Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Arkansas Advocate: Little Rock 1830 1837 [5] Arkansas Banner: Little Rock 1843 1845 Owned by the Democratic Party of Arkansas in 1945 [5] Arkansas County Gazette: DeWitt: 1884 1886 [6] Arkansas Democrat: DeWitt 1879 1882 [7] Arkansas Farmer: Little Rock 1844 1845 [5] Arkansas Forum: Siloam Springs 1921 c. 1921 [8] Arkansas Gazette: Arkansas ...
Williams retired from the University of Denver in 1985 and died of respiratory failure in 1994 at home in Fayetteville, Arkansas. He was survived by his wife and descendants. [ 1 ] A fifth novel, The Sleep of Reason , was unfinished at the time of his death, but two lengthy excerpts were published in Ploughshares and the Denver Quarterly in ...
The Baxter Bulletin was sold to Multimedia in 1976. The company was Gannett acquired Multimedia in 1995. [2] In August 2021, Gannett sold the newspaper to Phillips Media Group.
Donald Douglas Harington (December 22, 1935 – November 7, 2009) was an American author and visual artist. All but the first of his novels either take place in or have an important connection to "Stay More", a fictional Ozark Mountains town based somewhat on Drakes Creek, Arkansas, where Harington spent summers as a child.
Arkansas Literary Forum, an online publication of Henderson State University, which has published such notable Arkansas Writers as Jack Butler and Donald Harington. Arkansas Review: A Journal of Delta Studies , a tri-annual journal published by Arkansas State University ; it is the successor to the Kansas Quarterly .
Gilbert was born May 24, 1929, in Forrest City, Arkansas, the son of Osceola McCoy and Jewell Irene Gilbert Morris. He was a pastor for 10 years before becoming Professor of English at Ouachita Baptist University in Arkansas. He has a Ph.D at the University of Arkansas.
A July 2021 article in the Arkansas Times raised questions about the veracity of some of the claims that Burks has made in interviews and in her memoir. [20] NBC News published a follow-up investigation in October 2021, based on interviews with individuals connected to Burks and Hot Springs; Burks herself declined to be interviewed for the article.
The history of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette goes back to the earliest days of territorial Arkansas. William E. Woodruff arrived at the territorial capital at Arkansas Post in late 1819 on a dugout canoe with a second-hand wooden press. He cranked out the first edition of the Arkansas Gazette on November 20, 1819, 17 years before Arkansas ...