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  • Everyone knows you should wear a hard hat during construction, but are your lungs in just as much danger as your head?In the first part of Tuesday's Up to…
  • Missouri Governor Jay Nixon will deliver his 2013 State of the State Address on January 28th.Governor Nixon will use the address to lay out his proposed…
  • Whether it’s a bakery or a tech firm, running your own business is no cakewalk. Developing one from the ground up takes a lot of hard work and planning.On…
  • The bombings happened in 2004, not 2007. And the prime minister's party was defeated, not victorious, in elections held three days later.
  • In his new documentary, The Age of Love, filmmaker Steven Loring profiled several people between 70 and 90 at a speed dating event in Rochester, N.Y.
  • Google Fiber's website revealed Wednesday that the project will launch in Kansas City on July 26. The short message also says that there will be an…
  • When you take bread off the table, what goes on yours? Award-winning cookbook author Joan Nathan has a few ideas.In the second part of Friday's Up to…
  • A panel of three federal judges last week issued new political maps for Kansas. New boundary lines were issued for members of Congress, the state Senate,…
  • Modern technology has enabled people to find love without the old fashioned rituals like meeting in person or talking on the phone. And the anonymity of social networks has also opened up opportunities for fraudsters and fakes. The movie and TV show Catfish have told versions of this story. But when tech journalist Clive Thompson recently rediscovered a novel from 1879, he found that people have been finding love and anonymity through technology at least as far back as the telegraph.
  • Matchmaking apps like Tinder can help people find potential dates quickly. But that efficiency can have drawbacks for people trying to find true love.
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