Photographer Jerry Taliaferro’s exhibition “Women of a New Tribe” hopes to present the beauty of African-American women in a new light.
To listen to how NPR helped Taliaferro name this exhibition, click here.
(Photo Courtesy: Jerry Taliaferro's www.blackartphotoart.com)
Ozarks At Large
Photographer Jerry Taliaferro’s exhibition “Women of a New Tribe” hopes to present the beauty of African-American women in a new light.
To listen to how NPR helped Taliaferro name this exhibition, click here.
(Photo Courtesy: Jerry Taliaferro's www.blackartphotoart.com)
On this edition of Ozarks at Large, two sides of Valentine's Day: an anti-Valentine’s night of stories and music will be celebrated on the 13th, and the band Still on the Hill will release their CD of love songs on Valentine’s Day. We also examine municipal eminent domain practices in our region and state.
On this edition of Ozarks at Large, reports on Arkansas Technical University-Ozark campus’ plans to offer a Registered Nurse program, Fayetteville Police Department honoring the city’s first African-American police officer killed in the line of duty in 1928, and the status of state's health benefits exchange under the federal health care program.Comic Kristin Key will be at the UARK Bowl in Fayetteville this Sunday evening for a performance. She talks to us about her comedy style, and what it's like to be a female comic.
Blues artist Kevin Moore (Keb' Mo') will perform tonight at Walton Arts Center at 7 p.m. Becca Bacon Martin from Northwest Arkansas Newspapers tells us about a conversation she had with him.
Ozarks at Large’s Katy Henriksen has a preview of the University of Arkansas Fine Arts Gallery's first show this semester.
Fayetteville’s Advertising and Promotions Commission is planning to revive the Old Post Office on the Fayetteville Square. We take a tour of the building that's nearly a century old.
To take a video tour of the Old Post Office, click here.
The Avid Readers Book Club met at 1 p.m. this afternoon at the Springdale Public Library. Tomorrow, “Sandwiched In” with John Cross about Eureka Springs' history will take place at Shiloh Museum of Ozark History in Springdale. Becca Bacon Martin from Northwest Arkansas Newspapers has the details.
The Northwest Arkansas Curling Club was formed in the '90s. Ozarks at Large’s Antoinette Grajeda finds out more about the sport.
Happy new year! On this edition of Ozarks at Large, Drs. Angie Maxwell and Todd Shields from the University of Arkansas' Diane D. Blair Center of Southern Politics and Society discuss a few findings of the path-breaking 2011 Blair-Rockefeller Poll. Also on the show today, Kevin Kinder from Northwest Arkansas Newspapers compares his list of favorite 2011 music with that of Ozarks at Large's Kyle Kellams.Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
Ahead on this edition of Ozarks: we find out, kind of, why Dr. Lonnie Smith is a “doctor.” The legendary jazz master of the Hammond organ will play in Fayetteville this weekend and he talks to Robert Ginsburg about his music and his career. And a survey to help gauge the direction for the city of Rogers as growth continues.
Winner of 2011 Miller Williams Arkansas Poetry Prize Danielle Deulen stops by KUAF's Harold and Blanche Caulk News Studio to discuss her work.
Dance, music, books and Pettigrew Day will keep Northwest Arkansans entertained.
"I Can Almost See Clearly Now" by Charles Hammer
Community Clinic, based in Springdale, provides medical care to the working poor of Northwest AR. With satellite offices in Rogers and Siloam Springs, it now seeks to expand into South Washington County. But as Jacqueline Froelich reports, its funding is caught up in federal Congressional budget wrangling.
CAST researchers at the University of Arkansas helped National Geographic Magazine re-create Machu Picchu for the cover of its April issue.
"Toboggan" by Breathe Owl Breathe
UA Percussion Ensemble, and Drew Holcombe and the Neighbors perform today.





