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Randy Dixon of the David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History takes listeners back to 40 years ago when a major TV mini-series filmed in Arkansas.
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The new documentary “We Have Just Begun” about the 1919 Elaine Massacre and Dispossession in Phillips County, Arkansas, will be screened a week from tonight at the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts. Ozarks at Large's Kyle Kellams visited with film creators Michael Wilson and Tonga Eisen-Martin about how this tragic incident of violence on Black citizens still acts as a continuing influence on the present.
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To kick off this election year, Randy Dixon of the David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History takes a look at Arkansas presidential candidates.
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On today's show, Arkansas has opted into a new federal program to fight food insecurity for kids. Also, Dr. Chris Hardin considers the benefits of a Dry January. Plus, looking back at Arkansas-connected runs for the White House.
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In this edition of Reflections In Black, Raven Cook discusses U.S. Marshall Bass Reeves, a freed enslaved person who became the first Black deputy U.S. Marshal west of the Mississippi River.
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On today's show, a new CDC report shows tobacco use for middle school students is on the rise. Plus, a boyhood friendship that began in Hot Springs and continued into the White House. Also, celebrating a concentration of woman-run and woman-owned businesses in downtown Fayetteville.
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Randy Dixon of the David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History joins Ozarks at Large to reminisce about one of Arkansas' strangest former Thanksgiving traditions.
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On today's show, a special U.S. compact that allowed thousands of Marshall Islanders to migrate to Arkansas nearly expired earlier this year freely. Also, this week’s archives from the Pryor Center help us get turkey week started. Plus, Courtney Lanning says the "Hunger Games" franchise remains entertaining.
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On this episode of Reflections In Black, Raven Cook discusses Arkansas-native publisher John H. Johnson, who founded Ebony and Jet magazines.
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Randy Dixon of the David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History joins Ozarks at Large to discuss how Patti Upton made millions off of a simple idea: Aromatique.