Kansas
Site of bloody 1863 massacre named most peaceful place in Kansas

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A city with a violent past is now considered the most peaceful place in Kansas by users of the travel website TripAdvisor.
The northeast Kansas community of Lawrence was the Sunflower State’s representative on a list the travel website thetravel.com published this past summer identifying the most peaceful sites in each state.
“Whether you fancy the midnight-lit stillness of a shimmering lake, the distant calls of wildlife in an untouched wilderness, or the calming experience of strolling through a beautiful downtown, these places transport you to a meditative state and offer more than just stunning scenery,” the article said. “According to travelers on TripAdvisor, these are the most peaceful places in every U.S. state.”
What makes Lawrence so peaceful?
Lawrence, which the U.S. census showed had a population of about 95,000 in 2020, “is a beautiful college town in Kansas, between the Kansas and Wakarusa rivers,” said thetravel.com.
It said the city’s “storied past” includes its’ having played a central role in the “Bleeding Kansas” conflict over slavery in the 1850s, then being the site of a massacre in 1863 during the Civil War in which between 150 and 200 men and boys were killed.
Today, Lawrence is home to a lively downtown and offers beautiful natural scenery, with an abundance of wildlife, said thetravel.com.
“Clinton State Park boasts numerous hiking trails and is the perfect place to relax, while the Baker University Wetlands is perfect for a peaceful stroll through one of the most diverse habitats in Kansas,” it said.
Those wetlands, toward the city’s southern end, were formerly the subject of a 20-year battle over whether the Kansas Department of Transportation would be allowed to build a highway through them.
That dispute ended in 2012 with the approval by the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals of a plan that took only 56 acres of that 573-acre area for the project while arranging for the Kansas Department of Transportation to provide about $9 million in an endowment fund to manage the wetlands.
What other places made the ‘most peaceful’ list?
The following 49 other sites were on the “most peaceful” list published by thetravel.com.
- Dauphin Island, Alabama.
- Homer, Alaska.
- Sedona, Arizona.
- Eureka Springs, Arkansas.
- Cohasset, California.
- Fort Collins, Colorado.
- Litchfield County, Connecticut.
- Brandywine Valley, Delaware.
- St. Petersburg, Florida.
- Savannah, Georgia.
- Kailua, Hawaii.
- Moscow, Idaho.
- Galena, Illinois.
- Miller Beach, Indiana.
- Decorah, Iowa.
- Frankfort, Kentucky.
- Covington, Louisiana.
- Baxter State Park, Maine.
- Frederick, Maryland.
- Stockbridge, Massachusetts.
- Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, Michigan.
- Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, Minnesota.
- Gulf Islands National Seashore, Mississippi.
- St. Francois Mountains, Missouri.
- Bob Marshall Wilderness Area, Montana.
- Cowboy Trail, Nebraska.
- Baker, Nevada.
- North Conway, New Hampshire.
- Red Bank, New Jersey.
- Taos, New Mexico.
- Forest Lawn, New York.
- Lake Toxaway, North Carolina.
- Theodore Roosevelt National Park, North Dakota.
- Hocking Hills, Ohio.
- Talimena State Park, Oklahoma.
- Wallowa Lake, Oregon.
- Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
- Providence, Rhode Island.
- Beaufort, South Carolina.
- Badlands National Park, South Dakota.
- Franklin, Tennessee.
- Wimberley, Texas.
- Moab, Utah.
- Stowe, Vermont.
- Shenandoah, Virginia.
- Orcas Island, Washington.
- Dolly Sods Wilderness, West Virginia.
- Schoolhouse Beach Park, Wisconsin.
- Devils Tower National Monument, Wyoming.
Contact Tim Hrenchir at threnchir@gannett.com or 785-213-5934.

Kansas
Obituary for Ina L. Garrison at Chaput-Buoy Funeral Home

Kansas
Brian Branch and the Lions end a frustrating loss at Kansas City with postgame fisticuffs
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A long, frustrating night for the Detroit Lions inside Arrowhead Stadium ended with Brian Branch delivering a punch to Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster, setting off a brief fistfight among players from both teams.
It was about as much fight as the Lions showed all night.
They were dominated on both sides of the ball by a Kansas City team that was coming off a mistake-filled mess in Jacksonville and had no interest in falling two games below .500. Instead, the Chiefs shut down the prolific Detroit offense, holding it to less than half its season scoring average, and their own offense romped up and down the field on the way to a 30-17 victory Sunday night.
Then came a whole bunch of fireworks.
As red ones were set bursting over the stadium to celebrate the Chiefs’ victory, Patrick Mahomes tried to give a high-five to Branch as they met near midfield. The Lions safety walked right past the Kansas City quarterback and Chiefs wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster took umbrage with the move, walking up to Branch and having a few words with him.
Branch responded by throwing a right hook that knocked Smith-Schuster to the ground.
The veteran wide receiver leaped to his feet and went after Branch, who played through an ankle injury that had kept him out of practice most of the week. Chiefs running back Isiah Pacheco tried to get between them, but Branch succeeded in ripping Smith-Schuster’s helmet off as dozens of players from both teams converged on the scrum.
Detroit Lions wide receiver Jameson Williams is unable to catch a pass on fourth down during the second half of an NFL football game against the Kansas City Chiefs Sunday, Oct. 12, 2025, in Kansas City, Mo. Credit: AP/Charlie Riedel
Eventually, coaches and players managed to separate the parties, and they finally left the field for the locker room. Branch could be facing a hefty fine and even a suspension for his actions.
The loss snapped a four-game winning streak for Detroit, which was trying to pull off a rare feat by winning two consecutive games in Arrowhead Stadium. Instead, the Lions allowed 355 yards of total offense, forced just one punt, and were unable to make the stops they needed late in the fourth quarter to give their offense a chance to mount a comeback.
Jared Goff finished with just 203 yards passing, though he did have touchdown throws to Jameson Williams and Sam LaPorta, while Amon-Ra St. Brown was held to 45 yards receiving. Jahmyr Gibbs needed 17 carries for 65 yards, and nine carries for 32 yards came on the game’s opening drive, when Detroit marched right down field for what looked like a touchdown.
David Montgomery took a direct snap near the goal line and threw to Goff, who had gone into motion, caught the pass and then barreled into the end zone. But long after the play had finished, the officials huddled and decided that Goff never got set — even though no flags were thrown on the flag — and the illegal motion penalty wiped away the the touchdown.
After a delay-of-game penalty, the Lions had to settle for a field goal and a 3-0 lead.
It was just the start of a frustrating night for coach Dan Campbell and his team.
Kansas
Lance Leipold rails at Texas Tech’s tortilla tradition, says pocket knife was thrown

Texas Tech football coach Joey McGuire on dust-up with Lance Leipold
Texas Tech football coach Joey McGuire and Kansas’ Lance Leipold had a heated exchange over Tech fans’ tortilla throwing that led to penalties.
Texas Tech football continued its stellar 2025 season on Saturday, Oct. 11, blowing past Kansas 42-17 to improve its record to 6-0 and further establish itself as the favorite to win the Big 12.
The discussion of the victory, however, wasn’t just about what transpired on the field, but what was thrown onto it from the stands.
After his team’s loss, Jayhawks coach Lance Leipold railed against Red Raiders fans and their time-honored tradition of throwing tortillas onto the field. Leipold added that during the third quarter, one of his staff members was hit with a pocket knife.
“It’s ridiculous,” Leipold said in his postgame news conference. “It’s supposed to be for safety and things like that. It’s been a culture that’s been accepted to a point and it hasn’t changed. Eventually, somebody’s going to be seriously hurt, unfortunately.”
Leipold voiced his frustrations to Texas Tech coach Joey McGuire in their postgame handshake, describing the tossing of objects as “bull-(expletive),” according to a video of the exchange from Red Raider Nation. McGuire was incredulous, responding “Coach, I can’t do anything about it. You want me to do something (expletive) about it?”
Leipold isn’t the only figure from around the Big 12 who has grown frustrated with the practice. During the offseason, Big 12 athletic directors voted 15-1 to approve a policy that would discipline home teams for their fans throwing items onto the field.
Texas Tech athletic director Kirby Hocutt was the lone dissenting vote.
Texas Tech’s tradition of throwing tortillas began in the late 1980s or early 1990s. The most popular theory on the ritual’s origins ties back to the ESPN broadcast of a 1992 game between Texas Tech and Texas A&M, during which an announcer before the game joked that Lubbock, Texas had “nothing but Texas Tech football and a tortilla factory.” After that, fans started bringing tortillas to games and throwing them on the field before kickoff.
The Red Raiders were penalized twice for objects being thrown on the field. One of the penalties, a Kansas spokesperson told the Topeka Capital-Journal, was due to the pocket knife hitting a Jayhawks staffer. One of the penalties forced Texas Tech to begin a drive inside its own 15-yard line while the other allowed Kansas to start its possession at its own 40.
Leipold wasn’t the only coach upset with the activity from the crowd at Jones AT&T Stadium. McGuire expressed his frustrations, as well, noting the tossing of tortillas and other objects could end up hurting a team with increasingly realistic College Football Playoff aspirations.
“We’ve got to find a way to do a better job as a whole, all of us,” McGuire said in his postgame news conference. “We’ve got two weeks to have a better plan and get the point across of what the rule is because it’s gonna catch up with us. The first one nearly did because the game was a little bit tighter than what you wanted. It’s gonna catch up with us. It’s frustrating.”
Continued McGuire:
“It’s kind of like whenever I talk to the guys. Make it about the football. If you get any kind of extracurricular penalties — like we had a 15-yarder late in the game — you made it about you. If you’re throwing tortillas more than once, now it becomes all about you. Is that a Red Raider? If you came to the game and you love this team and you’re passionate about this team, but yet you’re gonna throw another tortilla and you know it’s against the rules?
“We’ve got to do a better job and I’ve got to do a better job of expressing to the fans how important they are because the atmosphere tonight was absolutely incredible, electric.”
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