On this edition of Ozarks, Boar’s Head Players Summer 2011 Season kicks off Thursday and KUAF/Fulbright Chamber Music Festival will feature Piazzolla, Strauss and Mendelssohn in its fourth concert. Special Collections at the University of Arkansas Library gets letters that offer an insight into the state during the beginning of the Civil War and the Young Actors Guild in Fort Smith hosts summer theater classes.Ozarks At Large
On this edition of Ozarks, Boar’s Head Players Summer 2011 Season kicks off Thursday and KUAF/Fulbright Chamber Music Festival will feature Piazzolla, Strauss and Mendelssohn in its fourth concert. Special Collections at the University of Arkansas Library gets letters that offer an insight into the state during the beginning of the Civil War and the Young Actors Guild in Fort Smith hosts summer theater classes.Piazzolla, Strauss and Mendelssohn are featured in the fourth KUAF/Fulbright Chamber Music Festival.
On this edition of Ozarks at Large, a scrutiny of slumping housing numbers in Arkansas and a preview of the third installment of KUAF/Fulbright Summer Chamber Music Festival. An update on the forthcoming United States Marshals Museum in Fort Smith and Wayne Bell from Fayetteville Flyer lists entertainment choices for the summer.A preview of the third performance in the KUAF/Fulbright Summer Chamber Music Festival.
On this edition of Ozarks, a preview of the latest exhibits in the Fayetteville Underground and Artosphere comes to a close.Jodi Beznoska, VP of Communications for Walton Arts Center, previews the final events of Artosphere and tells us what tickets will go on sale next week.
On this edition of Ozarks, Google creates a digital wallet and city of Rogers prepares to host an international festival.Stephen Gates is back to give us a preview of the second performance in the KUAF/Fulbright Summer Chamber Music Festival.
The city of Rogers will host the 11th annual Northwest Arkansas International Festival this Saturday.
For more information, visit www.rogerslowell.com.
On today's edition of Ozarks, a preview of a Saturday garden tour, a Wakarusa Festival giveaway and Becca Bacon Martin from NWA Newspapers with the rest of the holiday weekend roster of events.Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large
Sunday, June 15, 2014
Ahead on this edition of Weekend Ozarks, we learn the trick of the trade with a monster truck driver. Plus, if you had a magazine, how would you choose its name? Would it be literal, a hint as to what's expected inside, or something completely different?
Ankur Singh spent part of his freshman year of college traveling the country, asking high school students about learning. His documentary about the experience will be screened tomorrow night on the University of Arkansas campus.
Linda Leavell has long studied the poetry of Marianne Moore. As it turns out, Moore was among a group of artists that included Alfred Stieglitz.
Four years after Woodstock, a circle of friends living in Eureka Springs decide to stage an Ozark heritage family folk festival on a remote and rugged Carroll County wilderness. But instead of parents with children, an estimated hundred fifty thousand hippies showed up. Jacqueline Froelich takes us to visit the site, on the fortieth anniversary. (Photo: April and Dustin Griffith, landholders, hold up an artifact found on a festival campsite.)
Students from Elkins High School spent time inside a local Walmart, learning about retail basics.
The new(ish) restaurant 28 Springs, in downtown Siloam Springs, uses a mix of food, atmosphere and science to explore culinary ingredients.





