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A local young inventor is poised for the global stage with her life-saving invention, for which she won this year's Kansas City Invention Convention.
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Over the course of a long, pandemic winter, we may have gotten awfully cozy with our phones. And yes, I'm talking to the grownups.
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Over the course of a long, pandemic winter, we may have gotten awfully cozy with our phones. Now we're trying to figure out how to put them down.
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One by one, Kansas Citians wind their way through the bewildering maze that is the vaccine rollout. Sharing a selfie is one of the few ways to celebrate the milestone with friends and family. But there's a catch.
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One by one, Kansas Citians wind their way through the bewildering maze that is the vaccine rollout. Sharing a selfie is one of the few ways to celebrate the milestone with friends and family. But there's a catch.
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Two men living on two separate continents went into the pandemic with plans to open two very different restaurants. When COVID upended those plans, fate — and technology — threw them together.
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Two men living on two separate continents went into the pandemic with plans to open two very different restaurants. When COVID upended those plans, fate — and technology — threw them together.
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Two companies explain how they put their know-how to use in battling COVID-19 and why Missouri's junior senator plans to object during the Senate's verification of the Electoral College votes.
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Missouri Secretary Of State | Staying Focused Virtually | Police Interactions & Political EngagementJay Ashcroft is overseeing elections and running for reelection, a new app aims to help students stay on-task and a KU researcher says traumatic interactions with police make you less likely to vote.
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The district purchased the devices when they still thought this school year would start in person, but since everyone is learning virtually, students need more data.
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Social distancing and other COVID prevention measures have shifted many court proceedings online.
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Educators worry the inequality in Internet connectivity could make the "COVID slide" worse for some kids.