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Horticulture 2024 Newsletter No. 33

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KSU horticulture

1712 Claflin, 2021 Throckmorton Plant Science Center
Manhattan, KS 66506 (785) 532-6173

Download and print the Hort Newsletter
(Downloadable version)

HNR Website access: https://hnr.k-state.edu/extension/horticulture-resource-center/horticulture-newsletter/

VIDEO OF THE WEEK:
K-State Garden Hour
Preserve it Fresh, Preserve it Safe
If your garden is overflowing with fresh produce, what will you do with it? Besides enjoying the fresh flavors or sharing with family and friends, preserving the produce for later use is a great way to enjoy that taste of summer later in the year. Learn some easy ways to safely preserve your food.

GARDEN TO-DO
Avoid fertilizing ornamentals now so they harden off before winter
Take cuttings from cold-sensitive annuals to root for wintering indoors. See: https://kansashealthyyards.org/all-videos/video/cuttings-to-grow-inside-for-winter
Turn compost pile and add water when dry

TURF
Reading Grass Seed Labels
Before planting grass seed pay close attention to the percentages on the label. Depending on the seed quality, you could be planting weeds along with the desired grass.
Check the percentage of weed seed listed. This will tell you how much weed you will be introducing if you plant this seed mix. For example, if this number is 0.5% weed seed, approximately 12 to 16 weeds will be planted per square foot. If it is less than 0.01% weed seed that is good but 0% is best.
Check “Other Crop” on the label as well and choose a grass seed with a low percentage. “Other Crop” includes any species grown intentionally such as turfgrasses and pasture grasses. Some species of grassy weeds fit into this category and legally do not have to be named when they’re included in a mix if they constitute less than 5% of the contents. “Other Crop” can also include more desirable species that will not significantly impact your lawn. Without knowing what is included it’s best to choose a seed where this number is as close to zero as possible. Quality seed typically has 0.01% “Other Crop” or less.
VEGETABLES
Anthracnose of Tomatoes
Description: High humidity and frequent rainfall favor development of the fungal disease, anthracnose. Most often seen in the later part of the growing season on ripe fruit, anthracnose reduces the quality and yield of the tomato harvest.

Damage: Symptoms begin as small, circular lesions that are slightly depressed on the surface of the fruit. Spots grow both in diameter of the circles and the depth of the depressions. The sunken lesions give a water-soaked appearance beneath the skin of the fruit. During humid weather, the fruiting structures release buff-colored fungal spores (conidia). As lesions grow, they can join and cause the fruit to decay which promotes microorganisms to invade and rot the fruit entirely.
Control: Anthracnose spores survive in plant debris and soil. Spores can get splashed onto fruit during a heavy rain or even with overhead watering. This continues the spread of the disease. Follow proper cultural practices for prevention. Use mulch over the soil around tomato plants and remove plant debris from the ground. Promote air flow to reduce humid conditions by staking the tomato plants. Use drip irrigation or a soaker hose to prevent splashing spores onto plants.
Why Aren’t My Tomatoes Ripening?
Most gardeners are salivating over garden fresh tomatoes. I’ve watched my tomatoes developing and it seems to have taken twice as long this year to get ripe fruit from my plants.

If the plants are otherwise healthy and you’re still waiting for fruit to ripen, or it is happening slower than expected, it may be the result of temperature. Tomatoes ripen best when the temperature ranges between 70- and 75-degrees F. Ripening can slow or even halt when the temperature rises above 90 degrees F.

If you’re feeling impatient, you can remove fruit that has started to show the first signs of color change and ripen them indoors, at room temperature, in the dark. The more enclosed the fruit is (such as in a paper bag) the quicker it will ripen due to the exposure to ethylene gas.
FLOWERS
Spring-Flowering Shrubs
Spring-flowering shrubs typically establish buds for next year in August and September. Avoid pruning these shrubs now as it will negatively affect next year’s bloom. Water, as needed, this time of year to support the plants’ new growth.
Examples of spring-flowering shrubs include Forsythia, Flowering Quince, Almond, Beautybush, Deutzia, Pyracantha, Lilac, Mock Orange, Cotoneaster, Weigela, Viburnum and Witch hazel.

TREES
Mulch Rings Around Trees
A mulch ring is a circular border surrounding the base of a tree. Recommendations for proper tree planting include a mulch ring that covers the soil beneath the tree canopy.

One benefit of using a mulch ring around trees in a lawn area is to prevent maintenance equipment from coming too close and damaging the trunk. Plants grown directly beneath the tree canopy compete for water and nutrients. A mulch ring keeps the soil covered without creating competition.

Use organic mulch, if possible, for the same reasons it is selected for planter beds in general. The mulch ring around trees in a lawn should be at least three to six feet in diameter depending on the overall size of the tree. Ideally the mulch ring should extend to the drip line of the tree. This means the ground beneath the entire canopy of the tree should be covered protecting the majority of the plant roots.

Create a flat, donut-shaped ring of mulch around the tree leaving a 4–6-inch diameter circle of bare soil at the center so mulch isn’t right up next to the trunk to prevent rotting. The mulch should be 2-4 inches deep and reapplied annually. If applied too deep (more than four-inches) the mulch can actually restrict oxygen from the soil and negatively affect root development.

PESTS
Fall Armyworms
Though often found in agricultural crops, fall armyworms can be present in certain turfgrass species and we’ve had a few reports of them recently.

Description: Young larvae are ½ to ¾ inches long. Mature larvae can reach 1½ inches long. Fall armyworms can be identified by the inverted “Y” on top of the dark head. Adult moths are ½ inch long. The two front wings are brown-grey. Males have more dark markings than females.

Life Cycle: As a tropical insect, fall armyworms are not able to overwinter in Kansas limiting them to 2-4 generations each year. Moths migrate to their seasonal home and lay hundreds of eggs in clusters. Larvae hatch and begin feeding. Once established, new generations can occur every 23-25 days.

Damage: Larvae feed on grass blades. Heavy infestations will occasionally chew the blades to the crown. Though the damage may be unsightly it does not typically kill the grass. Regrowth of the turfgrass can be expedited with rain and/or irrigation.

To read more about fall armyworm and control options access our publication from the Horticulture Resource Center: Fall Armyworm.

Learn more from K-State Entomology: Fall Armyworm.

MISCELLANEOUS
Composting: What to Add
The most efficient compost has the right combination of carbon (browns) and nitrogen (greens) ingredients. Examples of browns include dried items such as leaves, twigs, straw, wood chips and sawdust. It is best to chop up the dried materials to expedite decomposition.

Examples of greens are coffee grounds, egg shells, fruit/vegetable scraps and fresh plant parts. Manure from farm-type animals (cows, sheep, etc.) is another green waste that can be added. Pet waste should not be used in compost.
Layer the compost pile alternating between six to eight inches of brown waste and two to three inches of green waste until the pile reaches three to five feet tall. You can wet down each layer of “browns” as you build the pile. This combination of materials creates an ideal environment for microorganisms that promote decomposing.
Should I Compost My Tomato Plants?
There are some common problems that occur with tomatoes which can easily spread to next year’s garden if the compost heap does not reach adequate temperatures for a long enough period of time to kill the spores. A compost pile that is not properly balanced with the amount of greens and browns and/or one that is not maintained to promote air circulation will not decompose as quickly. If compost is used before it is fully decomposed, diseases can easily spread to the plants it is supposed to be supporting.

If you suspect, or know, your current plants are harboring a disease, it is safest to destroy them when they have finished producing, rather than composting them.

QUESTION of the WEEK
What’s happening to the bark on my tree?
We are finding bark pieces on the ground beneath a mature tree in our yard. There are sections on the branches where the bark is stripped away. Any ideas what is causing this?

This looks like damage caused by squirrels. This kind of damage can sometimes cause girdling resulting in branch die-back. For recommendations, contact your local extension agent or read our KSRE Publication: Squirrel Damage to Trees

Contributors:
Cynthia Domenghini, Instructor and Horticulture Extension Specialist
Judy O’Mara, Plant Pathology Diagnostics Lab
K-State Turfgrass Blog
K-State Extension Entomology
K-State Wildlife and Outdoor Enterprise Management

Division of Horticulture
1712 Claflin, 2021 Throckmorton
Manhattan, KS 66506
(785) 532-6173

For questions or further information, contact your local extension agency.
This newsletter is also available on the World Wide Web at:
http://hnr.k-state.edu/extension/info-center/newsletters/index.html

The web version includes color images that illustrate subjects discussed. To subscribe to this newsletter electronically, send an e-mail message to [email protected] or [email protected] listing your e-mail address in the message.
Brand names appearing in this newsletter are for product identification purposes only. No endorsement is intended, nor is criticism implied of similar products not mentioned.
K-State Research and Extension is committed to making its services, activities and programs accessible to all participants. If you have special requirements due to a physical, vision or hearing disability, or a dietary restriction please contact Extension Horticulture at (785) 532-6173.

Cynthia Domenghini, Ph.D.
Instructor; Horticulture Extension Specialist
Department of Horticulture and Natural Resources
Kansas State University
1712 Claflin Rd.
Manhattan, KS 66503
785-340-3013
[email protected]

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KU News: Two ‘ultra-musicians’ will premiere works atop mountain

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

Headlines

Two ‘ultra-musicians’ will premiere works atop mountain
Sure, it’s beautiful atop Mount Elbert at 14,439 feet, the tallest peak in Colorado. But that is not the main reason Stephanie Zelnick, University of Kansas School of Music professor, is heading there in September. She and a partner will give a concert on the mountaintop, premiering two new pieces for clarinet duo, as part of her long-term research project on how altitude affects wind musicians. The Summit Duo plans to publish its video of the concert on YouTube soon after it is recorded in September.

 

Study details ‘eco-necrotourism’ and how public land managers can address psychological aspects of disappearing wonders

Researchers have outlined how visits to such sites have largely increased as people clamor to see them while they can. They also explore the ethics of last chance tourism, including questions of whether increased visitors exacerbate the dwindling of certain natural wonders and how some public land managers have responded to the phenomenon so far. They note that in some cases, such as Glacier National Park, increased visitors are not necessarily speeding the glaciers’ melting, but in places such as the Great Barrier Reef, inexperienced divers and other visitors can and have contributed to damaging the ecosystem.

 

KU Law students selected for Douglas County Legal Diversity Fellowship
Two University of Kansas School of Law students have been selected as the 2024-2025 fellows for the Douglas County Legal Diversity Fellowship. Nathan Felema and Rossiel Reyes, both second-year law students, will be working with local businesses in Douglas County during the upcoming academic year. During this fellowship, Felema and Reyes will work to improve their understanding of a diverse body of legal practice and support the work of Stevens & Brand L.L.P., Kansas Holistic Defenders and the Kansas State Board of Indigents’ Defense Service. Reyes is from Great Bend.

 

2024 Lelon Capps Lecture will explore culture, learning and community in mathematics classrooms
The School of Education & Human Sciences will welcome Dorothy White, professor of mathematics education at the University of Georgia, as the 2024 Lelon Capps featured lecturer. White will present “Embracing Students’ Cultures to Foster Learning and Community in Mathematics Classrooms” at 4:30 p.m. Sept. 9.

 

 

Full stories below.

 

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Contact: Rick Hellman, 785-864-8852, [email protected]

Two ‘ultra-musicians’ will premiere works atop mountain
LAWRENCE — If you knew one of the great wonders of the world would disappear soon, you might be inclined to visit while you still can. That kind of “last chance tourism” is real, as people around the world rush to visit natural landmarks before such sites succumb to the effects of climate change. A new study from the University of Kansas documents “eco-necrotourism,” ecological grief and what public land managers can do in the face of people rushing to see Earth’s wonders before they disappear.

 

It’s no secret people form deep emotional bonds to lands and places that are important to them and their loved ones. But little has been done to explore the psychological effects of people losing natural wonders. Robin Kundis Craig, Robert A. Schroeder Distinguished Professor of Law at KU, and Katrina Fischer Kuh of Pace University both specialize in environmental law and climate change’s effects on policy. During a conversation, they realized they have visited sites they wanted to see before they disappeared.

 

“This seems to be a real phenomenon. Visits are driven by tourists who want to see things before they are gone,” Craig said. “But no one was taking into account the psychological aspect of what is happening.”

 

The researchers have written a study examining literature from the tourism industry, psychology, public policy and law regarding visits driven by a desire to see natural wonders before they no longer exist. Their article, published in the Florida State University Law Review, coined the term “eco-necrotourism,” or tourism as a form of mourning.

 

Tourism literature has thoroughly documented last chance tourism. Real book titles such as “Last Chance Tourism,” “500 Places to See Before They Disappear” and “100 Places to Go Before They Disappear” all encourage travelers to catch fading natural wonders. And science has backed up that many natural wonders are indeed disappearing. Glacier National Park, for example, has documented the dwindling size of its namesake glaciers for decades, while Everglades National Park in Florida has documented how rising sea levels and agricultural practices have led to saltwater encroaching on the freshwater habitats of unique flora and fauna.

 

Craig and Kuh outline how visits in such sites have largely increased as people clamor to see them while they can. They also explore the ethics of last chance tourism, including questions of whether increased visitors exacerbate the dwindling of certain natural wonders and how some public land managers have responded to the phenomenon so far. They note that in some cases, such as Glacier National Park, increased visitors are not necessarily speeding the glaciers’ melting, but in places such as the Great Barrier Reef, inexperienced divers and other visitors can and have contributed to damaging the ecosystem.

 

Whether visitors are hastening a site’s decline, those motivated to see such disappearing wonders do in fact experience forms of grief. The authors cite examples such as people holding funerals for glaciers that have disappeared in locations such as Iceland just like they would for a deceased family member. They also cite psychological research documenting that people experience grief when they lose lands or natural features that are meaningful to them. Such ecological grief is only beginning to be acknowledged, but has and will continue to drive eco-necrotourism, the authors wrote, and as such dictates that public land managers would be well served to consider it in their management plans.

 

In the paper’s third section, the authors examine how public land managers can consider eco-necrotourism and ecological grief as part of their policy and management plans.

 

“How do we think governance of these places might have to change to accommodate visitors who are there for psychological reasons? That is a question we need to consider,” Craig said. “People do feel real grief when environments they are attached to start to see harm. This is a fairly new area of study, but there is a lot of evidence of it coming from many different places. Indigenous peoples have for decades, and wheat farmers in Australia, for example, have experienced grief over loss of beloved environments.”

 

The authors also document how residents and tourists alike have expressed grief over such ecological losses. With that grief and the resulting simultaneous increased visits and degradation in mind, the authors examine a typology of public land management. Fundamental questions of management in such settings should be addressed, including considering visitor psychology in adaptation planning and if that requires changes to how people are allowed to experience parks or whether visitor numbers need to be capped.

 

Some sites will eventually have a last visitor. Managers need to consider that possibility and ask who will be given precedence to be the last to see a natural wonder. Whether that priority is given to children, Indigenous populations, families, scientists, documentarians seeking to preserve memory for future generations or others is a question managers should contemplate. Finally, managers can also make equitable decisions about how disappearing sites are managed by giving Indigenous populations who have centuries of experience with the land a larger seat at the table to decide how the sites are managed.

 

“We’re not prescribing anything, because anything we did would be inappropriate for probably at least 70% of parks. Plus, there is the challenge of shifting memory. New generations are not going to view and remember the same things about sites as previous generations,” Craig said. “But, we need to start considering these questions and anticipating how visits are changing.”

 

As climate change’s effects continue to develop around the world, nature parks can provide valuable case studies on legal, governmental and policy responses to those changes, the authors wrote. Such parks have the advantage of generally being governed by central government organizations. By acknowledging psychological effects of environmental loss and ecological grief, they can provide examples of how to plan for and adapt to the psychological influence of climate degradation and peoples’ desires to experience natural wonders, while also mourning their changing nature.

 

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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: Mike Krings, 785-864-8860, [email protected]

Study details ‘eco-necrotourism’ and how public land managers can address psychological aspects of disappearing wonders

LAWRENCE — If you knew one of the great wonders of the world would disappear soon, you might be inclined to visit while you still can. That kind of “last chance tourism” is real, as people around the world rush to visit natural landmarks before such sites succumb to the effects of climate change. A new study from the University of Kansas documents “eco-necrotourism,” ecological grief and what public land managers can do in the face of people rushing to see Earth’s wonders before they disappear.

 

It’s no secret people form deep emotional bonds to lands and places that are important to them and their loved ones. But little has been done to explore the psychological effects of people losing natural wonders. Robin Kundis Craig, Robert A. Schroeder Distinguished Professor of Law at KU, and Katrina Fischer Kuh of Pace University both specialize in environmental law and climate change’s effects on policy. During a conversation, they realized they have visited sites they wanted to see before they disappeared.

 

“This seems to be a real phenomenon. Visits are driven by tourists who want to see things before they are gone,” Craig said. “But no one was taking into account the psychological aspect of what is happening.”

 

The researchers have written a study examining literature from the tourism industry, psychology, public policy and law regarding visits driven by a desire to see natural wonders before they no longer exist. Their article, published in the Florida State University Law Review, coined the term “eco-necrotourism,” or tourism as a form of mourning.

 

Tourism literature has thoroughly documented last chance tourism. Real book titles such as “Last Chance Tourism,” “500 Places to See Before They Disappear” and “100 Places to Go Before They Disappear” all encourage travelers to catch fading natural wonders. And science has backed up that many natural wonders are indeed disappearing. Glacier National Park, for example, has documented the dwindling size of its namesake glaciers for decades, while Everglades National Park in Florida has documented how rising sea levels and agricultural practices have led to saltwater encroaching on the freshwater habitats of unique flora and fauna.

 

Craig and Kuh outline how visits in such sites have largely increased as people clamor to see them while they can. They also explore the ethics of last chance tourism, including questions of whether increased visitors exacerbate the dwindling of certain natural wonders and how some public land managers have responded to the phenomenon so far. They note that in some cases, such as Glacier National Park, increased visitors are not necessarily speeding the glaciers’ melting, but in places such as the Great Barrier Reef, inexperienced divers and other visitors can and have contributed to damaging the ecosystem.

 

Whether visitors are hastening a site’s decline, those motivated to see such disappearing wonders do in fact experience forms of grief. The authors cite examples such as people holding funerals for glaciers that have disappeared in locations such as Iceland just like they would for a deceased family member. They also cite psychological research documenting that people experience grief when they lose lands or natural features that are meaningful to them. Such ecological grief is only beginning to be acknowledged, but has and will continue to drive eco-necrotourism, the authors wrote, and as such dictates that public land managers would be well served to consider it in their management plans.

 

In the paper’s third section, the authors examine how public land managers can consider eco-necrotourism and ecological grief as part of their policy and management plans.

 

“How do we think governance of these places might have to change to accommodate visitors who are there for psychological reasons? That is a question we need to consider,” Craig said. “People do feel real grief when environments they are attached to start to see harm. This is a fairly new area of study, but there is a lot of evidence of it coming from many different places. Indigenous peoples have for decades, and wheat farmers in Australia, for example, have experienced grief over loss of beloved environments.”

 

The authors also document how residents and tourists alike have expressed grief over such ecological losses. With that grief and the resulting simultaneous increased visits and degradation in mind, the authors examine a typology of public land management. Fundamental questions of management in such settings should be addressed, including considering visitor psychology in adaptation planning and if that requires changes to how people are allowed to experience parks or whether visitor numbers need to be capped.

 

Some sites will eventually have a last visitor. Managers need to consider that possibility and ask who will be given precedence to be the last to see a natural wonder. Whether that priority is given to children, Indigenous populations, families, scientists, documentarians seeking to preserve memory for future generations or others is a question managers should contemplate. Finally, managers can also make equitable decisions about how disappearing sites are managed by giving Indigenous populations who have centuries of experience with the land a larger seat at the table to decide how the sites are managed.

 

“We’re not prescribing anything, because anything we did would be inappropriate for probably at least 70% of parks. Plus, there is the challenge of shifting memory. New generations are not going to view and remember the same things about sites as previous generations,” Craig said. “But, we need to start considering these questions and anticipating how visits are changing.”

 

As climate change’s effects continue to develop around the world, nature parks can provide valuable case studies on legal, governmental and policy responses to those changes, the authors wrote. Such parks have the advantage of generally being governed by central government organizations. By acknowledging psychological effects of environmental loss and ecological grief, they can provide examples of how to plan for and adapt to the psychological influence of climate degradation and peoples’ desires to experience natural wonders, while also mourning their changing nature.

 

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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: Emma Herrman, [email protected]

KU Law students selected for Douglas County Legal Diversity Fellowship
LAWRENCE – Two University of Kansas School of Law students have been selected as the 2024-2025 fellows for the Douglas County Legal Diversity Fellowship. Nathan Felema and Rossiel Reyes, both second-year law students, will be working with local businesses in Douglas County during the upcoming academic year.

 

During this fellowship, Felema and Reyes will work to improve their understanding of a diverse body of legal practice and support the work of Stevens & Brand L.L.P., Kansas Holistic Defenders and the Kansas State Board of Indigents’ Defense Service.

 

“This fellowship is very important for the significance it carries in encouraging diverse legal students to aspire to reach positions and set goals that the history of the profession may not have wanted them to aim for,” Felema said. “I am excited for this upcoming school year and to really dive into new spaces of law and how to navigate them.”

 

Felema was born and raised in Seattle but hails from San Bernardino, California. Reyes, from Great Bend, is co-president of the student ambassadors and is the secretary of the Hispanic American Law Student Association (HALSA) and a member of First Generation Professionals.

 

“As KU Law continues to recruit and accept a more diverse student body, it is equally essential to provide support and resources to ensure our success. For first-generation law students, our presence in the legal field comes with both a sense of pride and frustration as we navigate this confusing path,” Reyes said. “Our presence is necessary to combat the many biases in the legal field by offering different viewpoints gained from our lived experiences.”

 

The fellowship was created in collaboration with local law firms, businesses and courts in Douglas County. It is a yearlong paid internship for diverse KU Law students to do legal work with both a private and public employer in the county.

 

“We were honored to participate in the DCLDF last year and are excited to partner with KU Law again this year in this valuable program,” said Brad Finkeldei, Stevens & Brand L.L.P. managing partner. “This fellowship provides practical experience for law students from underrepresented populations, which we hope will foster a greater diversity of backgrounds, experiences and viewpoints in our local legal community.”

 

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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: Aspen Grender, [email protected]

2024 Lelon Capps Lecture will explore culture, learning and community in mathematics classrooms
LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas School of Education & Human Sciences welcomes Dorothy White, professor of mathematics education in the Mary Frances Early College of Education at the University of Georgia, as the 2024 Lelon Capps featured lecturer.

 

White will present “Embracing Students’ Cultures to Foster Learning and Community in Mathematics Classrooms” at 4:30 p.m. Sept. 9 in 150 Joseph R. Pearson Hall. The event is free and open to the public. Registrants who cannot attend in person have the option to join virtually. Individuals interested in attending in person or virtually are encouraged to RSVP now and mark their calendars. Virtual registrants will receive Zoom login information to the email used for registration. Walk-ins for in-person attendance are welcome.

 

White’s research, teaching and service interconnect and support empowering all students for success in mathematics by purposefully promoting collaborative relationships among mathematics teachers and researchers.

 

White’s research centers on three lines of inquiry: access, equity and culture in mathematics education; teachers’ professional learning communities; and the professional development of mathematics teachers, educators and doctoral students. Her current research is a collaborative among mathematics teacher educators and preservice teachers of color (PTOCs) at three sites: a historically Black college/university (HBCU), a Hispanic-serving institution (HSI) and a predominantly white institution (PWI). The study will describe the K-12 experiences of PTOCs, how a cross-site community can support them as they learn to teach mathematics and the systemic ways that mathematics teacher preparation programs can be improved to meet the needs of all teacher candidates.

 

At the University of Georgia, White teaches undergraduate teacher preparation courses in elementary, middle grades and secondary mathematics education as well as graduate courses in critical issues and national trends in STEM education. Learn more about White online.

 

The Lelon R. Capps Lecture Series was established in honor of a former professor to bring nationally recognized speakers in education to KU. Capps served the KU School of Education & Human Sciences for 44 years. His teaching and scholarship focused on elementary mathematics education. The series is supported by a fund established through KU Endowment and is hosted by the Department of Curriculum & Teaching, with support from the Department of Mathematics.

 

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

[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 Alumni Association invites campus, community partners to participate in Homecoming 2024

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

Headlines

Editors: Note student steering committee members from De Soto and Newton.

Contact: Ryan Edmonds, KU Alumni Association, 800-584-2957, [email protected]

KU Alumni Association invites campus, community partners to participate in Homecoming 2024

 

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas will host its 112th Homecoming, sponsored by Central Bank, Oct. 14-20, culminating in the KU football game against Houston on Oct. 19 at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. The theme for this year’s celebration is “Jayhawks Through the Eras,” welcoming Jayhawks of all generations back to the Hill for this tradition.

 

The KU Alumni Association has selected the members of its student-led Homecoming Steering Committee, who will work with Ryan Edmonds, assistant director of student programs, to coordinate activities for Homecoming 2024.

 

Homecoming Steering Committee members:

 

Anna Korn, a senior in sport management from Phoenix, executive director.
Tithi Patel, a junior in finance and accounting from Navsari, India, awards chair.
Andy Denekas, a graduate student in business and pre-law from Omaha, Nebraska, competitions chair.
Eris Rindt, a sophomore in journalism from Newton, competitions co-chair.
Jess Mumm, a senior in strategic communication and business from Omaha, Nebraska, programs chair.
Emma Klingler, a junior in business management and marketing from De Soto, programs co-chair.
Aria Woolsey, a senior in journalism from River Falls, Wisconsin, public relations/outreach chair.
Nana Ansere Amfo Sackey, a senior in visual communication and design from Accra, Ghana, public relations/outreach co-chair.

KU’s Homecoming experience aims to celebrate KU history and tradition and instill Jayhawk pride in all members of the KU community, near and far, through the engagement of students, faculty, staff, alumni and community members. The Alumni Association and Homecoming Steering Committee encourage campus and community partners to submit an event for the Homecoming calendar on behalf of their department or organization. Program submissions will be accepted until Sept. 6.

 

The association and steering committee will hold a Homecoming Preview from 3 to 4:30 p.m. Aug. 20 in the Jayhawk Welcome Center and invite any KU campus or Lawrence community partner interested in hosting an event to attend. Register here for the Homecoming Preview.

 

This year’s Homecoming celebration is sponsored by Central Bank and presented by Konica Minolta, KU Bookstore, Pepsi Zero Sugar and The University of Kansas Health System.

 

The Alumni Association will continue to update the Homecoming website as more information on the week’s activities becomes available.

 

About the KU Alumni Association

Through the support of members and donors, the KU Alumni Association advocates for the University of Kansas, communicates with Jayhawks in all media, recruits students and volunteers, serves the KU community, and unites Jayhawks. For more information, visit the KU Alumni Association website.

 

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

[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: New book explores how punk virus continues to infect new generations

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

 

Headlines

 

 

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

New book explores how punk virus continues to infect new generations

 

LAWRENCE — Nearly 50 years after the musical form’s first flowering, the show of the summer here was by a punk rock band. On July 30, Aussie quartet Amyl and the Sniffers sold out the Granada Theater as frontwoman Amy Taylor performed for a crowd of 900 sweaty, moshing fans.

 

Four days earlier, Olivia Rodrigo sold out the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri, stomping the stage in her Doc Marten boots before a crowd of nearly 20,000.

 

This was no surprise to Iain Ellis, a senior lecturer in the University of Kansas Department of English and author of the new book “Punk Beyond the Music: Tracing Mutations and Manifestations of the Punk Virus” (Rowman & Littlefield).

 

“The music always is rejuvenating itself,” Ellis said. “There’s a lot of music coming out of Britain at the moment that is definitely rooted in punk. I call them neo-post-punk — bands like English Teacher or Sleaford Mods or some of the hip-hoppers like Bobby Vylan — people who are taking that punk sensibility and sometimes the punk style, as well.

 

“A key component of punkers is the way they use symbols as messages — as a kind of commentary. To me, it’s always been a visual phenomenon as much as a sonic one.”

 

Ellis, who grew up in Britain during the birth of punk there, did his doctoral thesis on the subject during the 1980s. But during COVID-19 lockdown he began thinking of punk again as a virus, maintaining some core tenets while mutating its shape over and over.

 

“I structure the book around five tenets of punk,” Ellis said. “The outsider is one … meaning you assume the position of an outsider. And that’s why it’s been so friendly and welcoming to minorities, whether it be Rock Against Racism, which was built on punk in reaction to Britain’s issues of racism in the ’70s, or things like queer core or the riot grrrl scene. It’s always had much more of an open invitation along the lines of gender, sexuality, class, race.”

 

“It also has an aspect of feelings of alienation or being antiestablishment or anti-institutional. So there is a kind of pre-political or political with a small ‘p’ element to it — to be an outsider by self-definition, even if it does include privileged white dudes, as well.

 

“I also mention politics, the importance of notable symbols and the DIY ethic. These things aren’t always fixed in punk, but they seem to always swim around it.”

 

The book hits the highlights of what Ellis calls:

 

Pre-punk — forerunners of punk expression across the arts, such as William Burroughs, Andy Warhol, Dada, Situationist International.
Proto-punk — those who immediately prefigured the punk explosion, including Charles Bukowski, John Waters, Monty Python.
Primary punk — the 1976-77 music (Ramones-Clash-Sex Pistols), arts and subcultural explosions.
Post-punk — expressions of punk aesthetics that have come since in various waves and manifestations.

Ellis’ analysis includes punk’s influence on fashion, comedy, theatre and much more.

 

“It manifests and mutates across the arts, infecting culture, lifestyles and even national heritage,” he said.

 

Ellis continues to have déjà vu. Shortly before his book’s publication, Britain was wracked with anti-immigrant rioting.

 

“It feels like history is repeating itself,” he said. “I feel like I’m going through the 1970s again with open racism, the far right on the streets. Trumpism is the new National Front, for me.

 

“And I think the same reactions are coming out where you get new manifestations of youthful dissent, and it has a very punk vibe to it. We still need Rock Against Racism.

 

“A lot of it is coming out of the north of England, as well. It’s almost a revival of a kind of Northern, working-class socialism, with very militant politics of the Gang of Four type.

 

“And at the same time, there are also incredibly co-opted, commercialized, pop versions of punk in singers like Olivia Rodrigo, one of the biggest pop stars of the last decade, or the 5 Seconds of Summer boy bands.

 

“That’s why it no longer can be seen as just an outsider or a subculture. It’s mainstream culture. We have politicians in Britain now who debate over what the Smiths were like, because that generation that grew up with the music are now people in positions of power. So it’s fascinating the way it’s now a multigenerational phenomenon. And of course, it is not manifested the same way each time. History doesn’t repeat itself, but it rhymes.”

 

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

[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

Lettuce Eat Local: E is for eggstra eggplants

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Amanda Miller
Columnist
Lettuce Eat Local

For some foods and food terms, etymology could not appear any simpler. Blueberries, for instance, are berries that are blue; watermelon is a melon that is 92% water. Sweet corn is corn that is sweeter than field corn (corn that is grown in big fields), and popcorn is different from both of those in that (guess what) it pops. 

Names could come from taste: honeydew melons are as sweet as honey mixed with morning dew, and butternut squash is deliciously buttery and nutty. Names could also come from appearance: cherry and grape tomatoes are as small as cherries and grapes; oranges are, you know, orange; dragonfruit can make you think of what a dragon might look like.

Speaking of squash, I’m guessing you can see the logic behind summer squash versus winter squash without me going into great detail, so names can also come from seasons. 

Some food names, however, sound simpler than they really are. Sweet potatoes are potatoes that are sweet…kind of. They seem like it and we call them that, but actually sweet potatoes are in the same family as morning glories and bindweed, whereas “real” potatoes are nightshades and therefore more closely related to peppers and tomatoes. While there are logical etymological explanations, surface reading won’t explain that coconuts don’t taste like nutty cocoa, and fortunately, strawberries are not berries that taste like straw. I live with a three-year-old boy so I should also point out that a pea doesn’t taste like its homophone. 

Eggplant is one of those that terms that does actually make sense, except maybe not immediately. What on earth does that elongated purple fruit have do to with eggs? They don’t taste like them or look like them; hens don’t lay them. The problem is not with our language nor with the vegetable itself, but rather with the cultivar that we are familiar with. If you’ve never seen one before, go google images of “white eggplants that look like eggs” — the reason for the name is suddenly and strikingly obvious.

I like to think how oddly surprising it would be to walk out to the garden, peer under a few leaves, and see this egg hanging there! It’s like a fairy tale…which, incidentally, there is type of eggplant called fairy tale, although they are just enchantingly small and not eggy. Eggplants have been around for so many centuries that they long predate fairy tales, being mentioned in Ayurvedic texts sometime in the years BC. Because of their natural bitterness, they were often cultivated for medicinal purposes, and their Arabic name is thought to mean “demon’s eggs” in light of their potent flavor.  

Nowadays, these egg plants are not as common, due in part to the little white varietals not shipping as well as the modern market desires. The potential of being surprised by eggplants remains, however, as I was pleasantly shocked by discovering several big purple orbs hanging on my plants — I’ve picked six beautiful eggplants so far, the best harvest I’ve had yet. 

I thought perhaps I had discovered a new varietal of eggplant the other day as I walked around the corner of the house. But wait, no, thanks to a wayward hen, that was just an egg sitting on some plants. 

 

Tahini-dressed Eggplant Salad

This isn’t your typical salad, but I assume you weren’t eggspecting that anyway. I usually reserve my eggplant for baba ghanoush, a Mediterranean roasted eggplant dip (that also features tahini, yes I have a problem), or ratatouille, but I actually have enough eggstra to be able to eggsperiment a little. I’ve found microwaving the eggplant a bit can help it not soak up so much oil when cooking. This dish can be served warm or chilled, so it’s nice both fresh and to pull out another day once its soaked up the dressing. 

Prep tips: I served it with some freshly pickled jalapeño slices, but sriracha would be a nice spicy hit as well. 

1-2 medium globe eggplants [about 1 ½ pounds], sliced into quarter-moons

salt

¾ cup water

¼ cup tahini

1 tablespoon molasses

1-2 tablespoons soy sauce

2 tablespoons rice vinegar

olive oil

Toss eggplant with a good sprinkle of salt in a colander; let set while you make the dressing. Blend the water, tahini, molasses, soy sauce, and vinegar; set aside. Transfer the eggplant to a microwaveable bowl, and microwave for 2 minutes. Heat the oil in a heavy skillet over medium-high heat, and put in a single layer of eggplant (in batches if needed), searing until golden. Toss with the dressing and enjoy.