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  • This week on The Range...a splash of color in an unexpected place. Also, a Wichita woman who loves fish … and not just for the halibut.
  • It's been just over a month since the mass shooting at the Super Bowl rally in Kansas City. And many people who witnessed it are still dealing with the echoes of that day. K-C-U-R and K-F-F Health News have started a series hearing from the many people who were injured last month during the Super Bowl rally.
  • Book reviewer Suzanne Perez says "Headshot" by Rita Bullwinkel is a one-of-a-kind reading experience — crisp, lyrical, almost poetic.
  • We look at some words that we think are related to other words, but actually aren't. Except sometimes they are.
  • Eric Litwiller says for most businesses, employee turnover cost is well into the thousands.
  • Wichita doesn't have enough affordable housing, making it difficult for people experiencing homelessness to gain stability. But one single mom was able to make the transition. We'll hear about her journey from a shelter to a hotel to permanent housing. Plus news from Wichita and around the state.
  • This week on The Range, Old MacDonald had a … robot? Also, KMUW film savants Fletcher Powell and Hugo Phan discuss what to expect at Sunday’s Academy Awards.
  • El Distrito Escolar de Wichita aprobó un plan para cerrar seis escuelas este año, la FFA encontró problemas con la fabricación en las instalaciones de Spirit y Boeing, y la recaudación de impuestos de Kansas cayó por debajo de las estimaciones.
  • KMUW film savants Fletcher Powell and Hugo Phan discuss what to expect at Sunday’s Academy Awards. Plus, composer Tim Hinck's Symphony No. 1 will receive its world premiere this Saturday with a performance from the Wichita Symphony Orchestra. We'll have both of those features and news from Wichita and around the state.
  • Farms across the Midwest use biosolids—a type of byproduct from wastewater treatment plants—to fertilize their land. But toxic forever chemicals called PFAS could be contaminating that fertilizer… along with millions of acres of farmland. How a few Midwestern states are testing for PFAS… while many are not. Plus news from Wichita and around the state.
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