Sixth Annual ‘Kansas Through The Eyes Of An Artist’ to open Jan. 21
The sixth annual Kansas Through The Eyes Of An Artist exhibit opens with a reception from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m.
The sixth annual Kansas Through The Eyes Of An Artist exhibit opens with a reception from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m.
Becky Fields, county treasurer, had some good news for the Harvey County Commission on Jan. 17 – the driver’s license station has partially reopened in the county courthouse.
The Quivira Boy Scout Council hosted the 2023 Trapper’s Rendezvous at Harvey County West Park Jan. 14 through 15.
Jon Hawes moved to Newton and Harvey County in 2017 to take the pastorate of a church, but his life plan and career changed. “ I was there for five years, and I left there at the end of July, in 2022,” Hawes said.
In 2017 there were 72,000 deaths in the United States linked to opioid overdoses. “That was meaningful to the U.S.
TOPEKA — The president of the Kansas Board of Regents believes greater investment of state tax dollars in need-based scholarships could play a key role in placing a university education within reach of more students.
WASHINGTON – The Internal Revenue Service recently announced the beginning of the nation’s 2023 tax season – when the agency will begin accepting and processing 2022 tax year returns – will be Jan. 23. .
½ cup warm water 2 tablespoons yeast 2 tablespoons sugar 3½ ounces vanilla instant pudding 2 cups milk ½ cup butter, melted 2 eggs 1 teaspoon salt 6 cups bread flour 6 tablespoons butter, melted 1 ¼ cup brown sugar 1 tablespoon cinnamon Combine first three ingredients. Mix pudding with milk and add to yeast mixture.
TOPEKA — Gov. Laura Kelly’s new budget presented to legislators Thursday would end the state sales tax on groceries in April, provide a 5% raise to qualified state workers and expand eligibility for Medicaid while adding $500 million to a state’s rainy-day fund.
In the wake of every election, political analysts pore over polls for clues about how conservative Christians voted, especially evangelicals – and the 2022 midterms are no exception. But these discussions often overlook a group with an increasingly important role in national politics: Pentecostals, evangelicals’ theological cousins.