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  • In this episode of Into Music, JM Stevens discusses his early love of Elvis Presley, his first live performance, which occurred at a school talent show, and how sobriety has led him to the most prolific patch in his career.
  • The year 2026 seems like a long way away, but it's not too soon to start preparing for the nation's 250th birthday. Dr. Jay Price tells us why in this edition of Past and Present.
  • Dr. Robert E. Weems, Jr. compares negative attitudes about internet technology a generation ago with present-day skepticism about blockchain and cryptocurrency technology.
  • Kansas doesn't require schools to report or track teacher injuries. And although most schools prepare students and staff for intruders with active-shooter drills, they don't train teachers on how to deal with more common violence on campus. A look at the growing problem of teachers hurt on the job and how schools are responding. Plus news from Wichita and around the state.
  • Whether you've played soccer or not, you probably know that it can be a challenging sport. Now imagine that you're blind and trying to play the game. Some young athletes in Kansas are doing just that, including 14-year-old Milo Scotten, of Lawrence, who was recently introduced to the sport. The Kansas State School for the Blind in Kansas City, Kansas, opened a new field last week. We'll learn more about the program. Plus news from Wichita and around the state.
  • This week on The Range...lace up the roller skates. We’re going for a spin. Also, a new exhibit remembers the women behind the Brown v. Board desegregation case.
  • A former high-end Kansas City Chef is now running a restaurant out in the middle of Kansas in a tiny, remote rural town. And that restaurant has become extremely important to its community. We learn how a chef who - as he says - got tired of cooking for rich people - is using local food and high end cooking to breath life into a tiny town. Plus news from Wichita and around the state.
  • Keep moving or die. Oh, and you can never return to anywhere you've already been. How's that for a novel premise? Author Douglas Westerbeke visits with KMUW's Beth Golay about his new novel, "A Short Walk Through a Wide World." Plus news from Wichita and around the state.
  • This week, Kathy and Ross quiz Fletcher on a list of words that may or may not have been coined by Shakespeare. You might be surprised by which ones we still use today.
  • We look at some names of famous people that, when you pronounce them correctly, can let people know you're an expert... or a snob.
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