Ozarks At Large

Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large

Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Ahead on this edition of Ozarks: the Arkansas Scholarship Lottery is four years old. There have been some bumps along the way, but the games of chance have provided hundreds of millions of dollars for scholarships. We'll talk to the lottery's second director, Bishop Woosley. Plus 40,000 students in elementary and middle schools across northwest Arkansas create art in a single day and the marvels involved with a staging of Carnival at the Alma Performing Arts Center. The show has steam punk costuming, puppets and music.
But why do we throw confetti when we celebrate or party? We consult America’s top confetti expert.
The Fayetteville Public Library is in the middle of an effort to build a $2 million endowment for its humanities collections and programming.
Co-editors of the book Charlie Alison and Ellen Compton talk to Ozarks at Large's Iti Agnihotri-Mudholkar about the lesser-known details of Fayetteville’s history. For more information or to buy the book, log on to www.arcadiapublishing.com. Click here to listen to Charlie and Ellen talk about the images they had to leave out of the book.
A University of Arkansas professor researches the effect of Alfred Hitchcock’s The Wrong Man on Italian stereotypes.
A Civil War exhibit in Van Buren, the Artists of Northwest Arkansas show in Springdale, Jonathan Harris Abstracts and Landscapes in Rogers, and more on today’s list of things to do.
“A Little Less Conversation” by Elvis Presley