Kansas
‘Hallowed ground’: Shawnee Tribe regains ownership of historic Johnson County cemetery
Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly signed SB 405, which provides a plot of land in Shawnee, Kansas, again to the Shawnee Tribe. A Google Maps avenue view picture from Might 2019 exhibits the realm of the historic burial grounds, situated on West 59th Terrace, east of Nieman Highway.
Google Maps
Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly final week signed a invoice returning a sacred burial floor in Johnson County to the Shawnee Tribe.
Kelly signed SB 405, which permits the Kansas State Historic Society to show possession of the cemetery over to the Shawnee Tribe, whose leaders say they plan to protect the historic web site.
“The Shawnee Tribe considers the cemetery a sacred place, a standard cultural property,” Shawnee Chief Ben Barnes stated in a information launch. “We’re dedicated to defending the gravesites of our ancestors and to the preservation and conservation of the historic, archaeological character of the location.”
The cemetery, which now measures about half an acre, is the burial floor of a number of outstanding leaders of the Shawnee Tribe, Barnes testified on the statehouse in February. This contains Chief Joseph Parks, Mose Silverheels, and kinfolk of Chief Bluejacket, a well-known common.
The land sits simply east of the intersection of Nieman Highway and West 59th Terrace, in a residential space. A small signal studying “Shawnee Indian Cemetery” marks the land.
The sacred cemetery as soon as spanned a number of acres, Barnes stated, and served as a spot of worship in addition to a voting location when Kansas first gained statehood.
Barnes stated as a result of the burial floor is taken into account a “Conventional Cultural property,” tribal leaders are working with the town to have the land listed on the Nationwide Register of Historic Locations.
“To many, this one-half-acre situated on the finish of a dead-end avenue seems to be only a small, vacant lot or a inexperienced house,” he stated in February. “To us, it’s hallowed floor. Due to this fact, the tribe is uniquely suited to function the cemetery’s proprietor, advocate, and caretaker.”

Kansas
Investigation underway after police shooting near 11th & Prospect

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KCTV) – An investigation is underway by the Missouri State Highway Patrol after a police shooting in Kansas City Friday evening.
It happened in the area of 11th Street and Prospect Avenue. That’s in the area of Prospect Plaza Park.
MSHP said a preliminary investigation revealed KCPD officers located a stolen Hyundai just before 5 p.m. that was part of a burglary earlier Friday morning. When KCPD officers tried to make a traffic stop near Independence Avenue and Benton Boulevard the driver refused.
A KCPD helicopter tracked the vehicle to the area. Eventually, the Hyundai came to a stop near 11th and Prospect, where the driver ran from the vehicle.
MSHP said an officer fired shots at approximately 5:02 p.m. striking the suspect during a chase on foot. The suspect continued running but was later taken into custody.
Police said the suspect was hospitalized but suffered non-life-threatening injuries. A handgun was found near the scene where the suspect was shot, MSHP said.
The investigation remains ongoing.
KCTV is sending a crew to the scene to gather more information. We will update this breaking news story as more information becomes available.
Copyright 2025 KCTV. All rights reserved.
Kansas
How to watch Kansas State vs. Fairfield in Women’s March Madness: Time, TV channel, streaming

The No. 5 Kansas State Wildcats (26-7) meet the No. 12 Fairfield Stags (28-4) in the first round of the NCAA Tournament on Friday, starting at 2:30 p.m. ET.
Kansas State heads into this contest following a 73-69 loss to West Virginia on Friday. Fairfield won its most recent matchup 76-53 against Quinnipiac on Saturday. Kennedy Taylor scored a team-best 21 points for Kansas State in the loss. Meghan Andersen scored a team-best 27 points for Fairfield in the victory.
Kansas State vs. Fairfield TV channel NCAA Tournament
- Location: Memorial Coliseum in Lexington-Fayette, Kentucky
- Date: Friday, March 21, 2025
- Time: 2:30 p.m. ET
- TV channel: ESPNews (watch on Fubo)
- Stream: Fubo
What time is Kansas State vs. Fairfield basketball today?
Kansas State and Fairfield take the court at 2:30 p.m. ET.
Watch Fairfield vs. Kansas State with Fubo
Kansas State vs. Fairfield odds, lines, spread
- Spread: Kansas State -16.5
- Total: 135.5
- Moneyline: Kansas State -2500, Fairfield +1127
Kansas State’s offense has been much less productive over its last 10 games, putting up 72.2 points a contest compared to the 79.3 it has averaged this year. Over its previous 10 games, Fairfield is putting up 68.9 points per contest, four fewer points than its season average (72.9).
March Madness First Round schedule
- Michigan Wolverines (6) vs. Iowa State Cyclones (11): Friday, 11:30 a.m. ET on ESPN2
- Kentucky Wildcats (4) vs. Liberty Lady Flames (13): Friday, 12 p.m. ET on ESPN
- Utah Utes (8) vs. Indiana Hoosiers (9): Friday, 1:30 p.m. ET on ESPN2
- Notre Dame Fighting Irish (3) vs. Stephen F. Austin Ladyjacks (14): Friday, 2 p.m. ET on ESPN
- Kansas State Wildcats (5) vs. Fairfield Stags (12): Friday, 2:30 p.m. ET on ESPNews
- Baylor Bears (4) vs. Grand Canyon Antelopes (13): Friday, 3:30 p.m. ET on ESPNU
- TCU Horned Frogs (2) vs. Fairleigh Dickinson Knights (15): Friday, 3:30 p.m. ET on ESPN2
- South Carolina Gamecocks (1) vs. Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles (16): Friday, 4 p.m. ET on ESPN
- Vanderbilt Commodores (7) vs. Oregon Ducks (10): Friday, 5:30 p.m. ET on ESPNews
- Ohio State Buckeyes (4) vs. Montana State Bobcats (13): Friday, 5:30 p.m. ET on ESPN2
- Louisville Cardinals (7) vs. Nebraska Cornhuskers (10): Friday, 6 p.m. ET on ESPN
- Ole Miss Rebels (5) vs. Ball State Cardinals (12): Friday, 6 p.m. ET on ESPNU
- Richmond Spiders (8) vs. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets (9): Friday, 7:30 p.m. ET on ESPNews
- Duke Blue Devils (2) vs. Lehigh Mountain Hawks (15): Friday, 8 p.m. ET on ESPNU
- Tennessee Volunteers (5) vs. South Florida Bulls (12): Friday, 8 p.m. ET on ESPN
- UCLA Bruins (1) vs. Southern Jaguars (16): Friday, 10 p.m. ET on ESPN
- Iowa Hawkeyes (6) vs. Murray State Racers (11): Saturday, 12 p.m. ET on ESPN
- UConn Huskies (2) vs. Arkansas State Red Wolves (15): Saturday, 1 p.m. ET on ABC
- Alabama Crimson Tide (5) vs. Green Bay Phoenix (12): Saturday, 1:30 p.m. ET on ESPN2
- NC State Wolfpack (2) vs. Vermont Catamounts (15): Saturday, 2 p.m. ET on ESPN
- Oklahoma Sooners (3) vs. Florida Gulf Coast Eagles (14): Saturday, 2:30 p.m. ET on ESPNU
- USC Trojans (1) vs. UNC Greensboro Spartans (16): Saturday, 3 p.m. ET on ABC
- Oklahoma State Cowgirls (7) vs. South Dakota State Jackrabbits (10): Saturday, 3:30 p.m. ET on ESPN2
- Maryland Terrapins (4) vs. Norfolk State Spartans (13): Saturday, 4 p.m. ET on ESPN
- North Carolina Tar Heels (3) vs. Oregon State Beavers (14): Saturday, 4:30 p.m. ET on ESPNU
- Michigan State Spartans (7) vs. Harvard Crimson (10): Saturday, 4:30 p.m. ET on ESPNews
- California Golden Bears (8) vs. Mississippi State Bulldogs (9): Saturday, 5:30 p.m. ET on ESPN2
- Illinois Fighting Illini (8) vs. Creighton Bluejays (9): Saturday, 7:15 p.m. ET on ESPNews
- Florida State Seminoles (6) vs. George Mason Patriots (11): Saturday, 7:45 p.m. ET on ESPN2
- LSU Tigers (3) vs. San Diego State Aztecs (14): Saturday, 10:15 p.m. ET on ESPN
Kansas State Wildcats basketball schedule
Fairfield Stags basketball schedule
Watch Fairfield vs. Kansas State with Fubo
Kansas
Kansas’s Self-Inflicted Damage and First-Round March Madness Exit Sinks Program to New Low

PROVIDENCE—The Kansas Jayhawks had rallied from 10 points down to a three-point lead with a 2-3 zone and a barrage of missed Arkansas Razorbacks shots. The Hogs had scored two points in a span of seven-plus minutes. A little over three minutes remained, and a miserable Kansas season was close to getting a smidge brighter.
Then KJ Adams tried to take off downcourt with a defensive rebound and suddenly went down, turning the ball over in the process. It looked bad in the moment, and it is—an Achilles injury that coach Bill Self said postgame could cause Adams “to lose a year.”
What followed that injury was a complete collapse in a winnable game against a No. 10 seed—echoing a home loss to the Houston Cougars and a blown 20-point lead to the Baylor Bears and a brutal loss to the Utah Utes. Without Adams, Kansas turned the ball over on its next four possessions with a flurry of careless passes. By the time the Jayhawks finally got up another shot (which missed), they had gone from three up to four down. Final score: Arkansas 79, Kansas 72.
“We did a lot of the damage ourselves,” Self said, a statement that was true Thursday night and for the season as a whole.
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It began with the No. 1 ranking and ended with a first-round punch-out. The 2024–25 Kansas season was the cautionary tale of a team that got what it paid for in the portal era—the wrong guys. The Jayhawks spent a ton of money for a mismatched, un-clutch, underachieving roster that flailed all season offensively and couldn’t finish games. Their 13 losses were the most for the program since 1982–83.
And truth be told, it continues a regression from elite status for the Jayhawks since winning the 2022 national title. They’re 2–3 in the NCAA tournament since then, and their Big 12 record the past two years is 21–17 in a league they dominated for decades.
It’s almost like some of the advantages gained from years as Adidas’s favored program have worn off after the federal investigation of corruption in college basketball. Kansas was sanctioned in that scandal, though not as severely as some thought it might be. Turns out the real sanction might have been losing T.J. Gassnola and Jim Gatto as recruiting concierges.
This inglorious end forced Self to acknowledge what became increasingly clear as the season spiraled into the dumpster. “We’ve got to reevaluate how we do things,” he said.
Building the program around 7′ 2″ Michigan Wolverines transfer Hunter Dickinson for two seasons was a failed plan. Dickinson exits college as a stat compiler more than a big-time winner. The teams he played on went to the Elite Eight as a freshman, the Sweet 16 as a sophomore, the NIT as a junior, the NCAA second round as a fourth-year senior and the first round as a fifth-year senior. Declining returns on large investments.
The addition of AJ Storr from the Wisconsin Badgers was a season-long fiasco that ended with him belatedly playing his best game against Arkansas, scoring 15 points. South Dakota State Jackrabbits transfer Zeke Mayo was inconsistent at best. Alabama Crimson Tide transfer Rylan Griffen was a non-factor who played much better last season for the Crimson Tide.
Kansas’s two program mainstays, fifth-year point guard Dajuan Harris Jr. and fourth-year forward Adams, were role players who couldn’t carry a bigger load this season when needed. Yet in the final minutes of the season, the absence of Adams suddenly loomed large.
Add it all together and you have a bust of a team.
“You can’t afford [portal] misses, but I will say this … there’s an element of luck involved,” Self said. “I think now more than ever [it] was even before. You can go after the kids that you get a great bargain on. You get a good deal on it but it doesn’t matter unless they fit in and can help you win.
“We’ve got to do a better job of evaluating the portal but I’m happy with the roster we had. It just didn’t turn out to be the team that we had hoped it was.”
Next year’s team will be built around guard Darryn Peterson, the No. 1 or 2 player in the country depending which recruiting rankings you prefer. But he will be a freshman in a sport that skewed old years ago—Cooper Flaggs don’t come along every year. The Jayhawks will have to mine the portal heavily again this offseason, and they can’t afford to get it wrong.
In addition to the roster, Self probably needs to take a critical look at his staff. It’s not the freshest collection of guys, most of them having been in the program for ages. Staff continuity can be a good thing until it’s suddenly not, and this inflection point might be a time to shake things up on that front.
Self pointed out that, in a way, this Kansas team is a victim of the program’s historic success. Most of the nation would take 21 wins and an NCAA berth—but in Lawrence they’re accustomed to conference titles, high seeds and NCAA runs. The Jayhawks’ consistency has been the envy of the entire nation.
“No matter what you do in life, there’s going to be some ups and downs,” Self said. “And we just haven’t had very many downs, to be honest with you.”
The question now is what Kansas will do about this down year. The Jayhawks have to be smarter (and luckier) in the portal. They have to coach the players they bring in better. But first, they head home after their earliest tournament exit since 2006, and with their most losses in more than 40 years.
More March Madness on Sports Illustrated
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