Illustration of smartphone with old time stage on screen

From bandleader to blogger: the evolving definition of the term ‘entrepreneur’

When you hear the word “entrepreneur,” it’s easy to picture a twenty-something guy wearing wireless headphones and typing furiously on his laptop. He’s developing an app, or writing a business plan or creating a social media presence — maybe all three tasks are being tackled at once. This stereotype, however, is only one vision of…

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DENTAL CHAIR

Dental funds for the poor caught in Missouri budget battle

Approximately $18 million that would restore basic dental benefits for hundreds of thousands of low-income Missouri adults is in limbo due to a sweeping budget action by Gov. Jay Nixon. Acting under what he termed his constitutional duty to balance the state budget, Nixon late last month restricted or vetoed approximately $1.1 billion in spending…

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Dr. Jeffrey Burns

KU Med Center Tests Promising Alzheimer’s Drug As Part Of International Trial

It’s a form of dementia that afflicts as many as 5.2 million people in the United States. It has no cure. And as the population ages, the number of people afflicted with Alzheimer’s disease is expected to quadruple over the next 35 years, according to a study from the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health….

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Dr. John Birky

Rural Kansas hospital bolsters recruitment by enticing “missionary” doctors

Though 25 percent of Americans still live in rural areas, only 10 percent of doctors do, according to the National Rural Health Association, and finding physicians and other medical professionals willing to work in the hinterlands remains a serious, growing problem in Kansas and other parts of the United States. But in Kearny County, on…

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Photo of Langton and Boyington at Mill Creek Middle School.

Lenexa middle school teachers go green at Honeywell boot camp

Come fall at Mill Creek Middle School, some students will get to build something in their math and English language arts classes other than equations and essays: wind turbines. English teacher Kristan Langton and math teacher Amber Boyington were two of 70 teachers from around the world who were invited to spend a week at…

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Panelists on the set of Week in Review

KC Week in Review: KC eliminated from RNC 2016 Convention quest

When Mayor Sly James decided to dance on the tarmac of the downtown airport with the head of the Republican National Convention site selection committee, it was seen as a powerful symbol of Kansas City’s warmth and hospitality. Combined with fireworks at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts, city leaders went all out to…

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Jim Cavanaugh

Comic book fans, producers embrace digital versions but still preserve print issues

Jim Cavanaugh has owned Clint’s Comics in midtown Kansas City for 39 years. He has seen the stores around his Main Street storefront come and go, and said that his store is the only one that remains in the area from the 1960s. While other media businesses like book and movie rental stores have gone…

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Traumatic childhood resurfaces as late-onset PTSD for Holocaust survivor

In 2001, Sonia Reich left her Skokie, Illinois, home in the middle of the night. When the cops picked her up, she insisted someone was trying to kill her. Over 60 years after Sonia escaped a ghetto and spent several years running and hiding, she is reliving the Holocaust. Her son, Howard Reich, a journalist…

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Two women who organized TIPS in KCK

KC-area project utilizes churches for TIPS on addressing AIDS among blacks

When activists worldwide marked three decades since the emergence of a mysterious immune disease, Kansas City, Kan., participants posted a timeline of key events in the fight against the AIDS pandemic in a building foyer in their community. Yet this was no ordinary lobby; it was the main entrance to Mt. Carmel Church of God…

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Sean-aka-Seandretta Duane Cramer Duane Cramer Creative

Photography exhibition takes aim at stigma associated with HIV and AIDS

This Friday is National HIV Testing Day, first created almost 20 years ago to encourage members of the public to learn their HIV status. Since then, what it means to be HIV-positive has changed dramatically. Individuals diagnosed as positive today can expect to live as long as they would without the virus, as long as…

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Truman Med could get hit with penalty over infection rates

Truman Medical Center Hospital Hill is among 175 hospitals nationwide most likely to be penalized with the loss of Medicare payments because of high rates of infection and other complications. In April, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services calculated preliminary “hospital-acquired condition” scores from 1 to 10, with one being best and 10 being worst. Truman was…

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Nick Haines

KC Week in Review: Judge orders Light Rail on KC ballot. Plus, 20 years of Shuttlecocks at the Nelson.

This week a Jackson County Circuit Court judge rules that a 3-year old plan by maverick transit activist Clay Chastain to bring light rail to Kansas City should go before voters. Though the judge rules that the city should write the ballot language. Also on this edition: “Right to Try” drugs in Kansas featuring a…

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Missouri measure would enact ‘Right to Try’ drug program for dying patients

If you were dying and had exhausted all conventional treatment options, wouldn’t you want immediate access to a drug that might prove to be a miracle cure? That’s the promise of legislation that, if signed by Gov. Jay Nixon, would make Missouri the third state in the country – after Colorado and Louisiana – to…

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Scene from MDC camp video - woman shooting

Ladies-only camp gets women fired up about the great outdoors

Michelle Manning is sporting a huge bruise on the inside of her upper arm. She shows it off, pulling up her shirt sleeve to expose the injury that she refers to as her “prized possession.” While learning how to shoot a bow and arrow earlier, Manning accidentally snapped her arm with the bow string, which…

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Black and white photo of group throwing graduation caps in the air.

Tell us who is making a difference in education

From teachers to business owners, local leaders to volunteers, people from all corners of our community can have a major role in a student’s success and the impact of education.

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