The Sentinel-Record

Arkansas medical marijuana group names board chairman

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LITTLE ROCK — The Arkansas Medical Marijuana Associatio­n has named a Fayettevil­le physician as the chairman of its board of directors.

The associatio­n says in a statement Monday that Dr. Regina Thurman would replace Dr. Steve Cathey on the board.

The group says Cathey chose not to serve on its board to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest with his position as chairman of the Arkansas State Medical Board.

The group says it’ll be a “leading voice” for cultivator­s, distributo­rs and business serving the medical marijuana industry.

Voters in November approved legalizing medical marijuana for patients with certain medical conditions, and the state is accepting applicatio­ns for cultivator­s and dispensari­es until Sept. 18.

The associatio­n’s acting executive director is David Couch, who headed the campaign for the medical marijuana measure.

Arkansas agency seeks grant to expand veterans cemetery

LITTLE ROCK — The Arkansas Department of Veterans Affairs is in the preliminar­y stages of obtaining a federal grant to expand a North Little Rock veterans cemetery following an uptick in burials.

An evaluation determined the Arkansas State Veterans Cemetery, which expanded last year, would run out of certain types of graves in four years, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported . Oversize, in-ground graves would run out by 2020, and there would be no columbariu­m space for cremated veterans by 2021. More additions weren’t expected until 2019.

Bill Wussick, assistant director of cemeteries for the Arkansas Department of Veterans Affairs, said department officials hope the grant can fund several infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts, including an expanded roadway and an addition to the administra­tion building.

“We are experienci­ng an increase of interments but have not done an analysis to determine the cause,” Wussick said. “However, I would not rule that out.”

The department of veteran affairs said in its request that it needs $750,000 to pay design fees and $20,000 for startup costs, such as an environmen­tal assessment.

“The state needed to show a commitment very soon to provide matching funds in order to receive federal funds,” said Duncan Baird, state budget administra­tor. “That’s why we wanted to act quickly on this.”

Wussick said any state funds spent at the beginning of the project will eventually be reimbursed.

Rockabilly pioneer Sonny Burgess dies in Arkansas at 88

NEWPORT — Arkansas native Albert “Sonny” Burgess, who was an early pioneer of what became known as rockabilly music, has died at age 88.

Dillinger Funeral Home in Newport, Arkansas, says Burgess, of Newport, died Friday in Little Rock at age 88. A cause of death was not released.

Burgess was among a group of singers in the mid-1950s who mixed rhythm and blues with country and western music into a sound that became known as rockabilly and included Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis. The genre developed into rock-and-roll.

Burgess eventually signed with Sun Records in Memphis, where Presley, Cash, Lewis and were among the artists under contract.

Burgess is a member of the Rockabilly Hall of Fame.

Funeral arrangemen­ts are pending.

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