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  • Boxes of records ready for the sale. (Photo by Audio-Reader)Vintage audio equipment and thousands of records and CDs will be on sale at discount prices in Lawrence this weekend. The sale, called "For Your EARS Only," benefits the Kansas Audio-Reader Network, a radio-reading service for the blind. Director Janet Campbell says this year's sale is the biggest ever, with nearly 16,000 records, CDs and DVDs -- and -- 300 pieces of audio equipment.The big sale of all things audio is now in its 11th year. It begins at 6 o'clock tonight (FRI) at the Douglas County fairgrounds and runs from 9 a.m. to noon tomorrow (SAT).====================(VERSION TWO)"For Your EARS Only!" That's the name of the big audio sale getting underway tonight (FRI) in Lawrence. The benefit features thousands of vintage records, used CDs and all kinds of working audio equipment.That's Janet Campbell, director of Audio-Reader at the University of Kansas. Proceeds from the sale benefit the radio reading service, which reaches thousands of blind listeners in Kansas and surrounding states. Tonight's (FRI) big audio sale begins at 6 o'clock at the Douglas County fairgrounds and continues tomorrow (SAT) morning.
  • A powerful 6.3 magnitude earthquake struck western Afghanistan on Sunday, just over a week after strong quakes killed thousands of people and flattened entire villages in the same region.
  • The platforms, as well as Twitter, had suspended him after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. YouTube was the last to lift its ban, announcing on Friday he could now upload new content.
  • Ripon, Wis. — where the Republican Party began — was the backdrop for a Harris campaign speech from former GOP Rep. Liz Cheney. She said former President Donald Trump is not fit to serve.
  • Wichita’s headcount for the 2025-26 school year is 45,075, down from 46,556 last year. The state’s largest district has lost about 6,000 students — a nearly 12% drop — over the past decade.
  • Some of the people who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6 believed in the QAnon conspiracy theory. In the aftermath, social media platforms ramped up efforts to push QAnon content off their sites. Four years later, the QAnon movement has morphed into something else.
  • The tension and loss that drove Marvin Gaye wasn't lost on his peers: In the same year as What's Going On, a wave of Black artists released explosive new work that put its politics front and center.
  • A McPherson County Sheriff's Deputy has killed a driver in central Kansas after he tried to take another officer's gun.
  • Here's a summary of today's news headlines from Associated Press, as compiled by KPR staff.
  • Here are the headlines for the KPR listening area, as compiled by KPR news staffers.
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