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  • A new venture in northwest Arkansas, Loloft, combines two very 2022 ideas.
  • The show begins with increases in revenue for Arkansas hospitality and tourism sectors and another close win for Razorback basketball.
  • The National Science Foundation has provided a nationwide Noyce Scholarship to try to boost the numbers of science teachers in high-needs schools. Pete speaks with Stephen Burgin with the University of Arkansas Department of Curriculum and Instruction.
  • Canoo, an electric vehicle company, recently announced they'll be moving their headquarters to Bentonville. We hear from the company's CEO Tony Aquila about the move, the investment in the state, and more.
  • We start the show with news of expected continued growth for Arkansas tourism and a three-month low for COVID-19 hsopitalizations in the state.
  • Jill Wieber Lens, professor and associate dean for research and faculty development at the University of Arkansas School of Law, discusses legal ramifications of pregnancy loss, including abortion.
  • Renae Merrill, doctoral student in the public policy program at the U of A, discusses the association between social media use, personality structure and depression.
  • Last winter, Fayetteville Arts Council selected two artists, Jeremy Navarette and Austin Floyd, to paint murals on either end of a tall winding concrete retaining wall along Archibald Yell, a busy historic highway in South Fayetteville.
  • The 2021-22 Fort Smith Symphony season is over, but the prep for the next season, the symphony's 99th, is well underway under the baton of John Jeter.
  • Another new update on the potential delay of St. Scholastica's demolition, a seven-figure price tag on the added costs with Peak Innovation Center, and the approval of two tax continuations are the topics at hand with Michael Tilley of Talk Business and Politics today.
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