
Ozarks At Large


Becca Martin Brown gets us ready for The King and I in Rogers and an adaptation of Jane Austen in Fort Smith.

Early next month the organization called the Military Order of the Purple Heart of the U.S.A. Inc. will hold its annual convention in Rogers. We talked to John Bircher, National Spokesman for the Military Order of the Purple Heart.

Officials with hunger relief organizations in Arkansas express concern over recent efforts to remove SNAP funding from the federal Farm Bill. Central Arkansas leaders request information from ExxonMobil regarding a stretch of pipeline in the Lake Maumelle Watershed. The Arkansas House and Senate Education Committees discuss the new Common Core curriculum, set to take effect when schools start in about a month. And the Fayetteville Public Library board of directors moves forward with an offer to purchase the former City Hospital property.



Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large
Sunday, December 22, 2013
Ahead on this edition of Weekend Ozarks, we visit a local yarn shop to speak with local knitters about how and what they're working on this holiday season. Plus, a discussion with a local man who lost his grandson in the Sandy Hook massacre last December, and how a church reaches out to the community with its healing touch.
To celebrate the role Springfield, Missouri played in the Route 66 era, the West Central Neighborhood Alliance is celebrating the inaugural Birthplace of Route 66 festival.
Tony Hernandez and Dan Craft from Northwest Arkansas Newspapers visit KUAF.
University of Arkansas genocide scholar Dr. Samuel Totten talks with Ozarks at Large’s Iti Agnihotri-Mudholkar about his book on the Darfur genocide, the ongoing mass killings in Nuba Mountains in Sudan and how we can effect change.
“Kind of Blue” by Miles Davis
Michael Tilley of www.thecitywire.com on the latest developments.
“Sousa” by Dutch Swing College Band Marinierskapel
Day 2 of Rodeo of the Ozarks, One-Person Shows at the Nadine Baum Studios, and Big Smith’s performance in Fayetteville.
“Lambada” by Gipsy Kings