Today’s News from the University of Kansas
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KU ends historic run at National Debate Tournament semifinals
LAWRENCE — Kansas Debate’s historic run at the National Debate Tournament, hosted by Harvard University, ended March 30 at the semifinals. The University of Kansas team of Azja Butler, Lansing, and Ross Fitzpatrick, Leawood, lost a hard-fought 3-2 split decision against the University of Michigan in the tournament’s Final Four after winning 11 consecutive debates. They were the 18th KU team in tournament history to reach the Final Four and the fourth in the last five years.
Four researchers to receive University Scholarly Achievement Awards
LAWRENCE — Four faculty members at the University of Kansas will receive 2021 University Scholarly Achievement Awards, which recognize significant scholarly or research achievement for scholars in the middle of their careers. The annual awards recognize achievement in four areas: arts and humanities; clinical sciences; science, technology and mathematics; and social science and professional programs. The recipients are Kelsie Forbush, associate professor of psychology; Kyoungchul (K.C.) Kong, professor of physics & astronomy; Nicole Nollen, professor of population health, and Peter Ojiambo, associate professor of African & African-American studies.
Full stories below.
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Contact: Scott Harris, KU Debate, 785-864-9878, [email protected], @KansasDebate
KU ends historic run at National Debate Tournament semifinals
LAWRENCE — Kansas Debate’s historic run at the National Debate Tournament, hosted by Harvard University, ended March 30 at the semifinals. The University of Kansas team of Azja Butler, Lansing, and Ross Fitzpatrick, Leawood, lost a hard-fought 3-2 split decision against the University of Michigan in the tournament’s Final Four after winning 11 consecutive debates. They were the 18th KU team in tournament history to reach the Final Four and the fourth in the last five years.
Butler and Fitzpatrick were 8-0 in the preliminary rounds and qualified for the single-elimination rounds as the top seed. They defeated the University of Minnesota in the Sweet 16 on a 5-0 decision. They defeated the University of California Fullerton in the Elite Eight on a 4-3 decision to advance to the semifinals.
Other tournament highlights:
1. KU had two teams in the Elite Eight for the first time since 1988.
2. KU had three teams in the Sweet 16 for the first time ever.
3. KU’s Butler became the first Black woman to win the Ross Smith Top Speaker award.
4. KU’s Nate Martin, of Lansing, took the second-place speaker award, and Graham Revare, of Shawnee, took 12th place.
5. Read previous coverage of Kansas Debate performance at the 2021 National Debate Tournament.
“I want to thank all the members of the 2020-21 KU debate team who worked so hard to support their teammates and who are a part of every win. It takes the entire squad to raise trophies, and this is a squad I truly love,” said Scott Harris, KU Debate coach.
Harris said he appreciated the support of the KU Department of Communication Studies, which arranged space in Bailey Hall that gave Jayhawks an “unrivaled” setup for online debate. He also expressed thanks to university leadership and the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences for their support as well as for the funding from Student Senate that allows Kansas Debate to work with a large squad.
Coaching staff and volunteers included Assistant Coach Brett Bricker as well as Jyleesa Hampton, Alaina Walberg, Julia Henry, Will Katz, Jesse Smith, Benton Bajorek, Ned Gidley, Derek Hilligoss, Talya Slaw, Jacob Justice and Allie Chase.
The KU Debate season continues with the Cross Examination Debate Association National Championship Debate tournament, which begins April 9.
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Contact: Joe Monaco, Office of Public Affairs, 785-864-7100, [email protected], @UnivOfKansas
Four researchers to receive University Scholarly Achievement Awards
LAWRENCE — Four faculty members at the University of Kansas will receive 2021 University Scholarly Achievement Awards, which recognize significant scholarly or research achievement for scholars in the middle of their careers.
The annual awards recognize achievement in four areas: arts and humanities; clinical sciences; science, technology and mathematics; and social science and professional programs.
This year’s winners:
1. Kelsie Forbush, associate professor of psychology (social science and professional programs)
2. Kyoungchul (K.C.) Kong, professor of physics & astronomy (science, technology and mathematics)
3. Nicole Nollen, professor of population health (clinical sciences)
4. Peter Ojiambo, associate professor of African & African-American studies (arts and humanities).
The recipients will be honored during a virtual University Research Awards ceremony in April, along with winners of other university research awards such as the Steven F. Warren Research Achievement Award and the Higuchi-KU Endowment Research Achievement Award. Details about the virtual University Research Awards ceremony will be announced soon.
“As our society has risen to the challenge of addressing the COVID-19 pandemic, we’ve all been reminded of the crucial role that leading research universities play in improving lives,” Chancellor Douglas A. Girod said. “The contributions of these four scholars are inspiring and cover a wide range of academic disciplines. Taken together, their efforts demonstrate the value of work that can have an impact far beyond our campuses, and I congratulate them on their achievements.”
This is the 11th year KU has presented the University Scholarly Achievement Awards.
Information about the four winners is below.
Kelsie Forbush, associate professor of psychology
Kelsie Forbush’s research focuses on eating disorders, serious mental health conditions that have the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric illness and affect people across all age, socioeconomic and racial groups. Forbush is at the forefront of research using rigorous statistical methods to test innovative models of eating disorder classification and is the developer of the Eating Pathology Symptoms Inventory (EPSI), an empirically based self-report instrument with strong psychometric properties and utility across a broad range of individuals, including clinical and community samples of men and women, and diverse ethnic and racial groups. She recently developed a mobile phone application that can be used to identify individuals who are at risk for poor treatment response. Her work has shaped the direction of scientific literature in eating disorders, reflected in over 70 peer-reviewed publications, and also has significant implications for clinical care and improving outcomes for people with eating disorders.
Kyoungchul (K.C.) Kong, professor of physics & astronomy
K.C. Kong has made foundational contributions to theoretical physics and has an exceptional international reputation in the field of high-energy physics. Kong’s seminal research paves a road into the uncharted territory of dark matter and new physics beyond the Standard Model. Kong is a leading expert on collider phenomenology. He has developed novel methods that are essential for new physics searches at the Large Hadron Collider, the world’s premier particle accelerator. Studying dark matter particles is especially difficult, and Kong’s contributions have enabled entirely new searches for these enigmatic objects. His seminal work, “The 750 GeV Diphoton Excess May Not Imply a 750 GeV Resonance,” published in the prestigious Physical Review Letters, was one of four featured articles in Nature News, the most prestigious magazine that covers the sciences.
Nicole Nollen, professor of population health
Nicole Nollen’s work represents more than 18 years of research conducted at KU Medical Center to understand racial disparities related to smoking cessation. Nollen’s multidisciplinary research team is one of the only groups in the country focused on improving tobacco use treatment outcomes in African-American smokers with the goal of reducing disparities in tobacco-related morbidity and mortality. By evaluating promising pharmacotherapy and behavioral interventions for African-American smokers, Nollen’s team has made significant contributions to the scientific literature, and their findings have directly affected clinical practice guidelines for treating African-Americans. Her work in this area was highlighted by the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee in its report to the FDA on the threat of menthol cigarettes to public health. Nollen’s research has elucidated mechanisms that explain racial and ethnic differences in tobacco use and cessation and have helped move the field away from a generic focus on race/ethnicity toward a targeted focus on specific, modifiable barriers and facilitators to quitting smoking and reducing racial health disparities.
Peter Ojiambo, associate professor of African & African-American studies
Peter Ojiambo’s work focuses on the democratizing potential of education. Across two single-authored books, two co-edited volumes and dozens of articles, Ojiambo argues that transformative educational practices in Africa require combining progressive models of education with traditional African strategies. The U.S. Department of Education, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and a range of other funders have found these arguments compelling, funding a collective set of proposals amounting to over $3 million on which Ojiambo was the PI, co-PI or co-author. Finally, Ojiambo is a leader in finding ways to make humanistic research a public good. His open-access software to teach the Kiswahili language is widely used on multiple continents. He is the leader of two language initiatives at KU: the annual African Languages Festival and the Food and African Film Festival. These events bring in more than 200 students and faculty to celebrate and learn the significance of African and African diasporic languages. These efforts illustrate how Ojiambo has creatively weaved his scholarship with various performance-based activities that are examples of his deep commitment to public scholarship and outreach.
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