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  • On today's show, students raising awareness of mental health care and suicide. Plus, the return of the Northwest Arkansas Startup Crawl, a bounty for invasive plants in Fayetteville, and much more.
  • Courtney Lanning says she knows it is early, but the new movie All the Old Knives is one of the year's best films.
  • The Galactic Masquerade Prom, the first LGBTQ+ prom for high school students to be privately staged in Arkansas, will take place April 16th hosted by the Equality Crew in northwest Arkansas.
  • April 7-9, the Smokehouse Players will again team up with Magdalene Serenity House, contributing house receipts from a Friday night show to the nonprofit that assists women who have experienced trauma, sexual exploitation, addiction and incarceration. That next production, Love Letters, will again be staged at Smokehouse Building near the intersection of Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard and Rupple Road in Fayetteville.
  • On the latest episode of Undisciplined, host Dr. Caree Banton interviews April Roy, the founder and CEO of FemPAQ, and discusses her emergency period kits.
  • Care Community Center offers the volunteer income tax assistance (VITA) program for low-income and underserved taxpayers.
  • The week of coming musical attractions features the regular rock, punk and country shows, but there is also ample opportunity to see various flavors of jazz throughout the listening area.
  • The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency plans to extend the agricultural use of neonicotinoids on U.S. food crops, pesticides known to harm pollinating insects, especially honey bees. We hear from an expert with the Center for Biological Diversity which seeks to ban the substance.
  • We go—once again—back into the archives to March 1974 with Randy Dixon of the David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History when the Congressional Black Caucus held their national convention at Robison Auditorium in Little Rock.
  • Northwest Arkansas Veterans witnessing coverage of the Russian siege on Ukraine, especially those who suffer with PTSD — post traumatic stress disorder — may be triggered by violent events unfolding in that war. A medical expert suggests ways to help.
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