© 2026 KMUW
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Search results for

  • Margi Sweeton is working to capture some of the nostalgia from the Mid-Century Modern era in her latest paintings, as she explained to Torin Andersen for this month’s ArtWorks.
  • Los zapatos de la estatua robada de Jackie Robinson se exhibirán en un museo en Kansas City, un programa de trabajo de verano para adolescentes está aceptando solicitudes y la ciudad está ofreciendo reembolsos en equipos eléctricos de jardinería.
  • This week on The Range...the reasons behind Wichita’s plan to close six schools. Also, an artist takes a whimsical approach to her newest works.
  • We run through some particularly confusing grammar mistakes and how sometimes we might think we’re saying one thing when we’re really saying another.
  • The Wichita School Board will vote tonight on whether to approve a plan that would close six schools. KMUW's News Director Tom Shine and education reporter Suzanne Perez talk about the reasons behind the plan. Plus news from Wichita and around the state.
  • Book reviewer Suzanne Perez says Canadian author Scott Alexander Howard's "The Other Valley" is great for fans of Margaret Atwood or Kazuo Ishiguro.
  • Scott Guild's debut novel, Plastic, is set in an alternate world about 50 years in the future. But with climate change, gun violence, and nuclear fallout, this dystopian comedy looks eerily similar to *our* world. Beth Golay speaks with Guild about his novel. Plus we have news from Wichita and around the state.
  • Every four years, Nebraska and Maine may send electoral votes to two different presidential candidates. That’s because those states can split their electoral vote by district, instead of giving all the votes to the popular vote winner. We’ll explore whether the split vote approach offers a better option for the electoral college. Plus news from Wichita and around the state.
  • Fletcher Powell looks at a recent Oscar-nominated film that tackles love, timing and the life paths we choose.
  • A group of four Kansas pharmacists is trying to revolutionize the multi-billion dollar prescription drug industry that they say is taking advantage of clients and locally-owned pharmacies. More on that plus news from Wichita and around the state.
196 of 30,780