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Exploring No Deposit Slot Bonuses in Canada’s Online Casinos 2023

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KU News: New grasp of key COVID-19 protein may lead to a live-attenuated vaccine effective against more variants for longer

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

Headlines

New grasp of key COVID-19 protein may lead to a live-attenuated vaccine effective against more variants for longer
LAWRENCE — Research from the University of Kansas just published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences could hasten development of a new class of vaccines aimed at SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. Anthony Fehr, associate professor of molecular biosciences, led research into a protein dubbed “Mac1,” which has intrigued molecular bioscientists as an antiviral target because it’s known to help confer virulence, or the power to cause disease.

School of Engineering establishes virtual institute to combat cyber threats
LAWRENCE — A new virtual institute established at the University of Kansas School of Engineering will train the next generation of military and civilian leaders to better combat the growing threat of cyberattacks and protect the electromagnetic spectrum (EMS). The complexity and diversity of modern communication systems — such as 5G and 6G networks — as well as artificial intelligence and electronic warfare systems present daunting challenges in protecting networks from cyberattacks, said Fengjun Li, KU professor of electrical engineering & computer science.

Authors try to simplify difficult aspect of Russian language
LAWRENCE — Together with two native Russians, Stephen Dickey, professor from the Department of Slavic, German & Eurasian Studies, has written a new book that explores and allows mid- to advanced-level Russian language learners to practice verbal aspect, which has no equivalent in English. “It’s a book about a very stubborn part of Russian grammar,” Dickey said. The book is part of KU’s Libraries’ free, online Open Textbooks initiative, and the authors have been promoting its availability at a series of national and international teachers’ conferences.

Full stories below.

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Contact: Brendan M. Lynch, 785-864-8855, [email protected]
New grasp of key COVID-19 protein may lead to a live-attenuated vaccine effective against more variants for longer
LAWRENCE — Research from the University of Kansas just published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences could hasten development of a new class of vaccines aimed at SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.

Anthony Fehr, associate professor of molecular biosciences, led research into a protein dubbed “Mac1,” which has intrigued molecular bioscientists as an antiviral target because it’s known to help confer virulence, or the power to cause disease. Results have spurred several groups, including the Fehr lab, to begin developing novel inhibitors of Mac1.

“We’ve built up a body of literature showing this gene is critical for the virus to cause disease,” Fehr said. “To better understand this protein, we use what’s called reverse genetics, where we can delete or mutate this gene so it no longer functions in the context of the actual virus. While we’ve done this in a lot of different coronaviruses, we hadn’t actually explored this in SARS-CoV-2 until just recently. This paper really describes our efforts to get rid of this protein Mac1 in SARS-CoV-2 and really see what’s happening.”

Studying how SARS-CoV-2 behaved in mouse models, Fehr’s collaborator at Oklahoma State, Rudra Channappanavar and his group, found that without Mac1, the virus barely had an impact on the health of mice.

“If you look at the mouse data, we find that every mouse survived and showed no real signs of disease when they were infected with the virus without this gene, whereas when we give mice the normal virus — we would call it the ‘wild-type’ virus — every mouse dies,” Fehr said. “So, there’s a huge discrepancy in the ability of those viruses to cause disease. These results further demonstrate that Mac1 is a strong target for the development of novel antiviral therapies.”

What’s more, Fehr and his co-authors found the virus, without the Mac1 protein, induced a robust initial immune response in mice, the kind of biological response researchers look for in a vaccine target.

“That first response you have to a virus, called an innate immune response, is dramatically increased in this infection,” said the KU researcher. “When we infect the mice, this further improves the adaptive immune response, which is that T- and B-cell response we get that produces antibodies and antiviral T-cells later on — that can really protect us from future disease.”

Fehr and Channappanavar have already shown that prior infection with the attenuated virus can be protective for mice from a future infection.

“Right now, we’re really looking at further developing this virus into a live attenuated vaccine for SARS-CoV-2, and we’re working on different strategies with minor modifications to this virus to make it even better,” he said. “We think this is a great start to developing a vaccine that we think would have longer lasting immunity.”

Fehr said such a vaccine could be administered intranasally, targeting the lung, giving it advantages over today’s recommended vaccine regimen based on mRNA technology.

“One of the major problems with the current vaccines is that we give them in your arm — when you give a vaccine in your arm or your muscle, you don’t really get great immune responses in your lungs,” he said. “We think that live-attenuated vaccines given intranasally can improve that response.”

Additionally, live-attenuated COVID-19 vaccines could last longer than current vaccines requiring boosters.

“I don’t want to dis mRNA vaccines — they’re great,” Fehr said. “But they’re not particularly long-lasting. We’re finding their immunity wanes over the course of time. Live-attenuated viruses have been around for decades, and many of them are very effective and last very long. We can get a lot of live-attenuated vaccines as children, and we never have to take them again because they last our lifetime.”

According to Fehr, a live-attenuated vaccine would target parts of the virus more likely to remain the same from variant to variant.”

“All the current vaccines out there are really focused on a small portion of that spike glycoprotein that’s on the outside surface of the virus,” Fehr said. “There are a lot of parts of that that don’t change, and they’re sensitive to the current vaccines. But if there are changes in the spike protein, will those vaccines keep working? Mostly, they do. But some of them do lose efficacy.”

Fehr said a whole-virus vaccine, like the one his lab is investigating, could target regions of the genome that don’t change from variant to variant.

“It could reduce what I call ‘variant chasing’ that we have with a lot of our different vaccines now,” he said. “Hopefully this approach targeting the Mac1 could be beneficial in preventing disease from future variants.”

Fehr’s KU collaborators were lead author Yousef M. Alhammad, a former postdoctoral researcher, along with postdoctoral researcher Srivatsan Parthasarathy, doctoral students Joseph O’Connor, Catherine Kerr and Jessica Pfannenstiel; and Robert Unckless, associate professor of molecular biosciences, Edward & Thelma Wohlgemuth Faculty Scholar and director of the KU Center for Genomics. They were joined by co-authors Roshan Ghimire, Debarati Chanda, Caden Miller, Sunil More and Rudragouda Channappanavar from Oklahoma State University and Sonia Zuniga and Luis Enjuanes of the National Centre for Biotechnology, Campus Universidad Autónoma de Madrid in Spain.

“I’m really proud of this group. We all came together, worked really hard and produced some really great science,” Fehr said.

The work was funded at in part by grants from the NIH and with significant support from the Chemical Biology and Infectious Disease COBRE at KU, led by Scott Hefty, professor and chair of molecular biosciences at KU, and startup funds from KU and Oklahoma State University.

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


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Contact: Cody Howard, 785-864-2936, [email protected]
School of Engineering establishes virtual institute to combat cyber threats

LAWRENCE — A new virtual institute established at the University of Kansas School of Engineering will train the next generation of military and civilian leaders to better combat the growing threat of cyberattacks and protect the electromagnetic spectrum (EMS).

KU received a two-year, $1.5 million grant from the Department of Defense to establish the program, known as the Virtual Institutes for Cyber and Electromagnetic Spectrum Research and Employ, or VICEROY, Virtual Institute. The grant is overseen by the Griffiss Institute, which is a nonprofit talent and technology accelerator for the Department of Defense and an international network of academic, government and industry partners.

Fengjun Li, KU professor of electrical engineering & computer science and lead researcher for the VICEROY Virtual Institute, said the complexity and diversity of modern communication systems — such as 5G and 6G networks — as well as artificial intelligence and electronic warfare systems present daunting challenges in protecting networks from cyberattacks.

“We must manage and allocate scarce spectrum resources, detect and counter sophisticated signal jamming and interference, and maintain reliable and secure communication in contested environments,” Li said. “Successfully tackling these challenges requires education, training, research and teamwork across many disciplines.”

KU will partner with researchers at Ohio State University and Purdue University Northwest to develop new cybersecurity courses and curriculum to support more than 30 students each year across three universities.

The VICEROY Virtual Institute will officially launch in fall 2023. It will offer an augmented curriculum that enhances existing education in cyber and EMS operations through hands-on training, research-oriented experiential learning and several scholarships. The VI will provide four augmentation programs, including:

1. Cybersecurity theories and practices
2. Cyber and EMS operations
3. Data science in cyber and EMS applications
4. Strategic foreign language proficiency in Chinese
5. In addition, it will offer two special education and training programs for developing cyber talent and qualified cyber instructors in the form of summer camps, workshops and seminars.

“Equipping the future generation of military and civilian leaders with essential skills in cyber and EMS security through experiential learning is becoming more crucial in our interconnected society,” Li said. “Developing a pipeline of future cyber leaders is critical to these efforts and a key goal of this program.”

The KU School of Engineering has a long history as a national leader in cybersecurity and electromagnetic spectrum research. The federally funded Institute for Information Sciences (I2S) has researchers developing technology in the areas of cybersecurity, computing, communications, bioinformatics, signal processing and sensors. I2S is also home to cybersecurity research at KU and is continuously supported by the university.

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for additional news about the University of Kansas.

http://www.news.ku.edu
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Contact: Rick Hellman, 785-864-8852, [email protected]
Authors try to simplify difficult aspect of Russian language

LAWRENCE – Stephen Dickey has specialized in the thorny problem of aspect – which has challenged linguists and learners of Russian around the globe — when it comes to the proper usage of verbs in the Russian language.

“I have researched this category as a linguist for a few decades, but I’ve never written any instructional material for it until now,” said Dickey, professor in the University of Kansas Department of Slavic, German and Eurasian Studies.

Together with two native Russians – KU doctoral student Kamila Saifeeva and KU doctoral graduate Anna Karpusheva, Dickey has written a new book titled “Russian Aspect in Conversation.” Published earlier this year, it is part of KU’s Libraries’ free, online Open Textbooks initiative, and the authors have been promoting its availability at a series of national and international teachers’ conferences.

It’s not a course textbook, Dickey said, but rather a complementary work that explores and allows mid- to advanced-level Russian language learners to practice verbal aspect.

“It’s a book about a very stubborn part of Russian grammar,” Dickey said.

That’s because, Dickey said, there is no equivalent in English.

“The category that we’re talking about is more or less on a par with English ‘was reading’ versus ‘read,’ ” Dickey said. “So you’ve got one verb form that refers to a completed action, and then you’ve got another verb form that refers to an action that’s ongoing. And any time a Russian uses a verb, they have to make this choice. So we rarely say ‘be reading’ as a command to somebody. We will say ‘read this’ and ‘read that.’ But Russians will say the equivalent of ‘be reading’ all the time.”

These Russian verbal categories are known as “perfective” verbs for actions that are or have been completed, and “imperfective” verbs for actions that are or might be ongoing.

“The mind-bending part of this is that it is more about reference,” Dickey said. “The difference between these two forms in Russian is kind of like the meaning of saying ‘the book’ versus ‘a book’ or ‘books.’ It’s about specific things versus nonspecific things.

“And if you think that this doesn’t make any sense, you’re in good company, because we just don’t think about verbal actions as being specific versus nonspecific. They take that kind of referential opposition and they lay it onto the verbs. And then you have the ‘read’ form, which is specific, versus ‘is reading’ or ‘be reading,’ or what have you, which is the nonspecific one. And it is extraordinarily difficult for people to get.

“There are people who do speak Russian for decades and don’t perfect it, and that is really the impetus for this book.”

It’s a crucial thing for approaching fluency, Dickey said.

He and his colleagues created a book with some brief introductory material and a series of more than two dozen practice modules to help students get it.

“You read a series of dialogues, and then you answer multiple-choice questions about them … that are designed to get you thinking about what is the relationship between the speaker and the hearer in the dialogue, and what the speaker wants to accomplish,” Dickey said.

Choosing the correct answer gets the student a confirmation with a gold star appearing on the screen/page. If they choose the wrong answer, the text lets them know that, too, and they can try again to get it right. Each module concludes with some explanatory material, summing up the section.

Dickey said while working with a teacher’s guidance would obviously be helpful, the book is designed to be able to be used independently by students. Moreover, he said, students can dip in and out of the book, taking on one bite at a time.

“That’s the challenge,” he said. “To take to take what is ultimately a very difficult category and break it down so students can acquire it and use it.”

Dickey said that since the book was published earlier this year, he and his co-authors have been promoting its availability at a series of national and international teachers’ conferences.

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KU News Service
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Lawrence KS 66045
Phone: 785-864-3256
Fax: 785-864-3339
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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

Horticulture 2023 Newsletter No. 34 

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https://hnr.k-state.edu/extension/info-center/newsletters/index.html
Blog Post: http://www.ksuhortnewsletter.org
Video of the Week: Fertilize for a Healthy Lawn
https://kansashealthyyards.org/all-videos/video/fertilize-for-a-healthy-lawn
REMINDERS
•           Light pruning of shrubs and trees where 10% or less of the plant is removed can be done any time of year.  Heavier pruning should be done in the spring if possible.
•           Fertilize strawberry bed for added flower bud development and larger crop next year.
•           Too late to spray for bagworms but can pull them off and dispose of them if practical.
TURFGRASS
Fall Lawn Seeding Tips
            The keys to successful lawn seeding are proper rates, even dispersal, good seed to soil contact, and proper watering. Evenness is best achieved by carefully calibrating the seeder or by adjusting the seeder to a low setting and making several passes to ensure even distribution. Seeding a little on the heavy side with close overlapping is better than missing areas altogether, especially for the bunch-type tall fescue, which does not spread.   Multiple seeder passes in opposite directions should help avoid this problem.
            A more serious error in seeding is using the improper rate. For tall fescue, aim for 6 to 8 pounds of seed per 1,000 square feet for new areas and about half as much for overseeding or seeding areas in the shade.
            Kentucky bluegrass has a much smaller seed so less is needed for establishment.  Use 2 to 3 pounds of seed per 1,000 square feet for a new lawn and half that for overseeding or shady areas.
            Using too much seed results in a lawn more prone to disease and damage from stress. The best way to avoid such a mistake is to determine the square footage of the yard first, and then calculate the amount of seed. Using too little seed can also be detrimental and result in clumpy turf that is not as visually pleasing.
            Establishing good seed to soil contact is essential for good germination rates. Slit seeders achieve good contact at the time of seeding by dropping seed directly behind the blade that slices a furrow into the soil. Packing wheels then follow to close the furrow. The same result can be accomplished by using a verticut before broadcasting the seed, and then verticutting in a different direction a second time.
            Core aerators can also be used to seed grass. Go over an area at least three times in different directions, and then broadcast the seed. Germination will occur in the aeration holes. Because those holes stay moister than a traditional seedbed, this method requires less watering.
            If the soil that has been worked by a rototiller, firm the soil with a roller or lawn tractor and  use light hand raking to mix the seed into the soil. A leaf rake often works better than a garden rake because it mixes seed more shallowly.
            Water newly planted areas lightly, but often. Keep soil constantly moist but not waterlogged.  During hot days, a new lawn may need to be watered three times a day. If watered less, germination will be slowed. Cool, calm days may require watering only every couple of days. As the grass plants come up, gradually decrease watering to once a week if there is no rain. Let the plants tell you when to water. If you can push the blades down and they don’t spring back up quickly, the lawn needs water. Once seed sprouts, try to minimize traffic (foot, mower, dog, etc.) seeded areas receive until the seedlings are a little more robust and ready to be mowed. Begin mowing once seedlings reach 3 to 4 inches tall. (Ward Upham)
Overseeding a Lawn
            Tall fescue lawns that have become thin over the summer can be thickened up by overseeding during September. Start by mowing the grass short (1 to 1.5 inches) and removing the clippings. This will make it easier to achieve good seed-soil contact and increase the amount of light that will reach the young seedlings.
            Good seed-soil contact is vital if the overseeding is to be successful. Excess thatch can prevent seed from reaching the soil and germinating. Normally we want 1/4 inch of thatch or less when overseeding. If the thatch layer is 3/4 inch or more, it is usually easiest to use a sod cutter to remove it and start over with a new lawn. A power rake can be used to reduce a thatch layer that is less than 3/4 inch but more than a quarter inch.
            Once thatch is under control, the soil should be prepared for the seed. This can be done in various ways.   For small spots, a hand rake can be used to roughen up the soil before the seed is applied.
            A verticut machine has solid vertical blades that can be set to cut furrows in the soil. It is best to go two different directions with the machine. A slit seeder is a verticut machine with a seed hopper added so the soil prep and seeding operation are combined. Another option is to use a core aerator.
            The core aerator will punch holes in the soil and deposit the soil cores on the surface of the ground. Each hole produces an excellent environment for seed germination and growth. Make three to four passes with the core aerator to ensure enough holes for the seed. Using a core aerator has the additional benefit of reducing the amount of watering needed to get the seed germinated and growing. Aeration also increases the water infiltration rate, decreases compaction, and increases the amount of oxygen in the soil.
            Of the three methods, I prefer the slit seeder for obtaining good seed/soil contact.  However, if watering is difficult, core aeration may be a better option.  Regardless of method used, fertilizer should  be applied at the rate suggested by a soil test, or a starter fertilizer should be used at the rate suggested on the bag. (Ward Upham)
Give Cool-Season Grasses a Boost
            September is almost here and that means it is prime time to fertilize your tall fescue or Kentucky bluegrass lawns. If you could only fertilize your cool-season grasses once per year, this would be the best time to do it.
            These grasses are entering their fall growth cycle as days shorten and temperatures moderate (especially at night). Cool-season grasses naturally thicken up in the fall by tillering (forming new shoots at the base of existing plants) and, for bluegrass, spreading by underground stems called rhizomes. Consequently, September is the most important time to fertilize these grasses.
            Apply 1 to 1.5 pounds of actual nitrogen per 1,000 square feet. The settings recommended on lawn fertilizer bags usually result in about 1 pound of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet. We recommend a quick-release source of nitrogen at this time. Most fertilizers sold in garden centers and department stores contain either quick-release nitrogen or a mixture of quick- and slow-release. Usually only lawn fertilizers recommended for summer use contain slow-release nitrogen. Any of the others should be quick-release.
            The second most important fertilization of cool-season grasses also occurs during the fall. A November fertilizer application will help the grass green up earlier next spring and provide the nutrients needed until summer. It also should be quick-release applied at the rate of 1-pound actual nitrogen per 1,000 square feet. (Ward Upham)
Power Raking and Core-Aeration
            September is the optimum time to power rake or core-aerate tall fescue and Kentucky bluegrass lawns. These grasses should be coming out of their summer doldrums and beginning to grow more vigorously. This is a good time to consider what we are trying to accomplish with these practices.
            Power raking is primarily a thatch control operation. It can be excessively damaging to the turf if not done carefully. For lawns with one-half inch of thatch or less, I don’t recommend power raking but rather core aeration. For those who are unsure what thatch is, it is a springy layer of light-brown organic matter that resembles peat moss and is located above the soil but below the grass foliage. Power raking pulls up an incredible amount of material that then must be dealt with by composting or discarding.
            Core-aeration is a much better practice for most lawns. By removing cores of soil, core-aeration relieves compaction, hastens thatch decomposition, and improves water, nutrient, and oxygen movement into the soil profile. This operation should be performed when the soil is just moist enough so that it crumbles easily when worked between the fingers. Enough passes should be made so that the holes are spaced about 2 to 3 inches apart. Ideally, the holes should penetrate 2.5 to 3 inches deep. The cores can be left on the lawn to fall apart naturally (a process that usually takes two or three weeks, depending on soil-type), or they can be broken up with a power rake set just low enough to nick the cores, and then dragged with a section of chain-link fence or a steel doormat. The intermingling of soil and thatch is beneficial to the lawn. (Ward Upham)
ORNAMENTALS
Dividing Peonies
             Though dividing peonies is not required, it can increase bloom production, reduce diseases and provide more peony plants free! If you choose to divide your peonies, it needs to be done this time of year.
            Begin by cutting the stems just above the soil surface. Dig up the entire root system and remove the soil from the roots. Divide the root clump into small sections using a sharp knife. Ensure each section has three to five buds as well as healthy roots. It may take a couple of years for the divided peony plants to return to full bloom productivity. If there are fewer buds on each division it may take three years for the plant to bloom at all.
            Choose a planting location that receives sunlight for at least half of the day. Dig a hole large enough to fit the roots of the divided peonies so the buds will be covered by one to two-inches of soil. Plants buried too deep may not flower. Backfill and water thoroughly. Space dwarf peonies at least two-feet apart and standard peonies four-feet apart.
            The winters in Kansas have periods of freezing and thawing which can be destructive to plants. Soil that freezes and thaws repeatedly can uproot plants that are not deeply rooted. This is called “heaving.” To protect the newly divided peonies, add a layer of straw, leaves or compost after the soil freezes. (Cynthia Domenghini)
                                                            VEGETABLES
Preparing the Vegetable Garden for Next Year
            Put in the work now for a productive garden next year. Before removing plants, make a sketch of the vegetable layout. This will come in handy when you’re planning the layout for the next garden if you choose to rotate your crops.
            Remove debris from plants that are done producing. Compost debris that is disease-free. For smaller gardens, manually remove weeds. Larger gardens may require tilling. If so, avoid tilling while the soil is saturated as this breaks down the structure.
            A cover crop can be planted to return nutrients to the soil during this off season. Cover crops also reduce soil erosion and improve the quality of the soil. Small grains such as wheat should be seeded at 3/4 to 1 pound of seed per 1,000 square feet from mid-September to late October. Spring oats can also be seeded until mid-September but the rate should be 2 to 4 pounds per 1,000 square feet. Spring oats will die back in the winter and can be tilled under in the spring. Daikon radishes are another good cover crop because the large taproot penetrates the hardpan. After the radishes die back in the winter, the loosened soil is better able to retain water.
            Hairy vetch, alfalfa and sweetclover are legumes which means they also fix nitrogen. Seed these cover crops at a rate of ¼ to ½ pound of seed per 1,000 square feet of garden. Hairy vetch and alfalfa can be seeded from mid-August to late September while sweetclover should be seeded only until early-September. (Cynthia Domenghini)
MISCELLANEOUS
Composting Tips
1. Turn the pile at least once a month to rotate materials from the center and promote decomposition. The pile will heat up as it decomposes and cool as decomposition slows.
2. Create a depression in the top of the pile to allow water to collect and slowly seep through the layers of the mound.
3. When deciding where to establish a compost pile, look for a water source. Proximity to supplemental water will allow you to keep the pile wet even during periods of drought which is important for efficient decomposition.
4. Smaller materials decompose faster. When possible, shred materials before adding them to the compost heap. This is especially true for “browns” such as dry leaves and twigs.
5. Fats and meats should not be added to the compost. They will attract wildlife.
6. Grass clippings from a lawn treated with crabgrass killer should not be composted. If crabgrass preventer or dandelion killer has been used on the lawn, the clippings can be composted after the third mowing. (Cynthia Domenghini)
Contributors:
Cynthia Domenghini, Instructor ([email protected])
Ward Upham, Extension Associate ([email protected])
Division of Horticulture
1712 Claflin, 2021 Throckmorton
Manhattan, KS 66506
(785) 532-6173
For questions or further information, contact: [email protected] OR [email protected]
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.
Kansas State University Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service K-State Research and Extension is an equal opportunity employer.  Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension Work, Acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914, as amended. Kansas State University, County Extension Councils, and United States Department of Agriculture Cooperating, Ernie Minton, Dean.

KU News correction: Partners announced for KU initiative to move toward rightful presence in regular education classrooms

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

Correction

Editors: A news digest sent earlier today included a story about the SWIFT Education Center that was previously published in October 2022. KU News Service has uploaded and published the correct story, available below.

Contact: Nicole Perry, SWIFT Education Center, 785-864-3391, [email protected], @SWIFTSchools
Partners announced for KU initiative to move toward rightful presence in regular education classrooms

LAWRENCE — Working with the U.S. Department of Education, Office of Special Education Programs, the National Center on Inclusion Toward Rightful Presence at SWIFT Education Center, based at the KU Life Span Institute, has selected four state education agencies as partners on a project directed toward creating changes in systems, policies and practices at 32 schools. The center will partner with the Delaware Department of Education; New Mexico Public Education Department; Orange County Department of Education on behalf of California Department of Education; and Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction to implement inclusive practices and policies in the four states.
Each state education agency was selected for its high level of commitment to and progress toward inclusion of students with disabilities. The partners in turn will each select and support two school districts and eight schools, for a total of 32 schools, to increase belonging and learning opportunities for those students who are now segregated from general education.
“These partnerships will make changes in systems, policies and practices that result in meaningful engagement in general education for students traditionally kept at the margins of school,” said Amy McCart, KU research professor and co-director of SWIFT. “This includes students with the most significant disabilities who benefit from intensive support when receiving high-quality academic instruction aligned with general education standards, delivered among peers in the same grade-level classroom.”
The center chose each partner based on its commitment to the project’s goal to build equitable educational systems for students, families and communities. Their past work in this area includes:
1. Delaware Department of Education, which emphasizes whole-child Multi-Tiered System of Support (MTSS) with embedded Universal Design for Learning (UDL) for environments that support all learners. Literacy programs, such as the Delaware Early Literacy Initiative, promote evidence-based literacy instruction, including strategies to teach reading to students with significant cognitive disabilities.
2. New Mexico Public Education Department, which has a robust structure to support Multi-Layered System of Supports (MLSS) implementation, including cross-district professional learning communities and implementation coaches. A strong support system is currently in place for students with high-incidence disabilities and is ready to extend to students with less frequently seen needs.
3. Orange County Department of Education, which participates in a statewide program for implementing MTSS with a whole-child approach, with embedded UDL, and are also well-positioned to extend their systems to students currently participating in separate educational programs.
4. Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction, which has initiatives in place to increase the placement of students with disabilities into the general education setting, including a robust statewide coaching structure and the expertise and commitment to leverage implementation science. The state infuses equity throughout their frameworks and systems, with a focus on equitable access, opportunity and outcomes experienced by learners who are systemically marginalized in the state’s schools.
“We are honored to have partners who have committed to work in deep and meaningful ways to change the system of support for students with intensive cognitive needs,” McCart said. “These dynamic learners offer so much, and we are excited to see how effective instructional support within general education will not only change their outcomes, but also provide lasting systems for those learners who come next.”
SWIFT technical assistance providers will collaborate to support the state partners’ systemic and sustainable changes and will monitor the states’ progress toward implementation through regular assessment. The results will demonstrate how to effect change toward inclusive reform in school systems.
A previously announced federal grant established the National Center on Inclusion Toward
Rightful Presence to partner with local and state education agencies to support educators and their students as they move beyond inclusion in schools and classrooms, to co-created systemic conditions for rightful presence.

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KU News Service
1450 Jayhawk Blvd.
Lawrence KS 66045
Phone: 785-864-3256
Fax: 785-864-3339
[email protected]
http://www.news.ku.edu

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

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

KU News: KU will host Women in the US Intelligence Community conference

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

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New $10 million grant to promote equity leadership and educator well-being
LAWRENCE — The SWIFT Education Center, part of the Life Span Institute at the University of Kansas, was awarded a $10 million federal grant to promote equity leadership and educator well-being among educational leaders in Black, Hispanic and Native American communities. School leaders’ professional learning will focus on developing student social and emotional competencies as well as ways to promote the well-being of educators.

KU will host Women in the US Intelligence Community conference
LAWRENCE — The Intelligence Community Center for Academic Excellence (IC CAE) at the University of Kansas will welcome women from the U.S. intelligence community for a conference from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Aug. 30 at the Jayhawk Welcome Center. The program is free and open to the public, but registration is requested.

KU Common Book Program announces 2023-24 events
LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas Common Book Program will host a slate of activities and events surrounding the 2023-24 Common Book selection, “Parable of the Sower,” by American science fiction writer Octavia Butler. These include author and artist talks, panel discussions and Common Book marathon reading.

Timothy Paulson to serve as director for University Press of Kansas
LAWRENCE — The University Press of Kansas board of trustees, composed of provosts from each of the six Kansas Regents institutions, has appointed Timothy Paulson as director of the University Press of Kansas. Paulson will succeed Mike Haddock, who has served as interim faculty director of UPK since July 2022. Paulson currently serves as general manager at Brentwood Studios, a media production company based in Nashville, Tennessee.

Trans identity and Catalan independence share key perspectives, research finds
LAWRENCE – When Marta Vicente was researching various aspects of transgender identity, one surprising word kept coming up: colonialism. Her new article “Rethinking Identity: Transgender Studies and Catalan Independence” finds trans people and those who favor Catalonia’s independence from Spain often express their identities as being political bodies that seek recognition as autonomous entities. “There’s a sense of breaking free from subordination of political powers,” said Vicente, a professor of history and of women, gender & sexuality studies at the University of Kansas.

Full stories below.

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Contact: Nicole Perry, SWIFT Education Center, 785-864-3391, [email protected], @SWIFTSchools
New $10 million grant to promote equity leadership and educator well-being

LAWRENCE — The SWIFT Education Center, part of the Life Span Institute at the University of Kansas, was awarded a $10 million federal grant to promote equity leadership and educator well-being among educational leaders in Black, Hispanic and Native American communities.
The three-year award comes from the Supporting Effective Educator Development (SEED) program, Office of Elementary and Secondary Education, Department of Education. SWIFT will provide for principals and leadership teams professional learning and networking opportunities with historically Black, Hispanic-serving and Tribal university faculty to foster a more diverse educational workforce. School leaders’ professional learning will focus on developing student social and emotional competencies as well as ways to promote the well-being of educators.
“We are at a moment in education when many pressing concerns converge. We face an urgent need to make transformative changes in our systems to bring equity, safety, security and freedom into education, and at the same time our educators are facing intense burnout due to multiple and overlapping crises,” said Amy McCart, research professor and SWIFT co-director. “We have to offer educational leaders the strategies they need to both make change for their students and support their own well-being.”
In addition to McCart, the project is being led by SWIFT’s Dawn Miller, associate director of partner engagement and systems design; Melinda Mitchiner, associate director of partnership development and business operations; and J. Hoon Choi, assistant research professor and associate director of research and evaluation.
The project will support over 50 principals and their leadership teams in schools that serve Black, Hispanic and Native American communities. Partner schools and districts will be San Diego (California) Unified Schools, Cumberland County (North Carolina) Schools, Sunnyside (Arizona) Unified Schools, Millington (Tennessee) Municipal Schools, Green Dot Charter Schools (Memphis, Tennessee), Perea Elementary (Memphis, Tennessee) and Arrow Academy of Excellence (Shelby County, Tennessee).
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The official university Twitter account has changed to @UnivOfKansas.
Refollow @KUNews for KU News Service stories, discoveries and experts.


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Contact: Mike Denning, Office of Military Graduate Programs, 785-864-1684, [email protected]
KU will host Women in the US Intelligence Community conference
LAWRENCE — The Intelligence Community Center for Academic Excellence (IC CAE) at the University of Kansas will welcome women from the U.S. intelligence community for its first event this academic year from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Aug. 30 at the Jayhawk Welcome Center.
The Women in the U.S. Intelligence Community conference will feature officials from the CIA, FBI, the U.S. Cyber Command and Department of Energy. Following the conference introduction by Barbara Bichelmeyer, KU provost and executive vice chancellor, discussions will include:
1. Cynthia Storer, veteran CIA senior terrorism analyst, and Beth Bailey, KU Foundation Distinguished Professor of History, who will discuss Storer’s role for “Sisterhood: The Women Who Tracked Bin Laden.”
2. Jeanette Milazzo, assistant special agent in charge of the FBI Kansas City office, and Hannah Britton, KU professor of political science and of women, gender & sexuality studies, who will discuss FBI’s efforts to counter human trafficking in the heartland.
3. Following the keynote interviews, Storer and Milazzo will join Lindsey Maier and Candy Smith, U.S. intelligence officers from the Department of Energy and Army, respectively, for a moderated roundtable on the representation of women in the intelligence community. Jorhena Thomas, a veteran FBI senior leader and current director with the nonprofit girlsecurity, will serve as moderator for the panel.

The program is free and open to the public, but registration is requested.

The IC CAE program is a workforce development program funded by Office of the Director of National Intelligence for the purpose of increasing diversity within the U.S. intelligence community. KU is partnered with minority-serving institutions Dodge City Community College, Garden City Community College, Seward County Community College and Kansas City Community College, which comprise the Kansas consortium. For more information about the KU IC CAE program, visit https://iccae.ku.edu/.

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Contact: Wendy Conover, KU Libraries, [email protected], @KULibraries
KU Common Book Program announces 2023-24 events

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas Common Book Program will host a slate of activities and events surrounding the 2023-24 Common Book selection, “Parable of the Sower,” by American science fiction writer Octavia Butler.
Students, faculty and staff across the university are encouraged to engage with this important book and participate in the conversations and activities taking place around campus throughout the academic year. Prior familiarity with the book is not required to join in the events.
Free copies of “Parable of the Sower,” are available via the request form for classes or personal use. Books can be picked up at Watson or Anschutz libraries, or access the book online through KU Libraries.

Common Book events in connection with “Parable of the Sower” will take place across campus during the 2023-24 school year. The events page on the Common Book website will be updated throughout the fall and spring semesters.

View the KU Common Work of Art: “Parable of the Sower: Oya’s Dream”
Through Jan. 7, 2024, Spencer Museum of Art
Each year the Spencer Museum selects a work of art to provide a visual pairing with KU Common Book. This year’s KU Common Work of Art, “Parable of the Sower: Oya’s Dream,” by Fahamu Pecou, is featured in the Spencer’s fall exhibition “Black Writing,” which explores the power, politics and complexities of language in contemporary Black culture, a collaboration in celebration of the 40th anniversary of KU’s History of Black Writing program.

Black Forager
7 p.m. Sept. 6, Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St.
The Commons hosts Alexis Nikole Nelson (@BlackForager) at Liberty Hall.

Slow Art Sunday: “Parable of the Sower: Oya’s Dream”
2-3 p.m. Sept. 10, Spencer Museum of Art
Slow Art Sundays allow you to spend time getting to know one great work of art through relaxed contemplation and guided conversation. September’s Slow Art Sunday focuses on “Parable of the Sower: Oya’s Dream.”

“Saving the World Through Science and Fiction,” exhibition opening
Oct. 5, Haricombe Gallery, Watson Library 3 West
The Haricombe Gallery on Watson Third Floor West hosts two major collaborative exhibitions per year with a keynote speaker and reception marking the exhibition’s debut. Explore the gallery at your leisure throughout the semester or visit online.

“Saving the World Through Science and Fiction,” discussion panel
Oct. 12, Haricombe Gallery, Watson Library 3 West
As an extension of the Haricombe Gallery on Watson Third Floor West, a panel of scholars will present their work in this public event.

Edwards Campus book discussion, “Parable of the Sower Debrief”
4:30-6 p.m. Nov. 14, KU Edwards Campus Hawk’s Nest
Join Student Services and DEI Initiatives for a welcoming and cozy night to discuss the book and the importance of Butler’s work. RSVP for this event.

Marathon reading of “Parable of the Sower”
10 a.m.-5 p.m. Nov. 29 and 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Nov. 30, Spencer Museum of Art
Participate in a live marathon reading of “Parable of the Sower” to experience Butler’s world-building within the “Black Writing” exhibition. You may sign up to read here. Copies of the book will be available. Sponsored by the Spencer Museum of Art, History of Black Writing, KU Common Book Program, Hall Center for the Humanities, Department of English and Gunn Center for the Study of Science Fiction.

Artist talk: Fahamu Pecou on creating “Parable of the Sower: Oya’s Dream”
4-5 p.m. Nov. 30, Spencer Museum of Art
Join Pecou as he discusses the KU Common Work of Art. The work symbolizes the new beginnings that emerge when one embraces the inevitability of change.

Author visit by N. K. Jemisin
7:30 p.m. April 25, 2024, Woodruff Auditorium
New York Times bestselling writer N.K. Jemisin, who composed the preface to the most recent edition of “Parable of Sower,” is an acclaimed science fiction and fantasy author, winning the prestigious Hugo Award three times in a row (the first author in history to do so). Come hear Jemisin read from her “Broken Earth” trilogy and speak about the influence of “Parable of the Sower” and Butler on her work.
The KU Common Book program is a campuswide initiative that fosters critical thinking and generates opportunities for shared experiences and conversation about topics and issues of significance in today’s world. The program is presented via partnership among KU Libraries, the Hall Center for the Humanities and the Division of Academic Success.

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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/when-experts-attack
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Contact: Savannah Rattanavong, Office of the Provost, 785-864-6402, [email protected], @KUProvost
Timothy Paulson to serve as director for University Press of Kansas
LAWRENCE — The University Press of Kansas board of trustees, composed of provosts from each of the six Kansas Regents institutions, has appointed Timothy Paulson as director of the University Press of Kansas.
Paulson will succeed Mike Haddock, who has served as interim faculty director of UPK since July 2022. Paulson currently serves as general manager at Brentwood Studios, a media production company based in Nashville, Tennessee.
“I’m thrilled to join the press and contribute to its ongoing success on behalf of the consortium universities and in service to its community of scholars and authors,” Paulson said.
As director, Paulson will serve as a focal point for organizational decision-making, strategic development and public outreach for the press. Paulson brings more than 20 years of experience in media and publishing to the press. He begins his new role Oct. 1.
Paulson will work closely with staff, editorial board members, authors, scholars and reviewers to acquire and publish scholarly and regional books. Among other responsibilities, Paulson will collaboratively develop strategies to build the publishing program of the press and promote the press to the faculty at consortium universities and other constituent groups.
“On behalf of the trustees, we are excited to have Tim join the University Press of Kansas as its next director,” said Charles Taber, chair of the UPK board of trustees and Kansas State University provost and executive vice president. “His years of leadership experience in media publishing and production will fuel the press’s continued growth and pursuit of knowledge.”
From small nonprofit publishers to multinational media companies, Paulson has held varied leadership positions, including in trade, academic and educational categories. In his most recent role, Paulson oversaw the strategy and execution of product, marketing and distribution activities for Brentwood Studios.
He previously served as vice president and publisher at HarperCollins Christian Publishing, where he oversaw the publication of multiple New York Times bestsellers, as well as general manager at Kalmbach Media. Paulson spent most of his career at 1517 Media, where he led several strategic growth initiatives, business acquisitions, market expansion efforts, new digital platform strategies and the creation of an award-winning animation studio.
Paulson earned a master’s degree in business administration from St. Cloud State University, a master’s degree in divinity from Luther Seminary and a bachelor’s degree in religion from Saint Olaf College.
The University Press of Kansas was founded in 1946 and represents the six state universities in Kansas: Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Kansas State University, Pittsburg State University, the University of Kansas and Wichita State University. The press is located in KU’s West District and functionally operates as a department of KU, while being governed by the board of trustees.
The press has more than 3,000 published books to its credit and publishes about 45 new books annually. The press specializes most broadly in history in addition to regional titles.

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The official university Twitter account has changed to @UnivOfKansas.
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Contact: Jon Niccum, KU News Service, 785-864-7633, [email protected]
Trans identity and Catalan independence share key perspectives, research finds
LAWRENCE – When Marta Vicente was researching various aspects of transgender identity, one surprising word kept coming up: colonialism.
“There’s a sense of breaking free from subordination of political powers,” said Vicente, a professor of history and of women, gender & sexuality studies at the University of Kansas.
“That’s really interesting because of the political component but also the geographical component; colony has to do with the landscape and the state. Yet colony is also about the body.”
Her new article “Rethinking Identity: Transgender Studies and Catalan Independence” finds trans people and those who favor Catalonia’s independence from Spain often express their identities as being political bodies that seek recognition as autonomous entities. By merging trans and independence narratives, she provides a new perspective on notions of identity as they apply to discussions over national sovereignty. Her piece is published in Catalan Review.
The Catalan independence movement is a political movement that seeks national sovereignty for the area known as Catalonia, which lies on the northeast part of the Iberian Peninsula. Barcelona is the capital of this region.
“It has some political autonomy, but it’s not a separate country. People who support the independence movement are seeking for it to become a separate country with its own government,” she said. “For comparison, it’s somewhat similar to the Quebecois minority in Canada or Scottish independence in the U.K.”
For trans people in this region, the geography of the body runs parallel to the geography of the nation — and both are connected to emotional processes difficult to pin down. Vicente notes that debates over identity, its meaning, prominence and recognition have proven central in both transgender and Catalan independence narratives.
Is the concept of identity more important now than it’s ever been before?
“I think this has always been important, but now it’s even more so because so many people are testing the boundaries of identity assigned to individuals at birth and in childhood. Historically, there has always been a search for one’s true, authentic identity. Now it’s more visible with modern means of communication, like social media, where you can discuss that in the public sphere,” she said.
This has compelled many people to now rethink concepts of what identity truly means.
“Like the sovereignty of the body goes beyond the personal body into the geographical body,” she said. “I see these all as connected.”
Vicente first became intrigued by this correlation when analyzing the emotional component of identity.
“What makes this particularly thought-provoking is that when it’s emotional, it becomes invisible to the eye. And if it’s invisible, then establishing someone’s identity is very difficult,” she said.
A native of Barcelona, Vicente has been at KU since 1997. She is the author of “Debating Sex and Gender in Eighteenth-Century Spain” (Cambridge, 2017), and of the articles “The Medicalization of the Transsexual: Patient-Physician Narratives in the First Half of the Twentieth Century” and “Transgender: A Useful Category? Or, How the Historical Study of ‘Transsexual’ and ‘Transvestite’ Can Help Us Rethink ‘Transgender’ as a Category.” Her expertise focuses on queer studies, queer theory, feminist history and sexuality.
“I’ve been working on trans studies for eight years, but in the back of my mind, there is always a sense of, ‘I’m not a trans person. I’m not part of that community,’” she said. “But I am part of this Catalan independence movement. So I can claim a personal connection to this one.”
She hopes the article can help people see trans not as something isolated, but as part of a changing political environment that we are all living in and experiencing.
Vicente said, “In a way, how individuals are seeking to obtain sovereignty over their own bodies is not so different from nations who are seeking the same thing.”
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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