Kyle Parr won the Triple Jump competition at the 3A track meet with a mark of 44:0.75. He was third in the final for the 300 Meter Hurdles (40.73) and was third in his preliminary heat for the 110 Meter Hurdles.
This blog is for posting all news of Rossville residents and Rossville High alumni. Bookmark this page and send any appropriate news (births, deaths, engagements, marriages, anniversaries, job changes, honors, etc.) items to: Frank.Ruff@juno.com . Feel free to add comments to any of the articles. Check this site often because I sometimes delete items. There are SEARCH (top left of page) and LINK (bottom of page) features. For photos, see link at bottom.
Thursday, June 2, 2016
RHS Boys At 3A Track Regional
The RHS boys track team finished in a tie for fifth place out of the 16 teams competing at the 3A Regional at Hoyt. The teams finished as below.
1) Silver Lake 98
2) Seneca-Nemaha Central 70
3) Sabetha 44
4) Oskaloosa 43
5) Wathena-Riverside 40
5) Osage City 40
5) Rossville 40
8) Hoyt-Royal Valley 31.5
9) Eskridge-Mission Valley 29
10) Easton-Pleasant Ridge 27
11) Atch-Maur Hill Mt Acad 24
12) St. Marys 23
13) Perry-Lecompton 18.5
14) Marysville 17
15) Hiawatha 11
16) Atchison County Community 2
Kyle Parr was the team leader winning the 110 M Hurdles and Triple Jump and coming in third in the 300 M Hurdles. Lorenzo Mason turned in an excellent 3rd place in the 800 M and ninth in the 600 M. The 4 x 800 Relay team came in second, composed of Trevor Balch, Zach Jenson, Holden Hurla and Lorenzo Mason.
1) Silver Lake 98
2) Seneca-Nemaha Central 70
3) Sabetha 44
4) Oskaloosa 43
5) Wathena-Riverside 40
5) Osage City 40
5) Rossville 40
8) Hoyt-Royal Valley 31.5
9) Eskridge-Mission Valley 29
10) Easton-Pleasant Ridge 27
11) Atch-Maur Hill Mt Acad 24
12) St. Marys 23
13) Perry-Lecompton 18.5
14) Marysville 17
15) Hiawatha 11
16) Atchison County Community 2
Kyle Parr was the team leader winning the 110 M Hurdles and Triple Jump and coming in third in the 300 M Hurdles. Lorenzo Mason turned in an excellent 3rd place in the 800 M and ninth in the 600 M. The 4 x 800 Relay team came in second, composed of Trevor Balch, Zach Jenson, Holden Hurla and Lorenzo Mason.
RHS Girls At 3A Regional Track
The RHS girls finished 9th of 15 teams at the 3A Regional track and field meet at Hoyt. The final team standings were:
1) Seneca-Nemaha Central 126
2) Silver Lake 91
3) Marysville 54
4) Hiawatha 50
5) Sabetha 45
6) St. Marys 42
7) Atchison County Community 34
8) Atch-Maur Hill Mt Acad 28
9) Rossville 18
10) Oskaloosa 17
11) Perry-Lecompton 14
12) Hoyt-Royal Valley 12
13) Eskridge-Mission Valley 11
14) Osage City 9
15) Easton-Pleasant Ridge 7
The best performances were turned in by Rachel Day, Taylor Bittner, Kaytlin Dohrman and Jordan Bittner. Rachel was third in the 100 M and fifth in the 200 M. Jordan was fourth in the 1600 M and seventh in the 3200 M. Kaytlin was third in the 3200. Jordan ws eighth in the 300 M Hurdles.
1) Seneca-Nemaha Central 126
2) Silver Lake 91
3) Marysville 54
4) Hiawatha 50
5) Sabetha 45
6) St. Marys 42
7) Atchison County Community 34
8) Atch-Maur Hill Mt Acad 28
9) Rossville 18
10) Oskaloosa 17
11) Perry-Lecompton 14
12) Hoyt-Royal Valley 12
13) Eskridge-Mission Valley 11
14) Osage City 9
15) Easton-Pleasant Ridge 7
The best performances were turned in by Rachel Day, Taylor Bittner, Kaytlin Dohrman and Jordan Bittner. Rachel was third in the 100 M and fifth in the 200 M. Jordan was fourth in the 1600 M and seventh in the 3200 M. Kaytlin was third in the 3200. Jordan ws eighth in the 300 M Hurdles.
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Tuesday, May 31, 2016
Derek Gentry To Wrestle At BCCC
Derek Gentry is pictured seated with his parents, Shari and Jim Gentry, and brother Trent.
Standing behind are RHS Head Wrestling Coach Curt Brecheisen and Asst. Coach Cody Lambotte.
Curt Brecheisen, RHS Wrestling Coach
Alex Cavanaugh To Wrestle At Pratt
Photo courtesy of the Yearbook Staff
Alex Cavanaugh is pictured seated with his parents, Shawness and Patrick Cavanaugh.
Standing behind are RHS Head Wrestling Coach Curt Brecheisen and Asst. Coach Cody Lambotte.
Curt Brecheisen, RHS Wrestling Coach
Monday, May 30, 2016
Rattler Season Starts June 2
. Opening Night for the Rossville Rattler's 2016 season is
Thursday, June 2nd at 7:00 PM!
Make plans to be at Joe Campbell Stadium as the
Rattlers take on the Junction City Brigade!
Saturday, May 28, 2016
Alan Jeffers Declared Hero
ROSSVILLE
(KSNT) – Thursday’s thunderstorms and tornadoes caused a lot of damage
throughout the state.
And for those
who were caught in the thick of it, it could have been worse.
A Rossville man
has been deemed a hero for his quick action by providing shelter.
Alan Jeffers
says don’t call him special, he says he was just doing what was right.
High winds up
to 70 miles per hour and brief tornado blew through Rossville and Silver Lake
along Highway 24 Thursday afternoon.
With some quick
thinking, Jeffers took action.
“When the
sirens went off, we just kept the doors open for all our customers that was
traveling,” said Jeffers.
Jeffers is the
manager at the Casey’s General Convenience Store right off of Highway 24 in
Rossville. During the storm he provided shelter for about 60 people, including
a bus full of children, and a family from Missouri.
That family was
Corey Sloan’s wife, his mother-in-law, his daughter and his two grand-children,
ages 8 and 3.
“The last words
I said to my wife was, ‘Get out of the vehicle’. I could hear the tornado
sirens in the background,” said Sloan. “She told my granddaughter to run, and
then the phone went dead. My entire life was in that Casey’s in Rossville,
Kansas yesterday.”
During that
tornado watch, Jeffers brought some of the children and adults to the cooler
for shelter. Others found safety in the gas stations bathrooms, and storage
rooms.
“It is pretty
important to me to know that my family was taken care of by complete
strangers,” Sloan says.
“I had no
problem doing it. It just shows comfort to other people knowing that if their
family is out on the road that they can go to a Casey’s or at least here…They
can come and take shelter here,” says Jeffers.
Sloan say’s he
personally thanked Jeffers for protecting his family. He even called the
Casey’s General Store headquarters to tell them about his new found hero.
You can view KSNT video about Jeffers at: http://ksnt.com/2016/05/27/small-town-hero-rossville-man-takes-action-during-severe-storms/
Friday, May 27, 2016
Baseball Festival & Film
From the Capital-Journal:
Fans of both sports and history
will have the opportunity this weekend to learn about baseball when it was
spelled base ball and played without gloves or fences.
Six teams, some with players from as far away as Colorado and
Minnesota, will compete Saturday and Sunday at the Free State Base Ball
Festival on the Felker Soccer Fields, S.W. 25th and Gage Boulevard, in a
tournament using the 1860 rules for the game.
The weekend also will include the Topeka debut of “Town Teams:
Bigger than Baseball,” a 40-minute documentary on the influence of baseball on
small Kansas towns at the turn of 20th century. The movie includes the
reenactment of a 1919 game played near El Dorado that was filmed last October
at the Joe Campbell Stadium in Rossville.
Members of the Topeka Westerns, the host team of the festival,
participated in the game reenactment.
In addition to the Westerns, the games from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Saturday and 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday will include the Topeka Shawnees, the
Hodgeman Nine from the western Kansas town of Jetmore, the Emporia White
Stockings, the Colorado Territorial All-Stars and a Minnesota Union team that
includes players from the Rochester (Minn.) Roosters, the Lincoln (Neb.)
Olympics and two Wichita players. Spectators can watch the games at no cost.
“Town Teams: Bigger than Baseball” will have its free Topeka
screening at 7 p.m. Saturday at the Jayhawk Theatre, 720 S.W. Jackson.
The documentary was written and directed by Kansas City
filmmaker Mark Honer, who said the movie “explores the role of baseball in
everything from assimilating immigrants, to labor relations, to its function as
a powerful tool in the battle between towns for economic supremacy.”
Honer, in a Sept. 29 story in The Topeka Capital-Journal, said
he intended to make a documentary about the El Dorado oil field and the
100-year anniversary of the economic boom it created. When he discovered
someone else had done such a documentary, he shifted his attention to something
he found in his research: the prevalence of small-town baseball teams and the
stiff competition among them.
“When I started researching the film, I fell in love with the
players,” Honer said. “Most of them put in 70 hours a week at their jobs. But
when the weekend came, they put on these heavy, wool uniforms and played
baseball in the scorching hot sun. Now that’s loving the game.”
The game recreated for “Town Teams” was one between two towns,
Midian and Oil Hill, which no longer exist. Joe Campbell Stadium was selected
because it is the region’s oldest wood stadium.
The movie also includes Bill Hesse, a former town team player
from Rossville, as he watches film of himself playing ball some 70 years
earlier.
Also in “Town Teams” is rarely seen footage of the “Silver Ball”
trophy that was awarded to the first Kansas state baseball champion in 1867.
The first recipient was the Kaw Valley team from Lawrence.
Cultural context is provided by an all-star cast of baseball
authors and historians.
“The amateur baseball players reflect the real America,” said
Dorothy Seymour Mills, who co-authored the first scholarly history of the game.
Her three-volume history, “Baseball: The Early Years” (1960), “The Golden Age”
(1971) and “The People’s Game” (1990), still stands as the benchmark against
which other baseball history books are measured. Honer also interviews state
and local baseball historians, like Steve Dodson, a history professor at Allen
County Community College in Iola.
“Town Teams” is produced and distributed by Destination Hope,
which does business as DHTV Digital, a film and video production company in
Shawnee.
Wednesday, May 25, 2016
Free Kids Lunches This Summer
The St Stanislaus Catholic Church & Harvesters Community Food Network are sponsoring lunch to all kids 0-18 years of age from 12:30 to 1:00 every Tuesday, Thursday & Friday from June 2 to August 11 at the Rossville Park Shelter House. Lunch is free to all kids.
3A State Golf Tournament
The Rossville High golf team did not go to the 3A State tournament played on May 23 at the Salina Municipal Golf Course, but three team members did qualify at the Regional. Gabe Marney fnished the state meet in the 49th spot with an 88. Andrew Hudson was 60th with a 91 and Kole Davoren was 98th with a 109.
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
RHS National Honor Society
RHS ANNOUNCES NATIONAL
HONOR SOCIETY MEMBERS
Rossville Jr./Sr. High School inducted
19 new members into the National Honor Society at the Spring Awards
Night on May 4, 2016. Senior Ashley Broxterman; Juniors Paul
Borcherding, Ryan Ehrlich, Bryce Gfeller, Malcolm Gillum, Andrew
Hudson, Samantha Murray, Mitchell Porter, and Alyssa Thompson; and
sophomores Kylee Badura, Breaira Bergstresser, Tronnie Blair, Maura
Buhler, Perry Foster, Cory Hadsall, Abigail McCrory, Hannah Miller, Jalyn Porter, and Ashley
Zemek lit the candle of honor and recited the pledge as new members.
RHS existing members are Seniors Katie
Conley, Kole Davoren, Rachel Day, Britnee Douglas, Eric Ebert, Riley
Falk, Zach Jensen, Chris Johnston, Justin Logan, Kyle Parr, Lauren
Steckel, and Willow Stipp and Juniors Taylor Bittner, Morgan Foster,
Laura Gillum, Amanda Hill, Ashley Rietcheck, Lora Shinn, Sara Shinn,
Sierra Streit, and Emily Woodcock.
NHS officers for the 2016-2017 school
year were recently elected and are as follows: President Taylor
Bittner, Vice-President Mitchell Porter, Secretary Paul Borcherding,
and Treasurer Laura Gillum.
Membership in the National Honor
Society is based on a student’s performance in the areas of
scholarship, service, leadership, and character. In order to be
eligible, students must first have a grade point average of at least
3.2 and have made significant contributions to their school and
community, as well as maintain strong moral character.
Beth Shepard, RHS Counselor
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