Don't put those skates away yet. Bentonville's downtown skating rink is extending the time you can get on the ice.
For more information click here.
Ozarks At Large
Lauren Embree's jewelry is featured in the latest issue of Martha Stewart Whole Living and her new showroom opens tomorrow. A big week, you might say. For more information visit www.laurenembreejewelry.com.
We emerge from the holiday shopping season, some of us, literally spent. And for thieves? The crowds served as good distraction to accumulate treasure. But as Jacqueline Froelich reports new technologies being developed at the UofA's RFID Lab will someday foil the robbers--but good.
Hanging out with a large purple dinosaur is one of Becca's entertainment picks for today.
More information is available at pryorcenter.uark.edu.
Wind continues to be a big business in Arkansas. Roby Brock of www.talkbusiness.net talks to one company president about the state's role in the wind energy industry.
Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large
Remembering Some of the People We Lost in 2013
On this special edition of Ozarks we hear again some of the voices we lost during 2013, including Bill Harrison, Curley Miller, Ivan Denton and Dick Renko.
With another busy week ahead we offer some highlights of a packed calendar.
Link: As promised, here is the long web address for the UAFS nominations:
www.uafs.edu/adp.american-democracy-project
"Blue Train" by John Coltrane
Warren Blaylock is a resident of Alma, but he served as a medic in the 67th Evacuation Hospital during World War II. Tonight, he will be the featured speaker during a special Veterans Day edition of the Crawford County Chronicles' speaker series at the Drennen-Scott Historic Site in Van Buren.
"Travelin' Soldier" by Dixie Chicks
Becca Martin Brown, from Northwest Arkansas Newspapers, says two great storytellers will share a stage soon in northwest Arkansas.
Education accountability and ongoing renovations were the recursive topics over the past week.
"New Orleans Shuffle" by John Fahey
Some kids may like athletics or marching band, but one effort in Fayetteville aims to nurture the next generation of nerds in a positive atmosphere.






