
Ozarks At Large

Mark O'Connor gives some musical advice prior to his performance tomorrow night at Walton Arts Center.



From Thanksgiving to Super Bowl Sunday, area police officers are on high alert for those that might be driving while intoxicated. We talk to officials about why Fayetteville has more DWI's than any other Arkansas city.
After months of preparation, the event's organizers say that the weekend's craft fair will still go on, regardless of the weather.


With the impending weather, many of the week's events have made some changes in anticipation of cold temperatures and hazardous road conditions.
The Arkansas Red Cross has shelters and volunteers on standby if the impending winter weather turns severe. The Federal Reserve releases the latest Beige Book, which shows significant economic development in Arkansas and surrounding states. A recent move to add a rural ambulance fee to property tax rolls of Benton County's rural residents will be put up to a vote after a recent successful petition drive. And unemployment numbers for northwest Arkansas edged slightly downward in October, while the inverse is true for the Fort Smith metro area.

Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large
Thursday, May 29, 2014
Ahead on this edition of Ozarks, a conversation from this year's Mozart in the Museum with the classical music trio Time For Three. Plus, 47 miles a day: that's how far, on average, a female hiker hiked to make it through the Appalachian Trail in fewer than 50 days. Hiker and author Jennifer Pharr Davis stops by the studio, and we get some tips on how to get into running.
The University of Arkansas Fort Smith's latest selection for the "Read This" program is the novel The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time by Mark Haddon.
The act of collecting is to gather objects in some location for a given purpose. A recent gathering at the Shiloh Museum of Ozark History collected collectors, along with their collections, for an open house.
"One Million Smiles" by Datuk Sudirman
A new exhibit at the Botanical Garden of the Ozarks salutes the state's biggest, oldes and most astounding trees.
RJ Mischo, Kory Montgomery, Garrett Jones and Ken Everts will play together, for the first time, Saturday night in Bentonville. Three of them came to our Firmin-Garner Performance Studio to play live.
Walton Arts Center has a calm January, then a busy February and a very busy spring.
"Tom Dooley" by Doc Watson