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First fully electric, autonomous tractor in the Midwest unveiled

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The University of Missouri rolled out its first all-electric, autonomous tractor Tuesday, calling it a “revolutionary piece of technology” that could pioneer new agricultural practices and make farming more efficient and sustainable.

The Monarch MK-V tractor, bought with grant funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, is the Midwest’s first fully autonomous tractor, according to Christopher Daubert, dean of the MU College of Agriculture, Food, and Natural Resources. The tractor will be used for research by CAFNR, the MU College of Engineering, and MU Extension.

The MK-V runs solely on electricity and is equipped with cameras and sensors that allow it to be driven remotely. Its artificial intelligence capabilities are designed to collect data and analyze crop health, allowing the machine to align with future agricultural innovation.

Kent Shannon, a CAFNR professor specializing in agricultural systems and technology, piloted the tractor for Tuesday’s demonstration. He said the MK-V was well-suited for smaller-scale farms, including his own.

“It provides some opportunities that a traditional tractor wouldn’t,” he said. “I can see me using this on a beef cattle farm at home.”

The tractor does come with a high price tag: A standard model starts at about $89,000, more than twice the price of a traditional tractor of the same size, Shannon said.

Even so, he emphasized that the total value of the tractor has yet to be fully understood, meaning that the price might actually be affordable given the advanced capabilities it offers.

“If I went to the local dealership, yeah, I’d find something a lot cheaper than this,” he said. “But if you think about agriculture as a whole, it’s not exorbitant.”

“You might even think it was more than $90,000 for a tractor like this,” he added. “You’ve got to think of all of the technologies on it — there’s no other tractor of this stature that has both electric and autonomy capability.”

Sazzad Rifat, a PhD student at MU studying biosystems engineering, said he looks forward to learning about the tractor’s autonomous driving features and its ability to maneuver around obstacles.

To better understand the MK-V’s technologies, university researchers are interested in exploring its ability to support farmers with disabilities.

Findings from this research, as well as information about the MK-V, will be shared with farmers through MU Extension’s AgrAbility program, which helps farmers with disabilities overcome challenges.

For Missouri’s small-scale farms, this tractor’s technological capability could be revolutionary, said Dan Downing, a water quality expert with MU Extension in a news release.

A more sophisticated hydraulic system and engine reduce emissions that may interfere with farm conditions, Downing said. The tractor also scores very well environmentally on air and water quality measurements.

Because of the nascency of this new technology, no state subsidies are yet available to help farmers pay for it, according to Teng Lim, a professor at MU Extension. There is, however, a “good chance” of future state support, he said.

This story originally appeared in the Columbia Missourian.

September Brings Baptisms, Birthdays, and a Recipe for Hot Pepper Butter

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Lovina’s Amish Kitchen
Lovina Eitcher,
Old Order Amish
Cook, Wife &
Mother of Eight

 

September has arrived already. How can we be in the ninth month of the year already? 2023 is flying by much faster than we want it to. This week I have lots of tomatoes to put into V-8 juice. We are out of V-8, so we will be glad for a fresh supply. We also want to can hot pepper butter and serrano peppers. Nephew Benjamin and Crystal brought supper in Friday evening and brought us a pint of fresh hot pepper butter and a quart of salsa with the meal. We are already almost done with the hot pepper butter. It is good on a slice of homemade bread with tomatoes sliced on top, or on scrambled eggs or haystack meals (lots of ingredients piled onto a plate). 

Friday, September 2, was the 18th birthday of the youngest of our eight children (Kevin). Happy birthday, Kevin! That is also hard to think of, that he’s that old already. I baked him a cake, but nothing fancy like daughter Lovina makes. He didn’t care that it tasted better than it looked. Haha!

On Sunday, our church was well attended. Many friends and family gathered in honor of the three young souls that were baptized. Son Joseph and daughter Lovina were among the three. When we moved to Michigan nineteen years ago, Leroy was our bishop, but then the church was divided because of the growth and we had another bishop, then again later on through the years. Leroy and Clara were such a help to us and welcomed Joe and I, with our six young children. Then, shortly after our move, I ended up in the hospital with complications and had Lovina by emergency C-section. After a week in the hospital, we could finally come home, and Leroy and Clara were among the first to come see baby Lovina. Now, nineteen years later, Leroy baptized her (and Joseph), and that was special to me. 

Brother Albert and Sarah Irene, and their son Marvin and Lori and their three sons, came here after the baptismal services to visit and enjoy some popcorn. We wanted them to stay for supper, but they had a driver and are from another community, so they didn’t.

Son Joseph bought chicken to grill for supper Sunday night. He invited friends and family, with the total being around sixty people. I made a pot of chicken noodles, and they also grilled small red potatoes from the garden. Everyone brought food in as well and the table was loaded with more than enough food. We all sang “Happy Birthday” to Kevin.

September 10 will be granddaughter Abigail’s seventh birthday. She is a joy to have around and is quite the talker already. She made Joe and I grandparents for the first time. She wants craft items for her birthday, too, so we will get her the same gift we gave Kaitlyn. 

Yesterday (Labor Day), Dustin, Loretta, Denzel, and baby Byron (four weeks) took Joe and I along on their pontoon to the lake. We spent the afternoon on the lake. Joe and Dustin did some fishing but the fish weren’t biting much. Denzel enjoyed being on the pontoon and looking at the water. Last time he was on the pontoon he couldn’t walk. Now he walks all around, looking into the water. He especially liked when the motor was running and the water was splashing out the back. Byron ate and slept mostly, and we kept him shaded from the hot sun. It was a warm day. I must get busy. God’s blessings to all!

 

Hot Pepper Butter

40 hot peppers

6 cups sugar

1 quart vinegar

1 pint yellow mustard

1 tablespoon salt
1 1/2 cups flour

1 1/2 cups water

Grind peppers and mix with the sugar, vinegar, yellow mustard, and salt. Boil for 10 to 15 minutes. In a separate bowl, mix 1 1/2 cups flour and 1/2 cup water, then slowly add to above mixture. Boil 5 minutes or more. Stir often to keep from sticking. Put in jars and process in a boiling water bath for 10 minutes.

Note: Canning times are subject to change according to USDA regulations. Please check with your county extension office. 

Lovina’s Amish Kitchen is written by Lovina Eicher, Old Order Amish writer, cook, wife, and mother of eight. Her newest cookbook, Amish Family Recipes, is available wherever books are sold. Readers can write to Eicher at Lovina’s Amish Kitchen, PO Box 234, Sturgis, MI 49091 (please include a self-addressed stamped envelope for a reply); or email [email protected] and your message will be passed on to her to read. She does not personally respond to emails.

 

Changes coming to the Kansas State Fair in 2023

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Change is the name of the game this year in Hutchinson, as the Kansas State Fair has made big improvements to the infrastructure of the fairgrounds by adding a public address system, new asphalt, and cameras. The public address system can be used to relay weather related information during the fair, lost or missing child calls, and music throughout the fairgrounds.

“Safety is our number one concern here at Kansas State Fair. We want to make sure that when parents come out here with their kids, they feel safe,” said Bryan Schulz, the general manager of the Kansas State Fair.
“On the west side of the grandstand we added a 16 foot high by 20 foot long, grand sized TV,” added Schulz.
But the changes and additions do not stop there.
A new building, the House of Capper, is freshly painted and ready for fair goers.
New foods have also been added for families to try like dessert and pizza box nachos, deep fried cola, and margaritas!

“This year is going to be the first year we’re actually allowed to have some spirits involved. So we’re going to have Jose Cuervo margaritas this year. Brand new to the fair for 2023. We also are going to have the ready to drink cocktails in a can,” said Carrie Thatcher, the owner of Carrie’s Beer Garden.

And of course activities for the whole family, a lip synch battle for kids and a contest for the grown ups that is equally expressive.

“The Iowa State Fair started the husband calling contest. We want to change it up so anybody can participate. So we changed it up to the partner calling contest. That’s brand new,” said Schulz.

For now, big empty rooms are awaiting excited fair goers.
 The Kansas Honey Producer Association has been at the fair for more than fifty years and leaders from the association tell us that setting up for the fair takes three days and more than 20 people, just for their booth.

“We’re setting up for the fair. We configure our counters. We’ve got products that have been made from other beekeepers in the Kansas State area, and we’re gonna put all the labels on them and have a lot of fun,” said Kristi Sanderson, 2nd vice president of KS Honey Producers Association.

If you purchase before September 8th tickets for adults are only $7 and $4 for children and seniors but if you buy tickets after they are $10 for adults and $6 for children and seniors.

There are also other ways to get cheaper tickets to the State Fair, like going on Dillons Day Monday September 11th when admission is $1 or free with a Dillons plus card. Friday September 8th admission is $2 for people ages 55 and older. Friday September 15th admission is only $2 for Kansas Lottery PlayOn members. Tuesday September 12th and Thursday September 14th admission is $4 after 4 p.m. and everyday admission is only $5 after 9 p.m.

 

This Haven teen just turned 18 and learned he needs a heart transplant

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Just weeks before his 18th birthday and the start of his senior year in high school, Evan Bartholomew’s life was filled with his favorite things — hunting, fishing, camping and working on his truck.

But in June, that life took an unexpected turn. After seeking a doctor’s help for shortness of breath, abdominal pain and nausea, he was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy. The diagnosis was followed by the stunning news that he needs a new heart.

“It was pretty scary. We weren’t expecting it to be anything major,” his mother, Julie Bartholomew, told The Hutchinson News. “It’s not what any teenager dreams that the beginning of their adult life is going to be like. It’s been a big adjustment.”

Since the diagnosis, Evan has had to wear a LifeVest defibrillator constantly and is on continuous IV therapy.

The Haven High School senior only went back to school for two weeks before having a setback. This week, he is again hospitalized at Children’s Mercy Kansas City, his mother said.

Evan has one brother and two sisters. One sister is old enough to realize the seriousness of Evan’s illness, she said, but his younger siblings don’t quite understand.

“It has been quite an adjustment for him,” his mother said. “It’s not something he was expecting. He was more focused on getting a job and starting adulthood.”

Evan works for his dad Corey Bartholomew’s tree service, BARC Tree Care in Hutchinson, but since he got sick he hasn’t been able to work at all, she said.

Evan is known as “Tater” because when he was small, he was unable to properly pronounce his middle name, Taylor, his mother said.

“This has been such a shock to all of us. Just a few short weeks ago he was a healthy young man,” Julie Bartholomew wrote on the Facebook page Ticker 4 Tater. “This is a group dedicated to getting information out and supporting Evan throughout his transplant journey. We are all hanging on the best we can right now but would still greatly appreciate being included in your prayers.”

For now, it’s a waiting game for Evan. In the meantime, family friends have launched a fundraising page on the Children’s Organ Transplant Association website to raise funds for the family’s travel back and forth to Children’s Mercy Kansas City and other related expenses.

According to COTA, transplant procedures can cost upwards of $800,000. Once the transplant is complete, families face significant transplant-related expenses, including medication, transportation to and from the transplant center, lodging and expenses while parents are out of work and often living with the hospitalized child far from home.

“COTA helps transplant families avoid financial devastation,” the organization said in a news release. “These out-of-pocket expenses add up to tens of thousands of dollars annually for transplant families with lifetime totals often exceeding $1,000,000.”

COTA said 100% of all funds raised in honor of patients go toward transplant-related expenses.

As for “Tater,” the community is rallying around him and his family. A #Ticker4Tater Baked Potato Bar, Silent Auction and Drawing event is set for 6-9 p.m. on Oct. 7 at the Moose Lodge, 1401 E. 1st Ave. in Hutchinson, to raise money for the young man’s expenses. Tickets are $20 and may be ordered at the #Ticker4Tater event website.

“We just appreciate all that our family and friends and the community are doing for Evan,” said Julie Bartholomew. “They are mostly doing all the fundraising, which has been phenomenal.”

As reported in The Hutchinson News

KU News: Researchers partner with state to better understand experiences of Kansans on disability services waitlist

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

Headlines

KU researchers partner with state to better understand experiences of Kansans on disability services waitlist
LAWRENCE — Researchers with the University of Kansas Life Span Institute are working with the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services to collect and analyze data on a waiting list for Kansans to access the Home and Community Based Services program. Services such as personal attendants and other in-home supports, supported employment and in-home specialized medical care help Kansans live and work in their community.

Influential ‘Instavangelists’ blur line between religion and social media
LAWRENCE — A new article from a University of Kansas professor of religious studies examines the rise of online personalities, primarily women, who have replaced traditional faiths with their own gospel through Instagram and other online platforms. They preach to other women about “how to be their best selves,” even though both the media and the message further blur the lines between religion and the secular. The article appears in the Journal of Religion, Media and Digital Culture.

New core lab enhances infectious disease research at KU
LAWRENCE – A new core laboratory at the University of Kansas will enhance the speed, quantity and quality of research into infectious diseases, neurological disorders, cancer and immunology. The Flow Cytometry Core Lab opens its services to KU and regional researchers Sept. 1. The lab includes three new instruments allowing researchers to study individual cells within a liquid sample.

Full stories below.

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Contact: Christina Knott, Life Span Institute, [email protected], @kulifespan
KU researchers partner with state to better understand experiences of Kansans on disability services waitlist
LAWRENCE — Like many 24-year-olds, Katie Pine loves pop and country music, her job and reading novels such as “The Hunger Games.” The Olathe resident, who currently lives at home with her parents, would like to have her own apartment — roommate optional.
Kansas strives to support people such as Pine, who has an intellectual disability, to meet their career and life goals through the Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) program. However, Pine is one of more than 5,000 Kansans with a disability unable to access the services.
The HCBS program allows states to use Medicaid funds to offer a broad array of nonmedical services not otherwise covered by Medicaid. The provided services such as personal attendants and other in-home supports, supported employment and in-home specialized medical care help people live and work in their community.
Kansans such as Pine who are on the waiting list face an extensive wait for services estimated to stretch as long as 10 years. This means that when people with intellectual disability transition out of education services at age 21, they often have no formal paid supports for years after leaving school. Without continued support, those individuals may begin to lose skills they’ve gained.
The Kansas University Center on Developmental Disabilities (KUCDD) and the Institute for Health and Disability Policy Studies, both based at the KU Life Span Institute, and the KU Center for Research on Aging & Disability Options in the School of Social Welfare are partnering with the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services to collect and analyze data on the waiting list to determine how to address the needs of people on the state’s waiting list for services effectively and efficiently.
One of the benefits of the HCBS program is that support services in one’s home are usually less than half the cost of residential care, according to figures shared by the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention. “In other words, it is both more cost-effective and more desired by individuals for them to receive HCBS at home than to be placed into institutional care,” said Jean Hall, a researcher on the project and director of the Institute for Health and Disability Policy Studies.
In Kansas, HCBS waiver programs are funded by a 60/40 allocated federal/state match. Each state oversees the approval process for waivers and can limit enrollment based on available funds. When the number of funded spots in HCBS programs are full, individuals are added to waiting lists.
“The waiting list in Kansas is long enough that often times, Kansans with intellectual or developmental disabilities can only receive services when they experience a crisis such as the death of a parent or caregiver,” said Evan Dean, associate director of community services at KUCDD and a researcher overseeing the project.
Dean said the ultimate purpose of the study of the IDD waiting list in Kansas is to provide information on how to best serve those who remain on the waiting list and to find how to prevent future backlogs from happening.
“People’s support needs can change a lot over 10 years, and then they are entering services when they are most vulnerable after a crisis,” Dean said. “It’s a big challenge for organizations providing services to determine how best to support the person in those situations.”
Landing on the waiting list can interrupt the health, independence and development of an individual as they progress from education systems where there are many supports, on to adulthood, when they may be waiting for services, said Sean Swindler, a project manager involved in the research and a director community program development and evaluation at the Kansas Center for Autism Research and Training at KU.
The project is important because it addresses the right of everyone to be allowed to contribute and be a part of their community, Swindler said.
“People with disabilities have a rightful presence within our community,” he said. “They have the same rights as everybody else to live, work and play. And we have tools that can assist people with doing that with the IDD waiver program.”
Last fall, a Kansas legislative committee, the Special Committee on Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Modernization, met to address HCBS waiver and consider alternatives. In the process, the committee heard testimony from officials from other states, researchers from KU, advocacy groups, parents and individuals with disabilities affected by the waiver delays.
Parents shared stories of being overwhelmed by the physical toll of being a caregiver 24 hours a day without support, as well as the cost of care, which can reach $50,000 a year. Some parents reported struggles with their own declining health as they, too, age while waiting for help to be approved.
Individuals on the waiting list also shared frustrations about wanting to live more independently. Among those providing testimony was Pine, who wrote a letter describing her desire to see changes to the waiver system that would help those like her to be successful.
“We need to change and update the system in Kansas to allow me to live where I want to live and not have to wait on a long list to get the services I need to have to be successful,” she said. “As an individual with a disability, I should get to choose where I want to live, where I want to work, who I want to be friends with — and right now this system is not designed with all that in mind.”
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Contact: Jon Niccum, KU News Service, 785-864-7633, [email protected]
Influential ‘Instavangelists’ blur line between religion and social media
LAWRENCE — Social media has radically changed the way we do things, from communicating to purchasing to learning to voting. But according to a new article, it’s also transformed the way we define religion — particularly among women.
“Religious studies scholars are interested in how fluid religion is and how it’s really bound up with social processes and power struggles,” said Jacquelene Brinton, associate professor of religious studies at the University of Kansas. “Whereas outside of religious studies, people think of religion as something static and easily defined. Social media is showing us how that process of transformation happens.”
Her new article “Media and the Formation of Secular/Religious Networks” examines the rise of so-called “Instavangelists.” These are women (primarily) who have replaced traditional faiths with their own gospel through Instagram and other online platforms. They preach to other women about “how to be their best selves,” even though both the media and the message further blur the lines between religion and the secular. It appears in the Journal of Religion, Media and Digital Culture.
Brinton first came across the term Instavangelist while reading Leigh Stein’s 2021 New York Times article titled “The Empty Religions of Instagram: How did influencers become our moral authorities?” It notes how media personalities such as Gabrielle Bernstein (1.3 million followers on Instagram), Glennon Doyle (2.1 million followers), Brené Brown (5 million followers) and Gwyneth Paltrow (8.3 million followers) have become the “neo-religious leaders of our era.”
“What’s fascinating to me is when authors like those at the New York Times write about Instavangelists, they don’t realize what they’re doing is putting forth a new definition of religion without any self-consciousness about it,” said Brinton, who also chairs KU’s Department of Religious Studies.
“It is a little bit weird that we’re discussing people who are not affiliated with what we generally define as religion in a typical way: a church, institution or belief. This has just entered our common understanding of what religion is,” she said.
While her piece focuses specifically on social media, Brinton said she believed this process was started by earlier media such as print and television.
“But what social media does is give us the sense we know the individuals we’re following … when it’s really just marketing. It enables that ‘hiddenness of the secular,’ and it enables that secular thing to appear to be religious. And that all comes together through this notion of self-help and reinventing yourself,” she said.
Media has often given viewers/users the illusion of having a deep connection to the source. For instance, “CBS Evening News” anchor Walter Cronkite was considered “the most trusted man in America,” even though few of his admirers had ever met him.
“Yet you didn’t see pictures of Walter Cronkite at home eating dinner with his family. Whereas Instagram gives you the sense that you are in people’s homes and involved in their lives — and you can actually get involved in their lives. You can comment on what they’re cooking and tell them how beautiful their children are,” she said.
Also, she said, that when people were watching network news, the commercials came on in the middle.
“You’re not exactly sure where they are now. What part is a commercial? Back then, you knew who was paying Walter Cronkite,” she said.
When researching Instavangelists, Brinton said she was most surprised by their ties to marketing.
“Evangelical female preachers such as Sarah Jakes Roberts are brands. They have agents and publicists. It was surprising to me how much they were able to mix in this branding message through social media when they are preaching about Christ.”
Was there a reason she exclusively focused on women?
“I think self-help messages tend to be geared toward women, and the messages of these Instavangelists are primarily geared toward women. But it would be interesting to try to find some male ones to see how their messages are formed,” she said.
Now in her 13th year at KU, the Philadelphia native specializes in Islamic studies but also maintains a strong research interest in media and theory. She is also a member of KU’s Center for Global & International Studies.
Brinton said she hoped her article will give those outside of academia generally and religious studies specifically a sense of the fluidity of religion, so that people writing about the topic from a digital media perspective can think of ways in which using religion as a static term is not entirely accurate.
“How did we get to this point where a person like Gwyneth Paltrow could be considered a religious personality by a newspaper? It doesn’t seem logical to me,” Brinton said. “I think this topic needs more excavating.”
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Contact: Vince Munoz, Office of Research, 785-864-2254, [email protected], @ResearchAtKU
New core lab enhances infectious disease research at KU
LAWRENCE – A new core laboratory at the University of Kansas will enhance the speed, quantity and quality of research into infectious diseases, neurological disorders, cancer and immunology.
The Flow Cytometry Core Lab opens its services to KU and regional researchers Sept. 1. The lab includes three new instruments, which allow researchers to study individual cells within a liquid sample.
“The core is providing flow cytometry analysis and sorting services. Flow cytometry and sorting is a way of distinguishing and analyzing cells based on their size and granularity,” said Peter McDonald, Flow Cytometry Core Lab manager.
Flow cytometry works by funneling a liquid containing microbes — usually either a blood sample or solution of bacteria — through a tube thin enough to allow only a single cell to pass through at a time. Fluorescent dye that attaches to certain microbes is added to the liquid beforehand. A laser is beamed through the tube as the dyed microbes pass through it, and sensors surrounding the tube monitor the ways the laser reflects off the dyed microbes. This tells researchers the size, shape and quantity of microbes in the sample.
“A lot of different research labs have flow cytometer analyzers that are cheaper. What this core provides is a more expansive, full-spectrum or spectral flow cytometer and two sorters,” McDonald said.
Two of the three new instruments in the core lab have fluorescently activated cell sorting (FACS) capabilities. This means they can separate the different microbes after they pass through the tube, allowing researchers to experiment on just one bacteria or cell type in a sample. The other instrument, Cytek Aurora, cannot sort microbes from the sample but has more light-sensitive sensors.
“The major difference with the Cytek is that it has an expanded spectral capacity,” said Scott Hefty, professor and chair of molecular biosciences. “It just has a broader array of capabilities for analyzing spectral properties.”

Beyond enabling innovative research, having flow cytometry services is essential to keeping KU competitive with peer academic institutions. Robin Orozco, assistant professor of molecular biosciences and the scientific adviser for the new lab, uses the technique in much of her research. Hefty said having these services helps recruit and retain new faculty like Orozco.
“She’s one of the junior investigators that, as we were attempting to recruit her, we saw this was an immediate need that we needed to address in order to enable her research, but there were so many others,” Hefty said. “We have two new faculty who have been here since January, and both of them are utilizing the flow facility as well.”
The core lab is currently expected to serve users from more than 20 labs, representing a half-dozen KU departments. Collaborative funding for the new instruments came from the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, School of Pharmacy, Office of Research, Department of Molecular Biosciences, Chemical Biology of Infectious Disease and the University of Kansas Cancer Center. The Higuchi Biosciences Center also contributed to the acquisition prior to its restructuring.

The fee schedule has been announced for fiscal year 2023. Prospective users can contact McDonald for more information.

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