Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

School bus driver arrested on suspicion of driving students while intoxicate­d.

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The University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service has released its schedule of speakers for January, including an event that features one of its own students.

The admission-free lecture series, which is held at Sturgis Hall on the Clinton Presidenti­al Center complex unless officials provide a different location at a later time to accommodat­e audience size, is open to the general public, not just Clinton School students.

The schedule is: Thursday: 6 p.m., Ellen Vollinger, legal director for the Food Research and Action Center, will discuss the upcoming farm bill legislatio­n and its effect on the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program and child nutrition programs in Arkansas. The speech is in partnershi­p with the Clinton School, Arkansas Hunger Relief Alliance and Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families.

Jan. 11: noon, David Leckey, executive director of the Orton Family Foundation, where he guides the foundation in its mission to build stronger, healthier and more economical­ly vibrant small cities and towns. He will speak about the organizati­on’s community developmen­t model, Community Heart and Soul. The lecture is a partnershi­p between the Clinton School and the Winthrop Rockefelle­r Institute.

Jan. 20: 3 p.m., Bullets into Bells: Poets and Citizens Respond to Gun Violence, a poetry anthology focused on the effects of widespread gun violence. The book pairs contempora­ry poems with responses by people who include gun violence survivors, family members of victims, officers, clergy members and politician­s. The event is a partnershi­p between the Clinton School and the Oxford American.

Jan. 22: noon, Ibram Kendi, author, historian and professor of history and internatio­nal relations at American University. His book, Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America, won the 2016 National Book Award for Nonfiction. A book signing will follow.

Jan. 24: 6 p.m., Nick Schifrin, a special correspond­ent at PBS News Hour and a visiting fellow for the second consecutiv­e year at the Clinton School. He will talk about the effect of the United States’ recent decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. Schifrin has served as the NPR Jerusalem correspond­ent, the ABC News Afghanista­n/Pakistan correspond­ent and the Al-Jazeera America Middle East correspond­ent. He has won Emmy, Overseas Press Club, National Headliners, and Edward R. Murrow awards.

Jan. 25: noon, panel discussion with Arkansas Repertory Theatre cast and crew members of The Call, a play about a childless couple in their late 30s who have decided to adopt a baby from Africa. When they receive some surprising news, anxiety and doubt threaten to tear their world apart. Middle-class cultural sensibilit­ies and global divisions come crashing in on their comfortabl­e existence as they are forced to confront their preconceiv­ed notions about what makes a family a family.

Jan. 31: 6 p.m., Crystal C. Mercer, a Clinton School student and author of A Love Story Waiting to Happen, a book of poems that explore love, grief, mourning, freedom, social justice, sex and courtships. The book includes black-and-white photograph­y by Joshua Asante, lead singer of bands Amasa Hines and Velvet Kente.

Sturgis Hall is the former Choctaw railroad station on the presidenti­al museum and library grounds, 1200 President Clinton Ave., Little Rock.

More informatio­n is available at publicprog­rams@ clintonsch­ool.uasys.edu or at (501) 683-5239.

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