Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Home Blog Page 678

KU News: KU launches new on-campus and online criminal justice programs to meet job market demand

0

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

Headlines

KU launches new on-campus and online criminal justice programs to meet job market demand
OVERLAND PARK — With a growing demand for skilled employees to fill criminal justice roles in the Kansas City metropolitan area and nationally, the University of Kansas School of Professional Studies is launching two new bachelor’s degrees in criminal justice, offered in person and online. Classes begin in spring 2024.

Department of Chemistry announces spring, summer awards and scholarships
LAWRENCE — The Department of Chemistry at the University of Kansas recently distributed more than $313,000 in awards and scholarships for spring and summer 2023 to undergraduate and graduate students. They include Kansans from Arkansas City, De Soto, Derby, Gardner, Lawrence, Liberal, Manhattan, Olathe, Overland Park, Prairie Village, Quinter, Salina, Shawnee, Stilwell, Topeka and Wichita.

Full stories below.

————————————————————————

Contact: Susan Motley, KU Edwards Campus, [email protected], @KUEdwardsCampus
KU launches new on-campus and online criminal justice programs to meet job market demand

OVERLAND PARK — Criminal justice is a large and growing career field encompassing jobs in law enforcement, corrections, policy analysis, court administration, law and intelligence. With the growing demand for skilled employees to fill roles in the Kansas City metro and nationally, KU’s School of Professional Studies is launching two new bachelor’s degrees in criminal justice, a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) and a Bachelor of Science (B.S.) This allows students to tailor the degree to meet their career goals.

The B.A. in Criminal Justice includes more courses in humanities, while the B.S. in Criminal Justice consists of more hands-on classes and lab work. Both criminal justice degrees require a nine-hour concentration in either Law Enforcement Leadership or Law and Society.

The Law Enforcement Leadership concentration includes courses in Racial Justice and the Criminal Justice System, Public Service Leadership and Principles of Social Problems. It is based on the fact that law enforcement officers often need additional education to advance their careers. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, there are more than a half-million people employed as police officers and sheriffs nationwide with a median salary of $65,790 a year. While individuals may start their careers in law enforcement without a college degree, many departments require a degree once they become supervisors.

The Law and Society concentration examines how the law works in practice in public administration, courts, the nonprofit sector, policy, policing and the justice system, with courses like The Pursuit of Rights: Law, Democracy, and Power.

Stuart Day, dean of the KU Edwards Campus and School of Professional Studies, said this new program addresses a growing demand for employees with these skill sets across the Kansas City area.

“These new degrees provide students with a broad foundation in criminal justice,” Day said, “and flexibility to tailor their degree to prepare them for the careers that interest them the most.”

The Greater Kansas City area has a strong workforce presence in protective and legal professions. According to the Occupational Report for Law, Public Safety, Corrections and Security, there are more than 32,000 jobs regionally in this sector and, recently, there were more than 400 active jobs postings that required a bachelor’s degree.

Students can complete the program on the Edwards Campus, but it is also possible to complete a KU bachelor’s degree in criminal justice entirely online. The degrees are designed for transfer students who already earned an associate degree or equivalent hours and have a strong interest in understanding how agencies and institutions function as part of the criminal justice system. These degree programs focus on different ideas of justice and understanding the impact the justice system has on the lives of individuals and communities.

The first bachelor’s in criminal justice classes will be offered in spring 2024.

-30-
————————————————————————
The official university Twitter account has changed to @UnivOfKansas.
Refollow @KUNews for KU News Service stories, discoveries and experts.


————————————————————————

Contact: Angie Erdley, Department of Chemistry, 785-864-6749, [email protected]
Department of Chemistry announces spring, summer awards and scholarships
LAWRENCE — The Department of Chemistry at the University of Kansas held its annual awards and graduation recognition ceremony May 7 to recognize the academic, research and teaching achievements of its students. The department distributed more than $313,000 in awards and scholarships to its undergraduate and graduate students. Additionally, 14 students graduating with bachelor’s degrees in chemistry were recognized.
The department welcomed many special guests to this annual celebration, including the Chemistry Alumni Advisory Board (CAAB) members who were in town for their annual meeting, as well Arash Mafi, executive dean of the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences; emeritus faculty; department staff and faculty; and family and friends of the honorees.
The department also announced the 2023 Summer Scholars. This program provides both graduate and undergraduates with a summer stipend to focus on research.
Kansas award winners from each category are listed below, while all recipients are listed online. Some students received multiple awards.
Kansas 2023 Chemistry Undergraduate Awards & Scholarships for freshmen, sophomores and juniors:
1. Nicole Giam, Overland Park, Owen W. Maloney Scholarship
2. Ethan Le, Wichita, Drs. Bijan & Mary Taylor Amini Scholarship
3. Ben Mosier, Manhattan, Drs. Bijan & Mary Taylor Amini Scholarship
4. Darya Moiny, Stilwell, Frances Gayetta Hanna Lenser Scholarship
5. Abigail Butler, Shawnee, Leonard V. Sorg Scholarship
6. Allison Babbit, Lawrence, Michelle & A.C. Buchanan Scholarship
7. Stanslaus Kariuki, Overland Park, Kenyon Latham Opportunity Award
8. Chase Courbot, Salina, James P. & Sharon A. Elrod Scholarship
9. Hannah Chern, Shawnee, K. Barbara Schowen Scholarship
10. Trisha Nair, Overland Park, Jacob Kleinberg Award
11. Roy Manns, Topeka, Roger Munsinger Scholarship
12. Celine Khalife, Wichita, Adrienne Hiscox Mitchell Scholarship
13. Brandon Nguyen, Liberal, John Shapley Award for Excellence in Research
14. Cecilia Paranjothi, Lawrence, Leland & Jill Weigel Scholarship
15. Eden Brenneman, Wichita, Burton & Cheryle MacKenzie Scholarship
16. Jiani Osborn, Olathe, Ralph E. & Esther Weik Badgley Award
17. Audrey Rips-Goodwin, Overland Park, Steve & Susan Snyder Award
18. Theresa Read, Shawnee, Keith & Dona Darlington Award

2023 Chemistry Undergraduate Awards for Seniors:
1. Evie Gruenbacher, Quinter, Emily V. Berger Award
2. Elaine Yeh, Overland Park, Emily V. Berger Award
3. Taryn McNickle, Arkansas City, Gini Adams Research Award in Analytical Chemistry
4. Claire Dopp, Olathe, Frank Newby Physical Science Award & ACS Inorganic Division Award
5. Spencer Einhaus, Salina, Frank Newby Physical Science Award
6. Thomas Finn, Overland Park, Frank Newby Physical Science Award
7. Gaven Stuhlsatz, Lawrence, Frank Newby Physical Science Award & ACS Organic Division Award

2023 Chemistry Undergraduate Top Senior Awards:
1. Caden Kussatz, Gardner, Wakarusa Valley ACS Section Award
2. Gavin Wolfmule, Salina, American Institute of Chemists Award
3. Samara Haenggi, Wichita, Richard J. Bearman Chemistry Award
4. Riley Stegmaier, Wichita, Alpha Chi Sigma Award & ACS Analytical Division Award

Kansas 2023 Chemistry Graduate Awards & Scholarships:
1. Joe Mandigo, Lawrence, Ray Q. Brewster Award
2. Fynn Cooper, Lawrence, Cornelius McCollum Research Scholarship
3. Alex Ervin, Lawrence, Cornelius McCollum Research Scholarship
4. Katie White, Lawrence, Cornelius McCollum Research Scholarship
5. Davis Curry, Lawrence, Elmer McCollum Research Scholarship
6. Madeline Isom, Lawrence, Thomas Milne Scholarship
7. Jenna Williams, De Soto, Adrienne Hiscox Mitchell Scholarship
8. Hanna Nguyen, Lawrence, Burton & Cheryle MacKenzie Scholarship
9. Ian Freed, Prairie Village, Burton & Cheryle MacKenzie Scholarship
10. Emily Mikeska, Lawrence, Drs. Walter & Roy Cross Memorial Award
11. Matthew Zupan, Lawrence, Drs. Walter & Roy Cross Memorial Award
12. Patrick Connelly, Olathe, Kristina May Paquette Scholarship
13. Emily Kurfman, Lawrence, Charles & Beatrice Kulier Scholarship

Kansas 2023 Chemistry Graduate Top Overall Awards:
1. Ashley Borkowski, Lawrence, Paul & Helen Gilles Award in Physical Chemistry

2023 Chemistry Undergraduate Summer Scholars:
2. Cecilia Paranjothi, Lawrence, Jack & Carolyn Landgrebe Research Scholarship

Kansas 2023 Chemistry Graduate Summer Scholars:
3. Lindsey Penland, Lawrence, Berger Summer Scholar
4. Evelyn Pinedo, Lawrence, Landgrebe Summer Scholar
5. Eliza Hanson, Lawrence, Lee Summer Scholar
6. Joseph Karnes, Derby, Lee Summer Scholar
7. Joseph Mandigo, Lawrence, Marsi Summer Scholar.

-30-
————————————————————————

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

Working Cowboys Getting Ultimate Test At Santa Fe Trail Ranch Rodeo

0
Frank J Buchman
Frank Buchman

Top working cowboys and their families from throughout the Midwest have July 7-8 circled on their calendars.
“It’s the annual Santa Fe Trail Ranch Rodeo sanctioned by the Working Ranch Cowboys Association (WRCA),” according to Clay Wilson.
“This year’s competition again sponsored by the Morris County Youth Rodeo Association (MCYRA) will be extra special,” said Wilson, MCYRA president.
“The first ranch rodeo in the state and one of the first in the country was at Council Grove,” Wilson noted.
A number of ranch rodeo sponsors around the Midwest patterned their competitions after the one at Council Grove.
“In conjunction with our ranch rodeos, we started having a youth ranch rodeo for children of the contestants,” Wilson said. “This appealed to the working cowboys making our rodeo a family affair not just for the adults.”
Due to the appeal of such junior rodeos, now the WRCA is sanctioning youth competitions along with traditional ranch rodeos.
“We are excited to again host one of these WRCA Youth Ranch Rodeos at Council Grove,” Wilson said. “While our regular WRCA competitions are Friday and Saturday evenings, the youth ranch rodeo is Saturday morning, July 8, at 10 o’clock.”
Featured youth events are calf branding, doctoring, cattle sorting, and penning with local ranchers also providing that livestock. There will be no admittance fee to attend the youth rodeo with six teams entered.
A Youth World Championship Ranch Rodeo is during the 28th World Championship Ranch Rodeo in Amarillo, Texas, November 9-12.
“Our youngsters are so important. They are the next generation of our ranching community,” said Shawn Goemmer, WRCA president.
Throughout the year, qualifying youth ranch rodeo events will be geared for youth members 16 years of age and under. “Up to eight WRCA youth ranch teams will compete for the WRCA Youth World Champion title,” Goemmer said.
“Winner of the Santa Fe trail Youth Ranch Rodeo will be qualified for that prestigious competition,” Wilson pointed out.
At the Council Grove arena, four member teams representing 14 ranches have entered the WRCA evening performances at 7 o’clock.
“Top scoring team from both performances qualifies for the WRCA World Championship competition,” Wilson said. “Several winners from previous Santa Fe Trail Ranch Rodeos have gone on to become world champions.
Ranch bronc riding featuring some of the top bucking horses in the country will kick off each WRCA evening performance.
In a return engagement, OMAK Rodeo Company, owned by Don Reno of Nowata, Oklahoma, is again providing the broncs. The horses are production of his “Born To Buck” rodeo bronc breeding program.
“These stout bucking horses have been contracted to a dozen top professional rodeos since the spring season began,” Wilson said.
“We are contracting some of our broncs to the famed Cheyenne Frontier Days again this year,” Reno said. “Several of the broncs we have there will also be at this year’s Santa Fe Trail Ranch Rodeo.”
Furthering the exciting colorful Western competition for the working ranch cowboys will be the wild cow milking event.
“This is always an anticipated feature,” Wilson assured. “It’ll be even more exciting for contestants and spectators alike this year.”
A working cowboy, rodeo champion, Les McGee of Greeley is providing his big, rank, bright-speckled Longhorn cows for the event. “Those stout ornery momma cows will surely test the cowboys’ abilities,” Wilson added.
Additionally, “true to life cowboys’ work on the ranch” featured in the rodeo will be calf branding, stray gathering, and team penning.
“This livestock is provided by local ranchers straight from Flint Hills pastures here in Morris and surrounding counties,” Wilson said.
Concessions by the sponsoring group will be available throughout each rodeo performance.
Additional information for entries and details is available from Wilson at 785-466-1359.

CUTLINES
Here they come fresh off the range, OMAK Rodeo Company “Born To Buck” broncs from Nowata, Oklahoma, for the Santa Fe Trail Ranch Rodeo Friday and Saturday evenings, July 7-8, at Council Grove.

Local riders and contestants from throughout the Midwest are expected for the Working Ranch Cowboys Association sanctioned youth ranch rodeo at Council Grove, Saturday morning, July 8. That competition is a feature of the annual WRCA rodeo Friday and Saturday evenings, July 7-8.

A working ranch cowboy, Les McGee of Greeley is providing his big, rank, bright-speckled Longhorn cows for the wild cow milking in the Santa Fe Trail Ranch Rodeo, July 7-8, at Council Grove.

From the sidelines to the arena dust, little cowboys and cowgirls are what the Morris County Youth Rodeo Association is all about. They’ll be watching and competing during the Working Ranch Cowboys Association sanctioned competitions at Council Grove, July 7-8.

Working Cowboys Getting Ultimate Test At Santa Fe Trail Ranch Rodeo

0

Top working cowboys and their families from throughout the Midwest have July 7-8 circled on their calendars.
“It’s the annual Santa Fe Trail Ranch Rodeo sanctioned by the Working Ranch Cowboys Association (WRCA),” according to Clay Wilson.
“This year’s competition again sponsored by the Morris County Youth Rodeo Association (MCYRA) will be extra special,” said Wilson, MCYRA president.
“The first ranch rodeo in the state and one of the first in the country was at Council Grove,” Wilson noted.
A number of ranch rodeo sponsors around the Midwest patterned their competitions after the one at Council Grove.
“In conjunction with our ranch rodeos, we started having a youth ranch rodeo for children of the contestants,” Wilson said. “This appealed to the working cowboys making our rodeo a family affair not just for the adults.”
Due to the appeal of such junior rodeos, now the WRCA is sanctioning youth competitions along with traditional ranch rodeos.
“We are excited to again host one of these WRCA Youth Ranch Rodeos at Council Grove,” Wilson said. “While our regular WRCA competitions are Friday and Saturday evenings, the youth ranch rodeo is Saturday morning, July 8, at 10 o’clock.”
Featured youth events are calf branding, doctoring, cattle sorting, and penning with local ranchers also providing that livestock. There will be no admittance fee to attend the youth rodeo with six teams entered.
A Youth World Championship Ranch Rodeo is during the 28th World Championship Ranch Rodeo in Amarillo, Texas, November 9-12.
“Our youngsters are so important. They are the next generation of our ranching community,” said Shawn Goemmer, WRCA president.
Throughout the year, qualifying youth ranch rodeo events will be geared for youth members 16 years of age and under. “Up to eight WRCA youth ranch teams will compete for the WRCA Youth World Champion title,” Goemmer said.
“Winner of the Santa Fe trail Youth Ranch Rodeo will be qualified for that prestigious competition,” Wilson pointed out.
At the Council Grove arena, four member teams representing 14 ranches have entered the WRCA evening performances at 7 o’clock.
“Top scoring team from both performances qualifies for the WRCA World Championship competition,” Wilson said. “Several winners from previous Santa Fe Trail Ranch Rodeos have gone on to become world champions.
Ranch bronc riding featuring some of the top bucking horses in the country will kick off each WRCA evening performance.
In a return engagement, OMAK Rodeo Company, owned by Don Reno of Nowata, Oklahoma, is again providing the broncs. The horses are production of his “Born To Buck” rodeo bronc breeding program.
“These stout bucking horses have been contracted to a dozen top professional rodeos since the spring season began,” Wilson said.
“We are contracting some of our broncs to the famed Cheyenne Frontier Days again this year,” Reno said. “Several of the broncs we have there will also be at this year’s Santa Fe Trail Ranch Rodeo.”
Furthering the exciting colorful Western competition for the working ranch cowboys will be the wild cow milking event.
“This is always an anticipated feature,” Wilson assured. “It’ll be even more exciting for contestants and spectators alike this year.”
A working cowboy, rodeo champion, Les McGee of Greeley is providing his big, rank, bright-speckled Longhorn cows for the event. “Those stout ornery momma cows will surely test the cowboys’ abilities,” Wilson added.
Additionally, “true to life cowboys’ work on the ranch” featured in the rodeo will be calf branding, stray gathering, and team penning.
“This livestock is provided by local ranchers straight from Flint Hills pastures here in Morris and surrounding counties,” Wilson said.
Concessions by the sponsoring group will be available throughout each rodeo performance.
Additional information for entries and details is available from Wilson at 785-466-1359.

CUTLINES
Here they come fresh off the range, OMAK Rodeo Company “Born To Buck” broncs from Nowata, Oklahoma, for the Santa Fe Trail Ranch Rodeo Friday and Saturday evenings, July 7-8, at Council Grove.

Local riders and contestants from throughout the Midwest are expected for the Working Ranch Cowboys Association sanctioned youth ranch rodeo at Council Grove, Saturday morning, July 8. That competition is a feature of the annual WRCA rodeo Friday and Saturday evenings, July 7-8.

A working ranch cowboy, Les McGee of Greeley is providing his big, rank, bright-speckled Longhorn cows for the wild cow milking in the Santa Fe Trail Ranch Rodeo, July 7-8, at Council Grove.

From the sidelines to the arena dust, little cowboys and cowgirls are what the Morris County Youth Rodeo Association is all about. They’ll be watching and competing during the Working Ranch Cowboys Association sanctioned competitions at Council Grove, July 7-8.

Swallows Take Over Barn

0

Barn swallows have returned in full force, sometimes seeming to completely take over the barn and ranch.
Uncertain when the unique birds started arriving this spring or when they left last year.
When barn swallows come, their presence is made most aware. As many as a dozen will swoop out of the barn nests and into the yard. They can give the feeling of wanting to attack but then glide right back up into the air.
The barn swallow is the most abundant and widely distributed swallow species in the world, according to bird specialists. It breeds throughout the Northern Hemisphere and winters in much of the Southern Hemisphere.
Barn swallows once nested in caves throughout North America, but now build their nests almost exclusively on human-made structures.
Horses are cautious of barn swallows initially and hesitate to move forward until becoming accustomed to the birds’ flight patterns.
Perhaps the little birds don’t feel secure around the horses either at first either. They can act territorial around their nests and will dive-bomb making alarm calls if feeling threatened. Fluffy the ranch cat was a target of one.
Nests really do make a mess on barn stall rafters and ceilings. Because it takes around two weeks for a pair to build a nest from mud, hair, and other materials, old nests are highly prized. So, there are old nests from several years with new ones added each year.
About 44 percent of all barn swallows will return to nest in the same area they nested in the previous year. If the birds decide to renovate their old nest, they begin by throwing out and replacing old nesting material. They then add more mud around the nest’s rim.
Uncertain exactly how many swallows there are in the barn and wonder if any of them have been here before.
There’s supposed to be an enormous benefit to having barn swallows. They are good at harvesting insects and reducing the number of harmful bugs like black widow spiders and biting flies.
Barn swallows can evidently be scared away if desired but there’s no intention of doing such a thing.
Reminded of Psalm 84.3: “The bird has found a house, And the swallow a nest for herself, where she may lay her young, Even Your altars, O Lord my God.”
+++ALLELUIA+++
XVII–27–7-2-2023

“Do Not Miss the Signs of a Blood Clot”

0

 

The patient was young, healthy, and short of breath. She had not been sick recently, other than a minor cough. Her oxygen level was normal and her lungs sounded clear. Her heart rate was a little fast and she was breathing rather quickly, too. She was anxious about it, but she knew there was more to this than anxiety. Meanwhile, she was taking an antibiotic for bronchitis which did not seem to be helping. We did some additional tests, some blood work, to look for other possible causes. One test result gave us a big clue: her “d-dimer” was elevated. While not tied to a specific diagnosis, this gave us more reason to keep looking.

We proceeded to get a CT pulmonary angiogram, a special scan of the chest, specifically looking at the vessels that run from the heart to the lungs, looking for a blood clot. Sure enough, that is what it was: a pulmonary embolism. The treatment was medication to help thin the blood, which helps the clot to gradually dissolve. She was relieved to know the cause of her symptoms and within days she was feeling better.

Without treatment a pulmonary embolism, or blood clot in the lungs, can be fatal. Thus, early detection and treatment is key. Unfortunately, detecting it may be difficult, especially since the symptoms are often vague and common with numerous other illnesses.

In addition to shortness of breath, coughing, wheezing, coughing up blood, or pain with breathing can be symptoms of a blood clot. Another hallmark symptom of a blood clot may be calf pain or swelling. Unexplained swelling and pain of a limb may indicate a deep vein thrombosis (DVT), a blood clot in the leg or arm. Left untreated, a DVT can become larger and may break off and go through the heart to the lung vessels and cause a pulmonary embolism (PE).

A person may be at increased risk of a clot due to a genetic condition, an illness, pregnancy, after surgery, after an injury, because of cancer, or because of medications such as birth control pills. Covid has been a more recent cause. Sometimes a clot happens for no apparent reason. Prolonged travel is also a reason, so on a long drive or flight, take time to stop and stretch your legs. Wearing high compression socks while traveling may also be helpful.

Shortness of breath can be a symptom of numerous ailments, major or minor. No matter the reason, however, please consult your doctor if you are short of breath or have unexplained swelling of an arm or leg. It could be a blood clot.

Andrew Ellsworth, M.D. is part of The Prairie Doc® team of physicians and currently practices family medicine in Brookings, South Dakota. Follow The Prairie Doc® at www.prairiedoc.org and on Facebook featuring On Call with the Prairie Doc® a medical Q&A show based on science, built on trust for 21 seasons, streaming live on Facebook most Thursdays at 7 p.m. central.