshman Owen Williams, Lee’s Summit, Missouri, and juniors Ethan Harris, Lawrence, with Jared Spiers, Pittsburg, each won five debates in the preliminary rounds and just missed qualifying for the single-elimination bracket.

“We are incredibly proud of the performance of the entire squad this weekend,” said Brett Bricker, associate director of KU Debate. “The coaching staff and debaters put on a phenomenal performance. The depth of talent in the program is amazing.”

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Subscribe to KU Today, the campus newsletter,

for additional news about the University of Kansas.

 

http://www.news.ku.edu

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Contact: Nina Yun, Center for Public Partnerships & Research, [email protected]

Registration now open for CPPR’s Alternative Futures for Kansas: A Civic Imagination Workshop

 

LAWRENCE — The Center for Public Partnerships & Research at the University of Kansas is hosting the Alternative Futures for Kansas: A Civic Imagination Workshop on Nov. 15. This in-person workshop is open to the public, and its featured speaker is Jake Dunagan, Governance Futures Lab director at the Institute for the Future.

 

The workshop will take place from 9 a.m. to noon in the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union and will explore two researched future scenarios.

Dunagan will guide participants in futures thinking by exploring multidisciplinary tools and strategies. KU Life Span Artist-in-Residence John Sebelius will help participants in creating future artifacts to support each scenario session with tangible elements that can ground and inspire an expansive exchange of ideas and support participants in sharing their point of view.

“Kansas has big questions to tackle, and no one sector or person has all the answers. The Civic Imagination Workshop provides a space for us to come together and think through alternative scenarios and see where we can take action today,” said Jackie Counts, executive director of CPPR. “We believe in the wisdom of the collective — in the students and community members of Lawrence — and their impact on future generations.”

The workshop is open to the public, but registration will be limited to 100 people. For more details and registration information, visit cppr.ku.edu/alternative-futures.

Alternative Futures for Kansas is co-sponsored by the Achievement & Assessment Institute, Common Book program, Hall Center for the Humanities, J. Wayne & Elsie M. Gunn Center for the Study of Science Fiction and the Lawrence Arts Center.

 

For previous coverage of CPPR’s approach to foresight, visit aai.ku.edu/how-cppr-futures-thinking.

 

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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: KU aerospace engineering students earn international design awards

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

Editors: Updates dean candidate presentation date to Nov. 2 in the headline.

KU aerospace engineering students earn international design awards

LAWRENCE — Aerospace engineering students from the University of Kansas collected three awards in the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics design competitions, adding to the school’s record number of such honors. Students finished first and third in the AIAA Undergraduate Individual Design Competition for their designs of efficient aircraft that can land or take off using either land or water. In addition, a team of six students finished second in AIAA’s Graduate Team Missile Design Competition for a missile featuring new modular design and innovative propulsion.

 

Final dean candidate for School of Engineering to present Nov. 2

LAWRENCE — Atul Kelkar, the fourth and final candidate for the University of Kansas School of Engineering dean position, will give a public presentation on his vision for the school. His presentation will take place 9:30-10:30 a.m. Nov. 2 in Burge Union Forum A. The event will additionally be livestreamed, and the passcode is 367292. Kelkar is the D.W. Reynolds distinguished professor and department chair of mechanical engineering at Clemson University. Early in his career, he was a faculty member at Kansas State University.

 

Full stories below.

 

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Contact: Cody Howard, School of Engineering, 785-864-2936, [email protected], @kuengineering

KU aerospace engineering students earn international design awards

LAWRENCE — Aerospace engineering students from the University of Kansas collected three awards in two major international design competitions, adding to the school’s record number of such honors.

Students finished first and third in the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics’ Undergraduate Individual Design Competition for their designs of efficient aircraft that can land or take off using either land or water.

In addition, a team of six students finished second in the AIAA’s Graduate Team Missile Design Competition for a missile featuring new modular design and innovative propulsion.

During the past decade, 125 aerospace engineering students have collected awards in international design competitions, said Ron Barrett-Gonzalez, professor of aerospace engineering. The three awards are numbers 100, 101 and 102 won by Jayhawks since 1980.

“We’re the first in the world to achieve 100, and that’s big,” said Barrett-Gonzalez, who served as faculty sponsor for the students’ entries. “A lot of companies look at this and know that they are getting good, strong, all-around students they can move around seamlessly. They stand out.”

AIAA is the world’s largest aerospace technical society, with nearly 100 corporate members and an additional 30,000 individual members from 91 countries. The annual design competitions give students a chance to solve design problems requiring specialized technical solutions, allowing students to perform theoretical work and gain real-world insight into the design process.

Daniel Pacheco won first place in Undergraduate Individual Aircraft Design for his design and analysis of “Little Goose,” an “amphibian” airplane capable of connecting communities both on land and adjacent to water. In the congested Bay Area of California, for example, the plane would be able to haul commuters from Sacramento to San Francisco without ever touching an airport.

“You could land on the water right off Pier 39 — hopefully avoid the tourists — and go right to work,” Barrett-Gonzalez said.

The commute might sound simple, but the design and analysis behind the Pacheco’s NEWT (New Efficient Water and Terrestrial aircraft) covered 76 pages filled with drawings, calculations, theories, history, graphics, weight ratios and more. As envisioned, the Little Goose would be able to carry up to 20 passengers at speeds of up to 185 miles per hour.

Pacheco graduated in December 2022 and now works as an aerospace engineer for Avcon Industries, which designs and performs modifications for special-mission and ISR (intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance) aircraft as a subsidiary of Butler National Corp.

Also in the Undergraduate Individual Design Competition, Riley Schwartzhoff won third place for his entry “Frog Hopper,” another NEWT concept deigned to skim above the water efficiently for both fuel and time while protecting the environment and wildlife both in the air and underwater.

In the Graduate Team Missile Design Competition, a six-member team devised the AIGM-138 Chimera, a tube-launched, modular weapon. Its propulsion assembly is designed to both shrink the size of such weapons by up to 30% while increasing their ranges and while enabling top speeds approaching four times the speed of sound. The team — Adam Andresen, Kang Chen, Jonas Knickenberg, Chukwuemeka Mba, Nicholas Sandusky and Muhammad Yakawu — have patents pending, both in the U.S. and internationally.

“Design is like the decathlon of aerospace engineering,” Barrett-Gonzalez said. “You can’t only be good at structures, or aerodynamics, or stability and control, or propulsion. Our students are known in the industry for being great all-arounders, and this gives them a leg up applying for jobs and graduate school.”

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The official university Twitter account has changed to @UnivOfKansas.

Refollow @KUNews for KU News Service stories, discoveries and experts.

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Contact: Savannah Rattanavong, Office of the Provost, 785-864-6402, [email protected], @KUProvost

Final dean candidate for School of Engineering to present Nov. 2

LAWRENCE — Atul Kelkar, the fourth and final candidate for the University of Kansas School of Engineering dean position, will give a public presentation on his vision for the school.

His presentation will take place 9:30-10:30 a.m. Nov. 2 in Burge Union Forum A. The event will additionally be livestreamed, and the passcode is 367292.

Kelkar is the D.W. Reynolds distinguished professor and department chair of mechanical engineering at Clemson University.

A candidate feedback survey will be open for two business days following the conclusion of Kelkar’s visit. Members of the KU community are encouraged to attend the presentation and provide feedback to the search committee.

The survey and a recording of Kelkar’s presentation will be available after the presentation on the search page until the survey closes.

Additional search information, including Kelkar’s CV, is also available on the search page.

In his current role, Kelkar manages the largest department at Clemson University, including personnel, research enterprise, development, curriculum and finances.

Prior to joining Clemson in 2018, Kelkar served as a program director at the National Science Foundation, helping lead the dynamics, control and system diagnostics program in the Division of Civil, Mechanical and Manufacturing Innovation. He previously worked as the associate chair for research and technology transfer and professor-in-charge of industry research and entrepreneurship for the College of Engineering at Iowa State University.

Early in his career, Kelkar was a faculty member in the Department of Mechanical and Nuclear Energy at Kansas State University.

In addition to co-founding and serving as the chief executive of five technology startups that specialize in areas from smart materials to educational software, Kelkar is a fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, an associate fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics and a senior member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). He is a steering committee member of the World Manufacturing Foundation and serves on the board of directors for Intelligent Manufacturing Systems International.

Within the ASME and IEEE, Kelkar has served as an associate editor for organizational journals and on conference-related program committees, as well as organized and chaired multiple technical sessions at these conferences. He previously received the National Science Foundation Career award and the 1997 NASA Creativity and Innovation Program award.

Kelkar has more than 170 archival publications, including a book titled “Control of Nonlinear Multibody Flexible Space Structures.” He holds six patents or patents-pending.

Kelkar earned his bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Pune in India and his master’s degree and doctorate in mechanical engineering from Old Dominion University.

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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

 

Start with Good Soil

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After the last couple of years of health problems I am hoping to get back into the swing of things with my garden next year. Having good soil to work with is a must and should be a first priority for a successful vegetable gardening year. So let’s think ahead already! Autumn is an excellent time to add organic materials and till garden soils. Winter can still be a good time to take care of this chore as long as the soil isn’t frozen. It is far wiser to till now than to wait until spring when cold, wet conditions can limit your ability to work soils easily. Working soil when it is wet destroys soil structure and results in hard clods that are very slow to break down. On the other hand, dry soil may need to be watered so it can be more easily tilled. Be sure to wait several days after watering to let soil moisture levels moderate. You want the soil moist, not wet or dry, when tilling.

 

There is a limit to how much organic material, such as leaves, can be added in one application. Normally, a layer 2 inches deep is adequate with 5 to 6 inches being the maximum that can be added at one time. Shredding the material before application encourages faster and more complete decomposition due to increased surface area. Remember, soil preparation is an important key to a successful garden.

KU News: KU Endowment board elects 6 new trustees

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

Headlines

KU Endowment board elects 6 new trustees

LAWRENCE — At the KU Endowment Board of Trustees’ Annual Meeting on Oct. 27, six new trustees were elected: Stephonn Alcorn of New York City; William W. Humphrey III (Trey) of Mission Hills; Schalie A. Johnson of Kansas City, Missouri; Allison Long of Lawrence; Winifred Pinet (Win) of Plymouth, Michigan; and Abbey Rupe of Salina. Each new trustee brings a wealth of experience to the board.

 

Paper shows story of legal heroes solving crisis of 1929 stock market crash was a myth

LAWRENCE — A University of Kansas School of Law professor has published new work on the “lost history” of mandatory disclosure, contradicting the common origin story of how the U.S. government began regulating business in the years following the stock market crash of 1929. “Early on, I realized there was something essential that was missing from the standard version of the origin story. Everyone has a picture in their mind about how this all started, and the picture just isn’t correct,” said author Alex Platt.

 

Author details how Czechs overlaid politics onto Mozart

LAWRENCE – Even though Mozart lived mostly in Vienna and only visited Prague four times, German- and Czech-speaking residents of Prague have fought over his legacy ever since, trying to make it support their nationalistic beliefs. A University of Kansas professor of musicology demonstrates how it happened in his new book, “Mozart’s Operas and National Politics: Canon Formation in Prague from 1791 to the Present” (Cambridge University Press).

 

Full stories below.

 

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Contact: Michelle Keller, KU Endowment, 785-832-7336, [email protected]; @KUEndowment

KU Endowment board elects 6 new trustees

LAWRENCE — At the KU Endowment Board of Trustees’ Annual Meeting on Oct. 27, six new trustees were elected: Stephonn Alcorn of New York City; William W. Humphrey III (Trey) of Mission Hills; Schalie A. Johnson of Kansas City, Missouri; Allison Long of Lawrence; Winifred Pinet (Win) of Plymouth, Michigan; and Abbey Rupe of Salina. Each brings a wealth of experience to the board. Brief bios of the new trustees follow.

Stephonn Alcorn

Stephonn Alcorn was student body president at KU and graduated in 2017 with a bachelor’s degree in finance. While serving as president, he created and launched the Summer Venture in Business program, a pre-college summer academy for underrepresented students in high school and/or potential first-generation college students who are interested in business. Nearly 200 students have participated in the program, with many electing to attend KU.

Alcorn lives in New York, where he is a vice president at the Blackstone Group, managing investments in affordable housing. He is currently studying for his master’s degree in urban planning at New York University’s Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service. Most recently, Alcorn served as the associate director for racial justice & equity in the Joe Biden-Kamala Harris White House Domestic Policy Council, where he helped drive the formulation and implementation of the president’s equity agenda. Alcorn began his career at the Blackstone Group in 2017. He serves on the board of directors of Urban Pathways, a leading provider of transitional and permanent supportive housing in New York.

William Humphrey III

William Humphrey III (Trey) received his bachelor’s degree in business administration from KU in 1987 and a Juris Doctor from the University of Missouri-Kansas City in 1990. He and his wife, Bethany, reside in Mission Hills, and their three children all graduated from KU: Billy in 2019, Elena in 2020 and Kate in 2023. Humphrey is chief legal officer at Lockton, where he leads a robust, global legal team. An essential part of Lockton since 2000, he previously served as executive vice president and group general counsel and secretary and has played a crucial role in managing the company’s legal affairs in an increasingly complex business environment. Humphrey serves on the board of directors of several organizations, including the Police Foundation of Kansas City, KC Common Good and the Kansas Alpha of Phi Delta Theta Education Foundation.

Schalie Johnson

Schalie Johnson earned a bachelor’s degree in environmental studies from Connecticut College in 2003 and a Juris Doctor from KU in 2006, where she received honors in trial advocacy. She and her husband reside in Kansas City, Missouri. Johnson is a partner at Wallace Saunders and is a member of the Kansas City Metropolitan Bar Association, the Missouri Bar Association, the Johnson County Bar Association and the Kansas Bar Association. She is a member of the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce and the Central Exchange. Johnson serves on the KU School of Law’s board of governors, an alumni group dedicated to advancing the intellectual and material development, growth and continued excellence of KU Law.

Allison Long

Allison Long is a third-generation Jayhawk originally from McPherson. Long, a CPA and 1985 graduate of the KU School of Business, she and her husband, Jeff, returned to Lawrence in 2012 following his Air Force career. She has held positions at KU Endowment in accounting and human resources and currently serves as the senior vice president for administration, chief operating officer and secretary.

Winifred Pinet

Winifred Pinet (Win) received a bachelor’s degree in English in 1980 and an MBA in 1982, both from KU. She also has a certified treasury professional (CTP) designation and a certificate in sustainability management from the University of Colorado, Boulder. Pinet resides in Plymouth, Michigan. She is president and CEO of Sycamore Associates and has more than 25 years of experience in capital structure, treasury, risk management and environment, social and governance (ESG) investing. Prior to forming Sycamore in 1999, Pinet enjoyed a career in corporate banking. She is co-chair of KU’s College of Liberal Arts & Sciences Advisory Board and has served on the KU School of Business board and national KU Alumni Association board.

Abbey Rupe

Abbey Rupe earned a bachelor’s degree in microbiology from KU in 2001 and a medical degree from the KU School of Medicine-Wichita in 2005. During her medical education, Rupe was inducted into the prestigious Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Society. She completed her residency in pediatrics at the KU School of Medicine-Wichita and served as chief resident during her third year. Rupe and her husband, Chris Rupe, a fourth-generation KU graduate, reside in Salina with their two teenage children. She is a faculty pediatrician at Salina Family Healthcare Center, where she helps train family medicine residents for future practice in rural Kansas through the Smoky Hill Family Medical Residency Program. She is an active member of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), the Kansas chapter of the AAP and the Saline County Medical Society. She also serves on the Sports Medicine Advisory Board for the Kansas State High School Activities Association.

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The official university Twitter account has changed to @UnivOfKansas.

Refollow @KUNews for KU News Service stories, discoveries and experts.

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Contact: Mike Krings, KU News Service, 785-864-8860, [email protected], @MikeKrings

Paper shows story of legal heroes solving crisis of 1929 stock market crash was a myth

LAWRENCE — Origin stories are powerful. From the Book of Genesis to Peter Parker’s fateful encounter with a radioactive spider, people draw a special kind of meaning and identity from these “founding” narratives. In the world of corporate finance, the birth of mandatory disclosure looms especially large: In the years after the stock market crash of 1929, Franklin D. Roosevelt brought a team of Ivy League lawyers down to D.C. to help rein in Wall Street; the mandatory corporate disclosure system they invented has provided the foundation of government regulation of business ever since.

Just one problem: That’s not what happened.

Alex Platt, associate professor of law at KU, has a new paper uncovering what he calls the “lost history” of mandatory disclosure. While conventional accounts focus on the drafting and enactment of securities laws by Franklin D. Roosevelt’s team of legal eagles, Platt’s “revisionist history” looks past the law on the books to the details of how the system was implemented. He found that the real administration of mandatory disclosure in the 1930s departed from and even contradicted the law.

Many know the names Franklin Roosevelt, Louis Brandeis, Felix Frankfurter and James Landis. But Baldwin Bane? Not so much. According to Platt, though, this obscure civil servant played a critical role in the founding of securities regulation and deserves broader recognition.

In July 1933, with the new securities law set to take effect, Bane was in charge of administering it. Companies for the first time had to file a disclosure document with the government 20 days before selling stock to the public. If the disclosure had “material” deficiencies, the government could block the stock sale by filing an administrative enforcement action before the window closed.

When this carefully crafted statutory system was finally set to be implemented, Bane found himself in a quandary. On the very first day, Bane and his small staff received about a hundred separate disclosure filings. And, upon review, all of the filings were materially deficient.

Bane knew that pursuing formal enforcement actions against all 100 companies (as the statute directed) was infeasible, given his small staff. So he came up with a workable alternative: He told his staff to write letters to all of the companies, advising them of the problems the staff identified, inviting amendments and threatening formal action in the event of noncompliance.

This “deficiency letter” system took off; going forward, virtually all companies filing disclosures received one or more of these letters – and virtually none received the formal enforcement actions contemplated by the law. The effect, Platt said, was nothing less than transformative.

For instance, because of delays built into the back-and-forth of the letter-writing process, the majority of stock offerings were delayed far beyond the 20 days contemplated by the statute. And instead of the government conducting only a “preliminary review” of disclosures for obvious problems as Congress had envisioned, the agency conducted what it described as a “careful and critical” analysis of every statement.

Bane invented the system and oversaw its implementation for several decades as a civil servant. To this day, companies looking to go public must go through the same deficiency letter process that Bane invented 90 years ago.

Platt told the story in a newly released paper, also forthcoming in the Journal of Corporation Law. Platt first encountered deficiency letters as a practicing lawyer and started looking into the history of the system while he was teaching at Harvard Law School. Over time, Platt pulled together sources from many archival collections, including those at Harvard University, Columbia University, the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library, Washington & Lee (Bane’s alma matter) and others.

“Early on, I realized there was something essential that was missing from the standard version of the origin story. Everyone has a picture in their mind about how this all started, and the picture just isn’t correct,” Platt said. “Brandeis, Frankfurter, Landis and other elite lawyer intellectuals tend to get all the credit. Bane was a humble civil servant, but he had a tremendous effect.”

Bane’s decision to abandon the statutory system also changed the essential character of the regime. The statute had been drafted by acolytes of Brandeis and reflected his regulatory philosophy: The government would maintain an adversarial relationship with business, making rules and suing those who violated them, with an emphasis on transparency. Bane’s system, by contrast, created a cozier interdependent relationship between government and business, effectively inviting elite securities professionals into the regulatory process.

“By drawing these accountants, lawyers and bankers into the regulation structure, Bane moved this system away from the pure Brandeisian model and closer to the rival corporatist model,” Platt said. “Under Bane’s system, it’s really government and industry working together to produce these disclosures.”

The paper, which was recently featured on the Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance, calls on readers to reconsider and think critically about history. Platt said that policymakers like current SEC Chair Gary Gensler frequently call back to the origins of the regime in the 1930s to explain or justify current actions.

“If people are using the origin story to try to legitimize something they are doing today, what does it mean if we find out the origin story they are pointing us to is really more of an origin myth?” Platt said.

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Contact: Rick Hellman, KU News Service, 785-864-8852, [email protected], @RickHellman

Author details how Czechs overlaid politics onto Mozart

 

LAWRENCE – Even though Mozart lived mostly in Vienna and only visited Prague four times, German- and Czech-speaking residents of Prague have fought over his legacy ever since, trying to make it support their nationalistic beliefs.

 

Martin Nedbal demonstrates how it happened in his new book, “Mozart’s Operas and National Politics: Canon Formation in Prague from 1791 to the Present” (Cambridge University Press).

“The main point of the book is that art is always political,” said the University of Kansas associate professor of musicology. “A lot of the concepts that we believe are based on artistic merit, such as the idea that there is a group of masterpieces by master composers that are a part of the canon of Western art music, are actually grounded in political as opposed to aesthetic considerations.”

Mozart premiered his operas “Don Giovanni” in 1787 and “La clemenza di Tito” in 1791 in Prague’s Estates Theatre, and he stayed in the city for a few weeks during each of his visits.

Nedbal, a native of the Czech Republic, said Praguers have never forgotten.

“If you go to Prague and take any tour of the major sites, you will hear about Mozart frequently,” Nedbal said. “All the guides will tell you, ‘This is the house where Mozart lived. And this is the theatre where “Don Giovanni,” his most famous opera, was performed.’ And all of this is because Prague loved Mozart and Mozart loved Prague, and Prague is the most important Mozart city in the world.”

Nedbal wrote that Prague’s citizens issued varying claims to be the deepest and most authentic lovers of the great musical genius to assert one of three main identities:

· Bohemian, seeing themselves as belonging to the historical territory that forms the western part of today’s Czech Republic

· Czech

· German

“It’s a form of cultural appropriation,” Nedbal said.

He wrote that it was part of a campaign by these factions to distinguish themselves as the preeminent national group at a time of shifting political power. For instance, two separate, monumental theatres — one dedicated to Czech repertoire (the National) and the other to German (New German) — were established in Prague in the 1880s, each using performances of Mozart’s operas to emphasize their group’s enlightenment and cultural superiority.

Both the National Theatre and the former New German theatre, now the State Opera, remain standing, as does the Estates Theatre. But all the originally German theatre institutions have long since been in Czech hands.

 

“I am constantly reminded of the history of 19th century Central Europe by what is now happening in Ukraine,” Nedbal said. “You have this mixture between Ukrainians and Russians, and for a long time many people residing in Ukraine were not really sure which nation they belonged to.

“That is very similar to how it was in Bohemia in the 18th and early 19th centuries, where you had people who spoke Czech and German, but it didn’t really matter because most people viewed themselves as Bohemians. And all that changed in the 19th century, when it suddenly became important to decide whether someone is a Czech or a German. And then culture played a significant role in this identification.”

Nedbal said these tensions reached a peak in the aftermath of World War II, when hundreds of thousands of ethnic Germans were expelled from what eventually became the Czech Republic.

And all the while, the forces behind this process of ethnic stratification used their love of Mozart to advance their causes, Nedbal wrote. The scholar said he used the COVID-19 lockdown to pore over the now digitized critical responses to Mozart’s premieres and productions in historical newspapers online. Nedbal compared production notes from different eras to see what sections of the operas were cut, how they were translated and how different generations of Czech and German critics explained the value of these works to their readers.

Not that Mozart intended any of this. But Nedbal said it’s less important, in many respects, what the composer intended than how his works were received.

“My claim,” Nedbal said, “is that this ‘monumental-ization’ and creating of the musical canon was related to nationalism, because in Central Europe these artworks of the past were important not just for their artistic merits but also because they somehow could be seen as connected to a national past and the cultural traditions of these ethnic groups that were being created in that time.”

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