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.
Author Megan Bergman talks to Ozarks at Large’s Katy Henriksen about her book “Birds of a Lesser Paradise,” a collection of short stories that was just cited by the Huffington Post as a must-read.
“Hoodoo Zephyr” by John Adams
Author Kristen Iversen’s new book Full Body Burden is a memoir about living in the shadow of a nuclear weapons plant once designated “the most contaminated site in America.”
Seventy of Arkansas’ 75 counties under a burn ban; Governor Mike Beebe to decide about Medicaid expansion in Arkansas under the federal health care overhaul before next year’s legislative session; and more – on today’s Segment A.
“The Fishin’ Hole” by Andy Griffith
Roby Brock from our content partner www.talkbusiness.net talks to Arkansas Supreme Court Justice Robert Brown to discuss the effect of financial donations from interest groups on judicial elections in the state.
“Every Direction is North” by El Ten Eleven
The organizers of the Museum of the Hardwood Tree are working hard to honor the importance of the most important raw material in the development of Arkansas.
“Don’t Sit Under the Apple Tree” by Glenn Miller Orchestra