News

Spencer Ives Uhland will attend Oklahoma State University and major in marketing. Spencer received the OSU Presidential Merit ...
Everything that we’re doing with spray drones, we want the traditional crop dusters to be involved in.” said Madison Dixon, associate director of the MSU Agricultural Autonomy Institute and training ...
More than 2,800 members and guests made their way to Manhattan and Kansas State University for the 97th annual Kansas FFA ...
Johnson earned the invitation after he led K-State to nine wins and a come-from-behind victory over Rutgers in the Rate Bowl ...
A history journal that’s been produced by the State of Iowa for 163 years must find a new “editorial home.” An Iowa Department of Administrative Services spokesman said due to “an increasingly lean ...
This story was originally published by ProPublica The Trump administration has proposed cutting funding for tribal colleges ...
Professor Emeritus Kent Bradford is listed as a coauthor of a May 2025 study that has received attention among the scientific community. Lead author Ryushiro Kasahara and his team at Nagoya University ...
WhyHunger would have liked to be out of service by now. Singer-songwriter Harry Chapin and radio DJ Bill Ayres founded the grassroots support organization in 1975 with the idea ...
Kansas 4-H gives high schoolers the college experience each year at Discovery Days, where students can visit Kansas State and ...
A new product that reduces animal stress could be the key to increasing artificial insemination rates in cattle.
HPI and AHA Communications Intern            Denver Drake, a native of Greenville, Texas, is interning with the AHA and Hereford Publications Inc. (HPI) through the summer and fall.
Led by Assistant Professor Nicholas Wege Dias and Professor Sandy Johnson from the animal science and industry department, the project focused on how reducing cattle stress could improve AI outcomes.