
Ozarks At Large


Becca Martin Brown from Northwest Arkansas Newspapers has a (partial) list of Halloween events scheduled for the next few days.


Tinkerbell and all the rest are part of Trike Theater's latest production.

Kirbi Allen is the 2013 Miss Rodeo Arkansas, but in a few months, she will travel to Las Vegas to compete in the Miss Rodeo America pageant.
Hope 2013 is a free health clinic that will take place Friday and Saturday at Central United Methodist Church in Fayetteville. For more information, call Kevin Fitzpatrick at 575-3777.


Just in time for Halloween, youth theater company Arts Live presents A Zombie High School Homecoming. It is the company's first original production to be written by one of the students and begins Halloween evening and runs through Sunday November 3.
You should know there is a special Halloween on the Fayetteville Square, an award-winning history teacher in Bentonville and a top National Geographic photographer coming to the University of Arkansas.
Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large
Sunday, May 18, 2014
Ahead on this edition of Weekend Ozarks, we'll hear wedding bells in our Sunday Morning Montage, and we'll talk about talking about faith. And, we visit two different buildings in downtown Fayetteville that have been around for about three-quarters of a century.
State's highest court upholds a lower court decision to strike down Act One of 2008.
The Arkansas Legislature will meet again next week to find a solution to the congressional redistricting issue. Roby Brock of www.talkbusiness.net has the details.
Popular author Alexander McCall Smith talks about seeing the poetry in everyday interactions. He talks today at 7 p.m. at the Fayetteville Public Library.
A diverse group of high school students from Carroll County are learning about charitable giving. Jacqueline Froelich visits the Carroll County Community Foundation’s Youth Advisory Council.
www.ARCF.org/CarrollCounty