A campaign advertisement begins airing on state TV, an effort gets underway to potentially raise the Arkansas minimum wage, and calls for a public official to resign were all stories we take a look at in this morning's Week in Review.
Ozarks At Large



The 2013 Northwest Arkansas Education Report Card collects all kinds of information to provide an overview of education in Benton and Washington counties.


Fayetteville-based SFC Fluidics has received another round federal grant funding to help with research into diagnosing traumatic brain injury. Oaklawn gears up for the new horse-racing season, and they have a new app for that as well.



Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large
Friday, February 28, 2014
Ahead on this edition of Ozarks: it has been 60 years since the largest-ever nuclear weapons test by the United States took place on the Marshall Islands' Bikini Atoll. Today, many Marshallese, including several northwest Arkansas residents, are marking the anniversary of the Castle Bravo Blast. Plus, Becca Martin Brown from Northwest Arkansas Newspapers gets us ready for the weekend, Michael Tilley from The City Wire helps us analyze the week's news, and more.
KUAF’s Robert Ginsberg talks to Jim Jernigan, a member of the gypsy swing group Hogtown Hot Club. He will perform at the Composer’s Showcase in the KUAF Summer Jazz Concert series this Saturday.
Rob Grayson from our content partner WKNO reports on the genre’s earliest chart-topping singles.
For more information, log on to www.wknofm.org.
Chaffee Crossing, east of Fort Smith, is transforming old toxic military compound into a new urban mixed-use district--while maintaining its historic legacy. We tour with director Ivy Owen.
Dr. Bill Smith on what is and isn’t warfare in the eyes of the American government.
“Dance 8” by Philip Glass
Burn ban near the Buffalo River, drought in Arkansas and more – on today’s Ozarks at Large Half-Time.