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  • The pandemic may have officially ended two years ago, but we still feel its impact. Artist Monica Moore wants to help the community in processing grief through “The Hearts Project”. Her work has become a collaborative effort between her and Life Styles, a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting adults with disabilities.
  • University of Arkansas instructor and poet Geffrey Davis will be reading from some of his “nature inspired” works at a free community reading at Hobbs State Park this Sunday, April 27.
  • TheatreSquared is staging "In the Grove of Forgetting," a world premiere from Bob Ford, the company's artistic director. He says the production reinforces TheatreSquared's mission of staging new works and engaging new audiences.
  • At this week’s gathering of three Arkansas college leaders, the subjects included DEI, free speech on campus, lottery funding and higher education's core mission. The panel discussion, hosted by the Northwest Arkansas Council, featured University of Arkansas Chancellor Charles Robinson, Northwest Arkansas Community College President Dennis Rittle and the president of the University of Central Arkansas, Houston Davis.
  • Maybe you’ve seen signs at your local library, school or at a favorite arts venue thanking volunteers. April is National Volunteer Month. Ozarks at Large's Kyle Kellams spoke with a pair of volunteers, Paulette and Cliff Sherrer, about their volunteer work at the Walton Arts Center.
  • Between May and December of 1975, some 50,000 Vietnamese, Laotian and Hmong refugees came through Fort Chaffee, before going to live with sponsors in towns across the country.
  • This week marks 50 years since the fall of Saigon. On today's show, we'll hear about refugees from the Vietnam War who made their way to the U.S. through Fort Chaffee. And while the war in Vietnam was half a world away, the impact was felt locally, as we hear in archival recordings of war protests from the Pryor Center.
  • Randy Dixon with the Pryor Center brings Ozarks at Large's Kyle Kellams archival recordings from the 1960s detailing anti-Vietnam War activism.
  • The University of Arkansas Fort Smith hosted its AAPI festival last week in an effort to share Asian culture clubs with campus and community.
  • The people behind the podcast "Doing Business in Bentonville" wanted to make operating a business less overwhelming. Andy Wilson, the podcast's executive director, was in the Anthony and Susan Hui News Studio recently and spoke about how the podcast addresses the sometimes whirlwind nature of doing business.
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