Add Joyce Elliott, the Democratic nominee for 2nd District Congress, to the list of candidates Bill Clinton will help with a swing through the state next week. Copper Grill lunch Sept. 8.
Remember the item earlier this week about whether the University of Arkansas had or had not made campus punishment for marijuana the same as that for alcohol violations? (Bottom line was that, despite notices that the rules had been equalized, top-level administrators put the kibosh on easing pot penalties.)
Those who backed the rule change aren't happy about it. Their release is on the jump. There will be a protest. That's what college is for, right? (And drinking beer and smoking pot.)
By way of proof that the deal was done, then reversed, students have distributed:
1) The new campus guidelines, now moot.

Over the course of 10 weeks, Oaklawn is looking for qualifiers for the first Spa City Poker Open.
Beginning Monday, at 7 p.m. every Monday and Wednesday until Nov. 10, Oaklawn Racing and Gaming hosts a multi-table tournament. The top two finishers each night clinch a spot in the finals on November 17. The winner of that gets a seat at the World Poker Tour's Southern Poker Championship in Biloxi across from the likes of Phil Ivey and Daniel Negreanu. The seat's valued at $10,000 and Oaklawn's paying for airfare and lodging.
There's a $60 buy-in for all qualifying tourneys.

Blue Man Group, the three-piece performance art troupe, give the first of eight performances at Fayetteville's Walton Arts Center, 7 p.m., $58-$79.
Down the street, electronic instrumentalists Sound Tribe Sector 9 co-headline Fayetteville's Arkansas Music Pavilion with the wild techno-rock duo of Ghostland Observatory, 8 p.m., $23.
Revolution offers a triple-bill of local indie pop with sunshine pop from Knox Hamilton, experimental alternative rockers Falcon Scott and the buzzy, fresh faces of Catskill Kids, 9:30 p.m., $5-$10.
Jeff Coleman and Friends take to The Afterthought to celebrate First Thursday in Hillcrest with a free show, 8 p.m.
The River Market district hosts the weekly parties "Posh" and "In Too Deep" at Ernie Biggs and Deep Ultra Lounge, respectively, 9 p.m.
Jazzy acoustic singer-songwriter Tiffany Christopher performs at the Markham Street Grill and Pub, 8:30 p.m.
If you're good at the Internet, you've probably seen this music video by Ted Leo and the Pharmacists. It's a parody of bands like Green Day (which features locals Jason White and Jeff Matika) who turn albums into musicals.
Hot Springs native Chris Wilson is the hirsute Pharamist. He plays a priest in the parody musical. "He died because he didn't believe in the power of punk," he lip syncs.
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Mooney always made the fastest single engine plane available from a production line.
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