Posted on April 30, 2013 in people
As a writer for @Urban, I’d like to let you in on a little secret—I almost always love my job and my editors. I generally get to pick my own stories, and even when I don’t, I’m usually excited about my assignments. Until I heard about this one...
Posted on April 30, 2013 in people
Before the symptoms and before the visit to Dr. Bridges in Paragould, Arkansas, Bernice McCord received a warning. Her mother had died of cancer the year before, in 1946, when Bernice was still married. Now she was divorced, a twenty-two-year-old single mother...
Posted on March 31, 2013 in people
Vonita Hoffer sits at a long table inside NeNe’s Restaurant in Fort Smith. The lunch crowd has dwindled, and she has some breathing room before the dinner crowd starts ambling in. It’s been a little over a year since the doors first opened...
Posted on March 31, 2013 in people
There’s something inherently uplifting about running. Putting one foot in front of the other, moving forward in long strides toward an absolute goal. A group of Fort Smith students is finding this out, through a kids running club called Mercy in Motion...
Posted on March 31, 2013 in people
How does your life change? Sometimes it’s as easy as finding a new friend. That’s what happened to Lisa Miller and Amy Scoggins. They met at Central Christian Church in Fort Smith, drawn to each other by a shared interest in art. Both were moms. Both were shimmering with talent...
Posted on March 31, 2013 in people
Carter Sampson, also known as the Queen of Oklahoma, wears red cowboy boots, black vintage glasses, and is rarely seen without her acoustic guitar. Around her neck is a golden guitar pick that reads, “Okla.” The “O” is a heart...
Posted on March 31, 2013 in people
Stacey Little lives and cooks in Prattville, Alabama, just north of Montgomery, where his family moved when he was only five. He was raised by a mother who cooked three meals a day, every day. His most vivid memories are of sitting in the kitchen...
Posted on February 28, 2013 in people, arts
Every year, the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences hosts the Emmy®
Awards in Los Angeles, an event to honor excellence in television
programming. Last year, Natalie Driscoll, twenty-eight, who grew up in
Fort Smith, was there as a nominee.
Posted on February 28, 2013 in people
Born with an extravagant imagination, at nine, I believed telephone
wires talked to me because they made unconventional sounds, which I
interpreted as weather predictions...
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Tuesday, June 19, 2012 7:30 PM
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One time event
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Normal Priority
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Catch Daughtry in concert at the AMP at Washington County Fairgrounds. This tour will give fans a chance to experience a number of new tracks from Break The Spell, like the chart-climbing hits Crawling Back To You and Renegade. Singer Chris Daughtry says: “We recorded a hard-hitting rock album that is primed to blow the doors off these great theaters. Fans who come out are going to get an incredible show every night.” Daughtry has scored four No. 1 hits, garnered four Grammy® nominations, sold more than seven million albums and played sold-out concerts around the world in less than four years. Daughtry’s self-titled debut was the fastest-selling rock debut in Soundscan history and its follow-up Leave This Town marked the quintet’s second consecutive No. 1 album. Daughtry’s latest album Break The Spell, which was certified gold in four weeks, builds on the band’s reputation for melodic hooks and anthemic choruses while providing a powerful showcase for Chris Daughtry’s emotionally resonant voice. For more information and tickets log onto waltonartscenter.org or call (479) 443.5600.
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