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On today's show, Be Pro Be Proud is working toward getting more students in the trade labor fields amid labor shortage. Plus, Elliot West discusses his new book on how the West changed the nation. Also, the Alzheimer's Association Arkansas will be at the state capitol tomorrow advocate for laws connected to dementia care and more.
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An Arkansas-based workforce education program is expanding and trying to get more students to invested in trade labor fields.
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For the first time since 1973, the Arkansas Women's Commission released a comprehensive report on the state of women and the economy.
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On today's show, challenges the public experiences in the growing opioid and overdose epidemic. Plus, highlighting the events leading up to the 1919 Elaine Race Massacre in KUAF's podcast "Undisciplined." Also, a project to make early newspapers open to the public, and more.
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In the season three finale of the podcast, we finish our conversation with Calvin White Jr. who discusses the 1919 Elaine Race Massacre and thinking about the way history is taught in Arkansas.
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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.
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Arkansas' right-to-work law turned 78-years-old on Nov. 7, and a little over a week after its anniversary, a Fayetteville Starbucks became the first location in the state to unionize. Although right-to-work effects how unions function, other factors like deindustrialization impacted the state's labor movement.
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For three decades J. Bill Becker was the president of Arkansas' AFL-CIO. This week's archives from the David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History help us learn more about him.
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For three decades J. Bill Becker was the president of Arkansas' AFL-CIO. This week's archives from the David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History help us learn more about him.
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For three decades J. Bill Becker was the president of Arkansas' AFL-CIO. This week's archives from the David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History help us learn more about him.