Angels and Tomboys, a new exhibit at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art is now open. The exhibit features works that show the changing nature of girlhood after the Civil War.
Ozarks At Large

In our weekly review of the headlines, we take a look at groups and organizations that are on the hook for more money, and one organization getting a sizable amount of money.

Ocie Fisher and her band came to the Firmin-Garner Performance Studio recently to play a song and give us a preview for their concert at the Fayetteville Public Library on Sunday.
Becca Martin Brown provides a few ways to celebrate the Independence Day holiday other than the usual pops of firecrackers.
Angels and Tomboys, a new exhibit at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art opens tomorrow. The exhibit features works that show the changing nature of girlhood after the Civil War.

Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large
Monday, October 14, 2013
Ahead on Ozarks, the Sustainability Communities Leadership Summit moves to North Little Rock. Plus, a conversation with Hoyt Purvis, one of the authors of Voices of the Razorbacks.
Business professionals can learn how to minimize cultural and generational conflict in the workplace by dropping into to a Walton College course tomorrow and again in a couple of weeks. Visiting professor Arthur Matthews, from NYU and Cornell, is opening his special topics management course to the business public. He has teamed up with Judith Tavano, professional development coordinator at the University of Arkansas’ Global Campus, who will be teaching one of the special courses.
To find out more, visit GlobalCampus.uark.edu.
Roby Brock of www.TalkBusiness.net doesn’t address workplace conflict in his usual Monday report, but aviation, utilities and new jobs in Fayetteville are part of his look back at the week’s business news
Becca Martin Brown talks about Drum Corps International who will be making a stop at Tiger Stadium in Bentonville.
Summer is prime time for pop songs, the ear worms that stick to you whether you want them to or not. But, Ozarks at Large’s Katy Henricksen has new music from a pair of bands that offer something different.