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  • A committee of experts voted unanimously to recommend that the Food and Drug Administration authorize COVID-19 vaccines from Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech for children as young as 6-months-old.
  • The record number headlined the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees' annual "Global Trends" report published Wednesday, just a day before World Refugee Day.
  • After a nail-biter of a landing, the real science begins now.
  • The staff at the Ulrich Museum on the campus at Wichita State has given us a fantastic gift in the form of an exhibition titled Deep Dive: Selections from the Permanent Collection.
  • KMUW's Fletcher Powell says The Pale Blue Eye leans hard into clichés instead of being afraid of them, and it turns this into exactly the kind of dark, deliciously brooding detective story we’re hoping for.
  • For years, wind energy led as Kansas' main renewable energy source. Now, solar power is growing rapidly, with hundreds of megawatts expected to come online in coming years. Today on Wichita's Early Edition, we'll hear more about why the power source is expanding in Kansas. Plus, author Jonathan Evison tells KMUW's Beth Golay about his latest novel, "Again and Again".
  • The idea behind the #ReadICT Challenge is to expand your reading horizons, and maybe push yourself to explore genres or topics you wouldn’t normally read.
  • Wichita actors JR Hurst and Deb Campbell return to the stage this summer for a production of Neil Simon's 1972 comedy "The Sunshine Boys." Campbell says that although Simon wrote a four-person play, there's another important character in the work. KMUW's Jedd Beaudoin spoke with Hurst and Campbell about the production - which opens tonight at Roxy's Downtown. We have their conversation, plus news from Wichita and around the state.
  • Woody Giessmann left Wichita in the early 1980s for Boston but by the time he was playing Madison Square Garden later in the decade he was deeply addicted to drugs and alcohol. He's been clean and sober for over 30 years and today works as an addictions specialist. and he hopes that a new book he's written will help others with their struggles. Plus news from Wichita and around the state.
  • El Congreso planea recortar miles de millones de dólares del programa Medicaid durante los próximos 10 años, una organización sin fines de lucro de Wichita está ayudando a pequeñas empresas a abrir cocinas comerciales, y las investigaciones revelan que Kansas se encuentra entre los peores estados en cuanto a muertes relacionadas con el trabajo.
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