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  • The long-running public radio show, "eTown," will be at The Momentary in Bentonville tomorrow night with guests The Milk Carton Kids and Buffalo Nichols.
  • This holiday season we reached out to several local independent bookstores in the listening area to get their recommendations for books. Up first is Two Friends Books in Bentonville.
  • Twitter quietly released that they would no longer be enforcing their COVID-19 misinformation guidelines on the platform. This has left many public health officials, include Dr. Joe Thompson from Arkansas Center for Health Improvement, to advise people to stop trusting medial information published on Twitter.
  • State senator Joyce Elliott will be leaving the legislature soon, but she remains engaged with Get Loud Arkansas!
  • The Compassionate Contact Corps, a new "social prescription" program deployed by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, matches Veterans experiencing loneliness or social isolation with volunteers trained to ease such conditions. We attend a national media roundtable hosted by USDVA to learn more.
  • In an excerpt from the latest episode of Undisciplined we hear from Dr. Calvin White, Jr. about his experience growing up in the Church of God in Christ and how that shaped his life.
  • The Arkansas Future Caucus includes all state legislators 45 years old and younger. The bipartisan group is hosting a panel discussion tomorrow night in Bentonville.
  • On today's show, how the Church of God in Christ shaped the life of Cavlin White Jr., the associate dean of the Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences. Plus, after right-to-work's anniversary in Arkansas, a Fayetteville Starbucks becomes the state's first location to unionize. Also, the Arkansas Future Caucus will host discussion tomorrow in Bentonville and more.
  • This week's Northwest Arkansas Business Journal Report includes a conversation with Charles Robinson, the chancellor at the University of Arkansas.
  • After 86 years of statehood, women were finally allowed to serve in the state legislature in Arkansas. 100 years later, authors Lindsley and Stephen Smith celebrate the nearly 150 women who have led their constituents.
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