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It is a service of the University of Missouri-Kansas City, which also owns 91.9 KWJC. KCUR-FM airs mostly NPR and local news and information programming such as All Things Considered, Morning Edition and 1A, while KWJC plays classical music. Weekdays on KCUR-FM, a local hourlong talk show, Up to Date, is broadcast at 9 a.m. and repeated at 8 p.m.
There’s a flashing yellow light, but no stoplight, at 51st Street and Troost Avenue, where University of Missouri-Kansas City students often cross. Past safety improvements have not been enough ...
The University News, or U-News, is an independent student newspaper at the University of Missouri–Kansas City. It publishes weekly, during the school semester, and averages sixteen issues per semester, with an additional issue during the summer.
The town of Kansas, Missouri, was incorporated on June 1, 1850, reincorporated and renamed City of Kansas on March 28, 1853, and renamed Kansas City in 1889.The area straddles the border between Missouri and Kansas at the confluence of the Kansas and Missouri rivers, and was considered a good place to settle.
Dan Jones died at University Health in 2022 after developing a pressure ulcer on his tailbone while a patient. Now, his widow has filed a lawsuit alleging nurses failed to properly treat the wound.
The University of Missouri–Kansas City (UMKC or Kansas City) is a public research university in Kansas City, Missouri, United States. UMKC is part of the University of Missouri System and has a medical school. [19] For the 2023-2024 academic year, the university's enrollment was over 15,300 students. [20]
The Kansas City Globe, local African-American news, weekly [10] Kansas City Hispanic News, local Hispanic news, weekly [11] Metro Voice Newspaper, local Christian digital news [12] National Catholic Reporter, Roman Catholic news, bi-weekly [13] Northeast News, Northeast Kansas City neighborhood news, weekly [14] [15] The Pitch, alternative ...
The station made an intensive push to become the market's sports station, picking up rights packages including Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, and UMKC basketball, Kansas City Blades hockey, and—starting in 1993—65 Kansas City Royals baseball games each year, which was more than longtime rightsholder WDAF-TV had ever carried in its 13-year ...