State Tipoffs Involving Kansas Newsletter for Thursday August 14, 2025 ( 4 items ) |
Faculty to Help Strengthen K-State's International Partnerships and Impact Through Prestigious Fulbright Scholar Program
MANHATTAN, Kansas, Aug. 14 -- Kansas State University issued the following news:
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Faculty to help strengthen K-State's international partnerships and impact through prestigious Fulbright Scholar program
By Kate Kennedy
Two Kansas State University faculty members have been selected for the Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program for the 2025-2026 academic year.
Shawn Hutchinson, professor of geography and geospatial sciences and co-director of the Institute for Digital Agriculture and Advanced A
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Prison to Possibility: KU TRIO Program Helps Incarcerated Individuals Rebuild Through Education
LAWRENCE, Kansas, Aug. 13 -- The University of Kansas issued the following news:
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Prison to possibility: KU TRIO program helps incarcerated individuals rebuild through education
Imagine spending 10 years behind bars with limited contact with the outside world. Then one night, you're removed from your cell and dropped off in an unfamiliar city, alone, with no job, no savings and no connections. This was the reality for Destney Williams, a former Topeka Correctional Facility inmate.
"I'm
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Textron Aviation proudly supports WSU Tech expansion
WICHITA, Kansas, Aug. 13 [Category: BizAerospace] -- Textron Aviation, a subsidiary of Textron, issued the following news release:
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Textron Aviation proudly supports WSU Tech expansion
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Investment aims to expand workforce programs to advance the future of flight
Driven by our ongoing commitment to train the next generation of the aviation workforce, Textron Aviation is investing in the expansion of WSU Tech's aviation training programs as the lead contributor to a new facility at th
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University of Kansas: Study Traces History of Legislation to Help Low-income Households Pay for Energy
LAWRENCE, Kansas, Aug. 13 (TNSjou) -- The University of Kansas issued the following news:
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Study traces history of legislation to help low-income households pay for energy
As extreme winter cold and rising summer temperatures drive energy bills higher, low-income households face utility shutoff for not being able to afford the cost. Policy addressing such energy insecurity has traditionally been viewed as the domain of poverty law, but new research from the University of Kansas proposes
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