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Wichita State offering transfer scholarships for spring 2015 semester

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Students transferring to Wichita State University during the spring 2015 semester have a new scholarship option. Renewable merit scholarships of $500 or $1,000 will be available to new transfer students.

“In the past, these scholarships were only available to students in the fall,” said community college coordinator Neal Hoelting. “But we understand that not every transfer student follows the same schedule. When they are ready to transfer, we want to have a scholarship available for them.”

To be eligible, students must be direct transfers from another college or university and have completed at least 12 credit hours and have fewer than 70 transfer credit hours. Transfer students must be fully admitted to the university by Dec. 1 to be considered for spring scholarships.

Scholarship amounts are based on a student’s transfer GPA. Students with a minimum 3.25 GPA will be awarded $500 for the spring 2015 semester and a total of $1,000 during the 2016 academic year. Those with at least a 3.5 GPA will be awarded $1,000 for spring 2015 and $2,000 for the 2016 academic year. A 3.25 GPA must be maintained at WSU to renew the scholarships.

Initial scholarship awards will be offered in mid-November with a second round of scholarships to be awarded in December.

“Wichita State consistently gets more transfers than other state universities, and programs like this are part of the draw,” Hoelting said. “We support our transfer students, and scholarships are just one way we show them our commitment to their potential at WSU.”

For more information, visit www.wichita.edu/scholarships or call the Office of Admissions at 316-978-3085.

October 29th is World Stroke Day

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Stroke: Time lost is brain lost

Gail Carlson, MPH, PhD, former Health Specialist, University of Missouri Extension

When someone suffered a stroke before 1996, little could be done except to wait. Rehabilitation and recovery could begin once the damage was done. Today, that picture is changing. Early treatment can prevent disability and death, but fast action is needed. The longer the delay between a stroke and treatment, the more damage a stroke can do. A campaign from the American Stroke Association says it well: Time Lost is Brain Lost.

A brain attack (stroke) damages the brain just as a heart attack damages the heart. Both require emergency medical treatment. A stroke occurs when the flow of blood to part of the brain is stopped. Brain cells in the affected part of the brain don’t get the oxygen they need and start to die. When brain cells die there can be loss of function. Speech, sight, movement and/or memory can be affected. Some people who have had a small stroke experience only mild effects, like weakness in an arm or leg; some recover completely. Large strokes can cause permanent disability and death.

A stroke can be caused by a clot in a blood vessel or artery (ischemic stroke) or by a ruptured or burst blood vessel (hemorrhagic stroke). Strokes occurring from clogged vessels are more common and account for 83 percent of all strokes.

Call 9-1-1 or your emergency medical service immediately if you or someone you are with experiences any of the following symptoms.

  • Sudden numbness or weakness of the face, arm or leg, especially on one side of the body
  • Sudden confusion, trouble speaking or understanding
  • Sudden trouble seeing in one or both eyes
  • Sudden trouble walking, dizziness, loss of balance or coordination
  • Sudden, severe headache with no known cause

Tell the operator what kinds of warning signs are present and when the symptoms first occurred. Health care professionals will want to know when the symptoms first started, not when they were first noticed. This is an important difference. A drug called tPA can help those suffering from an ischemic stroke but treatment must begin within 3 hours of the start of symptoms. If tPA is given more than three hours after the start of symptoms it can cause serious complications and death. Providing accurate information to your health care provider can make a difference in the kind of treatment given…

For more information and resources, view the full version of this article at http://missourifamilies.org/features/healtharticles/health57.htm
 

Kansas grape and wine industry advisory council to meet November 10

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CHRIS NEAL / THE CAPTIAL-JOURNAL
CHRIS NEAL / THE CAPTIAL-JOURNAL
The Kansas Department of Agriculture’s Grape and Wine Industry Advisory Council will meet at 1 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 10, 2014 for their regular quarterly meeting.

MANHATTAN, Kan. – The Kansas Department of Agriculture’s Grape and Wine Industry Advisory Council will meet at 1 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 10, 2014 for their regular quarterly meeting. The meeting will be held at the offices of the Kansas Grain and Feed Association at 816 SW Tyler Street, Topeka, Kansas.

The meeting is open to the public. Individuals who have questions about the meeting should contact the advisory’s chair and vice-chair, Bob DesRuisseaux, [email protected], or Scott Kohl, [email protected], for more information. Persons who require special accommodations must make their needs known at least two days prior to the meeting.

 

WHO: Kansas Department of Agriculture Grape and Wine Industry Advisory Council

WHAT: Grape and Wine Industry Advisory Council regular quarterly meeting

WHEN: 1 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 10, 2014

WHERE:  Kansas Grain and Feed Association offices, 816 SW Tyler Street, Topeka, Kansas.

Students Attend Chamber Dinner, Foundation Director Joins Chamber Board

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Pratt Community College

On Oct. 23, 10 Pratt Community College employees and students attended the 2014 Annual Chamber of Commerce Meeting and Dinner. This group included five students in PCC’s business program, who came to get a taste of a Chamber event and talk to other business leaders in the community.

PCC was recognized as a Bronze Sponsor for the event, and PCC Foundation Director Ann Ruder was recognized as an incoming member of the Board of Directors for the Chamber. Ruder also serves on the Membership Committee for the Chamber, the Relay for Life planning committee and is the Secretary/Treasurer of the Pratt Rotary.

“I look forward to my work on the Chamber of Commerce board,” said Ruder. “We are tasked with engaging both current members of the Chamber and businesses who are not yet members. I plan to connect others within the Pratt community and build on the relationships I already have to continue fostering the growth of our organization and our city.”

Filmmaker Shares Reflection of Life, Work in Western Kansas

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Pratt Community College

On Oct. 21, filmmaker Patrick Clement visited Pratt Community College to take part in a brown bag lunch and discussion of his film “Somewhere Between Freedom and Protection, Kansas.” The lunch was attended by middle school, high school, college students, and PCC faculty and staff.

The film is a 20-minute humanistic narrative that was filmed over a period of 10 days with a cast of 15 local actors starring Pratt High School student Brittnee Hill. Shooting locations included Haviland, Coldwater, Bucklin, Wellsford, Belvidere, Greensburg, Mullinville, Protection, Crescent and Pratt.

Clement is originally from Boston before he relocated to Greensburg and worked  as the editor of the Kiowa County Signal for two years. This experience influenced this latest film, his fourth, which features the employees of a rural Kansas newspaper office and explores the role of the newspaper in local communities.
 “Life and art heavily influence each other,” said Clement, speaking first to students who expressed uncertainty about what career paths to choose. “I drew from my personal experiences to make the film and tell a good story. If you’re not an artist yourself, exposing yourself to art is still vital to your success. Unless you experience other things in the world and get your head out of the books, you won’t be the best you can be. Photography and painting and theatre and music all make you a better teacher, architect, salesman.”

Clement is adamant about presenting authentic parts of life in his work, even parts that mainstream movies often choose not to portray.

“My film does contain religious elements that initially made some people uncomfortable,” he says, referring to Biblical passages recited in a funeral scene. “But I insisted upon including it because religion is a very important part of the Midwestern experience and the Kansas experience. You can’t remove that and remain true to the culture.”
Clement never anticipated leaving the big city for rural Western Kansas, but has found much to love in the people and the communities he has encountered.

“As an outsider, there are many things to appreciate about Western Kansas that perhaps a native doesn’t recognize. I find that family history and lineage is more accessible here; There’s more continuity and less mobility in family lines, so less historical items are lost in moves. That’s something that you can easily lose in more metropolitan areas. On the practical side, I never have to pay for parking meters, which is great. But while I love the heirlooms and the lower cost of living, the best part is the people. You never get the chance to have real conversations with strangers in big cities. Here, you can go to the gas station and right away you meet a guy who lives just down the road and you get to hear all about his collection of collapsible cups. I love that!”

Given Clement’s love for meeting new people, it comes as no surprise that his favorite part of the filmmaking process is casting.

“I am all about humans and I have a good eye for interesting people, it’s fun to find them and bring them into my projects. I prefer casting people who look real and are able to reflect the culture and the spirit of the region. I hate going to movies and watching Hollywood actors who look nothing like me.”

The cast isn’t the only noticeable difference between Clement’s work and mainstream Hollywood films.

“My films are like reading a short story: they unfold slowly. It’s a meditation on an experience rather than rapid fire action sequences. Commercial films are very formulaic: fast paced with predictable elements. It can be very difficult to fund these endeavors, because I want to make something that’s appreciated as a work of art, but that’s not the kind of film people pay money to see. Most of the time people invest in me because they like who I am and how I work. They know they’re not getting their money back.”

Somewhere Between Freedom and Protection, Kansas was filmed with a budget of $11,000 and was the recipient of the 2014 Audience Award at the Free State Film Festival in Lawrence. The film has been shown around the country and premiered in Sweden this week, and was screened to an audience of 50 at the Pratt Public Library during Clement’s visit.

“Everyone I worked with on this project was so wonderful,” he said. “I hope to make another film soon and I’d like to see larger movie projects come to Western Kansas in the future. This region has a lot to offer and this has been such a good experience.”