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Newsmakers 2020Q2
Kate White joins CEK Insurance.
Sunflower Bank Announces Retirement of Lawrence Banker Glynn Sheridan.
Just Food Receives Solar Donation to be installed by Good Energy Solutions.
[MORE]
401
Kate White joins CEK Insurance.
Sunflower Bank Announces Retirement of Lawrence Banker Glynn Sheridan.
Just Food Receives Solar Donation to be installed by Good Energy Solutions.
[MORE]
When we chose East Lawrence as the focal point for our Q2 (June) issue, we certainly were not expecting Covid-19 to close down our city. For a moment, we discussed postponing. But even though it was going to be a challenge for our writers to get their interviews and to make sure we would be able to get the impactful visuals to go with those articles, [MORE]
What is Heartland’s most important commodity or service?
Our mission of welcoming all who need care speaks volumes about who we are and what we do as an organization. We are focused on providing solutions for all living in our community to ensure everyone is able to access and afford comprehensive medical care. [MORE]
LMH doctor advises residents to consider not only themselves and family members, but all community members when choosing daily practices to help prevent the coronavirus. [MORE]
Lawrence’s Center for Great Futures continues vital work of previous teen center.
On a sticky, humid September afternoon in 2018, Boys & Girls Clubs of America president and CEO Jim Clark stood on a small stage at 2910 Haskell Ave. The words he delivered still serve as a source of pride. [MORE]
The Turnhalle in East Lawrence was the center of German-American residents’ lives.
In the late-19th century, immigrants were critical to the United States’ westward expansion. [MORE]
East Lawrence’s Warehouse Arts District started with a singular focus on converting one building and blossomed into something so much more.
When Tony Krsnich was sewing the first seeds of development for a little-regarded area of East Lawrence eight years ago, his visions were more molehill than mountain. [MORE]
Blink and you might miss the diversified industrial district thriving off of Bullene Street.
On the surface, it’s a nondescript, even confusing, area of East Lawrence.Traveling east on 19th Street just before hitting Haskell Avenue, it’s a good idea to maintain a northward gaze if the goal is to find Bullene Avenue. [MORE]
Infill development surges on the east side despite strict city codes and a lack of incentives for smaller projects.
In the past decade, infill development has taken off like wildfire in eastern Lawrence. Vacant lots and formerly empty, crumbling buildings have been replaced by bright new structures and creative remodels, both in commercial areas like the Warehouse Arts District and in residential areas such as the Brook Creek Neighborhood. [MORE]