Dragon softball team swept by unbeaten Cheney
Halstead shut out in second game By Mark Schnabel Newton Kansan CHENEY — The Halstead Dragon softball team ran into a buzzsaw Monday night in… Login to continue reading Login…
Halstead shut out in second game By Mark Schnabel Newton Kansan CHENEY — The Halstead Dragon softball team ran into a buzzsaw Monday night in… Login to continue reading Login…
Halstead plays Friday at Nickerson By Mark Schnabel Newton Kansan CHENEY – The Halstead Dragon baseball team went on the road Monday to claim a… Login to continue reading Login…
Threshers lose two seniors off roster The Kansan Staff The Bethel College softball team got one more win, and nearly two, in the team’s season… Login to continue reading Login…
Pioneers prepare for NCAA regionals By Mark Schnabel Newton Kansan The Denver University women’s golf team had a record-setting and dominant performance at the 40th… Login to continue reading Login…
Newton to play Thursday at Salina South By Mark Schnabel Newton Kansan The Newton High School girls’ soccer team played a strong first half, but… Login to continue reading Login…
Salina South Inv. April 22 Salina Municipal GC Par 70, 6,521 yards Team scores — McPherson 320, Emporia 323, Derby 330, Valley Center 349, Topeka Hayden… Login to continue reading Login…

Ross Michael Scheffler was born on March 31, 1949, in Newton, Kansas to parents Art and Catherine Scheffler. Ross was an outdoorsman, and enjoyed hunting and fishing from a young age.…

HALSTEAD — Last season, Halstead’s Korbin Black apprenticed under state medalist Douglas Grider in the throws. Now a senior, Black emerged as a top thrower in his own right after a pair of wins Friday at the 51st Conrad Nightingale Invitational at Hess Field in Halstead.

While the first official day of Spring is March 22, this year it took a few weeks for spring to begin to truly show. Kansan photographer Michele Clarke found signs of spring around Newton last week, from trees beginning to finaly leaf out and tulips displaying their spring colors.

George F. Kennan was the author of the post-WWII Marshall Plan and the diplomat who kept the Cold War from becoming “hot.” Therefore U.S. foreign policy experts paid attention when he wrote an essay in the New York Times on February 5, 1997, Section A, Page 23.