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Home Blog Page 393
By
Guest Columnist
-
June 9, 2024
0

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

Media advisory

Contact: Jackson DeAndrea, Dole Institute of Politics, 785-864-4900, [email protected], @DoleInstitute

Media invited to KU program featuring NATO Military Committee Chair Admiral Robert Bauer on June 4

 

LAWRENCE — Members of the media are invited to the University of Kansas at 6:30 p.m. June 4 to cover a presentation by Admiral Robert Bauer (Royal Netherlands Navy), chair of the Military Committee of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Bauer will speak to an invitation-only audience at the Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics on the future of NATO in a new era of collective defense.

Following his presentation, Bauer will sit for a discussion on the topic with Dole Institute Visiting Fellow Gerald Seib.

The Office of the Chancellor is hosting Bauer in partnership with the Dole Institute, the Truman Library Institute and the Eisenhower Presidential Library and Foundation.

Bauer is the 33rd chair of the NATO Military Committee. In his role, Bauer serves as the military adviser to Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and the North Atlantic Council — making him NATO’s most senior military officer. Before joining NATO, he served as a commissioned officer in the Royal Netherlands Navy, where he commanded various posts. He also served as director of plans, vice chief of defense and chief of defense for the Netherlands Armed Forces.

Although this program is closed to the public, limited seating will be available for news media wishing to cover the event. The program will be livestreamed on the Dole Institute’s YouTube channel.

Email Jackson DeAndrea by noon June 3 to request media credentials.

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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 announces contract extension for Director of Athletics Travis Goff

By
Guest Columnist
-
June 9, 2024
0

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

Headlines

Editors: See contract information online.

Contact: Daniel Berk, Kansas Athletics, [email protected]

KU announces contract extension for Director of Athletics Travis Goff

LAWRENCE — University of Kansas Director of Athletics Travis Goff has signed a seven-year contract extension that will keep him at KU through 2031.

The agreement extends Goff’s contract — originally a five-year deal worth $700,000 annually — through May 31, 2031, and increases his base salary to $1.3 million. Goff’s title will also be elevated to Director of Athletics/Vice Chancellor for Athletics.

“Travis has proven to be among the most respected athletic directors in the country and terrific fit for KU at this moment in our history,” said Douglas A. Girod, chancellor of the University of Kansas. “He has established a culture of excellence and integrity within Kansas Athletics — and done so while navigating unprecedented changes to the collegiate athletics landscape and positioning KU for long-term success. We are thrilled he’s a Jayhawk, and we look forward to his leadership for years to come.”

Since returning to his alma mater, Goff has hired Football Head Coach Lance Leipold, signed Basketball Head Coach Bill Self to an amended contract and helped raised nearly $300 million in combined donor and state support for the university’s Gateway District, which will include a transformed David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium and a conference center to generate revenue for academic programming. Additionally, Allen Fieldhouse is currently in the final phase of a $50 million renovation that began in 2023 under Goff’s leadership.

More broadly, Goff has guided KU through an extraordinary shift in the collegiate athletics landscape that has included conference realignment; new long-term TV contracts; the implementation of name, image and likeness (NIL) policies; an overhaul of student-athlete transfer rules and congressional legislation that has greatly affected the future of collegiate athletics. Also under his leadership, KU student-athletes have thrived academically, setting or tying a department record for NCAA Graduation Success Rate for three straight years.

Prior to joining KU in April 2021, Goff served as Northwestern University’s deputy director of athletics and assistant vice president. Before joining Northwestern, he served as associate athletics director for external affairs at Tulane University and worked in athletics development at KU, where he earned his undergraduate degree.

“The University of Kansas is responsible for so many of the blessings in my life: an exceptional student experience and degree, my passion for college athletics and the opportunity for my wife, Nancy, and I to raise our family in this community, amongst many others,” Goff said. “I have the privilege to work with the best coaches and staff in the country, and together, we serve a remarkable university, passionate fanbase and, most importantly, 500 of the most inspiring young people in society – Jayhawk student-athletes.”

Goff continued: “I am thankful to Chancellor Girod for his continued trust in our team, and I am honored and humbled by the opportunity to continue leading Kansas Athletics through a pivotal time. Rest assured, our best days are ahead.”

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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: Ten KU Law students honored for scholarship, leadership and service

By
Guest Columnist
-
June 9, 2024
0

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

Headlines

Editors: Note honorees from Lawrence, Wathena, Wichita and the Greater Kansas City area.

 

Contact: Emma Herrman, School of Law, [email protected], @kulawschool

Ten KU Law students honored for scholarship, leadership and service

 

LAWRENCE – Ten University of Kansas School of Law students received awards during the spring 2024 semester for distinguishing themselves in scholarship, leadership and service to the law school and the community.

The recipients:

Anshul Banga, Atlanta: Class of 1949 Leadership Award
Elm Beck, Olathe: Samuel Mellinger Scholarship, Leadership and Service Award
Chris Birzer, Leawood: Faculty Award for Outstanding Scholastic Achievement
Karlie Bischoff, Kansas City, Missouri: Samuel Mellinger Scholarship, Leadership and Service Award
Abbey Brower, Sterling, Colorado: Walter Hiersteiner Outstanding Service Award
Christy Harris, Dallas: The Dru Mort Sampson Center for Diversity & Inclusion Award of Distinction
Jackie Jeschke, Lawrence: Robert F. Bennett Award
Anthony Leeks, Wichita: Janean Meigs Memorial Award
Olivia Almirudis Schneider, San Antonio: Class of 1949 Leadership Award
Collin Studer, Wathena: Justice Lloyd Kagey Leadership Award

All but one of the honorees are graduates in the Class of 2024 who were recognized at the KU Law hooding ceremony May 11. Chris Birzer, of Leawood, was selected to serve as the 2024 banner carrier, an honor bestowed upon the student who exemplifies excellence in their program. The class is composed of 118 recipients of the Juris Doctor as well as four Master of Laws in American Legal Studies and 12 Master of Science in Homeland Security: Law & Policy graduates.

Funds for the awards are managed by KU Endowment, the independent and nonprofit organization serving as KU’s official fundraising and fund-management organization. Founded in 1891, KU Endowment was the first foundation of its kind at a U.S. public university.

Student awards are listed below alphabetically.

Anshul Banga, of Atlanta, received the Class of 1949 Leadership Award. This award is given to the students who contributed most significantly to the overall experience of the students in Green Hall. Throughout his time in law school, he has held leadership positions and given back to the KU Law community in many ways. Banga served as Student Bar Association president for the 2023-2024 academic year and served as co-president of Student Ambassadors. He also served as chief judge of traffic court. Banga is the son of Ajay and Saveta Banga. He is a graduate of Peachtree Ridge High School and the University of Georgia.

Elm Beck, of Olathe, received the Samuel Mellinger Scholarship, Leadership and Service Award. This award is given annually to the graduate who has most distinguished themselves in the combined areas of scholarship, leadership and service. Beck was the founder of the Trans Law Students Association. They also served as a Dean’s Fellow, Shook Hardy & Bacon Scholar and executive staff articles editor for the Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy. During law school, they volunteered as a Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) in Douglas County, completing over 160 hours of pro bono service and earning Pro Bono Distinction upon graduation. Beck is the child of Darren and Angela Beck. They graduated from the University of Kansas.

Chris Birzer, of Leawood, received the Faculty Award for Outstanding Scholastic Achievement. This award is given to the graduate who has made the most significant contribution toward overall legal scholarship. A gifted moot court competitor, Birzer won the NNALSA Moot Court Competition as a second-year student and has since served on the Moot Court Council and the Kansas Law Review as the executive comments editor. His paper discussing third-party felony murder was published in Kansas Law Review. Birzer is the son of Kevin and Michele Birzer. He is a graduate of Blue Valley West High School, KU and Emporia State University.

Karlie Bischoff, of Kansas City, Missouri, received the Samuel Mellinger Scholarship, Leadership and Service Award. This award is given to the graduates who have most distinguished themselves in the combined areas of scholarship, leadership and service. Bischoff served as an articles editor for the Kansas Law Review, where she wrote two published articles, participated in moot court competitions and was a member of the Moot Court Council. She was a Student Ambassador for all three years as well as a Lawyering Skills writing teaching assistant, providing effective mentoring and assistance for students who needed extra help with writing skills. Bischoff is the daughter of Robert and Lisa Bischoff. She graduated from Park Hill South High School and Truman State University.

Abbey Brower, of Sterling, Colorado, received the Walter Hiersteiner Outstanding Service Award. The recipient of this award is the graduate whose service to their fellow students in the School of Law or the university community demonstrates the greatest promise for contribution to the legal profession and to society. This past year, Brower represented KU Law at Baylor University’s “The Closer” Transactional Law competition. She was a Lawyering Skills teaching assistant who went above and beyond to connect with students. Brower is the daughter of Chris and Julie Brower. She graduated from Sterling High School and Colorado State University.

Christy Harris, of Dallas, received the Dru Mort Sampson Center for Diversity & Inclusion Award of Distinction as a second-year student. This award is given to a student who has exhibited exemplary leadership and a commitment to promoting diversity and belonging – both in Green Hall and in the law school’s broader communities. Harris has served as a Student Ambassador for two years and as secretary this past year for the Black Law Student Association (BLSA). She graduated from Skyline High School and Texas A&M University – Commerce.

Jackie Jeschke, of Lawrence, received the Robert F. Bennett Award. This award is presented to the graduate whose undergraduate degree is from a Kansas university or college and who has demonstrated leadership qualities through public service. This year, Jeschke served as co-head Dean’s Fellow and the editor-in-chief of the Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy. She took home first place at the Wayne State Taft Transactional Law Competition with her partner, Alli Baden. Jeschke is the daughter of Neil and Donna McCullough. She graduated from Free State High School, KU and KU Medical Center.

Anthony Leeks, of Wichita, received the Janean Meigs Memorial Award. This award is given to the graduate who has demonstrated a caring spirit in service to the students of the university and/or the community at large. This past year, Leeks led two student organizations as president: Sports Law Society and Black Law Students Association (BLSA). He was an active member of KU Law’s Moot Court Program and won the second-best brief award at this year’s Stetson International Environmental Moot Court Competition. Leeks is the son of Anthony and Robin Leeks. He graduated from Wichita West High School and KU.

Olivia Almirudis Schneider, of San Antonio, received the Class of 1949 Leadership Award. This award is given to the students who contributed most significantly to the overall experience of the students in Green Hall. Schneider served as the president of the Student Bar Association for first-year law students, president of Women in Law, was a Student Ambassador and staff editor for the Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy. In her second year, she was a member of the Dean’s Professional Identity Formation Committee and was part of the Dean’s Academic Affairs Committee in her third year. She brought back Pub Night to its pre-pandemic glory, raising record funds for a local nonprofit, and served as a mentor to other organizations including First Gen Professionals and the Hispanic American Law Students Association. She graduated from the University of Incarnate Word.

Collin Studer, of Wathena, received the Justice Lloyd Kagey Leadership Award. This award is presented to the graduate who has most distinguished themselves through leadership in the School of Law. This year, Studer served as the editor-in-chief of the Kansas Law Review. He has also been a member of the Moot Court Council. As personable as he is kind, Studer leads his classmates by example. He is always open and available to give personal advice or have a legal discussion and has a curious legal mind. He graduated from Wathena High School and Baker 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

 

KU News: KU establishes $11 million biomedical center to advance women’s health using big data

By
Guest Columnist
-
June 9, 2024
0

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

Headlines

KU establishes $11 million biomedical center to advance women’s health using big data

LAWRENCE — A new $11.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health will establish a multidisciplinary biomedical center at the University of Kansas to research big data’s potential to improve women’s health. The award is a component of the NIH Institutional Development Award Program and will be KU’s fifth Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) since the program’s inception in the 1990s.

Dyche Hall Grotesque Renewal Project honored with historic preservation award

LAWRENCE – The Dyche Hall Grotesque Renewal Project received the Medallion Award, the highest award bestowed by the Kansas Preservation Alliance, at the 2024 Kansas State Preservation Conference on May 17 in Newton. The project, led by local artists Karl Ramberg and Laura Ramberg and University of Kansas architecture faculty members Keith Van de Riet and Amy Van de Riet, began in 2017 and combined traditional stonecraft with modern 3D imaging to recarve the eight limestone grotesques perched on Dyche Hall, which houses the Biodiversity Institute and Natural History Museum at KU.

Education in an AI World summer conference to be hosted for educators

LAWRENCE — The School of Education & Human Sciences at the University of Kansas will host the 2024 Strategies for Educational Improvement Summer Conference for the region’s PK-12 educators as a hybrid professional development event. This year’s conference, Tomorrow Is Here: Education in an AI World, will take place from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. June 14 in the BEST Building at KU’s Edwards Campus.

Spain still struggles over interpretation of its Golden Age, author writes in new book

LAWRENCE — As headlines about the Catalan independence movement show, the threat of Spain’s dissolution is ever present. And, as such, all sides try to exploit the country’s literary legacy for their own benefit. “If you want to understand the chaos of Spain, pay more attention to how they’re using their classics, because that gives you a sense of the current state of things,” said Robert Bayliss, University of Kansas professor of Spanish and author of “The Currency of Cultural Patrimony: The Spanish Golden Age.”

 

Full stories below.

 

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Contact: Brendan Lynch, KU News Service, 785-864-8855, [email protected], @BrendanMLynch

KU establishes $11 million biomedical center to advance women’s health using big data

 

LAWRENCE — A new $11.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health will establish a multidisciplinary biomedical center at the University of Kansas to research big data’s potential to improve women’s health.

The award is a component of the NIH Institutional Development Award Program and will be KU’s fifth Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) since the program’s inception in the 1990s.

“This is part of NIH’s EPSCoR effort to enhance research in states like Kansas that historically have received a smaller portion of the pie,” said principal investigator Heather Desaire, Dean’s Professor and Keith D. Wilner Chair in Chemistry at KU, who will serve as the center’s director. “We’re going to leverage big data to improve women’s health. All of the research projects within the center will have a component of using large data sets or machine learning, and an application area related to women’s health in some way — especially looking at health disparities that women incur. We’re talking about diseases like ovarian cancer, breast cancer, multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer’s disease, which are more prevalent in women.”

By funding research projects, supporting faculty, improving lab facilities and boosting collaboration across scholarly fields, the center will harness complex datasets to tackle biomedical issues vital to women. The leading collaborators at KU come from a range of laboratory sciences as well as behavioral and social sciences.

Five KU faculty will lead biomedical research projects, each of which could serve as a springboard to further funding opportunities. The research project leaders are Rebecca Whelan, associate professor of chemistry; Meredith Hartley, assistant professor of chemistry; Amber Watts, associate professor of psychology; Jarron Saint Onge, professor of sociology and population health; and Misty Heggeness, associate professor of public affairs & administration and associate research scientist at KU’s Institute for Policy & Social Research.

Additionally, the new grant will support three new tenure-track faculty hires at KU in the departments of Chemistry, Psychology and Sociology, whose research will focus on the intersection of big data and biomedical research benefiting women. A Research-Engaged Faculty Fellows Program also will be established under the grant.

The new center at KU will expand education and training of students in handling complex datasets as well.

“Psychology is leading the charge in developing a data science curriculum at KU,” Desaire said. “They’re very tied into this grant, and that will be an area where there will be synergy in teaching and training students.”

Moreover, the Kansas Board of Regents has awarded the new center matching funds earmarked toward training students in data science, boosting the state’s workforce in the burgeoning field.

The researchers, students and faculty involved will be backed by a new Biomedical Datasets and Services Core Lab at KU supported under the NIH award that will serve other research efforts at KU and even private industry, too.

“This core lab is run by Donna Ginther (Roy A. Roberts and Regents Distinguished Professor of Economics at KU) and will focus on biomedical data sets, which is a new expansion of the scope of her center’s past work,” Desaire said.

The Datasets and Services core will be run under the umbrella of the Institute for Policy & Social Research, a center Ginther heads at KU.

“The five project leaders will be served by the datasets core, as will anybody in the entire KU community who needs statistics support, dataset analysis or help finding a dataset relevant to a project they are pursuing,” Desaire added.

The multimillion-dollar economic boost to Kansas through direct spending and new research positions is just one way the center will benefit the region. Planned research also will draw data from regional communities that often find themselves overlooked in biomedical studies. For instance, according to Desaire, most clinical trials operate out of city hospitals, leaving women living in rural communities under-researched.

“If you live out in western Kansas, the chances of you participating in those types of things are smaller,” said the KU researcher. “Sometimes it’s a matter of having somebody specifically ask the question, ‘How do you know these health factors impact somebody’s overall health in rural settings versus urban settings — where we have most of the data from?’”

Heggeness, one of the project leaders, will focus on telemedicine, another growing means to provide health care to people in less populated areas of the state.

“The telemedicine project is specifically addressing rural health issues that are relevant to Kansas,” Desaire said.

The final objective of the Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence program is to train and retain highly qualified faculty so that even beyond the COBRE funding, new ideas can be launched and developed in states like Kansas.

“My very first grant funding was a research project on Bob Hanzlik’s COBRE grant here at KU in 2002,“ Desaire said. “The program was invaluable in my development as a grant-funded scientist. Now, over 20 years later, it’s exciting to get to pay it forward and help other faculty accelerate their research.”

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The official university account for X (formerly Twitter) is @UnivOfKansas.

Follow @KUnews for KU News Service stories, discoveries and experts.

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Contact: Natalie Vondrak, Natural History Museum/Biodiversity Research Institute, [email protected]

Dyche Hall Grotesque Renewal Project honored with historic preservation award

 

LAWRENCE – The Dyche Hall Grotesque Renewal Project received the Medallion Award, the highest award bestowed by the Kansas Preservation Alliance, at the 2024 Kansas State Preservation Conference on May 17 in Newton.

The project, led by local artists Karl Ramberg and Laura Ramberg and University of Kansas architecture faculty members Keith Van de Riet and Amy Van de Riet, began in 2017 and combined traditional stonecraft with modern 3D imaging to recarve the eight limestone grotesques perched on Dyche Hall, which houses the Biodiversity Institute and Natural History Museum at KU.

The original grotesques were created by Joseph Roblado Frazee and his son Vitruvius and kept a watchful eye over Jayhawk Boulevard for over 100 years. In 2017, the limestone creatures were removed due to deterioration and were on view at the KU Natural History Museum, while the new, hand-carved statues were created by the Rambergs.

By November 2020, all eight grotesques were complete, and by 2022, they were placed atop Dyche Hall.

“Having the Medallion Award bestowed to the Grotesque Renewal Project is the perfect ending to an amazing project,” Amy Van de Riet said. “This award is a reflection of the stewardship of the KU Biodiversity Institute, the generosity of donors and the community of Lawrence to have retained such talented stone carvers.”

Other contributors are project manager Lori Schlenker, associate director of collections and facilities at the KU Biodiversity Institute and Natural History Museum; project consultant and architect Julia Manglitz at TreanorHL; and the more than 80 donors who gave to the overall rejuvenation project.

The KU Natural History Museum is part of the KU Biodiversity Institute, a KU designated research center studying the biological diversity of the planet. The museum is open to the public 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday and noon-4 p.m. Sunday with free admission, though donations are welcome. Learn more at the museum website.

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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: Aspen Grender, School of Education & Human Sciences, [email protected], @KUSOEHS

Education in an AI World summer conference to be hosted for educators

 

LAWRENCE — The School of Education & Human Sciences at the University of Kansas will host the 2024 Strategies for Educational Improvement Summer Conference for the region’s PK-12 educators as a hybrid professional development event.

This year’s conference, Tomorrow Is Here: Education in an AI World, will take place from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. June 14 in the BEST Building at KU’s Edwards Campus. Leaders in education will discuss the rapidly changing educational landscape during TED-style “EduTalks” on the exciting opportunities and complex challenges offered by artificial intelligence.

The event will include “AI Playground” activities in the afternoon, with opportunities for hands-on experience with a variety of AI tools, and ample time for Q&A and networking. An in-person American Sign Language (ASL) interpreter will be provided.

“With the explosion of emerging AI technologies, we are pleased to being together experts to help teachers navigate the best ways to have AI impact their teaching and the work in schools,” said Rick Ginsberg, dean of the School of Education & Human Sciences. “Adding some hands-on sessions to allow teachers to practice varying approaches and techniques is an exciting addition this year.”

Morning sessions include:

“From AI to IA: Co-evolve with Artificial Intelligence,” Yong Zhao, professor, Department of Educational Leadership & Policy Studies, KU
“From Chalkboards to Chatbots – Teaching in an AI World,” Ronnie Williams, coordinator of instructional resources, Greenbush Education Service Center, Girard
“AI: Looking Forward,” James Basham, professor, Department of Special Education, KU
“AI From the Classroom,” Jessica Tickle, teacher, Shawnee Mission School District
“The Intersection of the Human Brain and AI in the Classroom,” Lisa Dieker, professor, Department of Special Education, KU
“AI Guidance for Educators,” Stephen King, education program consultant, Career Standards and Assessment Services, Kansas State Department of Education

AI Playground sessions include:

“Hone Your AI Skills: Using AI for Lesson Planning”
“Exploring AI”: Become an AI prompt engineer. Tips for writing good prompts. Led by Dean Rick Ginsberg.

See the full schedule at the event website.

 

The event is free and open to the public, but registration is required by 5 p.m. June 10.

 

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Don’t miss new episodes of “When Experts Attack!,”

a KU News Service podcast hosted by Kansas Public Radio.

 

https://kansaspublicradio.org/podcast/when-experts-attack

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

Spain still struggles over interpretation of its Golden Age, author writes in new book

 

LAWRENCE – At first blush, Spain seems like a solid nation. But as headlines about the Catalan independence movement and its exiled leader Carles Puigdemont show, the threat of dissolution is ever present. And, as such, all sides try to exploit the country’s literary legacy for their own benefit.

 

“If you want to understand the chaos of Spain, pay more attention to how they’re using their classics, because that gives you a sense of the current state of things,” said Robert Bayliss, University of Kansas professor of Spanish and author of the new book “The Currency of Cultural Patrimony: The Spanish Golden Age” (Liverpool University Press).

The “currency” of the title refers both to the contemporary nature of the debates over Spanish nationalism and the money that governments and other institutions have spent over the past century promoting canonical works from the period just before and after 1600.

Bayliss looks at the history of three Golden Age texts — Lope de Vega’s 1619 play “Fuenteovejuna,” Miguel de Cervantes’ 1605-1615 novel “Don Quixote” and the legend of “El Cid” — exploring how each has been staged and seen throughout the modern era, and how that history, in turn, has affected the way they are viewed today.

“Don Quixote” is undoubtedly Spain’s urtext, Bayliss said. It’s why Spain sponsors Cervantes Institutes around the world to spread its culture and promote tourism.

The cumulative uses of these texts for centuries, the KU researcher said, continually add new meaning to them.

“It’s like a snowball effect where it rolls down the hill and gets bigger and bigger,” Bayliss said. “Their reappearance in popular culture is especially worth examining during times in Spanish history marked by cultural crisis or calamity.

“When Spain finds itself in crisis, Spaniards are prompted to ask, ‘Who are we? Where do we find inspiration?’ This is when the classics become newly current, as they are engaged to provide answers. So ‘Don Quixote’ was used to stimulate tourism in the 1950s during Francisco Franco’s fascist regime, just as the character was engaged to inspire Spaniards after the Spanish-American War in 1898. So we have all these texts written about how he’s an allegory for the Spanish nation, and he’s fighting the windmills of the Industrial Revolution, or communism, or whatever the case may be at the time.”

The meanings impressed upon Lope de Vega’s play “Fuenteovejuna” and the legend of “El Cid” are somewhat more contested, in Bayliss’ telling.

The KU researcher sketches the historical roots of the knight/prince Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar, (1043-1099) known as El Cid, following as he is transformed from 12th century ballad to Golden Age play to the 1961 Hollywood blockbuster “El Cid” starring Charlton Heston to the 2003 animated film “El Cid: La Leyenda” (The Legend).

This last iteration, Bayliss notes, was not only affected by its proximity to the 9/11 terror attacks, the subsequent U.S. invasion of Iraq, and the Spanish socialist backlash against that, but also the Heston movie.

Thus, he writes, the film “re-codes an already (geo)politically re-coded narrative, through a discursive re-coding of one midcentury Hollywood genre (Hollywood Epic) through the lens of another (Disney).”

He continues: “The upshot of how this film might inform debates on immigration from Northern Africa is clear enough: While good, Spanish Muslims contribute to the nation’s cultural strength and diversity, the bad foreign Muslim power is an Other whose exclusion should motivate policy reforms.”

Bayliss writes that Vega’s “Fuenteovejuna … dramatizes the medieval uprising of a rural village against its tyrannical and sexually predatory Comendador,” or knight/commander. He said it “makes the small town into an allegory for national civil strife.”

The book explores how, during the reign of Franco, his supporters were able to find support for their version of the essentially Spanish national character in “Fuenteovejuna.” Then the author covers the reaction against that interpretation (and that of Golden Age literature as a whole) in the democratic period that followed, starting in the late 1970s.

Bayliss said Lope de Vega remains adaptable to the present moment, as a 2023 staging of his play “La Villana de Getafe” (“The Old Woman Villager of Getafe”) in the town of that name near Madrid proved. City leaders from the culturally conservative Vox Party objected.

“It was some sort of avant-garde interpretation with a lot of surrealist sexual innuendo blown up in everybody’s face, and so they decided that was too scandalous and they canceled it,” Bayliss said. “Others said, ‘How can you censor this most Spanish of playwrights?’ So it was a case in point of how Golden Age texts end up in the middle of all these culture wars.”

Bayliss writes that he expects that to continue: “Amid these cultural-narrative twists and turns, references to the Spanish Golden Age remain a reliable constant.”

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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 establishes $11 million biomedical center to advance women’s health using big data

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June 9, 2024
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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

KU establishes $11 million biomedical center to advance women’s health using big data

LAWRENCE — A new $11.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health will establish a multidisciplinary biomedical center at the University of Kansas to research big data’s potential to improve women’s health. The award is a component of the NIH Institutional Development Award Program and will be KU’s fifth Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) since the program’s inception in the 1990s.

Dyche Hall Grotesque Renewal Project honored with historic preservation award

LAWRENCE – The Dyche Hall Grotesque Renewal Project received the Medallion Award, the highest award bestowed by the Kansas Preservation Alliance, at the 2024 Kansas State Preservation Conference on May 17 in Newton. The project, led by local artists Karl Ramberg and Laura Ramberg and University of Kansas architecture faculty members Keith Van de Riet and Amy Van de Riet, began in 2017 and combined traditional stonecraft with modern 3D imaging to recarve the eight limestone grotesques perched on Dyche Hall, which houses the Biodiversity Institute and Natural History Museum at KU.

Education in an AI World summer conference to be hosted for educators

LAWRENCE — The School of Education & Human Sciences at the University of Kansas will host the 2024 Strategies for Educational Improvement Summer Conference for the region’s PK-12 educators as a hybrid professional development event. This year’s conference, Tomorrow Is Here: Education in an AI World, will take place from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. June 14 in the BEST Building at KU’s Edwards Campus.

Spain still struggles over interpretation of its Golden Age, author writes in new book

LAWRENCE — As headlines about the Catalan independence movement show, the threat of Spain’s dissolution is ever present. And, as such, all sides try to exploit the country’s literary legacy for their own benefit. “If you want to understand the chaos of Spain, pay more attention to how they’re using their classics, because that gives you a sense of the current state of things,” said Robert Bayliss, University of Kansas professor of Spanish and author of “The Currency of Cultural Patrimony: The Spanish Golden Age.” 

Full stories below.

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Contact: Brendan Lynch, KU News Service, 785-864-8855, [email protected], @BrendanMLynch

KU establishes $11 million biomedical center to advance women’s health using big data

 

LAWRENCE — A new $11.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health will establish a multidisciplinary biomedical center at the University of Kansas to research big data’s potential to improve women’s health.

The award is a component of the NIH Institutional Development Award Program and will be KU’s fifth Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) since the program’s inception in the 1990s.

“This is part of NIH’s EPSCoR effort to enhance research in states like Kansas that historically have received a smaller portion of the pie,” said principal investigator Heather Desaire, Dean’s Professor and Keith D. Wilner Chair in Chemistry at KU, who will serve as the center’s director. “We’re going to leverage big data to improve women’s health. All of the research projects within the center will have a component of using large data sets or machine learning, and an application area related to women’s health in some way — especially looking at health disparities that women incur. We’re talking about diseases like ovarian cancer, breast cancer, multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer’s disease, which are more prevalent in women.”

By funding research projects, supporting faculty, improving lab facilities and boosting collaboration across scholarly fields, the center will harness complex datasets to tackle biomedical issues vital to women. The leading collaborators at KU come from a range of laboratory sciences as well as behavioral and social sciences.

Five KU faculty will lead biomedical research projects, each of which could serve as a springboard to further funding opportunities. The research project leaders are Rebecca Whelan, associate professor of chemistry; Meredith Hartley, assistant professor of chemistry; Amber Watts, associate professor of psychology; Jarron Saint Onge, professor of sociology and population health; and Misty Heggeness, associate professor of public affairs & administration and associate research scientist at KU’s Institute for Policy & Social Research.

Additionally, the new grant will support three new tenure-track faculty hires at KU in the departments of Chemistry, Psychology and Sociology, whose research will focus on the intersection of big data and biomedical research benefiting women. A Research-Engaged Faculty Fellows Program also will be established under the grant.

The new center at KU will expand education and training of students in handling complex datasets as well.

“Psychology is leading the charge in developing a data science curriculum at KU,” Desaire said. “They’re very tied into this grant, and that will be an area where there will be synergy in teaching and training students.”

Moreover, the Kansas Board of Regents has awarded the new center matching funds earmarked toward training students in data science, boosting the state’s workforce in the burgeoning field.

The researchers, students and faculty involved will be backed by a new Biomedical Datasets and Services Core Lab at KU supported under the NIH award that will serve other research efforts at KU and even private industry, too.

“This core lab is run by Donna Ginther (Roy A. Roberts and Regents Distinguished Professor of Economics at KU) and will focus on biomedical data sets, which is a new expansion of the scope of her center’s past work,” Desaire said.

The Datasets and Services core will be run under the umbrella of the Institute for Policy & Social Research, a center Ginther heads at KU.

“The five project leaders will be served by the datasets core, as will anybody in the entire KU community who needs statistics support, dataset analysis or help finding a dataset relevant to a project they are pursuing,” Desaire added.

The multimillion-dollar economic boost to Kansas through direct spending and new research positions is just one way the center will benefit the region. Planned research also will draw data from regional communities that often find themselves overlooked in biomedical studies. For instance, according to Desaire, most clinical trials operate out of city hospitals, leaving women living in rural communities under-researched.

“If you live out in western Kansas, the chances of you participating in those types of things are smaller,” said the KU researcher. “Sometimes it’s a matter of having somebody specifically ask the question, ‘How do you know these health factors impact somebody’s overall health in rural settings versus urban settings — where we have most of the data from?’”

Heggeness, one of the project leaders, will focus on telemedicine, another growing means to provide health care to people in less populated areas of the state.

“The telemedicine project is specifically addressing rural health issues that are relevant to Kansas,” Desaire said.

The final objective of the Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence program is to train and retain highly qualified faculty so that even beyond the COBRE funding, new ideas can be launched and developed in states like Kansas.

“My very first grant funding was a research project on Bob Hanzlik’s COBRE grant here at KU in 2002,“ Desaire said. “The program was invaluable in my development as a grant-funded scientist.  Now, over 20 years later, it’s exciting to get to pay it forward and help other faculty accelerate their research.”

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Contact: Natalie Vondrak, Natural History Museum/Biodiversity Research Institute, [email protected]

Dyche Hall Grotesque Renewal Project honored with historic preservation award

 

LAWRENCE – The Dyche Hall Grotesque Renewal Project received the Medallion Award, the highest award bestowed by the Kansas Preservation Alliance, at the 2024 Kansas State Preservation Conference on May 17 in Newton.

The project, led by local artists Karl Ramberg and Laura Ramberg and University of Kansas architecture faculty members Keith Van de Riet and Amy Van de Riet, began in 2017 and combined traditional stonecraft with modern 3D imaging to recarve the eight limestone grotesques perched on Dyche Hall, which houses the Biodiversity Institute and Natural History Museum at KU.

The original grotesques were created by Joseph Roblado Frazee and his son Vitruvius and kept a watchful eye over Jayhawk Boulevard for over 100 years. In 2017, the limestone creatures were removed due to deterioration and were on view at the KU Natural History Museum, while the new, hand-carved statues were created by the Rambergs.

By November 2020, all eight grotesques were complete, and by 2022, they were placed atop Dyche Hall.

“Having the Medallion Award bestowed to the Grotesque Renewal Project is the perfect ending to an amazing project,” Amy Van de Riet said. “This award is a reflection of the stewardship of the KU Biodiversity Institute, the generosity of donors and the community of Lawrence to have retained such talented stone carvers.”

Other contributors are project manager Lori Schlenker, associate director of collections and facilities at the KU Biodiversity Institute and Natural History Museum; project consultant and architect Julia Manglitz at TreanorHL; and the more than 80 donors who gave to the overall rejuvenation project.

The KU Natural History Museum is part of the KU Biodiversity Institute, a KU designated research center studying the biological diversity of the planet. The museum is open to the public 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday and noon-4 p.m. Sunday with free admission, though donations are welcome. Learn more at the museum website.

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for additional news about the University of Kansas.

http://www.news.ku.edu

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Contact: Aspen Grender, School of Education & Human Sciences, [email protected], @KUSOEHS

Education in an AI World summer conference to be hosted for educators

 

LAWRENCE — The School of Education & Human Sciences at the University of Kansas will host the 2024 Strategies for Educational Improvement Summer Conference for the region’s PK-12 educators as a hybrid professional development event.

This year’s conference, Tomorrow Is Here: Education in an AI World, will take place from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. June 14 in the BEST Building at KU’s Edwards Campus. Leaders in education will discuss the rapidly changing educational landscape during TED-style “EduTalks” on the exciting opportunities and complex challenges offered by artificial intelligence.

The event will include “AI Playground” activities in the afternoon, with opportunities for hands-on experience with a variety of AI tools, and ample time for Q&A and networking. An in-person American Sign Language (ASL) interpreter will be provided.

“With the explosion of emerging AI technologies, we are pleased to being together experts to help teachers navigate the best ways to have AI impact their teaching and the work in schools,” said Rick Ginsberg, dean of the School of Education & Human Sciences. “Adding some hands-on sessions to allow teachers to practice varying approaches and techniques is an exciting addition this year.”

Morning sessions include:

  • “From AI to IA: Co-evolve with Artificial Intelligence,” Yong Zhao, professor, Department of Educational Leadership & Policy Studies, KU
  • “From Chalkboards to Chatbots – Teaching in an AI World,” Ronnie Williams, coordinator of instructional resources, Greenbush Education Service Center, Girard
  • “AI: Looking Forward,” James Basham, professor, Department of Special Education, KU
  • “AI From the Classroom,” Jessica Tickle, teacher, Shawnee Mission School District
  • “The Intersection of the Human Brain and AI in the Classroom,” Lisa Dieker, professor, Department of Special Education, KU
  • “AI Guidance for Educators,” Stephen King, education program consultant, Career Standards and Assessment Services, Kansas State Department of Education

AI Playground sessions include:

  • “Hone Your AI Skills: Using AI for Lesson Planning”
  • “Exploring AI”: Become an AI prompt engineer. Tips for writing good prompts. Led by Dean Rick Ginsberg.

See the full schedule at the event website.

The event is free and open to the public, but registration is required by 5 p.m. June 10.

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Don’t miss new episodes of “When Experts Attack!,”

a KU News Service podcast hosted by Kansas Public Radio.

https://kansaspublicradio.org/podcast/when-experts-attack

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

Spain still struggles over interpretation of its Golden Age, author writes in new book

 

LAWRENCE – At first blush, Spain seems like a solid nation. But as headlines about the Catalan independence movement and its exiled leader Carles Puigdemont show, the threat of dissolution is ever present. And, as such, all sides try to exploit the country’s literary legacy for their own benefit.

“If you want to understand the chaos of Spain, pay more attention to how they’re using their classics, because that gives you a sense of the current state of things,” said Robert Bayliss, University of Kansas professor of Spanish and author of the new book “The Currency of Cultural Patrimony: The Spanish Golden Age” (Liverpool University Press).

The “currency” of the title refers both to the contemporary nature of the debates over Spanish nationalism and the money that governments and other institutions have spent over the past century promoting canonical works from the period just before and after 1600.

Bayliss looks at the history of three Golden Age texts — Lope de Vega’s 1619 play “Fuenteovejuna,” Miguel de Cervantes’ 1605-1615 novel “Don Quixote” and the legend of “El Cid” — exploring how each has been staged and seen throughout the modern era, and how that history, in turn, has affected the way they are viewed today.

“Don Quixote” is undoubtedly Spain’s urtext, Bayliss said. It’s why Spain sponsors Cervantes Institutes around the world to spread its culture and promote tourism.

The cumulative uses of these texts for centuries, the KU researcher said, continually add new meaning to them. 

“It’s like a snowball effect where it rolls down the hill and gets bigger and bigger,” Bayliss said. “Their reappearance in popular culture is especially worth examining during times in Spanish history marked by cultural crisis or calamity.

“When Spain finds itself in crisis, Spaniards are prompted to ask, ‘Who are we? Where do we find inspiration?’ This is when the classics become newly current, as they are engaged to provide answers. So ‘Don Quixote’ was used to stimulate tourism in the 1950s during Francisco Franco’s fascist regime, just as the character was engaged to inspire Spaniards after the Spanish-American War in 1898. So we have all these texts written about how he’s an allegory for the Spanish nation, and he’s fighting the windmills of the Industrial Revolution, or communism, or whatever the case may be at the time.”

The meanings impressed upon Lope de Vega’s play “Fuenteovejuna” and the legend of “El Cid” are somewhat more contested, in Bayliss’ telling.

The KU researcher sketches the historical roots of the knight/prince Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar, (1043-1099) known as El Cid, following as he is transformed from 12th century ballad to Golden Age play to the 1961 Hollywood blockbuster “El Cid” starring Charlton Heston to the 2003 animated film “El Cid: La Leyenda” (The Legend).

This last iteration, Bayliss notes, was not only affected by its proximity to the 9/11 terror attacks, the subsequent U.S. invasion of Iraq, and the Spanish socialist backlash against that, but also the Heston movie.

Thus, he writes, the film “re-codes an already (geo)politically re-coded narrative, through a discursive re-coding of one midcentury Hollywood genre (Hollywood Epic) through the lens of another (Disney).”

He continues: “The upshot of how this film might inform debates on immigration from Northern Africa is clear enough: While good, Spanish Muslims contribute to the nation’s cultural strength and diversity, the bad foreign Muslim power is an Other whose exclusion should motivate policy reforms.”

Bayliss writes that Vega’s “Fuenteovejuna … dramatizes the medieval uprising of a rural village against its tyrannical and sexually predatory Comendador,” or knight/commander. He said it “makes the small town into an allegory for national civil strife.”

The book explores how, during the reign of Franco, his supporters were able to find support for their version of the essentially Spanish national character in “Fuenteovejuna.” Then the author covers the reaction against that interpretation (and that of Golden Age literature as a whole) in the democratic period that followed, starting in the late 1970s.

Bayliss said Lope de Vega remains adaptable to the present moment, as a 2023 staging of his play “La Villana de Getafe” (“The Old Woman Villager of Getafe”) in the town of that name near Madrid proved. City leaders from the culturally conservative Vox Party objected.

“It was some sort of avant-garde interpretation with a lot of surrealist sexual innuendo blown up in everybody’s face, and so they decided that was too scandalous and they canceled it,” Bayliss said. “Others said, ‘How can you censor this most Spanish of playwrights?’ So it was a case in point of how Golden Age texts end up in the middle of all these culture wars.”

Bayliss writes that he expects that to continue: “Amid these cultural-narrative twists and turns, references to the Spanish Golden Age remain a reliable constant.”

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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

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