Last week the Oxford American received some very good news: They were nominated for a 2016 National Magazine Award in General Excellence!
Category Archives: Literature
Little Rock Look Back: Mayor Webb Hubbell
On January 18, 1948, future Little Rock Mayor Webster “Webb” Hubbell was born. After playing football in high school, he played for the University of Arkansas Razorbacks. He also received his law degree from the U of A.
At the age of 30, already a successful attorney, Hubbell was appointed to the Little Rock City Board of Directors to fill a vacancy in September 1978. In 1980, he was elected to a four year term on the City Board.
In June 1979, there was a vacancy in the office of Mayor of Little Rock. Hubbell was selected by his fellow City Directors to serve as Mayor until December 1980. In January 1981, he was selected to serve another term as Mayor. In June 1981, he stepped down as Mayor but continued to serve on the City Board of Directors.
In 1984, Hubbell was appointed to serve as Chief Justice of the Arkansas Supreme Court to finish out the term of Richard B. Adkisson. Following his service on the court, he returned to the practice of law at the Rose Law Firm. He later served as the Associate Attorney General in the Justice Department during the Clinton administration.
Hubbell resigned from the Justice Department due to an investigation related to Whitewater. He has been an author and management consultant. His novel, When Men Betray, was published by Beaufort Books in May 2014. His next novel Ginger Snaps was released in May 2015. A Game of Inches, another mystery novel, will be released in 2016.
Senator David Pryor in conversation with Skip Rutherford at today’s Legacies & Lunch
The conversation will take place today, January 6, at 12 noon at the CALS Ron Robinson Theater.
15 Highlights of 2015 – Kennedy Center President Deborah Rutter led panel at Clinton Presidential Center

Kennedy Center President Deborah Rutter addressing the audience. Photo by James Doyle
On October 21, 2015, Kennedy Center president Deborah Rutter and a distinguished panel of Arkansas educators and artistic directors discussed national trends in teaching the arts and humanities, while exploring new ways to give Arkansas schools access to combined national and local resources.
- Joy Pennington ( Moderator ), Executive Director, Arkansas Arts Council
- Zinse Aggine, Teaching Artist and Musician
- Jama Best, Senior Program Officer, Arkansas Humanities Council
- Dr. Jeff Grubbs, Associate Professor, University of Arkansas at Little Rock
- Lana Hallmark, Fine Arts Coordinator, Arkansas Department of Education
- Melanie Landum, Executive Director, Arkansas A+ Schools
- Dr. Lenore Shoults, Executive Director, The Arts & Science Center for Southeast Arkansas
- Dr. Todd Herman ( Moderator ), Executive Director, Arkansas Arts Center
- Sericia Cole, Director, Mosaic Templars Cultural Center
- Robert Hupp, Producing Artistic Director, Arkansas Repertory Theatre
- Philip Mann, Music Director, Arkansas Symphony
- Deborah Rutter, President, The Kennedy Center
- Stephanie S. Streett, Executive Director, Clinton Foundation
15 Highlights of 2015 – Chelsea Clinton was 1,000th Clinton School Speaker
Eleven years to the day of the first Clinton School Speaker Series public program, that initiative celebrated its 1,000th speaker on September 18, 2015.
In “It’s Your World: Get Informed, Get Inspired & Get Going!,” Chelsea Clinton tackles the biggest challenges facing us today. She combines facts, charts, photographs and stories to give readers a deep understanding of the world around them and how anyone can make a difference. With stories about children and teens who have made real changes big and small, this book inspires readers of all ages to do their part to make our world a better place.
One of Clinton’s favorite childhood books was “50 Simple Things Kids Can Do to Save the Earth.” As an elementary school student in Little Rock, she helped start a paper-recycling program at her school; as a teenager in Washington, D.C., she led her school’s service club; and as a student at Stanford University, she volunteered as a reading and writing tutor and at the Children’s Hospital.
Today, she is Vice Chair of the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation where she helps lead the work of the Foundation across its various initiatives, with a particular focus on work related to health, girls and women, creating service opportunities, and empowering the next generation of leaders. Chelsea holds a BA from Stanford University, an MPH from Columbia University, and an MPhil and doctorate degree in international relations from Oxford University.
The lecture featuring Chelsea Clinton was the 1,000th public program for the Clinton School of Public Service. On September 18, 2004, the Clinton School welcomed their first public program speaker, Senator Bob Dole.
This event will be at the Wally Allen Ballroom at the Statehouse Convention Center at 6pm.
15 Highlights of 2015 – 86% of voters approve new CALS projects

For the final fifteen days of 2015, a look back at some of the cultural highlights of 2015.
Up next –
In July 86.10% of those voting approved the Central Arkansas Library System bond refinancing.
The refinancing will allow CALS to:
- Expand the Thompson, Fletcher, and Dee Brown libraries and reconfigure their children’s areas
- Limited remodel in the Main Library and refurbish the Williams Library
- Expand and upgrade the digital/Internet network
- Purchase thousands of books, eBooks, DVDs, & CDs
Because of the restructuring of the debt, it will actually lower taxes by about $2 per year on a $100,000 home and extend the bond payments by approximately five years.
The final numbers were 3,834 FOR, 619 AGAINST. Two ballots were cast which were overvotes (voters filled in both bubbles) and five ballots were cast which were undervotes (they were blank). 4400 votes in a special election in July is a fairly decent turnout. It was 3.51% turnout. When one considers how anemic voter turnout is for presidential elections, this should be viewed as fairly strong.
Looking at the precinct reports, it shows a deep level of support from all areas of the city. It passed overwhelmingly in every precinct. The most votes garnered against it in a precinct were 291 at one of the two Pulaski Heights Presbyterian precincts in Hillcrest. But as that precinct had over 3,000 voters, it was still only 9% of the voters at that ballot box.
The Central Arkansas Library System is in the process of hiring a replacement for retiring director Dr. Bobby Robert
15 Highlights of 2015 – Polk Stanley Wilcox wins AIA/ALA Library Building Award for CALS Children’s Library
For the final fifteen days of 2015, a look back at some of the cultural highlights of 2015.
Up first –
Polk Stanley Wilcox Architects and the Central Arkansas Library System were honored with Library Architecture’s highest and most prestigious achievement: A 2015 AIA/ALA Library Building Award.
Of all libraries submitted, the 2015 AIA/ALA Library Building Awards honor only six separate projects. The Hillary Rodham Clinton Children’s Library and Learning Center joins prestigious projects from as far away as Vancouver, Washington, Dartmouth, Mass., Norfolk, Virginia, San Antonio, Texas, and Des Moines, Iowa. The projects was honored at the National ALA Conference in San Francisco on June 25-30th.
To encourage excellence in the architectural design and planning of libraries, the National American Institute of Architects (AIA) in Washington DC and the American Library Association (ALA) created this award to distinguish accomplishments in library architecture. Biennially, representatives of each organization celebrate the finest examples of library design from around the world designed by American Architects.
The new Children’s Library and Learning Center is based on experiential learning, where children are educated through hands on activities that teach life skills needed to become responsible adults. Referred to as a “community-embedded, supportive learning center,” this library offers not only books, but also a performance space, a teaching kitchen, a greenhouse and vegetable garden, and an arboretum.
The award is given every two years. It is the second time that Polk Stanley Wilcox has received the award for a CALS project. In 2011 the firm won it for the Arkansas Studies Institute building. Not only is it rare for a firm to receive this award, it is even more rare for the same firm to receive it twice for working with the same client. These honors are a testament to the leadership at both Polk Stanley Wilcox and the Central Arkansas Library System.

