
Ozarks At Large

The Little Free Library project has small, neighborhood libraries on street corners in Fayetteville, Africa, Australia and almost everywhere else.
A collection of University of Arkansas graduates is making headway in the digital world. Their new company, TTAGG, helps clients understand what their customers are saying about them.

Bentonville residents can expect a wastewater rate increase in a few months thanks to a new ordinance enacted by the Bentonville city council. Also, a winter meteor shower will light up the night sky, especially during the next few days.

Top Arkansas immigrant civil rights activist Mireya Reith, executive director of the Arkansas United Community Coalition, explains what we should expect regarding reform, at both the federal and state level.
A recycling pilot program in Fayetteville stands to expand next year, the Applied Sustainability Center at the UA in Fayetteville wants Arkansans to focus on sustainable energy in the state, and one of Arkansas's congressional delegation is optimistic that Congress will avoid the fiscal cliff.

Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Ahead on this edition of weekend Ozarks, music made with bedsprings and sawblades, and we learn the history behind a lake in Benton County, and it isn't Beaver Lake.
The United States Postal Service honors native Arkansas John Johnson; racial divide still exists in the country; and more – on today’s edition of Ozarks at Large Half-Time.
Carol Prusa’s art is influenced by physics, architecture, medicine, Tibetan monks, mathematics, and other esoteric elements. Ozarks at Large’s Katy Henriksen spoke with Prusa about her art and exhibit at the University of Arkansas Fine Arts Gallery.
Ozarks at Large’s Christina Thomas examines the many ways in which colleges and universities close by are reaching out to potential students.
For decades, water-colorist Bill McNamara has wandered the remote upper Buffalo wilderness, where he lives, to paint ancient places.
His abstract-realism yields shimmering visions of the Ozarks.
We visit the artist on his homestead at Cave Mountain.
Becca Bacon Martin from Northwest Arkansas Newspapers has many, many details about Spamalot that’s coming to the Fort Smith Convention Center this Monday. Also lined up are other events.
The Theme from Monty Python and the Holy Grail