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The first weekend of spring offers us theater, music, kites and more. Becca Martin Brown, the features editor with the Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, tells us about many of the options, including a the world premiere of "Survival of the Unfit" by Oren Safdie.
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Sen. Clint Penzo, R-Springdale, is the lead sponsor of Senate Bill 206. If passed, it would mandate local school board elections to become partisan elections, among other amendments to the current laws around elections.
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The Writers' Colony at Dairy Hollow in Eureka Springs has been an ideal location for writers for more than 20 years. But the colony is extending beyond the walls of the establishment. There is a literary magazine, eMerge, and a series of public readings...including one Tuesday Dec.13 at Brew's in Eureka.
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A three-show run of Vaudeville-inspired entertainment in Eureka Springs will serve as a fundraiser for Main Stage.
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Carnegie Public Library assistant director, Cass Schallhorn was awarded a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to gather and archive Eureka Springs oral histories. Library director April Griffith says the project will preserve important stories that otherwise would be lost.
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As more housing in northwest Arkansas neighborhoods is converted into fully furnished short-term rentals for tourists and travelers, more residents are raising alarm. Fayetteville city planners have proposed easing certain short-term rental applicant rules, while working to control sprawl. The city of Eureka Springs has enforced a ban on vacation rentals in residential districts.
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Newly published historic district design guidelines to preserve Eureka Springs’ residential and commercial dwellings are more lenient – and explicit.
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Hundreds of artists and craftspeople have inhabited the historic artists' colony of Eureka Springs for well over a century. To preserve a growing wealth of Eureka-made art and craft works, plans for a permanent Museum of Eureka Springs Art are underway.
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Sean Fitzgibbon has spent more than a decade working on his new book 'What Follows is True' using his art, and research, to tell the story of Norman Baker's wild, fraudulent ride through life. That ride included an infamous tenure at the Crescent Hotel in Eureka Springs.
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Sean Fitzgibbon has spent more than a decade working on his new book 'What Follows is True' using his art, and research, to tell the story of Norman Baker's wild, fraudulent ride through life. That ride included an infamous tenure at the Crescent Hotel in Eureka Springs.