Becca says one of the two places you could be tonight is at Ron White's comedy performance at Walton Arts Center.
Ozarks At Large

Frank Vignola and the Virtuoso Band will perform at St. Catherine's at Gable Bell tonight.
Political columnist discusses the role Mike Huckabee will have now that he's not running for the White House, and the future of state legislative re-districting.
Hazel Dickens died earlier this month, She wasn't the most famous singer/songwriter of her time, but as Meredith Martin Moats points out in this musical essay, she was an important figure in music for decades.
Photographer Annie Griffiths will speak as part of Walton Arts Center's National Geographic Live series.

Now there's a way for UA students to dispose of old textbooks that bookstores won't buy back.
Michael Tilley, editor and publisher of www.thecitywire.com, discusses Fort Smith's financial numbers for April.
Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large
Sunday, january 19, 2014
Ahead on this edition of Weekend Ozarks, lions and tigers and wampus cats? We learn whats in a name when it comes to high school mascots around Arkansas. Plus, lung cancer rates are on the decline in Arkansas while the use of solar energy systems is on the rise.
Jacob Kaufman from KUAR provides a recap of the state legislature's recently concluded special session.
The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission is stepping up enforcement this weekend on the state's lakes and rivers in an effort to decrease incidents of boating while intoxicated. Plus, the Rogers Fire Department embraces new technology with a smartphone app that informs people in public of nearby incidents of cardiac arrest.
Earthquakes in Oklahoma have dramatically increased since last autumn, likely linked to gas and oil development the U.S. Geological Survey says. And as Jacqueline Froelich reports, larger quakes there could shake western Arkansas. We hear from both the director of the Oklahoma Geological Survey in Norman and an Arkansas seismologist.
The Legislature began discussing the items on the special session agenda yesterday in Little Rock.
The Beaver Watershed Alliance has been working on assessing ways to improve water quality of the West Fork of the White River. As part of the project, the group is holding public meetings to engage residents and landowners alike.