Thirty immigrants from 18 countries are now U.S. citizens following a ceremony at the Kansas Statehouse in Topeka.
Sunflower Summer leaders say there are no plans to cut funding from the program, but more is needed to keep it going strong.
Students gathered around the Kansas State Capitol on Tuesday, Jan. 28 to show their appreciation for their school choices.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Two children were found dead Monday night trapped under ice in a Linn County lake. According to the Linn ...
TOPEKA — Apolina Bahati’s decades-long journey to United States citizenship came to a close Monday at a naturalization ceremony in the marble-enveloped rotunda of the Kansas Capitol. Bahati left Congo ...
The Ogallala aquifer that sustains parts of western Kansas has been declining rapidly, and some farmers say the solution is ...
A recent ceremony at the Kansas Statehouse in Topeka saw Carlos Wriedt from Mexico, along with his wife, gain US citizenship.
Pat George, chairman of the Kansas Fights Addiction Act Grant Review Board, gives an update to the Senate Ways and Means ...
Aquifer levels in parts of western Kansas that rely on groundwater for everything from drinking to irrigation fell more than ...
In a push to help Kansans access unclaimed funds, Treasurer Steven Johnson is recognizing February 1 as National Unclaimed ...