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Page 8A • Kearney Hub • Tuesday, April 2, 2019 EXPIRES 4-30-2019 Clean Up Special $ 14 14 95 95 KEARNEY CENTRE VACUUM 23rd & Central Avenue Kearney • 234-9400 Spring Spring SPECIALS! SPECIALS! 12 12 FREE BAGS FREE BAGS with any NEW VACUUM EXPIRES 4-30-2019 EXPIRES 4-30-2019 Buy 1 Get One Buy 1 Get One 50% OFF 50% OFF On All On All Vacuum Bags Vacuum Bags Papa John’s In Kearney Over 60 Years of Pizza Making Experience Under One Roof! Order Online at papajohns.com or call 308-236-5455 5611 West 2nd Avenue, Kearney Open Sun.–Thurs., 11am–12am Fri.–Sat., 11am–1am Buy any large pizza with 2 or more toppings at regular menu price; get 2nd pizza of equal or lesser value for FREE! BO GO Not valid with any other coupons or discounts. Limited delivery area. Delivery fee may apply. One coupon per order. Must present coupon for discount. Get any large one-topping pizza for JUST $ 7.99! $ 7.99 Special! Not valid with any other coupons or discounts. Limited delivery area. Delivery fee may apply. One coupon per order. Must present coupon for discount. Take 50% Off the regular menu price of your entire order when you order between 11am & 3pm any day 50% OFF Lunch Special Not valid with any other coupons or discounts. Limited delivery area. Delivery fee may apply. One coupon per order. Must present coupon for discount. Kearney Klip-It New Coupons Announced the First Tuesday of Every Month! BH News Service CLARA DVORAK puts a pinwheel into the grass outside the Parent Child Center of Tulsa on Friday. Employees and volunteers planted 2,685 pin- wheels, one for every confirmed case of child abuse or neglect in Tulsa County in 2018. ONE FOR EVERY VICTIM Come for fillings, stay for fillers By SARAH MEEHAN The Baltimore Sun BALTIMORE — After a plastic sur- geon’s office botched her dermal fill- ers, Tima Barkeshli found a different destination for cosmetic treatments: her dentist’s office. From his suite in Columbia, Dr. Javod Gol is among the ranks of dentists who are increasingly treat- ing not only the teeth, but everything that frames them. In addition to teeth-cleanings, crowns and cavity fill- ings, he offers patients like Barkeshli Botox, dermal fillers and small sutures that lift and tighten their skin. “It rejuvenates your face, which is what I’m looking for,” Barkeshli, a 33-year-old Bethesda, Md., resident, said of the Botox and fillers she’s received from Gol. “I’m not looking to look different. I’m not even looking to look so much younger. It’s more like I want to look fresh and rejuvenated.” For more than a decade, regulatory boards have authorized the use of botulinum toxin — known under the popular brand name Botox — and other non-surgical cosmetic proce- dures by dentists. In addition to its cosmetic applications, Botox can be used to treat temporomandibular joint disorders — which cause pain where the jaw and cheek bones meet — as well as conditions like migraines and teeth grinding. With three levels of certification from the American Academy of Facial Esthetics, Gol’s cosmetic work ranges from procedures as simple as injecting Botox to smooth fine lines on the fore- head, to the more complex “Nefertiti lift,” which tightens skin along the neck and jawline. Dentists’ familiarity with facial anatomy makes them reliable providers for facial injections, Malcmacher said, adding they also understand how to treat complica- tions that could arise. Some dentists now offering Botox, cosmetic treatments Do young people still want to be journalists? By ANNA ORSO The Philadelphia Inquirer Emily Erdos wanted to be a reporter so badly that she begged administrators at Princeton to allow her to study journalism — a major the Ivy League school didn’t offer. She was denied. “Too vocational,” they said. But the Massachusetts native kept at it, and, along with a dedicated professor, eventually helped persuade faculty mem- bers to approve a formal jour- nalism program, a first for the school. This year, she’ll be part of the inaugural class of students to graduate with an undergradu- ate certificate in journalism. It’s an industry that’s being decimated by layoffs and facing more distrust from the public than ever before, thanks in no small part to a president who has deemed journalists “the enemy of the people.” Nonetheless, Erdos still wants to be a reporter — one whose work proves to critics how the work serves American democracy. “I don’t see backing down as an option,” she said. Interest in studying journalism hasn’t waned at the region’s top schools since Donald Trump’s election, and in some ways, crit- icism of the press actually may be energizing student journalists, students and faculty say. What’s different now is that an increas- ing number want to do more than report on problems. They want to solve them. Look at Penn State, which has one of the largest commu- nications schools in the region. Enrollment in the journalism program had declined steadily from 654 students in the spring of 2008 to 504 students in spring 2016. But those numbers have since bounced back, with 630 students enrolled in the program in spring 2018. Marie Hardin, dean of the school’s Donald P. Bellisario College of Communications, said five years ago prospective students and their families were worried there weren’t enough jobs in journalism. Today, she said, she hears fewer of those concerns and more excitement around “the role and impact that these young people feel they can make as journalists.” David Boardman, dean of Tem- ple’s Klein College of Media and Communication, said applications to the school’s journalism major are up this year after several years of decline (although the school didn’t provide figures). He said the response to the presi- dent’s attacks on the press are just a part of “a rebirth of awareness and commitment” to the idea of a healthy Fourth Estate as young people witness the power of the press not only in politics but also in the #MeToo movement, which was largely driven by investiga- tive reporting. KHANYA BRAN, right, a senior, and Ayooluwa Ariyo, left, a junior at Temple University, report for a story about Tiffany’s bakery in the 15th Street subway concourse near Temple’s Center City Campus on March 11. Tribune News Service Michael Brown’s mom making run for Ferguson City Council FERGUSON, Mo. (AP) — Michael Brown’s mother could soon have oversight over the police department connected to her son’s death, if voters in Ferguson, Mo., elect her to the City Council. Lesley McSpadden, 39, is among three candidates run- ning in Ferguson’s 3rd Ward today. She faces incumbent Keith Kallstrom and Fran Griffin, who has been active on several Ferguson boards. Brown, a black 18-year-old, was fatally shot by white Fer- guson officer Darren Wilson on Aug. 9, 2014, touching off months of protests and violence. Wilson claimed he was forced to shoot when the unarmed Brown came at him menacingly after attacking the officer during a street con- frontation. A St. Louis County grand jury’s November 2014 decision not to indict Wilson sparked renewed unrest. “I wanted to go back and do something right in a place that did something so very wrong to my son, and I think that’s what my son would want as well,” McSpadden said in an interview with The Associated Press McSpadden, who spelled her first name “Lezley” for an autobiography but said she otherwise goes by Lesley, is new at being a candidate but has been at the edge of politics since her son’s death. She’s been front and center in the national Black Lives Mat- ter movement. She endorsed Democratic presidential can- didate Hillary Clinton in early 2016, at a time when Clinton was fending off a primary challenge from Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Page A † Kearney Hub † Tuesday, April 2, 2019 Come for Do ... · fillings, stay for fillers By SARAH MEEHAN The Baltimore Sun BALTIMORE — After a plastic sur-geon’s offi

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Page 1: Page A † Kearney Hub † Tuesday, April 2, 2019 Come for Do ... · fillings, stay for fillers By SARAH MEEHAN The Baltimore Sun BALTIMORE — After a plastic sur-geon’s offi

Page 8A • Kearney Hub • Tuesday, April 2, 2019

EXPIRES 4-30-2019

Clean Up Special

$14149595

KEARNEY CENTRE VACUUM

23rd & Central Avenue Kearney • 234-9400

SpringSpring

SPECIALS!SPECIALS!

1212

FREE BAGSFREE BAGS with any

NEW VACUUM

EXPIRES 4-30-2019

EXPIRES 4-30-2019

Buy 1 Get One Buy 1 Get One 50% OFF50% OFF

On All On All Vacuum BagsVacuum Bags

Papa John’s In Kearney

Over 60 Years of Pizza Making Experience Under One Roof!

Order Online at papajohns.com

or call 308-236-5455

5611 West 2nd Avenue, Kearney

Open Sun.–Thurs., 11am–12am

Fri.–Sat., 11am–1am

Buy any large pizza with 2 or more toppings at regular menu price; get 2nd pizza of equal or lesser value for FREE!

BOGO

Not valid with any other coupons or discounts. Limited delivery

area. Delivery fee may apply. One coupon per order.

Must present coupon for discount.

Get any large one-topping pizza for

JUST $7.99!

$7.99Special!

Not valid with any other coupons or discounts. Limited delivery

area. Delivery fee may apply. One coupon per order.

Must present coupon for discount.

Take 50% Off the regular menu price of your entire order when you order

between 11am & 3pm any day

50%OFFLunch

Special

Not valid with any other coupons or discounts. Limited delivery area. Delivery fee may apply. One coupon per order.

Must present coupon for discount.

Kearney

Klip-It New Coupons Announced the First Tuesday of Every Month!

BH News Service

CLARA DVORAK puts a pinwheel into the grass outside the Parent Child Center of Tulsa on Friday. Employees and volunteers planted 2,685 pin-wheels, one for every confi rmed case of child abuse or neglect in Tulsa County in 2018.

ONE FOR EVERY VICTIM

Come for fillings, stay for fillers

By SARAH MEEHANThe Baltimore Sun

BALTIMORE — After a plastic sur-geon’s offi ce botched her dermal fi ll-ers, Tima Barkeshli found a different destination for cosmetic treatments: her dentist’s offi ce.

From his suite in Columbia, Dr. Javod Gol is among the ranks of dentists who are increasingly treat-ing not only the teeth, but everything that frames them. In addition to teeth-cleanings, crowns and cavity fi ll-ings, he offers patients like Barkeshli Botox, dermal fi llers and small sutures that lift and tighten their skin.

“It rejuvenates your face, which is what I’m looking for,” Barkeshli, a 33-year-old Bethesda, Md., resident, said of the Botox and fi llers she’s received from Gol. “I’m not looking to look different. I’m not even looking to look so much younger. It’s more like I want to look fresh and rejuvenated.”

For more than a decade, regulatory boards have authorized the use of botulinum toxin — known under the popular brand name Botox — and other non-surgical cosmetic proce-dures by dentists. In addition to its cosmetic applications, Botox can be used to treat temporomandibular joint disorders — which cause pain where the jaw and cheek bones meet — as well as conditions like migraines and teeth grinding.

With three levels of certifi cation from the American Academy of Facial Esthetics, Gol’s cosmetic work ranges from procedures as simple as injecting Botox to smooth fi ne lines on the fore-head, to the more complex “Nefertiti lift,” which tightens skin along the neck and jawline.

Dentists’ familiarity with facial anatomy makes them reliable providers for facial injections, Malcmacher said, adding they also understand how to treat complica-tions that could arise.

Some dentists now offering

Botox, cosmetic treatments

Do young people still want to be journalists?By ANNA ORSO

The Philadelphia Inquirer

Emily Erdos wanted to be a reporter so badly that she begged administrators at Princeton to allow her to study journalism — a major the Ivy League school didn’t offer. She was denied. “Too vocational,” they said.

But the Massachusetts native kept at it, and, along with a dedicated professor, eventually helped persuade faculty mem-bers to approve a formal jour-nalism program, a fi rst for the school. This year, she’ll be part of the inaugural class of students to graduate with an undergradu-ate certifi cate in journalism.

It’s an industry that’s being decimated by layoffs and facing more distrust from the public than ever before, thanks in no small part to a president who has deemed journalists “the enemy of the people.”

Nonetheless, Erdos still wants to be a reporter — one whose work proves to critics how the work

serves American democracy.“I don’t see backing down as

an option,” she said.Interest in studying journalism

hasn’t waned at the region’s top schools since Donald Trump’s election, and in some ways, crit-icism of the press actually may be energizing student journalists, students and faculty say. What’s different now is that an increas-ing number want to do more than report on problems. They want to solve them.

Look at Penn State, which has one of the largest commu-nications schools in the region. Enrollment in the journalism program had declined steadily from 654 students in the spring of 2008 to 504 students in spring 2016. But those numbers have since bounced back, with 630 students enrolled in the program in spring 2018.

Marie Hardin, dean of the school’s Donald P. Bellisario College of Communications, said fi ve years ago prospective students and their families were

worried there weren’t enough jobs in journalism. Today, she said, she hears fewer of those concerns and more excitement around “the role and impact that these young people feel they can make as journalists.”

David Boardman, dean of Tem-ple’s Klein College of Media and Communication, said applications to the school’s journalism major are up this year after several

years of decline (although the school didn’t provide fi gures). He said the response to the presi-dent’s attacks on the press are just a part of “a rebirth of awareness and commitment” to the idea of a healthy Fourth Estate as young people witness the power of the press not only in politics but also in the #MeToo movement, which was largely driven by investiga-tive reporting.

KHANYA BRAN, right, a senior, and Ayooluwa Ariyo, left, a junior at Temple University, report for a story about Tiffany’s bakery in the 15th Street subway concourse near Temple’s Center City Campus on March 11.

Tribune News Service

Michael Brown’s mom making run for Ferguson City Council

FERGUSON, Mo. (AP) — Michael Brown’s mother could soon have oversight over the police department connected to her son’s death, if voters in Ferguson, Mo., elect her to the City Council.

Lesley McSpadden, 39, is among three candidates run-ning in Ferguson’s 3rd Ward today. She faces incumbent Keith Kallstrom and Fran Griffi n, who has been active on several Ferguson boards.

Brown, a black 18-year-old, was fatally shot by white Fer-guson offi cer Darren Wilson on Aug. 9, 2014, touching off months of protests and violence. Wilson claimed he was forced to shoot when the unarmed Brown came at him menacingly after attacking the offi cer during a street con-frontation. A St. Louis County grand jury’s November 2014

decision not to indict Wilson sparked renewed unrest.

“I wanted to go back and do something right in a place that did something so very wrong to my son, and I think that’s what my son would want as well,” McSpadden said in an interview with The Associated Press

McSpadden, who spelled her fi rst name “Lezley” for an autobiography but said she otherwise goes by Lesley, is new at being a candidate but has been at the edge of politics since her son’s death. She’s been front and center in the national Black Lives Mat-ter movement. She endorsed Democratic presidential can-didate Hillary Clinton in early 2016, at a time when Clinton was fending off a primary challenge from Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.