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Strange Currency's Jedd Beaudoin offers up a review of Shinedown's latest tour stop in Wichita for the Dance, Kid, Dance Act II tour.
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Douglas County District Court Judge Carl Folsom said provisions the Kansas "Help Not Harm Act" likely violate the state constitution. Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach called the decision "is a stark example of judicial activism."
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This week on "The Range," it’s almost summer… so what are you reading? Also, local booksellers offer their suggestions for page-turning summer reads.
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The U.S. Department of Justice reached agreement with The Kroger Co., which owns Dillons stores in Kansas, regarding its mismanagement of refrigerant chemicals, including payment of a $2.5 million penalty.
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The band Styx was formed in Chicago in 1972 and continues performing and recording new music to this day. Vocalist and keyboardist Lawrence Gowan says that the band's enduring appeal likely comes down to its positive lyrics, impressive musicianship, and ability to entertain.
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Multiple fires started in southwest Kansas after a lightning storm hit the area Thursday.
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Party didn’t fulfill plan to nominate candidates for president, vice president
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Wichita-native Tiffany Day is an emerging artist in the realm of hyperpop — a growing subgenre of electronic dance music. Day recently sold out a number of dates on the East and West coasts, and she has new album out titled, "Halo."
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Kobach's opinion, which carries no legal authority, exempted some government spaces — such as skilled nursing rooms at the Kansas Office of Veterans' Services — from complying with the bathroom law that went into effect in February.
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On this week's "The Range," Disc golf is flying high. Also, a Wichita business restores films to their former glory.