Yes, it does.
Because the Earth rotates west to east.
Kansas appear's flat in elevation from east and west.
The Sun is in the West of the sky in the afternoon, so it's facing East.
To see the sun rise in the morning, look towards the east. The sun rises in the east and sets in the west due to Earth's rotation.
They mostly appear to move from east to west but there are epicycles during wich they appear to move from west to east.
No, the earth rotates west to east. As a result objects like the sun appear to move from east to west.
kansas appear's flat in elevation from east and west.
They always rise in the east and set in the west, because the Earth's daily rotation goes west to east. That is, they appear to rotate anticlockwise around the Pole Star. Stars under the Pole Star move from left to right, west to east.
If the sun or stars appear to rise from behind the mountain then you are to its west, otherwise you are to its east.
During roughly half of the time, 'circumpolar' stars don't appear to move from east to west. Which ones those are depends on your latitude. All other stars all the time, and circumpolar stars for the other half of the time, do appear to move from east to west.
The sun rises in the east and sets in the west. So if the sun is facing east then it must be in the west and it will be evening.
Yes.