Ozarks At Large

Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large

Thursday, August 15, 2013
Ahead on this edition of Ozarks: when you think of fertile ground for jazz you may think of New Orleans, Europe, New York City…but, Azerbaijan? Amina Figarova grew up listening to jazz in her childhood home in Baku, Azerbaijan. She’s released a dozen albums and will close the KUAF Summer Jazz Concert Series this weekend. We'll hear from her later on the show. Plus…that extra "A" in Lake Atalanta in Rogers. Why the lake is called that isexplained in the latest edition of our series "What's in a Name?" And a wilderness water trail inside the Fort Smith city limits.
Auditions for Symphony of Northwest Arkansas (SoNA) Singers, an auditioned group of the region’s best choral singers, will be held this Saturday.
Dr. Jesse Casana, a University of Arkansas archaeologist, recently discovered evidence for the continuity of civilization at a time when all other ancient civilizations were collapsing. He talks to Ozarks at Large’s Iti Agnihotri-Mudholkar about the details. For more on what could’ve caused some of these ancient civilizations to collapse, click here.
“Oud Blues” by Ahmed Abdul-Malik
Ozarks at Large’s Energy Corps correspondent Christina Thomas talks to Katherine Brandt, a fellow Energy Corps member.
Youth Strategies, a faith-based local non-profit organization, helps at-risk adolescents improve their personal and professional lives. More information on the organization is available on www.youthstrategies.org.
“Life of the Mind” by Club d’Elf
Dr. Bill Smith, our history expert, discusses odd presidential candidates from the 18th and 19th centuries.