A SPECAIL ALERT for Lyncho fanatics. NEXT WEEK’S Arkansas Times will run a story on my 25th. Anniversary in Little Rock. Yes, he does pose a loaded question. It is on newsstands NEXT THURSDAY.
Look for my column in Monday’s Democrat-Gazette. It was truly inspired and you may read it on the Voices page in the Arkansas sectin.
My morning headlines are on K-106.3 The Greatest Hits of All Time with John Lee and Spirit FM with Don Burns at 93.3 and 100.7. AND, the entire staff and management at the Lyncho Intergalactic Headquarters welcome 100kw.Y-95 in Camden. You can hear my morning updates all over south Arkansas on this MONSTER FM powerhouse.
The radio show is on at 9.
KSMD 99.1 FM – Searcy/Batesville
KWCK 1300 AM – Searcy
KAPZ 710 AM – Bald Knob/Augusta
KAWW 1370 AM – Heber Springs/Clinton
The proposal for a $700 billion federal bailout of financial institutions has hit a roadblock and tonight’s presidential joint press conference in Oxford Mississippi is in doubt.
By an 11-10 vote, the Governor’s Commission on Global Warming recommends that no new coal-fired power plants be built in Arkansas until at least 2020, when new technology could reduce carbon emissions.
Mike Huckabee will debut his Fox News show this weekend. It will be titled “Huckabee” and will debut at 7 pm on Saturday, Sept. 26. He’s back at 7 on Sunday night too.
Tony Alamo is under arrest in Flagstaff, Arizona. Federal agents took him into custody without incident yesterday afternoon on charges of illegally transporting minors across state lines.
Faulkner County authorities believe many as 15 killings could be under investigation in a case related to discovery of human remains near Jacksonville. Although they are being tight-lipped, the suspected killer is not believed to be at large.
Jason Baldwin, one of three men convicted in the 1993 killings of three West Memphis second-grade boys, unsuccessfully urged his attorneys to allow him to testify during his trial 14 years ago. Baldwin’s hearing for a new trial continues in Jonesboro.
A judge has ordered a measure allowing alcohol sales in Sharp County off of the November ballot. Circuit Judge Phil Smith issued an order saying that signatures gathered by supporters of the measure were invalid.
It looks official now. A 21st century high school will be built on the current site of Fayetteville High School.
The Wall Street Journal reports that activist shareholders of Dillard’s are pushing the Dillard family to relinquish control of the department store chain by selling their Class B shares.
Despite the credit crisis that looms over the U.S. economy, Verizon Wireless’ $28.1 billion deal to purchase Little Rock-based Alltel Corp. remains on schedule.
Shareholders have approved the merger of Delta and Northwest into the country’s largest airline. The final step is federal approval.
Arkansas Times Blog is reporting a number of reports circulating in the local blogosphere concerning the gathering of a thousand RV’snorth of the River. Included in the complaints is a Transit rubber wheel trolley stalled in gravel, and firefighters unhappy about being pressed into water service for the event.
Family members and friends of people buried at Haven of Rest Cemetery want the state’s Cemetery Board to help restore and maintain the 76-year-old graveyard after years of neglect.
Representatives of the Little Rock School District and the Classroom Teachers Association are at an impasse in their negotiations over teacher salary increases and insurance premium payments for this school year.
Arkansas legislators were urged Thursday to fund Garvan Woodland Gardens in the state budget. Little Rock Mayor Mark Stodola thinks it might help other cities.
Shawn Fields, on parole for a St. Francis County murder, is now under arrest for a shooting at a Fort Smith bar.
Two teenagers were found delinquent in Saline County juvenile court for participating in the robbery and killing of a 24-year-old Sherwood man in 2007. The pair participated in luring Nicholas Jones to an isolated part of town on Aug. 5, 2007, where he was shot and robbed. The teenagers, who were 14 and 15 at the time, will serve an indefinite sentence in youth facilities and may be sentenced as adults later.
A federal appeals court upheld the dismissal of a lawsuit by a former Arkansas prison inmate who contracted tuberculosis while incarcerated at the Varner Unit in Lincoln County.
Prosecutors charged Donald Warren Sr., a Pine Bluff attorney serving as special judge, with abuse of office and forgery, accusing him of fraudulently ordering the sheriff to assist in recovering a lawn mower for the judge from a pawnshop.
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Join me and Bill Vickery for the WEDNESDAY WAKE-UP around 6:45 every Wednesday morning on KARK TV Channel 4. We pick winners and losers from the past week and comment on the day's top news. Sometimes we play rough, but it is always a million laughs.
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