Governor Mike Beebe yesterday officially issued the call for a special session of the state legislature. The Federal Reserve Bank released its quarterly Burgundy Book, which provides some insight into the health of the state's economy. hundreds of volunteers associated with World Changers are descending upon Fort Smith to help with some repairs to homes in the city. And the city of Fayetteville recently released a new Web application to help city residents find city information applicable to where they live in the city.
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The Principal Fellows program at the U of A yesterday announced it had received a $1.9 million grant from the Walton Family Foundation. A recent report suggests that in coming years, the northwest Arkansas economy will be among the fastest growing in the U.S.. And the Bentonville City Council gets ready to fill two vacancies.

UA Professor Angie Maxwell argues that the attention the South received throughout the 20th century in regards to three particular events has shaped the Southern Identity that exists yet today. She discusses her book The Indicted South: Public Criticism, Southern Inferiorty, and the the Politics of Whiteness with Ozarks’ Christina Karnatz.
Latest Edition of Ozarks at Large
July 4th Weekend, 2014
For this holiday weekend we listen again to music recorded inside Firmin-Garner Performance Studio during the first six months of 2014. We hear from:
Pearl Brick
Cletus Got Shot
Sweetwater Gypsies
Isayah Wofford
The Riverblenders
Xcluded
Sons of Otis Malone
Finvarra's Wren
Dick Johnson
Elephant Revival
And a weekend update of things to do from Becca Martin Brown from Northwest Arkansas Newspapers.
Becca offers a beginning-of-the-week menu of entertainment options.
Raneau's "Meneut" by Style of Five
An Emmy Award winner and University of Arkansas graduate will debut his documentary about drug court tonight at the Arkansas Union Theater.
A trailer for the documentary can be viewed here.
To hear today's Writer's Almanac, visit their website here.
"Out on a Limb" by Lennie Tristano
For more than 127 years, Carroll County business has been conducted, as a convenience to citizens, in two courthouses, on either side of the Kings River. But after a county circuit court judge ordered to consolidate the district this year, the Arkansas Supreme Court decided to overturn it. Jacqueline Froelich reports.
Tomorrow, several schools from a three-state area will be showing off their robots on the campus of the University of Arkansas Fort Smith.