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KU News: KU Debate qualifies third team for National Debate Tournament

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

 

Headlines

 

KU Debate qualifies third team for National Debate Tournament

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas debate team of junior Jacob Wilkus, Lawrence, and Owen Williams, Lee’s Summit, Missouri, have qualified for the National Debate Tournament in Atlanta from April 5-8. Wilkus and Williams were selected as at-large qualifiers for the National Debate Tournament by the tournament’s selection committee based on their record over the course of the season. They are the third KU pair to qualify for the tournament this year.

Department of Physics & Astronomy professor receives prestigious NSF award for black hole research

LAWRENCE — A prestigious Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award from the National Science Foundation will help a University of Kansas scholar continue her groundbreaking research on supermassive black holes. Elisabeth Mills, assistant professor of physics & astronomy, received the five-year, $821,724 grant from the NSF. Along with helping to develop her research, Mills said the award will also support department outreach efforts, like the popular KU AstroNights telescope viewing events, as well as provide important opportunities for KU students.

 

Full stories below.

 

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Contact: Scott Harris, KU Debate, 785-864-9878, [email protected], @KansasDebate

KU Debate qualifies third team for National Debate Tournament

 

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas debate team of junior Jacob Wilkus, Lawrence, and Owen Williams, Lee’s Summit, Missouri, have qualified for the National Debate Tournament in Atlanta from April 5-8.

Wilkus and Williams were selected as at-large qualifiers for the National Debate Tournament (NDT) by the tournament’s selection committee based on their record over the course of the season. They are the third KU pair to qualify for the tournament this year. They join seniors Graham Revare, Shawnee; William Soper, Bucyrus; John Marshall, Lawrence; and Jiyoon Park, Topeka; who had already qualified.

To qualify as a third team, a team must be one of the six best third-teams in the country over the season.

“Qualifying for the NDT as a third team is incredibly difficult, and Jacob and Owen earned it with a remarkable season,” said Scott Harris, the David B. Pittaway Director of Debate.

The other schools that qualified three teams to the tournament are Dartmouth College, Emory University, Georgetown University, Northwestern University and Wake Forest University. This is the ninth straight year that KU has qualified three teams for the NDT and the 57th consecutive year of qualifying one or more teams to compete at the NDT.

KU has won the National Debate Tournament six times and reached the Final Four 19 times.

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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: Ranjit Arab, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, [email protected], @KUCollege

Department of Physics & Astronomy professor receives prestigious NSF award for black hole research

 

LAWRENCE — A prestigious Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award from the National Science Foundation will help a University of Kansas Department of Physics & Astronomy professor continue her groundbreaking research on supermassive black holes.

Elisabeth Mills, assistant professor of physics & astronomy, received the five-year, $821,724 grant from the NSF for her research on how supermassive black holes grow.

Every galaxy, including our own Milky Way galaxy, has a supermassive black hole at its center, yet very little is known about how black holes gather gas from their surroundings to grow bigger. Mills will use some of the world’s most powerful telescopes — the Very Large Array in New Mexico and the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array in Chile — to observe supermassive black holes in neighboring galaxies.

She said the goal is to study the gas and dust in the centers of these galaxies to better understand when they might become the next meal for the black holes.

“This work helps us understand how our own Milky Way galaxy has been formed and how the growth of its black hole might change our galaxy in the future,” Mills said.

The NSF’s CAREER Award is the most prestigious awards given to faculty members beginning their independent careers, providing support to advance outstanding research through commitment to teaching, learning and disseminating knowledge. Along with helping to develop her research, Mills said the award will also support department outreach efforts, like the popular KU AstroNights telescope viewing events, as well as provide important opportunities for KU students.

“It gives students in my group the opportunity to make connections with internationally renowned astronomers from all over the world and makes KU visible on an international stage,” she said.

Arash Mafi, executive dean of KU’s College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, said the award reflects the high caliber of research taking place within the College.

“We are thrilled that the NSF has recognized Professor Mills’ innovative work,” Mafi said. “It is further proof of the world-class research being conducted across the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences.”

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

Phone: 785-864-3256

Fax: 785-864-3339

[email protected]

http://www.news.ku.edu

 

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

 

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs

KU News: Digital scholarship illuminates life of important medieval poet

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

 

Headlines

 

Rice paddy snake diversification was driven by geological and environmental factors in Thailand, molecular data suggests

LAWRENCE — A University of Kansas study of rice paddy snakes in Southeast Asia gives key details to their diversification and natural history, adding molecular evidence that the rise of the Khorat Plateau and subsequent environmental shifts in Thailand may have altered the course of the snakes’ evolution some 2.5 million years ago. The researchers relied on molecular data along with ecological niche modeling, which depended on data about where specimens were located in the field. This approach could help conservation efforts going forward, or predictions of how species might fare in climate change scenarios.

Digital scholarship illuminates life of important medieval poet

LAWRENCE — Tapping into digitized wills and other legal documents, University of Kansas scholar Misty Schieberle unearthed new information about the family and network of medieval poet Thomas Hoccleve, whose financial worries and mental health struggles remain relevant to readers today. “Thomas Hoccleve of London: New Evidence of Hoccleve’s Family and Finances” was published in the journal Studies in the Age of Chaucer.

 

Full stories below.

 

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

Rice paddy snake diversification was driven by geological and environmental factors in Thailand, molecular data suggests

 

LAWRENCE — A University of Kansas study of rice paddy snakes in Southeast Asia gives key details to their diversification and natural history, adding molecular evidence that the rise of the Khorat Plateau and subsequent environmental shifts in Thailand may have altered the course of the snakes’ evolution some 2.5 million years ago. The findings were published today in the journal Scientific Reports.

Researchers say the implications could help tell the story of diversification more broadly in the region.

“This paper concerns mud snakes typically found in aquatic systems across Southeast Asia, South Asia, East Asia, Australia and New Guinea,” said lead author Justin Bernstein, a KU Center for Genomics postdoctoral researcher. “Deeper-level relationships regarding their evolution have recently begun to be studied, particularly through genome-scale data. However, finer-scaled evolutionary patterns remain to be fully revealed.”

Bernstein, who currently serves at the University of Texas-Arlington, said the mud snakes, a family known as the Homalopsidae, are commonly found today in aquatic systems. Bernstein’s newest work on the homalopsids focuses on a subgroup called rice paddy snakes that are commonly found in agricultural fields and freshwaters streams in Southeast Asia.

Although recent research has touched on the diversity of rice paddy snakes, their geographic distribution has touched off scientific speculation: One hypothesis suggests that around 2.5 million years ago, a plateau in Central Thailand, known as the Khorat Plateau, emerged from the ground, leading to the separation and subsequent diversification of snake populations over time. Indeed, molecular data provided insights into the timing of species diversification that aligned with the formation of the plateau.

However, a later genome-scale study challenged this hypothesis by pushing the divergence date backward, predating the plateau’s formation.

“This discrepancy raises questions about the accuracy of different datasets in determining evolutionary timelines,” Bernstein said. “To address this, our paper employs more limited molecular datasets but with more robust analyses and denser sampling to test the hypothesis. Our results suggest that the group indeed diversified after the Khorat Plateau rose, and environmental changes over time further contributed to their divergence.”

Past that, the research team found varied differences in preferred habitats among different snake species using past and present niche models, hinting that other environmental factors might have influenced their routes toward diversification and geographic distribution.

Bernstein’s collaborator included co-author Rafe Brown, KU professor of ecology & evolutionary biology and curator-in-charge of the Herpetology Division at KU’s Natural History Museum & Biodiversity Institute. Other co-authors included Harold Voris and Sara Ruane of the Field Museum in Chicago; Bryan Stuart of the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences; the late Daryl Karns of Hanover College; Jimmy McGuire of the University of California-Berkeley, Djoko Iskandar of the Institut Teknologi Bandung in Indonesia; Awal Riyanto of the National Research and Innovation Agency of Indonesia; Camilo Calderón‐Acevedo of the State University of New York: College of Environmental Science and Forestry; Marcelo Gehara of Rutgers University-Newark; and J. Angel Soto‐Centeno of Rutgers University-Newark and the American Museum of Natural History.

Bernstein and his collaborators relied on molecular data along with ecological niche modeling to shed new light on the rice paddy snakes, which depended on data about where specimens were located in the field. This approach could help conservation efforts going forward, or predictions of how species might fare in climate change scenarios.

“The whole point of ecological niche modeling, put simply, is if I take, say, 100 occurrence points for those snakes, and then I use 19 environmental data layers that correspond with each point, and compare it to a background — which would be the landscape with its environmental data regardless of snake occurrence points — do we see correlations and patterns?” Bernstein said. “You’re trying to determine the habitat suitability of your species of interest across a broad landscape, including areas where they have not been recorded from.”

He said the environmental data includes variables like temperature differences, seasonality and precipitation at different points in time, such as quarterly, monthly or annually.

“These 19 layers containing the environmental factors are ‘stacked’ in a way that each GPS coordinate — where a snake occurrence record is — has a set of 19 environmental variables associated with it,” Bernstein said.

For instance, via this approach Bernstein said while these rice-paddy snakes don’t exist in the Philippines, there are suitable habitats based off of where they live in Indochina.

“Hypothetically they could live there,” he said. “That doesn’t mean they do. There is no evidence suggesting they are able to get across ocean waters and enter the Philippines, and it would be highly unlikely for that scenario to occur. But the analysis is just indicating there is suitable habitat elsewhere, in addition to where we find them now, and that can be really useful. If it’s a continuous landscape and you haven’t found any individuals of a species in a particular area, but you see high habitat suitability, maybe you can go find a population that is presently unknown to exist.”

The research builds on two of Bernstein’s earlier works. One study combines genetic analyses of older museum specimens’ mitochondrial DNA with fresher genetic samples from recent field collections of mud snakes to learn more about diversity of homalopsids, including rice paddy snakes. The other study is a more focused study that described a new rice paddy snake species and posited the hypothesis of the Khorat Plateau based on current data but lacked the power to test it.

While many species of the mud snakes are drab, Bernstein said others are highly charismatic.

“Some have tentacles as appendages on their face,” he said. “You could find two of the same species in one hole, like a mud lobster hole, where one is white and black, and the other is bright red and black — very striking. Some have speckled yellow bellies, while others are black with bright orange flecks and stripes down their back. And other species have unique behaviors that are not seen in the 4,000-plus species of snakes. They are truly stunning snakes.”

Ultimately, the mud snake’s value may be in serving to show how species, and their morphological diversity, evolves over time, as well as how other organisms may react to changes in the ecosystems they live in.

“I saw a lot of opportunity in them as a model system for investigating biogeography,” Bernstein said. “Honestly, using them more as a model system for understanding how species change or remain stable over time has been really valuable. We have several studies we want to pursue further, and many more in the works, and it all begins with understanding their evolutionary relationships.”

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

a KU News Service podcast hosted by Kansas Public Radio.

 

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

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

Digital scholarship illuminates life of important medieval poet

 

LAWRENCE – A fresh round of digital scholarship has revealed new information about the family and London network of late-medieval poet Thomas Hoccleve (1367-1426).

Misty Schieberle, University of Kansas professor of English, recently published “Thomas Hoccleve of London: New Evidence of Hoccleve’s Family and Finances” in Studies in the Age of Chaucer, a journal of the New Chaucer Society.

Schieberle cites evidence she pieced together from centuries-old records, which she translated from their original Latin, showing for the first time that Hoccleve’s father was an aristocratically connected draper, or cloth merchant, operating in London when Hoccleve was born, strongly indicating the poet was born in the city.

Scholars of the period previously thought he might have been born in the village of Hockliffe, about 45 miles north of London, which provided the family surname.

From her studies of wills and other legal documents, Schieberle shows that Hoccleve’s father worked with the prominent merchant William Holbech, a former sheriff and member of Parliament, and had business dealings with John of Gaunt, the uncle of King Richard II. Schieberle suggests that Hoccleve had a likely aunt in William’s wife, Maud Holbech, whose will left Hoccleve a yearly income explicitly in the event that he never obtained what was called a benefice: full-time, permanent employment in the Catholic Church as a priest, the vocation he trained for.

That benefice, with job security that might be likened to a tenured professorship, never materialized. Hoccleve spent his days instead employed as a government secretary who copied and processed royal documents.

At the turn of the 1400s, after years as a bureaucrat, Hoccleve completed his first poem, starting a literary career that would make him one of the most important poets between Chaucer and Shakespeare.

“He’s one of Chaucer’s successors, and he’s one of the men most responsible for creating the image of Chaucer as the father of English poetry,” Schieberle said. “He’s also remarkably frank about some of his struggles, including his financial woes and a mental health crisis and his recovery from it. And so, in addition to writing poetry that engaged with the popular styles and themes of the day, he’s a remarkably personable figure because of what he tells you about his life and his struggles, which a lot of modern readers and students find really approachable.”

Schieberle’s archival work presents new facts about the life of the poet and his family, and it offers a vivid picture of how Maud Holbech’s will acknowledges the financial precarity that Hoccleve complained about in some of his poems.

Schieberle’s research builds on a 2014 reference by fellow scholars who identified the name of Hoccleve’s father from a single legal record. By cross-referencing all the names in that document in newly available digital databases that summarize wills and property records, then tracking down the original, full-text manuscript copies for details on the individuals and transactions, Schieberle identified over a dozen new records that add to scholars’ knowledge about the poet’s life history.

Schieberle said what she found confirms that although Hoccleve rose to be a senior clerk in the Royal Office of the Privy Seal, he was frustrated by the lack of security and recognition that even that managerial position conferred.

“Hoccleve’s inheritance supplemented his income,” Schieberle said, “but it must have also reminded him of opportunities he never received, which gives us even more sympathy for him.”

Schieberle came to study Hoccleve through the other special focus of her research, his then-contemporary writer Christine de Pizan, whose works Hoccleve translated and copied.

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

Phone: 785-864-3256

Fax: 785-864-3339

[email protected]

http://www.news.ku.edu

 

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

 

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs

 

Introduccing DriveKS

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DriveKS, Kansas’ new toll payment system will go live with cashless tolling in July. Watch this short video for a sneak-peek of this new system that supports transponder transactions and transactions identified by license plates on a single account.

Want to know more about how cashless tolling will work? Head on over to DriveKS.com, today’s source for all cashless tolling information including short instructional videos, FAQs and more. Sign up to receive Cashless Tolling Updates sent directly to your email each month.

Monthly Construction Report

Many of KTA’s 20 construction projects for 2024 have begun or soon will. It’s easier than ever to stay up to date on these projects:

Summer Help Program

KTA’s summer help program is back, with a variety of positions available. These temporary positions are perfect for a college student, recent high school grad and teachers who have the summers off. Check out the job postings, then share with those you know. Applications close late April.

KTA in your Community

KTA wants to help customers get ready for cashless tolling. We’re seeking presentation opportunities, and places to share material and distribute free KTAGs, as schedules permit. Simply use this link to request materials, presentations or KTAG pop-ups.
Distracted Driving

April is Distracted Driving Awareness Month. Safe driving should be your top, and only, priority when behind the wheel. If your attention is on anything besides driving, you increase your risk of crashing. Save a life and #JustDrive. Visit NHTSA’s website for more information.

 

 

Lovina Remembers 20 Years in Michigan

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

As I write down today’s date, many memories flow through my mind. Twenty years ago we left Geneva, Indiana with all our belongings and headed north to our new home in Michigan. We had six children at that time: Elizabeth, age 9, Susan, 8, Verena, 6, Benjamin, 4, Loretta, 3, and Joseph, 20 months. The years have passed so quickly. Daughter Lovina joined our family eight weeks later, coming three and a half weeks earlier than expected. I was sick in the hospital for a week, and she was delivered by emergency C-section. We were not unpacked yet and not at all prepared for a newborn. 

Then fifteen and a half months later, our last child joined the family—Kevin. He will be 19 in September. Kevin has muscular dystrophy, and we are in the process of getting him a power chair. I really hope this will be much more useful to him than the mobility scooter, since it will let the seat rise higher and also recline. He will also be able to stretch his legs out better. He’s over six feet tall, so he needs more room for his long legs. 

On Sunday, daughter Susan and Ervin hosted church services for our church district. It was a cold, snowy day, so it took a lot of propane to heat the pole barn. After services were over, six tables were set up to feed everyone in two seatings. We fed a total of 11 tables, which held 16 at each table. The babies and the toddlers don’t eat at the table, so I am guessing there were around two hundred people there. We made a noodle soup for the younger children that don’t eat sandwiches at the table. The lunch menu consisted of homemade wheat and white bread, ham, Colby cheese, peanut butter spread, pickles, pickled red beets, hot peppers, jelly, butter, coffee, spearmint tea, and four different kinds of cookies.

While dishes were being washed, baggies of popcorn were passed out to everyone. It took a lot of coffee on a cold day. I made 150 cups of coffee and a 20-quart pot of tea. There wasn’t much left of either.

Susan and Ervin invited mostly family back for supper. I had helped Susan make two big roasters of pizza casserole the day before. So along with that, on the menu was potato salad, deviled eggs, bread, ham, cheese, peanut butter spread, pickles, pickled red beets, hot peppers, a variety of pies, cakes, pudding, jello, etc. A lot of us took a dish so it made an easy supper for Susan.  

I am so glad this is over for Susan and Ervin. It was a little rough getting ready, but now she can relax that all her closets, walls, ceilings, furniture, windows, etc. all had a good cleaning. 

On Saturday son Benjamin and I went to help Ervin and Susan with last-minute prep. Daughter Verena and her special friend Daniel Ray went to get Kaitlyn, Jennifer, Isaiah, Ryan, and Curtis and took them to Dustin and Loretta’s house for the day. Verena and Loretta gave all the children a bath and washed their hair. Verena and Daniel Ray took them back home in the evening. It was much easier cleaning for Susan with someone else looking after their five children. Of course Baby Ervin stayed home, and this Grandma would stop working once in a while to cuddle him. He’s such a blue-eyed little sweetie. He can give the biggest smiles. He’s short on patience though, when he’s hungry. 

My husband Joe, son Joseph, and son-in-law Dustin dressed a 1,000-pound beef, and it’s hanging in our cold pole barn. That’s on our agenda this week. Dustins will take a half and we will take the other half. God bless!

Cheesy Chicken Chowder

1 onion, chopped

1 cup chopped carrots

1 cup diced potatoes

1 cup diced celery

4 cups water

5 cups diced cooked chicken

4 tablespoons butter

6 tablespoons all-purpose flour

2 cups milk

1 cup shredded Cheddar or mozzarella cheese

1 teaspoon salt

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

Come see a Musical Drama

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A Goodly Heritage, a musical drama sharing a history of the Swiss Volynian Mennonites on Saturday, March 23 at 7:00 or Sunday, March 24, at 2:00

at Eden Mennonite Church, 401 18th Ave., Moundridge, Kansas..

One of many groups of Mennonites moving to the U.S. in  the 1870’s, the Schweitzers settled near (what is now) Moundridge, Kansas, and Freeman, South Dakota.  Mennonites were part of the larger Anabaptist movement that began in Europe in the early 1500’s.  The drama seeks to explain the religious beliefs underlying the Anabaptist movement, and the journey over  centuries that brought these groups to America.

 The cast is made up of Schweitzer’s and friends, adults and children, from McPherson County and surrounding   areas.  Jenny Schrag, who wrote the drama and composed some of the music, is directing, along with Dawn Abrahams.  Bonita Howard is the choir director.

Lrics and music are by Jenny Schrag, with hymns from Voices Together and The Mennonite Hymnal (used with permission).

The drama is one of the events of the 150th celebration of forebears coming to the U.S. in 1874.  Admission is free.