A few not so typical opportunities to donate money, goods, and time in the next few days.
Ozarks At Large
For our monthly series Three Things we ask a Peace Corps recruiter what we should know about the organization.

Ben E. Keith Foods announces it will add more than 70 jobs to the state's economy, and some law experts say that its unsurprising that a number of counties stopped issuing marriage certificates for same-sex couples after doing so for a few days.

In this month’s music review, we revisit an album of summer’s past. Abra Moore’s “Strangest Places” was released in 1995, but the whimsical folk vibes have us rolling down our windows and driving to the tunes again this year.
Discussing faith and religion does not have to create an argument.
Becca Martin Brown, from Northwest Arkansas Newspapers, continues her week-long survey of what kids around the region can do this summer.


Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Ahead on this edition of Ozarks, an update on HIV services in northwest Arkansas, and a review of the latest release by St. Paul and the Broken Bones.
A group of teenagers got hands-on experience last week inside the surgical suites at Mercy Medical Center in Rogers.
“The Manufacture of Tangled Ivory” by Bang on a Can
Roby Brock from www.talkbusiness.net spoke with Arkansas’ Second District Congressman Tim Griffin about the economy and how to come to terms on the debt-ceiling discussion.
Click here for more of Roby's conversation with Tim Griffin.
Becca has an interesting list of things to do today.
Three members of the Civilian Conservation Corps reunite.
July at the Fayetteville Underground complex of galleries on the downtown square reveals graphic mixed media, textile paintings, sensuous wood vessels, and contemporary classical oil paintings.
“Signe” by Eric Clapton