Interventional Cardiologist and Structural Heart Specialist Muhammad Ali Zulqarnain, M.D., Joins UAMS

By Linda Satter

LITTLE ROCK — Muhammad Ali Zulqarnain, M.D., an interventional cardiologist and structural heart specialist, has joined the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) as an assistant professor in the Division of Cardiology.

 He is board-certified in cardiovascular disease, nuclear cardiology, hypertension, adult echocardiography, critical care echocardiography, critical care medicine and internal medicine.

“We were delighted to recruit Dr. Muhammad Ali Zulqarnain to the cardiology group at UAMS,” said J. Paul Mounsey, M.D., professor and chair of the cardiology division in the UAMS College of Medicine Department of Internal Medicine. “He brings a wealth of experience in interventional cardiology, including transcatheter heart valve surgeries as well as treatment of coronary artery disease. Given his experience in intensive care, we will also look to him to make an impact in our cardiac intensive care.”

Interventional Cardiologist and Structural Heart Specialist Muhammad Ali Zulqarnain, M.D., Joins UAMS

Arkansas authorities see ‘high risk’ of violence against religious nonprofits from Mideast war

KUAR | By Tess Vrbin / Arkansas Advocate

From the Arkansas Advocate:

Arkansas lawmakers will direct $500,000 in state funds to bolster security for religious nonprofits considered at risk of violence in light of ongoing conflict in the Middle East once state law enforcement officials specify how the money will be used.

Col. Mike Hagar, DPS secretary and head of the Arkansas State Police, asked on Nov. 2 for the money to distribute as a grant “to support physical security enhancements and other security activities for nonprofit organizations that are at high risk of a terrorist attack based on the organization’s ideology or mission.”

He cited increasing safety concerns following the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas that has incited war between Israel and Palestinian militants.

Arkansas authorities see ‘high risk’ of violence against religious nonprofits from Mideast war

Arkansas Legislature/Screenshot

Arkansas Division of Emergency Management Director A.J. Gary (left) and Secretary of Public Safety Col. Mike Hagar appear before the Arkansas Legislative Council to discuss a potential grant for religious nonprofits’ security measures on Friday, November 17, 2023.

Echols hearing before the Arkansas Supreme Court likely in early 2024

by George Jared (gjared@talkbusiness.net)

Damien Echols plight to force the state of Arkansas to test ligatures used to bound three boys murdered in West Memphis on May 5, 1993, likely won’t be decided by the Arkansas Supreme Court until next year.

The Court is still waiting on an amicus brief from the Innocence Project that is expected to be filed before the end of the month. Once that brief has been filed the appeal will be “get in line” behind previously filed cases to be officially submitted to the high court, Arkansas Supreme Court Clerk Kyle Burton told Talk Business & Politics. It’s difficult to predict when it will be heard, Burton said.

Since it’s a criminal case, it could take precedent over some of the civil cases that have already been filed. Once submitted, justices will render a decision in two to four weeks. That means the timeframe for a decision could span from January to April of next year.

Echols hearing before the Arkansas Supreme Court likely in early 2024

Damien Echols, Jason Baldwin and Jessie Misskelley Jr., were convicted of the murders of three 8-year-old boys in West Memphis in 1993.

Williams Baptist University opens fourth meat processing facility in Arkansas

by George Jared (gjared@talkbusiness.net)

Walnut Ridge-based Williams Baptist University has opened the fourth meat processing facility licensed by the Arkansas Meat Inspection Program, according to the Arkansas Department of Agriculture. The facility joins Arkansas State University, JACO Meats, and Ferguson’s Packing Company as state-inspected meat processing facilities.

“The expansion of state-inspection facilities across the state is great news for Arkansas consumers and the state’s agriculture industry,” said Arkansas Secretary of Agriculture Wes Ward. “We are hopeful that this program will continue to increase the availability of locally sourced meat and meat products for Arkansans.”

The Arkansas Meat Inspection Program was authorized by Act 418 during the 2021 Regular Session of the Arkansas General Assembly and was finalized through a cooperative agreement with the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS). The program allows the Department to inspect meat products for shipment within Arkansas.

Williams Baptist University opens fourth meat processing facility in Arkansas

Arkansas governor appoints two conservatives to state library board amid lawsuit, content debate

KUAR | By Tess Vrbin / Arkansas Advocate

Former Arkansas state senator Jason Rapert, a Conway Republican who founded the National Association of Christian Lawmakers, is one of the newest members of the Arkansas State Library Board at a time when children’s access to library materials is a subject of statewide debate.

Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders announced a range of appointments to state boards Monday. Rapert replaces Joan O’Neal of Greenbrier, whose term on the library board expired last year. Sanders also appointed Shari Bales of Hot Springs to the board, replacing Donna McDonald of Charleston, whose term expired in October.

Rapert’s term will last until Oct. 18, 2029, and Bales’ term will last until a year later.

Arkansas governor appoints two conservatives to state library board amid lawsuit, content debate

Arkansas Advocate/Screenshot From Court Documents

The “social section” in Crawford County Library’s Van Buren branch

An appeals court has struck down a key path for enforcing the Voting Rights Act

By Hansi Lo Wang

Updated November 20, 2023 at 4:15 PM ET

A federal appeals court has struck down a key path for enforcing the Voting Rights Act.

The new ruling in an Arkansas redistricting lawsuit may set up the next U.S. Supreme Court fight that could further limit the reach of the Voting Rights Act's protections for people of color.

The legal dispute is focused on who is allowed to sue to try to enforce key provisions under Section 2 of the landmark civil rights law, which was first passed in 1965.

An appeals court has struck down a key path for enforcing the Voting Rights Act

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Demonstrators hold up large cut-out letters spelling "VOTING RIGHTS" at a 2021 rally outside the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C.

New recommendations for soybean producers have potential to boost profits

By Nick Kordsmeier
U of A System Division of Agriculture

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Soybean producers surveying their fields may see green leaves and no problems. But an invisible enemy may be concealed in the plants — “hidden hunger.”

POTASH SHORTAGE — Professor of soil testing Trent Roberts, left, examines soybean leaves in a field with doctoral student Carrie Ortel in this file photo from 2021. Roberts and Ortel worked with a team of Arkansas researchers to define new recommendations for in-season soybean tissue sampling, published last month. (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo)

Hidden hunger describes plants that look healthy but are experiencing a nutrient deficiency that could harm yield, said Trent Roberts, professor and the Endowed Chair in Soil Fertility Research for the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station. A deficiency in potassium, also called potash, can eat into potential profits for soybean producers.

“You reduce photosynthetic rate and reduce water use efficiency,” Roberts said. “The overall productivity of the plant really drops.

“If you have an 80-bushel soybean crop and you’re losing 10 percent yield, that’s eight bushels of soybean, and you start talking about $14 per bushel, now all of a sudden we’re talking $100 per acre that you’re not able to capture because of this deficiency you don’t know about,” Roberts said.

Last month, Roberts and other scientists with the experiment station, the research arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, published research in the Agrosystems, Geosciences & Environment journal that gives producers new recommendations in the fight against hidden hunger.

The goal? Maximize yield and boost profits for soybean producers.

“Anything we can do to maintain sufficient potassium availability just means higher yield potential,” Roberts said. “That’s just more profit for the producer.”

The study was conducted by Roberts and Carrie Ortel, a crop, soil and environmental sciences doctoral student in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas. Other collaborators included doctoral student Kyle Hoegenauer, assistant professor of precision agriculture Aurelie Poncet, professor and soybean extension specialist Jeremy Ross, and Nathan Slaton, associate vice president for agriculture and assistant director of the experiment station.

Roberts said one surprising finding wasn’t an objective of the study, which was conducted on five producer-managed commercial production fields around Arkansas.

“One of the biggest things that we found was 90 percent of these fields were deficient in potash, but they had no visual deficiency symptoms.”

In other words, they were suffering from hidden hunger.

Roberts sees a great opportunity in addressing this nutrient deficiency.

“If we’re able to effectively manage that, then that’s as much as 5 to 15 bushels of soybean per acre across the board that we can increase yields,” he said.

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service, Arkansas harvested 3.15 million acres of soybean in 2022, with an average yield of 52 bushels per acre.

Tissue sampling is key

What makes hidden hunger so difficult to address is the lack of visual cues in the soybean plant, Roberts said. “A lot of producers assume they’re doing fine because they don’t see visual deficiency symptoms, and they could be losing 5 to 10 percent yield and never know it.”

Tissue testing has emerged in recent years as a way to evaluate fields for hidden hunger. Soybean plant material is analyzed in a lab to identify the concentration of potassium in the plant. If plants test below a certain threshold — called the critical concentration — the plants are suffering from nutrient deficiency and will lose yield potential, Roberts said.

“The purpose of this paper was really to define a sampling protocol for tissue tests in soybean,” he said. “So, what we really set out to do was say, ‘OK, how much variability in tissue nutrient concentration exists in our soybean fields?’”

With that information, the team was able to develop a protocol for producers to collect soybean tissue samples, including when, where and how many samples to collect per field.

New sampling recommendations

The researchers conducted grid sampling in one-acre grids at five producer-managed soybean fields in Arkansas in 2020 and 2021. The samples were analyzed in a lab to determine the average concentration of potassium in each sample at a given time and field location. The measured concentrations were compared against the critical potassium concentrations, Roberts said.

Through spatial analysis of the data, Roberts said the team found no benefit to high-resolution grid sampling. The data showed no indication that concentrations of potassium in soybean tissue varied within a given field management area — a segment of land with similar conditions defined to help fine-tune management decisions.

Roberts said the biggest recommendation coming from the research is that composite sampling is sufficient to capture the variability of soybean tissue samples within management areas.

“The data basically told us there’s no benefit from grid sampling,” he said. Instead, a composite sample consisting of at least 18 of the uppermost fully expanded trifoliolate leaves will be representative of the management area. Trifoliolate leaves are compound leaves composed of three leaflets.

Eliminate the guess work

The next step for the researchers is to develop a set of calibrated potassium fertilizer rates to give producers site-specific recommendations for in-season applications.

“A producer can go out and sample their field and identify whether or not their potassium is adequate. And then based on that tissue concentration, if it’s deficient, we can basically take the tissue concentration and provide a calibrated fertilizer rate,” Roberts said. “The real exciting part is this idea that now we know how to sample, now we know how to interpret it, we can take that tissue concentration and give you a site specific in-season potassium fertilizer rate.”

The researchers hope to develop a decision support tool for producers to use by 2025.

Roberts emphasized that taking the guesswork out of production systems is the goal.

“Whether it’s soybean or any of our other crops, we’ve got a lot of tools out there,” he said. “Whether it’s soil sampling, tissue sampling, there are ways that you can help manage your production system to make sure that yield isn’t being limited and that you’re not spending money you don’t have to.”

This research was supported in part by the Soybean Checkoff Program, administered by the Arkansas Soybean Promotion Board.

To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu/. Follow us on X at @ArkAgResearch. To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on X and Instagram at @AR_Extension. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on X at @AgInArk.

UAMS Myeloma Center Hits Impressive Milestone, Sees 1000th Article Published

By Nathan Tidwell

Researchers and physicians with the Myeloma Center at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) recently published their 1,000th article, an impressive milestone that demonstrates the center’s high level of scholarship.

“This is a remarkable achievement by our amazing Myeloma Center physicians and researchers,” said Frits van Rhee, M.D., Ph.D., clinical director of the Myeloma Center, part of the Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute.

Sandy Mattox, MNSc, RN, who tracks publications for the Myeloma Center, notes that No. 1,000 was a paper published in the July 11, 2023, issue of Blood Advances titled “Risk of infections associated with the use of bispecific antibodies in multiple myeloma: a pooled analysis.” It was co-authored by van Rhee and UAMS physicians and researchers Samer Al Hadidi, M.D.; Carolina Schinke, M.D.; John Shaughnessy Jr., Ph.D.; Sharmila Thanendrarajan, M.D.; Mauricio Zangari M.D.; and Fenghuang (Frank) Zahn, M.D., Ph.D.

UAMS Myeloma Center Hits Impressive Milestone, Sees 1000th Article Published

Singer John Carter Cash to headline entertainment for Arkansas Governor’s Conference on Tourism

by George Jared (gjared@talkbusiness.net)

The 50th Arkansas Governor’s Conference on Tourism is slated to be held in Jonesboro this February and the son of Hall of Fame musician Johnny Cash is slated to give a concert.

John Carter Cash, son of the late Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash, and his wife, Ana Cristina, will participate in a special performance on Feb. 25.

“This conference will bring together industry professionals throughout the state and will be an opportunity for Jonesboro to celebrate all the successes in tourism that are happening in Northeast Arkansas,” said Jerry Morgan, chairman of the Jonesboro Advertising and Promotion Commission.

Singer John Carter Cash to headline entertainment for Arkansas Governor’s Conference on Tourism

John Carter Cash.

Weekly Update from State Representative DeAnn Vaught

While the convenience of department stores and online shopping is undeniable, we’d like to take this time to encourage you to incorporate shopping locally this holiday season.

Saturday, November 25, 2023, is Small Business Saturday – a day to celebrate and support small businesses and all they do for their communities.

Small businesses are the lifeblood of our communities, and by choosing to support them, we can make a significant positive impact on our state's economy, as well as create a more vibrant and diverse shopping experience.

A small business in Arkansas is defined as those with less than 500 employees. There are more than 264,000 small businesses in Arkansas. Small businesses make up the majority of businesses in the state. More than 47% of all Arkansas employees work for a small business.

When you shop at small businesses, your dollars stay within the local economy. These businesses often reinvest in the community, helping to create jobs and contribute to the overall economic well-being of your area. In fact, studies show that 68 cents of every dollar spent at a small business stays in the community. In addition, every dollar spent at a small business creates an additional 48 cents in local business activity as a result of employees and local businesses purchasing local goods and services.

Small businesses are often family-owned or operated by your neighbors, friends, and fellow community members. By shopping at these local establishments, you not only support their livelihoods but also create a stronger sense of unity and connection within your town or city. They also offer a treasure trove of one-of-a-kind products that you won't find in larger stores.

Your small purchase this holiday season can make a big difference.

Southern root-knot nematode in soybean: Risks and control options

By Sarah Cato
U of A System Division of Agriculture

LONOKE, Ark. – Although most crop pests attack from above ground, some of the most damaging threats – nematodes – lurk beneath the soil.

ATTACKING FROM BELOW — Southern root-knot nematodes damage plants by invading the root system and developing specialized feeding sites that rob plants of nutrients and water. As a result of this infection, they cause knot-like swellings, or galls, to form on infected plants. ( U of A System Division of Agriculture photo by Travis Faske)

Nematodes are microscopic, unsegmented roundworms. Some nematodes infect plants and are called plant-parasitic or -pathogenic. The southern root-knot nematode, scientific name Meloidogyne incognita, is the most damaging – and most common – nematode species in Arkansas soybeans.

Southern root-knot nematodes damage plants by invading the root system and developing specialized feeding sites that rob plants of nutrients and water. As a result of this infection, they cause knot-like swellings, or galls, to form on infected plants. Galls become a part of the root, whereas nodules are attached to the root system.

“The southern root-knot nematode is the most yield-limiting, plant-pathogenic nematode that affects soybean production in the Mid-South,” said Travis Faske, extension plant pathologist for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. “It’s found in nearly all soybean producing counties in Arkansas and can cause significant grain yield losses when a susceptible variety is planted in a field with a high population density of root-knot nematodes.”

But how can growers control them? It starts with knowing your fields, Faske said.

“The foundation of any nematode control program is the identification of the types of nematodes present and an estimation of their relative population density,” he said. “The most effective way to do this is through soil samples assayed by a nematology laboratory.”

The Division of Agriculture runs the Arkansas Nematode Diagnostic Laboratory near Hope, which offers soil nematode assay for a small fee to any Arkansas producer. With the information from soil samples, producers can make site-specific management decisions to prevent widespread damage. This Arkansas Soybean Promotion Board is working in partnership with the Division of Agriculture to provide these assays to soybean producers for free. Those interested can contact their local county agent.

Crop rotation and resistant varieties

“Crop rotation can be a very useful nematode management strategy,” Faske said. “But it’s important we match the cropping sequence to the nematode species we’re dealing with.”

For southern root-knot nematode specifically, Faske said planting peanuts or sesames can effectively lower the nematode density but corn, grain sorghum, cotton and vegetable crops will likely make the situation worse. Rice is a host, but growing rice in a flooded field for two months will significantly reduce nematode densities in the soil.

In addition to crop rotation, resistant soybean varieties are another tool for producers to manage root-knot nematode populations.

“Resistant varieties offer an advantage to producers struggling with nematode populations by reducing galling and increasing grain yield,” Faske said.

Screening varieties

Each year, Faske and his team run trials assessing the commercially available soybean varieties that are marketed as suitable for production in fields where southern root-knot nematodes are present.

“This year we tested 44 varieties that are marketed to growers for root-knot nematode-infested fields,” Faske said. “We tested these varieties in a field with a high population density of southern root-knot nematode, a density that would be considered severe for soybean production in Arkansas. This puts the most stress on the soybean to perform under the most stressful conditions.”

The trials test the susceptibility of each variety to southern root-knot nematode as well as yield performance.

“This really is one of the most important trials we do each year in our program,” Faske said. “There are no other programs that I’m aware of that provide susceptibility and yield data of commercially available soybean varieties for Mid-South farmers.”  

Ensuring that varieties marketed as suitable for root-knot nematode fields actually are resistant, and testing their yield performance provides growers with valuable, science-based information when making planting decisions, Faske said.

“Some of these varieties are marketed as being suitable for production in a southern root-knot nematode field. They are not,” he said. “This research provides an unbiased assessment of soybean varieties marketed as ‘moderately resistant’ or ‘other’ in a comparison trial. If your favorite brand is not in this test it is because there is no resistance to southern root-knot nematode in their portfolio or they did not send us seed to test.”

The results of this trial are available on the Division of Agriculture plant disease website and the Arkansas Row Crops blog. Funding for the trials is provided by the Arkansas Soybean Promotion Board.

To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on X and Instagram at @AR_Extension. To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu. Follow on X at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on X at @AgInArk.

State celebrates Turkey Week ahead of holiday; Governor pardons two turkeys

By Tracy Courage
U of A System Division of Agriculture

LITTLE ROCK – At Thanksgiving, it’s all about the turkey — but at least two lucky birds have been spared from being the centerpiece of a Thanksgiving feast.

PARDONED — Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders pardons two turkeys Friday ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday. UADA photo

Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders pardoned “Hank” and “Davie” during a Turkey Week Celebration on Friday at the Governor’s Mansion in Little Rock. The event, coordinated by the Arkansas Department of Agriculture, recognizes the value that turkey producers bring to the state’s agricultural industry.

“We want to continue to support, grow and do all we can to increase the agriculture industry here in Arkansas,” Sanders told a group of more than 100 industry officials, legislators, members of Arkansas 4-H and Future Farmers of America and other guests.

Turkeys in Arkansas

“Agriculture is our state’s largest industry, and turkey production plays a role in that,” Arkansas Department of Agriculture Secretary Wes Ward said.

Poultry production is the leading agricultural industry in Arkansas. Currently, Arkansas ranks second in the nation for turkey production, according to the Poultry Federation. Last year, 26 million turkeys were processed in Arkansas, equating to 556 million pounds of poultry, valued at $594 million, Poultry Federation President Marvin Childers said.

“We’re fortunate to have two of the largest turkey producers operating plants here in Arkansas,” Childers said, referring to Cargill and Butterball. “Every whole turkey sold by Butterball at Thanksgiving and Christmas is processed here in Arkansas.”

Cargill has also donated a quarter of a million pounds of poultry to Arkansas’ food banks, Sanders said.

This year’s lucky turkeys were raised by Jackson Barber, 15, of Cabot, who has provided the turkeys for the governor’s pardon for three years now. Barber, son of Tom and Scharidi Barber, is part of FFA and Arkansas 4-H.

While it was Barber’s third turkey pardon in Arkansas, it was Sanders’ first as governor, and she called the pardons a “fun and nonpartisan way to encourage Americans to give thanks.”

Sanders said she was pardoning Davie and Hanks “so they can enjoy a peaceful Thanksgiving.”

“We don’t want to see them anywhere other than right here,” she said.

To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on X and Instagram at @AR_Extension. To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: aaes.uada.edu. Follow us on X at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit uada.edu. Follow us on X at @AgInArk.

Higher jobless numbers push Arkansas’ October jobless rate up to 3.1%

by Talk Business & Politics staff (staff2@talkbusiness.net)

A continued rise in the number of Arkansans without jobs pushed the state’s jobless rate from 2.9% in September to 3.1% in October. It’s the first time the jobless rate has been at or above 3% since March.

The number of employed in Arkansas during October was an estimated 1,350,628, up 27,041 jobs, or 2.04%, compared with October 2022, and below the 1,352,441 in September, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics report posted Friday (Nov. 17). The October numbers are preliminary and subject to revision.

Arkansas’ labor force, the number of people eligible to work, in October was 1,393,177, up 1.6% from the 1,371,549 in October 2022 and above the 1,392,374 in September.

Higher jobless numbers push Arkansas’ October jobless rate up to 3.1%

Researchers say better rice quality will feed more people

by George Jared (gjared@talkbusiness.net)

About 2.3 billion, or nearly 30%, of the world’s population doesn’t get enough to eat, according to the World Health Organization. Rice is by far the most consumed food in the world with it being a staple food for nearly half the human population.

With the global population expected to exceed 9 billion by the year 2050, farmers and food scientists will have to find ways to keep hunger numbers from growing. One way could be to more efficiently mill rice or grow rice that is better suited to be milled.

A 1% increase in unbroken rice kernels could mean millions more servings of this critical staple grain, increased food security around the globe and improved producer profitability, a study from two University of Arkansas researchers suggests. Professor Lanier Nalley and Associate Professor Alvaro Durand-Morat, both in the agricultural economics and agribusiness department, conduct research for the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station.

Researchers say better rice quality will feed more people

The Supply Side: Veteran-owned brand making waves at Walmart

by Paul Gatling (pgatling@nwabj.com)

Grind toothpaste brand hit select Walmart stores earlier this year. Starting with 365 stores in February and expanding to 453 stores by summer, a co-founder of the Salt Lake City-based company is eager to continue growing the business.

Roger Gindlesperger, co-founder and co-owner of Grind, said it took him three tries to get into Walmart’s Open Call. He applied in 2020 and 2021, but it was 2022 before he got an invitation.

“We married hydroxyapatite and theobromine together to provide the same benefits as fluoride without the risks. We have a patent pending on that process. Grind has natural whitening agents, hardening agents and six minerals to fight bacteria, plaque buildup and inflammation,” he said.

The Supply Side: Veteran-owned brand making waves at Walmart

UA athletics breaks even in fiscal 2023

by Paul Gatling (pgatling@nwabj.com)

One year after posting a $6.27 million profit, the University of Arkansas athletics department broke even for the fiscal year 2023 (July 1, 2022–June 30, 2023).

The figures are in the university’s annual Equity in Athletics Disclosure Act (EADA) survey. Arkansas, and every other intercollegiate athletics department in the country, self-reports financial information detailing operating revenues and expenses to the U.S. Department of Education annually to comply with the EADA Act of 1994. The EADA requires disclosing information about varsity teams and the financial resources and personnel the school dedicates to those teams.

To read the university’s EADA report, click here for a PDF.

According to the survey, the athletics department’s revenue totaled $171.1 million, up 10.7% from $154.55 million in the previous fiscal year. Expenses were also $171.1 million, up 15.3% from $148.28 million last fiscal year.

UA athletics breaks even in fiscal 2023

Be aware of carbon monoxide dangers both in the home and on the hunt

By Ryan McGeeney
U of A System Division of Agriculture 

LITTLE ROCK — Hunting safety encompasses many things, including firearms safety, proper handling of game and a working knowledge of emergency first aid. But as temperatures drop and fall hunting season enters full swing, Arkansans should also be aware of a danger that can sometimes accompany modern efforts to stay warm: carbon monoxide poisoning.

TAKE PRECAUTIONS — Carbon monoxide poisoning kills more than 400 Americans each year. (Division of Agriculture image.)

Jesse Bocksnick, extension 4-H outdoor skills coordinator for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, said carbon monoxide, often a byproduct of certain kinds of heating units, can kill with little warning.

“If you get carbon monoxide poisoning, you may not even realize it,” Bocksnick said. “It can happen in just a few minutes.”

Inhaling carbon monoxide can impair your body’s ability to absorb oxygen, effectively suffocating you. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control estimates that at least 420 people in the United States die from carbon monoxide poisoning each year, and more than 100,000 Americans visit emergency rooms with carbon monoxide poisoning.

Earlier this month, a father, 46, and son, 26, were both discovered dead in a cabin in Sharp County of apparent carbon monoxide poisoning. Investigators said the cabin reeked of propane fumes, and a propane stove was found in the “on” position, its tank empty.

Bocksnick said that many hunters use small propane heaters in hunting blinds when temperatures are cold. These heaters run off of small, 1-pound propane tanks. In blinds, which are notoriously drafty, carbon monoxide build-up is typically not a problem, but they may present other concerns, such as fire risk due to tipping.

“A lot of newer heaters have anti-tipping sensors, which will shut the heater off if it tips over, or is moved too quickly,” he said. “Be sure and test that out at home. If your heater uses any kind of filter, inspect that as well. Make sure all your safety features are functioning properly before you even get out to the woods.”

If using a propane heater in a more enclosed space, such as a cabin or camper, Bocksnick recommended bringing a carbon monoxide detector with fresh batteries.

Some heaters, such as those using “forced air,” are completely inappropriate for anything other than very well-ventilated areas.

“They don’t work that well in a deer blind, and are very dangerous, as far as both heat and carbon monoxide,” Bocksnick said.

Silent Killer: What You Should Know about Carbon Monoxide” is a free publication available from the Cooperative Extension Service, the education and outreach arm of the Division of Agriculture. It details the signs of carbon monoxide poisoning:

  • Low level poisoning:

  • Tiredness in healthy people

  • Chest pain in people with heart disease

  • Medium level poisoning:

  • Flulike symptoms including nausea, dizziness, headache and confusion

  • Impaired vision and coordination

  • Breathing difficulty and increased blood pressure

  • Skin with a reddish cast

  • High level poisoning:

  • Convulsions or seizures

  • Loss of consciousness

  • Death

To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on X and Instagram at @AR_Extension. To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu/. Follow on X at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on X at @AgInArk.

 

Gov. Sanders blasts Board of Corrections for partially rejecting request for more beds

by George Jared (gjared@talkbusiness.net)

Gov. Sarah Sanders wants to create 500 new beds in the Arkansas Department of Correction (ADC) system and she is calling on the Board of Corrections to do so. A department spokesperson said the agency doesn’t have the staff to accommodate the bed request.

She was joined by Attorney General Tim Griffin, Secretary of the Department of Public Safety and Director of Arkansas State Police Mike Hagar, Secretary of Corrections Joe Profiri among others on Friday (Nov. 17) to make the request public.

“As governor, my top priority is the safety and security of our citizens. I will not sit by while we enact the same broken policies that got us here in the first place because nobody ever called them out. Unfortunately, some in those positions of leadership are still playing games that put Arkansans in harm’s way. Last week, the Arkansas State Board of Corrections refused to approve Secretary Profiri’s thoughtful, informed and desperately – needed request to open up hundreds of additional prison beds. This is simply unacceptable. I’m calling on the Board to convene an emergency meeting without delay to approve the 500 additional beds that they denied last week,” said Sanders.

Gov. Sanders blasts Board of Corrections for partially rejecting request for more beds

U.S Rep. French Hill provides update on his trip to Ukraine

KUAR | By Ronak Patel

Last month, U.S Rep. French Hill of Arkansas’ Second Congressional District visited Ukraine. In an interview with Arkansas PBS, Hill said he wanted to get a better understanding of what was happening with the war and find out how military aid was being used.

"As I evaluate President Biden’s request for additional aid for Ukraine, this visit in country will inform me as to the most effective use of further funding for Ukraine as they continue their defense of their nation against Russian aggression,” Hill said in a press release.

There are members of Hill’s party, the Republicans, who are reluctant to provide more aid. Hill said those members are reluctant to support more aid because they believe Europe needs to provide more aid.

U.S Rep. French Hill provides update on his trip to Ukraine

Office Of Congressman French Hill

U.S Rep. French Hill, R-Little Rock, spoke about his recent trip to Ukraine. He said he made the trip with fellow lawmakers to get a better understanding of what was happening in Ukraine.

Basic Thanksgiving meal costs remain high, but down from 2022

by Kim Souza (ksouza@talkbusiness.net)

Food inflation has been persistent for the past two years but hefty retailer promotions from Aldi, Walmart and other discounters may help consumers stretch their Thanksgiving meal budgets further this year.

Data from Statista shows 81% of Americans plan to have a home-cooked dinner on Thanksgiving Day (Nov. 23). The annual survey from the American Farm Bureau (AFB) includes a basic menu shows the average cost at $6.20 per person. That does not include ham, green beans, pecan or apple pie and mashed potatoes. When adding those items to the menu, the cost rises to $8.50 per person, up 4.2% from a year ago.

The basic AFB menu includes a turkey, stuffing, sweet potatoes, frozen green peas, pumpkin pie, cranberries, milk, spices, whipping cream, carrots and celery and dinner rolls. AFB estimates serving those items to 10 people will cost $61.17, lower than the $64.05 spent last year but higher than the $53.31 in 2021.

Basic Thanksgiving meal costs remain high, but down from 2022