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  • The Clinton House Museum in Fayetteville is open again. We take the opportunity to visit archives at the Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History to remember the Clintons' time in Fayetteville.
  • On today's show, a few introductions. Plus, the implications of the overturning of Roe v. Wade in Arkansas, the reopening of the Clinton House Museum, and much more.
  • The St. Scholastica Monastery in Fort Smith is set for demolition beginning in July. We hear from Preserve Arkansas about why that matters and what this means for historic preservation in the state.
  • Mike Duley is the general manager for Keller Williams Market Pro Realty, and he joins Paul Gatling to talk about the rise in mortgage rates and the impact that has on the market for today's Northwest Arkansas Business Journal Report.
  • Dozens of people from across the middle of the country gathered together via Zoom for the Heartland Forward Builders and Backers program.
  • A century before Roe v. Wade federally legalized abortion in America, girls and women in Arkansas seeking to prevent or terminate unwanted pregnancies were often required to resort to extreme measures. Independent historian Melanie K. Welch Ph.D. chronicles the history of contraception and abortion in Arkansas.
  • Over 5,500 Indigenous women and girls have gone missing according to the most recent data from the U.S. Department of Justice. Indigenous women are murdered at a rate ten times higher than any other ethnicity. Students from Stillwell High School in Oklahoma investigated and reported on the epidemic of missing and murdered indigenous women.
  • On today's show, the economic possibilities of Arkansas dirt. Plus, we meet the creators of a podcast about missing and murdered Indigenous women, the makers-in-residence at the Amazeum, and much more.
  • Arkansas and other southern states — where COVID-19 vaccination rates are low — this summer are ground zero for Omicron subvariant infections. Dr. Robert Hopkins, a professor of Internal Medicine and Pediatrics, and Chief of Internal Medicine at University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock, provides insight and guidance about this new outbreak.
  • The new anime film The Deer King is in Fayetteville and Fort Smith for a very limited run. Courtney Lanning says it is a movie worth seeing.
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