Thursday, February 19, 2026
Home Blog Page 504

KU News: KU School of Pharmacy lowers nonresident tuition

0

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

Headlines

KU School of Pharmacy lowers nonresident tuition

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas School of Pharmacy has lowered its nonresident tuition $50,000 over the course of its four-year Doctor of Pharmacy (Pharm.D.) program. The tuition reduction applies to first-year pharmacy students admitted during the current academic year and beyond. “In an era when the health care of Kansans is being negatively affected by a shortage of pharmacists, we hope this tuition adjustment for out-of-state students will provide more opportunity for aspiring pharmacists to pursue their career goals and meet the needs of patients across our state,” said Ronald Ragan, dean of the School of Pharmacy.

Jayhawks named semifinalists for student Fulbright awards

LAWRENCE – Nine University of Kansas students and alumni have advanced to the semifinalist round for Fulbright U.S. Student Program awards, which will provide funding to study, conduct research or teach English abroad for the 2024-2025 academic year. Semifinalists include Kansans from Kansas City, Lawrence, Shawnee and Topeka.

Law Journal Symposium to explore art law complexities

LAWRENCE – On Feb. 23, the 2024 Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy Symposium will host academics, legal scholars and museum professionals for discussions rooted in the public policy considerations of art law issues. Event speakers will include experts from the Department of Defense, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the Smithsonian and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. Registration is required for the free public event.

 

Full stories below.

 

————————————————————————

 

Contact: Brad Stauffer, School of Pharmacy, [email protected], @KUPharmacy

KU School of Pharmacy lowers nonresident tuition

 

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas School of Pharmacy has lowered its nonresident tuition $50,000 over the course of its four-year Doctor of Pharmacy (Pharm.D.) program. The tuition reduction applies to first-year pharmacy students admitted during the current academic year and beyond.

Over the course of the four-year Pharm.D. program, tuition for nonresident students is now $133,378. The cost of pharmacy tuition for Kansas residents is $106,579.

“In an era when the health care of Kansans is being negatively affected by a shortage of pharmacists, we hope this tuition adjustment for out-of-state students will provide more opportunity for aspiring pharmacists to pursue their career goals and meet the needs of patients across our state,” said Ronald Ragan, dean of the School of Pharmacy. “We need to encourage more talented students to enroll in pharmacy school, and cost is certainly one factor that can influence that decision. I’m optimistic that lowering our tuition for nonresident students will increase our enrollment and grow our workforce in Kansas.”

Ragan noted that KU offers one of the country’s top Pharm.D. programs and is also well known for its history of research, discovery and drug development. KU pharmacy students taking the North American Pharmacist Licensure Exam (NAPLEX) for the first time last year passed at a rate of 91%, ranking them 13th nationally. It was an increase of 5% over the previous year and well above the national average of 79%.

The KU School of Pharmacy is currently accepting applications through June 1 for the fall 2024 semester. For more information on enrollment, visit the pharmacy school website.

-30-

————————————————————————

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

a KU News Service podcast hosted by Kansas Public Radio.

 

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

————————————————————————

 

Contact: Christine Metz Howard, International Affairs, [email protected], @KUintlaffairs

Jayhawks named semifinalists for student Fulbright awards

 

LAWRENCE – Nine University of Kansas students and alumni have advanced to the semifinalist round for Fulbright U.S. Student Program awards, which will provide funding to study, conduct research or teach English abroad for the 2024-2025 academic year.

This year’s Fulbright semifinalists represent diverse academic fields across campus, coming from the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences and the schools of Journalism & Mass Communication and Education & Human Sciences. The semifinalists’ locations of proposed study span three continents and eight countries.

The Fulbright Program is the U.S. government’s flagship international educational exchange program and is designed to increase mutual understanding between Americans and people of other countries. The Fulbright U.S. Student Program operates in more than 160 countries worldwide.

Recipients of Fulbright grants are selected based on academic or professional achievement as well as their record of service and demonstrated leadership in their respective fields. Fulbright grants provide funding for round-trip travel, maintenance for one academic year, health and accident insurance and, where relevant, tuition.

Finalists and alternates will be announced later this spring.

2024-2025 Fulbright semifinalists

Raneem Alasmi has applied to be an English teaching assistant in Switzerland. Originally from Syria and then Kansas City, Kansas, Alasmi will graduate in December with a bachelor’s degree in journalism with a focus on multimedia and minor in French. Her parents are Hanna Alasmi and Nazzal Alasmi.

Jenna Bellemere has applied to be an English teaching assistant in Mexico. From Lawrence, Bellemere will graduate in May with bachelor’s degrees in anthropology and women, gender & sexuality studies. Her parents are Fred Bellemere and Kim Mahanna-Bellemere.

Samantha Brant has proposed to study and conduct research in education at Durham University in the United Kingdom. From Topeka and currently living in Kansas City, Missouri, Brant received a master’s degree in education from KU in 2015. Her parents are David and Deba Brant.

Anabel Cardoza has applied to be an English teaching assistant in Mexico. From Kansas City, Kansas, Cardoza will graduate in May with a bachelor’s degree in linguistics and a minor in Spanish. Her parents are Jeronimo Cardoza and María Cortez.

Finn Finnerty has applied to be an English teaching assistant in Germany. From Lee’s Summit, Missouri, Finnerty will graduate in May with a bachelor’s degree in foreign language education and minors in German and Spanish. Their parents are Miranda and Scott Finnerty.

Alicia Houser has proposed to travel to Tanzania to study and conduct research in history. Houser is a doctoral student in history. Houser has a master’s degree in public and international affairs from the University of Pittsburgh and bachelor’s degrees in international relations and African studies from Austin College. Her parents are Bryan Houser and Janice Hileman.

Rachel Paese has applied to be an English teaching assistant in Spain. From St. Louis, Paese will graduate in May with bachelor’s degrees in English and Spanish and a minor in sociology. Her parents are Matthew Paese and Becky Paese-Mullen.

Kahill Perkins has applied to be an English teaching assistant in Malta. From Lawrence, Perkins will graduate in May with a bachelor’s degree in English with a concentration in creative writing and is pursuing an accelerated master’s degree in literary theory. Her parents are William Perkins and Jennifer Dixon-Perkins.

Theresa Read has proposed to travel to Sweden to study and conduct research in chemistry. Living in Shawnee, Read will graduate in May with bachelor’s degrees in chemistry and biochemistry. Her husband is Justin Read, and her son is Dalamar Read.

-30-

————————————————————————

Follow @KUNews for KU News Service stories,

discoveries and experts.

 

————————————————————————

 

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

Law Journal Symposium to explore art law complexities

 

LAWRENCE – On Feb. 23, the 2024 Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy Symposium will host academics, legal scholars and museum professionals for discussions rooted in the public policy considerations of art law issues.

“This year’s symposium is about the intersection of art and law in the United States,” said Megan Gannon, symposium editor. “Symposium attendees will discover the interdisciplinary nature of art law through policy-based discussions of restitution and repatriation, trade of cultural property and the ethical stewardship of objects in museum collections.”

“A Museum’s Purpose: Discussions of Art and Law in 2024” will run from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the University of Kansas School of Law in Green Hall. Check-in and breakfast will begin at 8:30 a.m. This event is free and open to the public, but registration is required.

Register and preview the complete symposium schedule.

Event speakers:

Craig Blackwell, Smithsonian Office of the General Counsel
Col. Scott DeJesse, U.S. Department of Defense
Derek Fincham, South Texas College of Law Houston
Mike Hoeflich, KU School of Law
MacKenzie Mallon, the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
Nick O’Donnell, Sullivan & Worcester
Lauren van Schilfgaarde, UCLA School of Law
Jonathan Zwibel, U.S. Customs and Border Protection

The symposium is sponsored by the Shook, Hardy & Bacon Center for Excellence in Advocacy. Scholarship associated with the symposium will be published in an upcoming issue of the Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy. For more information, contact Megan Gannon by email.

-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

 

KU News: KU announces 2024 Truman scholarship nominees, University Scholars

0

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

Headlines

University announces 2024 Truman scholarship nominees

LAWRENCE — Three outstanding University Honors students have been selected as the University of Kansas nominees for Harry S. Truman Scholarships. The prestigious national awards, which provide up to $30,000 for graduate study, are given to college juniors for leadership in public service. KU nominated students from Gardner, Manhattan and Olathe.

2024 class of University Scholars announced

LAWRENCE — The 43rd class of University Scholars and their faculty mentors were recently recognized during a reception hosted by the University of Kansas Honors Program. The new cohort includes students from Lenexa, Manhattan, Norton, Olathe, Overland Park, Sedgwick, Shawnee and Topeka.

 

Full stories below.

 

————————————————————————

 

Contact: Erin Wolfram, Academic Success, 785-864-2308, [email protected]

University announces 2024 Truman scholarship nominees

 

LAWRENCE — Three outstanding University Honors students have been selected as the University of Kansas nominees for Harry S. Truman Scholarships.

The prestigious national awards, which provide up to $30,000 for graduate study, are given to college juniors for leadership in public service. They are highly competitive, with only about 60 Truman Scholars named nationwide each year.

This year’s KU nominees:

DaNae Estabine, a junior in psychology minoring in philosophy
Grant Misse, a junior in environmental studies and music composition
Emily Ward, a junior in anthropology and political science minoring in Spanish

Criteria for the nominations include an extensive record of campus and community service, commitment to a career in government or the nonprofit and advocacy sectors, communication skills and a high probability of becoming a “change agent,” and a strong academic record with likely acceptance to the graduate school of the candidate’s choice.

The campus nomination process is coordinated by the Office of Fellowships, a unit of Academic Success. Students interested in applying for the Truman Scholarship in future years are encouraged to contact the office ([email protected]), which can nominate a limited number of students each year. The next application cycle will begin in fall 2024.

Scholars receive priority admission and supplemental financial aid at some premier graduate institutions, leadership training, career and graduate school counseling, and special internship opportunities within the federal government.

Since 1981, 20 KU students have become Truman Scholars. Samuel Steuart was the most recent KU student to receive the honor in 2019.

Congress established the Truman Scholarship Foundation in 1975 as the federal memorial to President Harry S. Truman. A national selection committee reviews applications from more than 800 nominees for the Truman Foundation. Approximately 200 students will be named finalists in late February and be invited to participate in regional interviews in March and early April. The scholarship recipients will be announced in late April.

More information about KU’s nominees is below:

 

DaNae Estabine, from Olathe, is the daughter of Jean and Kristy Estabine and a graduate of Olathe East High School. She is pursuing a bachelor’s degree in psychology and minoring in philosophy with plans of earning a joint juris doctor/doctorate in psychology and becoming a prosecutor in the state of Kansas. Estabine was named a Multicultural Scholars Program scholar as a sophomore and was selected for KU’s Legal Education Accelerated Degree (LEAD) program. Her freshman year she served as a senator in KU’s Student Senate, held the government relations director position as a sophomore and currently is the student body vice president. In summer 2023, Estabine interned for U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran, and she now interns in the Statehouse for Kansas State Rep. Barbara Ballard. Outside of KU, Estabine volunteers her time as the director of the Johnson County Fair Pie Contest, an Olathe Fishing Derby board member and a Lawrence Mothers of Pre-Schoolers (MOPS) volunteer. Additionally, she is a substitute teacher in the Lawrence School District.

 

Grant Misse, from Gardner, is the son of Brett and Kourtney Misse and a graduate of Gardner-Edgerton High School. Misse is double majoring in environmental studies and music composition. He aspires to earn a master’s degree in public and nonprofit management and return to northeast Kansas to start a nonprofit and eventually influence policy related to sustainable agriculture and food systems at the government level. Currently, Misse works to promote environmental initiatives as the leadership/recruitment outreach lead for the Sunrise Movement and as the committee lead/founder of 2040 Vision KU. Additionally, he works at the Center for Community Outreach as the managing director. He continues to volunteer for the program Music Mentors, for which he previously served as a program coordinator, and is inspired by the nonprofit work he takes part in through this role. Misse is also the president of the New Music Guild and a member of the Glee Club.

 

Emily Ward, from Manhattan, is the daughter of Jeffrey and Michele Ward and a graduate of Manhattan High School. Ward is majoring in anthropology and political science and minoring in Spanish. She plans to pursue a doctorate in anthropology with a concentration in biological anthropology and become a forensic anthropologist. She currently works in the anthropological genomics lab under Jennifer Raff. In summer 2022, she interned at Riley County Historical Museum and has served as a volunteer for the Dia de los Muertos Festival, the Edinburg Filipino Festival and Haunting Humanities. Ward is a KU student ambassador, a University Scholar, the president of Honors Community Advocates and a Dole Center of Politics Student Advisory Board member. She also plays the cello in the KU Symphony orchestra.

-30-

————————————————————————

The official university Twitter account has changed to @UnivOfKansas.

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

 

————————————————————————

 

Contact: Dustin Vann, University Honors Program, [email protected]

2024 class of University Scholars announced

LAWRENCE — The 43rd class of University Scholars and their faculty mentors were recognized during a reception hosted by the University of Kansas Honors Program on Feb. 6 at the Nunemaker Center. Attendees celebrated with refreshments and heard remarks from Sarah Crawford-Parker, University Honors Program director and Paul Scott, professor of French, who both reflected on the program and the opportunities it presents each cohort.

Since 1982, the University Scholars Program has recognized and encouraged sophomores who demonstrate intellectual achievement and curiosity. Selected students receive a scholarship, are assigned a faculty mentor to support their academic endeavors and engage with a topic of contemporary interest as part of an interdisciplinary seminar course.

This spring’s seminar, “Imagined Futures,” is taught by Scott, the Jeffrey B. Weinberg Honors Faculty Fellow. The course invites students to examine the ways short stories, films and work in other mediums illustrate how most human pursuits are focused on future outcomes and possibilities.

Fittingly, Scott sees great potential for the seminar, which is already underway.

“Students in this seminar will become familiar with not only ways of envisioning the future but will also recognize – and reap the benefits – of doing so,” Scott said. “The seminar is a wonderful forum for discussion, sharing, sometimes disagreeing and always learning from each other as students hone analytic skills that can be applied to other topics and fields.”

The 2024 University Scholars are listed below alphabetically with major, hometown and faculty mentor:

Nawal Basra, sophomore in behavioral neuroscience from Overland Park, mentored by Elizabeth MacGonagle, associate professor of history and African & African-American studies.
Hannah Bunch, sophomore in mechanical engineering from Overland Park, mentored by Katie Batza, chair and associate professor of women, gender & sexuality studies.
Lauren D’Souza, sophomore in computer science from Overland Park, mentored by Thom Allen, honors program associate director and assistant professor of practice in urban planning.
Connor Engelsman, sophomore in classics from Norton, mentored by Yvonnes Chen, professor of journalism & mass communications.
Michelle Gasparre, sophomore in microbiology from Overland Park, mentored by Nilou Vakil, associate professor of architecture & design.
Tej Gumaste, sophomore in computer science from Dubai, United Arab Emirates, mentored by James Blakemore, associate professor of chemistry.
Bhavya Gupta, sophomore in microbiology from Overland Park, mentored by Mary Klayder, associate director of undergraduate studies and senior lecturer in English.
Jasneet Kaur, sophomore in pre-business from Olathe, mentored by Tracey LaPierre, director of undergraduate studies and associate professor of sociology.
Kristopher Long, sophomore in political science from Manhattan, mentored by Ray Mizumura-Pence, associate teaching professor of American studies.
Alexa Magstadt, sophomore in molecular, cellular & developmental biology from Shawnee, mentored by Kyla Camarda, associate professor of chemical & petroleum engineering.
Daniel Mirakian, sophomore in accounting from Olathe, mentored by Nathan Wood, associate professor of history.
Jiyoon Park, sophomore in environmental studies from Topeka, mentored by Patricia Gaston, Lacy C. Haynes Professor of Journalism.
Jillian Parsons, sophomore in political science from Overland Park, mentored by Sarah Crawford-Parker, honors program director and associate teaching professor of museum studies.
Rita Pham, sophomore in East Asian languages & cultures from Lee’s Summit, Missouri, mentored by Najarian Peters, associate professor of law.
Eden Shimekt, sophomore in human biology from Lenexa, mentored by Mary Klayder, lecturer, Department of English.
Anjali Singh, sophomore in human biology from Sedgwick, mentored by Dave Tell, professor of communication studies.
Xochitlh Vargas, sophomore in visual arts from Tulsa, Oklahoma, mentored by Darren Canady, professor of English.
Monique Vieux, sophomore in mechanical engineering from Naples, Italy, mentored by Stephanie Zelnick, professor of clarinet.
Elizabeth Viguerie, sophomore in biochemistry from Belleville, Illinois, mentored by Amy Leyerzapf, senior lecturer in leadership studies.
Created to recognize and encourage academically talented and motivated sophomores, the University Scholars Program was founded under the leadership of retired U.S. 10th Circuit Chief Judge Deanell Tacha, then KU’s vice chancellor for academic affairs, along with longtime University Honors Program director Francis Heller, the Roy A. Roberts Distinguished Professor of Law and Political Science.

-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

Wheat Scoop: Farmer-Backed Heartland Plant Innovations Helps Unlock Wheat’s Genetic Potential

0
Kansas Wheat

Contact: Marsha Boswell, [email protected]

For audio version, visit kswheat.com.

Six sets of seven chromosomes make the wheat genome five times larger than the human genome. This complexity makes wheat breeding even more difficult, but technology like double haploid breeding has helped public and private researchers unlock potential agronomic, quality and even nutritional traits.

 

Key to this work is a farmer-backed, for-profit plant services company housed at the Kansas Wheat Innovation Center — Heartland Plant Innovations (HPI). Dusti Gallagher, HPI president/CEO, recently sat down with Aaron Harries, Kansas Wheat vice president of research and operations, on the “Wheat’s on Your Mind” podcast to walk through the formation of HPI and how the company is accelerating and improving the wheat breeding pipeline.

Starting with Synergy
Technology for crop improvement experienced a boom in the early 2000s, but applying those techniques was focused on corn and soybeans. The push to start HPI was the result of the industry’s recognition that wheat was being left behind when it came to applying innovative breeding tools.

 

“We were just trying to bring the message that we needed to make sure that wheat stayed relevant in the United States compared to other crops,” Gallagher said. “We wanted to let them know producers, specifically in Kansas and HRW (hard red winter wheat) producers, were really interested in bringing innovations and technology to the forefront with wheat because, at the time, we were losing a little ground to other crops.”

 

The industry faced another significant challenge at the time — a lack of synergy and collective focus. As a result, a core group brought together representatives from across the industry, including producers representing the Kansas Wheat Commission and the Kansas Association of Wheat Growers, Kansas State University, the University of Kansas and private companies.

 

“It started with communication. At that time, there was very little communication between the public and private sectors on wheat breeding; everybody was doing their own thing,” Gallagher said. “So, it started with bringing everybody to the same table to talk about what our common interests were. And once we did that, it started falling into place.”

 

HPI was officially formed in 2009. Kansas farmers, through state organizations, have majority ownership in HPI, and other members include private companies, universities and individual shareholders. The company started in Throckmorton Hall but quickly recognized that their work to amp up breeding technology required lab space, growth rooms, greenhouse space and other spaces to mix soil, plant pots, thresh heads and more. As a result, the early success of HPI helped provide the spark that led to the construction of the Kansas Wheat Innovation Center, where the company is now housed.

 

Today, HPI has seven full-time staff drawn from all over the world for their unique expertise, including agronomy, molecular biology, botany and biotechnology. In addition, two to three part-time students gain hands-on experience by assisting with harvesting, threshing, caring for plants and more.

Doubling Down on Double Haploids
Instead of competing with public and private wheat breeding programs, HPI was built around the idea of providing additional bandwidth and applying very specific technologies to assist those programs. The first — and still primary — of these tools is the production of double haploids, which essentially cuts half the time out of the wheat breeding process.

 

“We’re basically taking only the genetic material from one of the parents, the female parent, and we’re keeping those genetics and rebuilding that plant to where it can be a mature seed-producing plant,” Gallagher said. “And so, there’s a lot of steps along the way.”

 

The goal of the double haploid process is to create a population of plants that all have the same genetics across all their chromosomes, something that takes generations of traditional breeding to achieve but can be accomplished in a single year with the double haploid process.

 

“We’re basically rescuing a very tender, very delicate haploid embryo and culturing it and taking care of it until it becomes a viable seedling,” Gallagher said. “Then we double its chromosomes through a process that we’ve created and that we’ve refined here at HPI. And that doubling process then creates a double haploid plant.”

 

The seeds from these plants then go back to wheat breeding programs, where breeders know the exact genetic material and can more efficiently evaluate lines in their programs.

 

“When they take it to the field, and they grow it, and they start evaluating it, they know its genotype, then they can make better decisions, and they can either advance that line quickly through their program, or they can make a decision that they need to do more crossing with it,” Gallagher said. “So, the double haploid process is a tool that allows a better-quality line to go through the process, and breeders can advance it quickly, and they can make better decisions based on that very pure genetic line that we provide to them.”

 

HPI has capacity to produce 20,000 double haploids a year and works with customers from all over the United States, from wheat breeders to public and private crop improvement programs. The process is fee-for-service, so it is open to the entirety of the wheat breeding pipeline.

 

“Over the last couple of years, we’ve seen the first seeds that have gone through our program,” Gallagher said. “They’ve been released to producers, and so they’ve been very good, healthy varieties that have proven to be profitable for producers.”

 

In addition to double haploid production, HPI also provides technical expertise using other advanced plant breeding tools, including genotyping and marker-assisted selection as well as supporting traditional wheat breeding programs and proprietary projects. Every piece of the business, however, is built on partnerships.

 

“The producers are really the foundation for all of this,” Gallagher said. “Everything that we do is driven toward making a better opportunity for those producers to have better varieties to be able to improve their bottom lines.”

Still More to Come
From uncovering the dense nutrients for improving wheat as a food crop to bringing in trails from wheat’s wild relatives or improving agronomic traits, Gallagher told Harries there is still more to unlock in the wheat genome.

 

“I really don’t believe that we have tapped the genetic potential of wheat,” Gallagher said. “We’re just now getting to the point where we’ve mapped the wheat genome, and there’s still so much in there that we need to help discover, and that takes time.”

 

Ultimately, Gallagher encouraged wheat producers to continue investing in the research process — both in private companies like HPI and public breeding programs like that at K-State.

 

“Investment in wheat research is critical to us continuing to uncover the vast benefits wheat has to offer,” Gallagher said. “It takes a long time. Investment in wheat research is the long game; it’s not the short game. Continue to support universities and checkoffs because it’s those wheat research dollars that are really going to make an impact. We just need to keep doing what we’re doing, but also looking at new opportunities and new technologies — and that’s what we’re here to do at HPI.”

 

Listen to the full discussion on HPI’s positive impact on the wheat breeding pipeline or check out other episodes of “Wheat’s on Your Mind” at kswheat.com/podcast.

 

###

“Fundamental Functions: Ear, Nose, Throat”

0

 

I confess that occasionally even doctors get squeamish. Or perhaps more honestly, this doctor does. My personal list has gotten pretty short, but one of the things that still makes me squirm is something I nevertheless frequently recommend to my patients.

So what is this mysterious and rather ominous medical recommendation? Nasal saline irrigation.

The practice of rinsing the nose out with liquid probably originated centuries ago in India, and it remains part of spiritual ritual as well as traditional medicine around the world. However, it isn’t something I learned about in medical school. Western medical research into it began in earnest perhaps 25 to 30 years ago.

How does this rather torturous sounding practice help? It physically removes germs, allergen and irritant particles, it loosens thick mucous, and it helps the cilia — the tiny hairs lining our airways— clean things out.

Although the practice is generally safe for almost everyone, there is one very important caveat. Your equipment must be clean, and the solution used prepared with sterile or distilled water, to prevent a very rare, but highly deadly, infection.

When I tell someone I think they should flush a cup or so of salt water into one nostril and out the other one, and then do it again from the other side, they usually react with dismay. I freely admit that the idea sounds pretty awful, and that it makes my toes curl every time I suggest it. Then I tell them a story.

I first recommended this for a patient who was all of 7 years old. Her horrible allergies and chronic sinus problems triggered frequent asthma attacks. She had a collection of inhalers and pills from the allergist, her dad had torn up the carpet, and the family dog was bathed twice a week and banished to the back yard. Parents, child, and doctor were all a little desperate. When I rather hesitantly suggested nasal saline irrigation, her mom was willing to try it.

A month later, my little patient came dancing down the hallway, announcing with glee “Dr. Deb, Dr. Deb, I love my Netti Pot!” The simple act of regularly rinsing the allergens and irritants out of her nose had improved her symptoms so much that she could play outside with her dog. Now I tell my reluctant patients that if a literal child can do it, we can borrow some of her courage and try it too.

If you suffer from chronic sinus problems, or even just the next time a cold or allergies has you stuffed up and miserable, ask your doctor if you should grit your teeth and give it a try.

Debra Johnson, 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 providing health information based on science, built on trust for 22 Seasons, streaming live on Facebook most Thursdays at 7 p.m. central.

KU News: Dole Institute, Kennedy Institute launch initiative to strengthen US election infrastructure

0

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

Headlines

Dole Institute, Kennedy Institute launch initiative to strengthen US election infrastructure

LAWRENCE — The Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics and the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate have announced a collaborative initiative to promote investment in American electoral administration and processes. The partnership begins with an event at 7 p.m. Feb. 15 at the Dole Institute with Kansas Secretary of State Scott Schwab in conversation with Douglas County Clerk/Election Officer Jamie Shew.

Groundbreaking history of Adaptive Use Musical Instrument chronicled in new book

LAWRENCE — A University of Kansas professor of American studies is one of the editors and contributors to a book titled “Improvising Across Abilities: Pauline Oliveros and the Adaptive Use Musical Instrument.” It details the origins of the AUMI and spotlights its creator, Oliveros (1932-2016), an American composer considered a pioneer in the development of experimental and electronic music. The book was published by University of Michigan Press.

Distinguished professor lecture to explore history, limitations of American ‘Manifest Destiny’

LAWRENCE — An award-winning author and historian at the University of Kansas will share some of his multifaceted scholarship during his inaugural distinguished professor lecture, which will take place at 5:30 p.m. Feb. 15. Andrew Isenberg will present “The Age of the Borderlands: The Limits of American ‘Manifest Destiny,’ 1790-1845,” which will focus on the encounter between Indigenous people and settlers in North America.

Author creates fantastic fiction grounded in reality

LAWRENCE — At some level, you have to write what you know, and author Bogi Takács Perelmutter does that in their new collection of fantastical tales, titled “Power to Yield and Other Stories.” Some works, for instance, are inspired by the academic and scientific milieu in which the author moves as assistant teaching professor in the University of Kansas departments of Slavic, German & Eurasian Studies and Jewish Studies.

 

KJHK, KPR to celebrate local music, film, radio during Jazz in the Evening

LAWRENCE – KJHK, the University of Kansas’ student-run radio station, and Kansas Public Radio invite listeners to Jazz in the Evening, which begins at 5:30 p.m. Feb. 10 at the Kansas Union. America Patton and his jazz group are the featured musicians of the evening, and Patton’s efforts to celebrate the redlined Kansas City community of Quindaro through music are highlighted in the 13-minute documentary to be shown during the event.

Full stories below.

————————————————————————

 

Contact: Maria Fisher, Dole Institute of Politics, 785-864-4900, [email protected]

Dole Institute, Kennedy Institute launch initiative to strengthen US election infrastructure

 

LAWRENCE — The Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics and the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate have announced a collaborative initiative to promote investment in American electoral administration and processes.

The two institutes have assembled a team of policy experts and practitioners to examine why the study of funding election systems is so difficult as compared to other government services and to highlight models of success at the local level.

The institutes have selected Tammy Patrick, election expert and a former commissioner on the Presidential Commission on Election Administration, to lead this process.

Policy experts involved in the working group include professors Mitchell Brown, Auburn University; Paul Gronke, Reed College; Kathleen Hale, Auburn University; Martha Kropf, University of North Carolina; Paul Mason, Reed College; and Zach Mohr, University of Kansas; as well as Rachel Orey, Bipartisan Policy Center; Charles Stewart, professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and Matt Weil, Bipartisan Policy Center.

For its first event, the institutes will co-host Kansas Secretary of State Scott Schwab in conversation with Douglas County Clerk/County Election Officer Jamie Shew at 7 p.m. Feb. 15 at the Dole Institute. Following the public event, the working group will convene local and regional practitioners to further research on this topic, with future sessions and products to be announced.

“Our goal is to support the tireless elections administrators who are the backbone of our democracy. We need a strong 21st century election system in America, and part of achieving that is understanding the range of funding sources and options today,” said Adam Hinds, CEO of the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate. “This partnership between the Dole and Kennedy institutes underscores that building a resilient election process is not a partisan issue but one our entire country must get behind.”

“In the tradition of our namesakes, both Dole and Kennedy institutes are dedicated to promoting qualities of service, leadership and engagement that fortify our democratic institutions and processes,” said Audrey Coleman, director of the Dole Institute of Politics. “This project focuses on the fundamental resources — human and financial — that are required to administer secure and trusted elections, the foundation of our democracy.”

-30-

————————————————————————

The official university Twitter account has changed to @UnivOfKansas.

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

————————————————————————

 

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

Groundbreaking history of Adaptive Use Musical Instrument chronicled in new book

 

LAWRENCE — How can you write a book about an app?

That was the question faced by Sherrie Tucker and her colleagues.

“But our project leader, composer Pauline Oliveros, always said that what was important about AUMI is not the app but how people use it,” said Tucker, professor of American studies at the University of Kansas.

The AUMI (Adaptive Use Musical Instrument) software allows individuals with limited mobility to play music. The free program is installed on any computer, tablet or smartphone that has a camera. Movement with whichever part of the body is selected (finger, nose, chest) triggers an array of sounds, from the melodious to the idiosyncratic.

Tucker is one of the editors and contributors to a book titled “Improvising Across Abilities: Pauline Oliveros and the Adaptive Use Musical Instrument.” It details the origins of the AUMI and spotlights its creator, Oliveros (1932-2016), an American composer considered a pioneer in the development of experimental and electronic music. The book was published by University of Michigan Press.

“We did an open call for chapters of all shapes and sizes by sending it out to everyone who had downloaded the instrument. So we have poems. We have videos of people dancing with it. There’s a whole section on music therapists, and even they all use it differently,” she said.

Other KU contributors to the 390-page project include KU faculty members Michelle Heffner Hayes, Ray Mizumura-Pence and Nicole Hodges Persley; graduate student Caleb Lázaro Moreno and student Kendall Conway.

Tucker helped found the AUMI-KU InterArts, an affiliate of the international research group dedicated to spreading usage of this instrument. (The KU branch focuses on “interdisciplinary arts and improvisation.”) She first met Oliveros in 2007 while working together on a grant project, right as the composer had started dabbling with the AUMI.

“Pauline thought that listening could heal the world. And she meant that really broadly. She wasn’t using a hearing definition of listening – she was also interested in compositions for deaf audiences,” Tucker said. “She felt improvisation was a way not only for people to listen to themselves but to learn how to listen to everyone and to the environment.”

As described in the book, the AUMI (pronounced like “ow-me”) was designed as a “liberating and affordable alternative to the constraints of instruments created only for normative bodies, thus opening a doorway for people of all ages, genders, abilities, races and socioeconomic backgrounds to access artistic practice with others.”

“It’s a way to create something together, and the goal is to have everybody affected,” Tucker said. “It’s everybody’s creation. The instrument is so flexible. I’ve played it in so many different settings, different aesthetics, different musical backgrounds and interests.”

She recalled performing a composition by recording all the distinctive sounds her car makes.

“One of our regular improvisers here in Lawrence is a serious bowler. So we’ve made sound-collecting trips to the bowling alley and uploaded those to create instruments,” she said. “You know what’s the coolest sound in the bowling alley? The ball return. You put a microphone inside that, and you can hear this sonic echo chamber.”

Ultimately, Tucker hopes readers not only embrace the societal and community benefits that the AUMI elicits but also learn of Oliveros’ influence on so many people.

“Pauline was very inclusive,” Tucker said.

“So she had a lifetime career of creating pieces and instruments for musicians and non-musicians to play together. She didn’t like passive relationships with music. Sure, she’s a pioneer of music technology. But she was never interested in making it more and more precise. She liked technology that made a difference in everyone’s ‘experience’ of music.”

-30-

————————————————————————

Subscribe to KU Today, the campus newsletter,

for additional news about the University of Kansas.

 

Email [email protected] to subscribe

————————————————————————

 

Contact: Elizabeth Barton, Office of Faculty Affairs, [email protected]

Distinguished professor lecture to explore history, limitations of American ‘Manifest Destiny’

 

LAWRENCE — An award-winning author and historian at the University of Kansas will share some of his multifaceted scholarship during his inaugural distinguished professor lecture later this month.

Andrew Isenberg will present “The Age of the Borderlands: The Limits of American ‘Manifest Destiny,’ 1790-1845,” which will focus on the encounter between Indigenous people and settlers in North America. The lecture will take place at 5:30 p.m. Feb. 15 in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union.

Individuals can register to attend the lecture, which will also be livestreamed. Additional webinar details will be available upon registration. A recording of the lecture will be posted afterward on the Office of Faculty Affairs website.

Isenberg, the Hall Distinguished Professor of American History, said the widely recognized view of Manifest Destiny limits the narrative. While researching other projects, including a book about the near extinction of the bison and an environmental history of the California gold rush, Isenberg came across details that did not fit into the paradigm of Manifest Destiny.

These included a U.S. effort to vaccinate Indigenous people against smallpox, an attempt to introduce camels into the Southwest and missionaries who tried to protect the culture and autonomy of Indigenous people, he said.

“At first, I thought of these as exceptions to Manifest Destiny’s story of unrelenting U.S. expansion,” Isenberg said. “Over time, I started to think that there were so many exceptions to the narrative that it was time to rethink the paradigm of Manifest Destiny. Indigenous people were more powerful than we often recognize. The U.S. was not the surpassing power on the continent and often had to seek accommodations and alliances with Indigenous people. The Manifest Destiny notion that the U.S. was foreordained to conquer the continent was an idea that only gained currency in the early 20th century.”

Isenberg’s diverse journey through his scholarship is represented in his numerous authored, co-authored, edited and co-edited books, journal publications and book chapters on American history and American environment. Some of these titles include “The Destruction of the Bison: An Environmental History, 1750-1920,” “Wyatt Earp: A Vigilante Life,” “The California Gold Rush: A Brief History with Documents” and the forthcoming “The Age of the Borderlands: Indians and Slaves on North American Frontiers, 1790-1850.”

Student mentorship is at the forefront of Isenberg’s teaching history. In 2001, Princeton University recognized his instructional work with its President’s Award for Distinguished Teaching, and the Organization of American Historians appointed him as a distinguished lecturer from 2010 to 2013. He has mentored 18 graduate students through their dissertations. These advisees now hold positions at Southern Methodist University, Wellesley College, Marshall University, Texas Christian University, Pomona College, University of St. Thomas, University of Pittsburgh and St. Mary University, among other institutions.

Before joining the KU faculty, Isenberg taught at the University of Puget Sound, Brown University, Princeton University and Temple University.

Isenberg has held fellowships from the Huntington Library, the Shelby Cullom Davis Center for Historical Studies, the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Fulbright Foundation.

He earned his bachelor’s degree from St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota, and his master’s and doctorate in history from Northwestern University, where he was mentored by one of the founders of the field of environmental history, Arthur McEvoy.

-30-

————————————————————————

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

a KU News Service podcast hosted by Kansas Public Radio.

 

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

————————————————————————

 

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

Author creates fantastic fiction grounded in reality

 

LAWRENCE — At some level, you have to write what you know, and Bogi Takács Perelmutter does that in their new collection of fantastical stories.

Some, for instance, are inspired by the academic, scientific milieu in which the author moves as assistant teaching professor in the University of Kansas departments of Slavic, German & Eurasian Studies and Jewish Studies. But “Power to Yield and Other Stories” (Broken Eye Books, 2024) is hardly just for nonbinary, neurodivergent Jewish immigrants from Hungary.

Rather, the author aspires to capture something universal about the human condition in extremis – whether that’s the Kafkaesque tale of a woman turned into a potted plant or a sadomasochistic, futuristic allegory about the sacrifices required to maintain life in a hostile environment.

Allusions to, for example, the yearlong traditional Jewish mourning ritual or a specific neighborhood in Budapest just add color of a particularly grounded sort within some pretty fantastical settings, Takács said.

“I sometimes get reader comments like, ‘I’m not Jewish, but was I supposed to relate to this?’ Of course, if you relate to this, that’s not a problem. But I also get people who say, ‘I didn’t necessarily understand everything, but I went and looked it up,’ which I think is also great. … I’m not going to police how much background knowledge is required. God forbid! I understand that readers come to the story with really different backgrounds,” Takács said.

“I really liked what Malka Older said on Twitter a few years ago: ‘I write for the people whose names are underlined in Word.’ I think that’s very relatable. When I write, the readers I have in mind are those who have some experience of being on the margins or being in the minority in some way. But it can be any minority or any type of situation,” Takács said.

There is pride, Takács said, in being recognized as a voice for such a population. For instance, they recently won the Hadassah-Brandeis Institute Jewish Gender Studies Research Award for their work on gender nonconformity in Hungarian Jewish woman writer Zsuzsa Kántor’s oeuvre. They have won Hugo and Lambda awards in the categories of fan writing (for their book reviews) and transgender fiction, respectively, and were a finalist for Ignyte and Locus awards. A book they edited, “Rosalind’s Siblings: Fiction and Poetry Celebrating Scientists of Marginalized Genders,” is on the long list for 2024’s British Science Fiction Awards and the Locus Award in the category of Best Collection.

“I just had somebody tell me specifically about the intersex stories that are in the new book,” Takács said, “and as an intersex person, I was just super happy that somebody is seeing and noticing and realizing that. An intersex book club is going to be reading the book, so I’m excited about that, too.”

Takács earned their doctorate in Speech-Language Pathology from KU in 2022. They said some of their story ideas spring directly from scientific papers they’ve read.

“There was one in my previous collection, ‘The Trans Space Octopus Congregation,’ that especially had a lot of people say, ‘Oh, this is like a fantasy story set in the far future.’ And it was actually a science fiction story, inspired by very specific research papers,” Takács said. “I wanted to cite the research papers at the end of the original publication, but the editor was like, ‘We don’t do that, no.’ … That was also specifically about artificial intelligence and about adversarial inputs, where you give some kind of input to an AI system that wouldn’t throw off a typical human at all, but it’s very confusing to the AI system. And I feel like nowadays, there’s more discussion about this.”

-30-

————————————————————————

The official university Twitter account has changed to @UnivOfKansas.

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

 

————————————————————————

 

Contact: Emily Fisher, Kansas Public Radio, 785-864-0190, [email protected], @kprnews

KJHK, KPR to celebrate local music, film, radio during Jazz in the Evening

 

LAWRENCE – KJHK, the University of Kansas’ student-run radio station, and Kansas Public Radio, northeast Kansas’ source for National Public Radio and other local programming, invite listeners to an evening celebrating jazz.

Join the staff of both stations at 5:30 p.m. Feb. 10 at the Kansas Union for music, a film screening and refreshments.

 

“Jazz in the Evening” will feature a variety of performers celebrating the genre of jazz, with a special highlight on local musician America Patton. Patton and his jazz group are the featured musicians of the evening, with an opening act composed of KU School of Music jazz students.

Patton is also the subject of a local documentary film, directed by Backer Hamada and Brandon Luck, which shines a light on Patton’s charitable work done in the redlined Kansas City community of Quindaro and his efforts to celebrate the area through music. The 13-minute film will premiere following Patton’s performance and will conclude with a Q&A moderated by KPR’s Kaye McIntyre.

This event is free and open to the public, and guests are welcome to come and go as they please throughout the evening’s activities.

Green Lady Lounge, Ken and Sallie Goertz, the Kansas Union and KU Dining are the event sponsors.

-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