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The David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History
The David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History University of Arkansas 1 East Center Street Fayetteville, AR 72701 (479) 575-6829 Arkansas Memories Project Ray Thornton Interviewed by Scott Lunsford September 20, 2011 Little Rock, Arkansas Copyright 2014 Board of Trustees of the University of Arkansas. All rights reserved. Objective Oral history is a collection of an individual's memories and opinions. As such, it is subject to the innate fallibility of memory and is susceptible to inaccuracy. All researchers using these interviews should be aware of this reality and are encouraged to seek corroborating documentation when using any oral history interview. The Pryor Center's objective is to collect audio and video recordings of interviews along with scanned images of family photographs and documents. These donated materials are carefully preserved, catalogued, and deposited in the Special Collections Department, University of Arkansas Libraries, Fayetteville. The transcripts, audio files, video highlight clips, and photographs are made available on the Pryor Center website at http://pryorcenter.uark.edu. The Pryor Center recommends that researchers utilize the audio recordings and highlight clips, in addition to the transcripts, to enhance their connection with the interviewee. Transcript Methodology The Pryor Center recognizes that we cannot reproduce the spoken word in a written document; however, we strive to produce a transcript that represents the characteristics and unique qualities of the interviewee's speech pattern, style of speech, regional dialect, and personality. For the first twenty minutes of the interview, we attempt to transcribe verbatim all words and utterances that are spoken, such as uhs and ahs, false starts, and repetitions. -
Congressional Record—Senate S6162
S6162 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — SENATE May 4, 1995 desk No. 39, Mr. President, and it lists I yield the floor and suggest the ab- What many of us are saying now is, if all of the Senators who have occupied sence of a quorum. we are going to continue to make this particular desk. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The progress, then clearly we have to go be- I just want to name a few of these. clerk will call the roll. yond what the reconciliation package Some of these names may stand out. The legislative clerk proceeded to did with respect to strengthening Medi- John Bankhead from Alabama occupied call the roll. care. this particular desk. John Bankhead Mr. DASCHLE. Mr. President, I ask What we said last year is that we lived over on 19th Street, right off of unanimous consent that the order for have to pass meaningful health care re- Dupont Circle. John Bankhead was the the quorum call be rescinded. form if we are to reduce further the father of Tallulah Bankhead. Tallulah The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without rate of Medicare growth, without hurt- Bankhead was one of the grand ac- objection, it is so ordered. ing beneficiaries and shifting costs tresses during that period of time, and f onto families and businesses. they lived on 19th Street, where I used MEDICARE INSOLVENCY to live. That is what we attempted to do last Now, also, Patrick McCarran of Ne- Mr. DASCHLE. Mr. President, I was year. The Senator from Utah indicated vada occupied this particular desk, No. not in the Chamber an hour ago when that the President last year argued we 39. -
Twelve Elections That Shaped a Century I Tawdry Populism, Timid Progressivism, 1900-1930
Arkansas Politics in the 20th Century: Twelve Elections That Shaped a Century I Tawdry Populism, Timid Progressivism, 1900-1930 One-gallus Democracy Not with a whimper but a bellow did the 20th century begin in Arkansas. The people’s first political act in the new century was to install in the governor’s office, for six long years, a politician who was described in the most graphic of many colorful epigrams as “a carrot-headed, red-faced, loud-mouthed, strong-limbed, ox-driving mountaineer lawyer that has come to Little Rock to get a reputation — a friend of the fellow who brews forty-rod bug juice back in the mountains.”1 He was the Tribune of the Haybinders, the Wild Ass of the Ozarks, Karl Marx for the Hillbillies, the Stormy Petrel, Messiah of the Rednecks, and King of the Cockleburs. Jeff Davis talked a better populism than he practiced. In three terms, 14 years overall in statewide office, Davis did not leave an indelible mark on the government or the quality of life of the working people whom he extolled and inspired, but he dominated the state thoroughly for 1 This quotation from the Helena Weekly World appears in slightly varied forms in numerous accounts of Davis's yers. It appeared in the newspaper in the spring of 1899 and appears in John Gould Fletcher, Arkansas (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1947) p. 2. This version, which includes the phrase "that has come to Little Rock to get a reputation" appears in Raymond Arsenault, The Wild Ass of the Ozarks: Jeff Davis and the Social Bases of Southern Politics (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1984), p. -
Saving History
SAVING HISTORY The papers and correspondence of past Arkansas political leaders are archived at several facilities around the state. Where the documents go is up to the politician. Here are the known locations of some of their writings. Some collections are partial or split between institutions. The time served is in brackets. University of Arkansas at Fayetteville U.S. Senators Augustus H. Garland (1877-1887) James H. Berry (1885-1907) Jeff Davis (1907-1913) Joseph Taylor Robinson (1913-1937) John Elvis Miller (1937-1941) Hattie Wyatt Caraway (1931-1945) J. William Fulbright (1945-1975) Dale Bumpers* (1975-1999) David Pryor (1978-1996) U.S. Representatives Edward Cross (1839-1845) Logan Holt Roots (1868-1871) James Millander Hanks (1871-1873) Thomas Chipman McRae (1885-1903) Hugh Anderson Dinsmore (1893-1905) Joseph Taylor Robinson (1903-1913) William A. Oldfield (1909-1928) Hiram Heartsill Ragon, Sr. (1923-1933) John Elvis Miller (1930-1937) Clyde T. Ellis (1939-1943) William F. Norrell (1939-1961) Oren Harris (1941-1966) J. William Fulbright (1943-1945) Brooks Hays (1943-1959) James W. Trimble (1944-1966) Catherine D. Norrell (1961-1962) David Pryor (Rep. 1966-1972, governor (1975-1979) John Paul Hammerschmidt (1967-1993) Ed Bethune* (1978-1984) Beryl Anthony* (1979-1992) William Asa Hutchinson* (1997-2001) Governors Augustus H. Garland (1874-1877) James H. Berry (1883-1885) Jeff Davis (1901-1907) George W. Donaghey (1909-1913) Joseph Taylor Robinson (1913) George W. Hays (1913-1917) Charles Hillman Brough (1917-1921) Thomas Chipman McRae (1921-1925) Harvey Parnell (1928-1933) Junius Marion Futrell (1933-1937) Sidney S. McMath (1949-1953) Orval Faubus (1955-1967) University of Arkansas at Little Rock U.S. -
2016 Annual Report
STATE OF ARKANSAS Judicial Discipline and Disability Commission Judicial Ethics Advisory Committee 2016 ANNUAL REPORTS TABLE OF CONTENTS _________________________ FROM THE CHAIR………………………………………………………………...… 3 CHAIRMAN OF THE COMMISSION………………………………………………. 4 COMMISSION MEMBERS………………………………………………….............. 5-12 EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR……………………………………………………………. 13 I. INTRODUCTION……………………………………………….……………... 14 II. AUTHORITY AND JURISDICTION….………………………....................... 14-15 III. PROCEDURE…………………………………………………………………... 16-18 IV. CONFIDENTIALITY…………………………………….……………............. 19 V. MEMBERS……………………………………………………………………… 20 STAFF…………………………………………………………………………… 20 VI. COMMISSION ACTIVITIES……………………………………………….… 21 VII. BUDGET………………………………………………………………………… 22 VIII. COMPLAINTS, DISPOSTIONS & WORKLOAD DATA………………….. 23-24 IX. JUDICIAL ETHICS ADVISORY COMMITTEE…………………………… 25 APPENDICES A. Arkansas Code of Judicial Conduct………………………………….……….. 27-56 B. Amendment 66…………………………………………………………………. 57 C. Legislation Concerning the Commission……………………………………… 58-61 D. Commission Rules of Procedure………………………………………............. 62-71 E. Guidelines and Operating Policies for Commission Members, Alternates and Staff…..……………………………………………................... 72-76 F. Procedural Rules for the Judicial Ethics Advisory Committee……………… 77 G. Summaries of Ethic Advisory Opinions and Topical Index…………………. 79-125 Arkansas Judicial Discipline and Disability Commission FROM THE CHAIR The Judicial Discipline and Disability Commission continued its function of receiving and investigating complaints -
Monday Accident Into Custody Around 9:30 of Pills,” Aside from the Aug
NashvilleThe News Revocation of Adcock’s THURSDAY • October 2, 2014 • Issue 79 • 1 Section • 14 Pages • USPS 371-540 • 75 cents • PUBLISHED EACH MONDAY & THURSDAY In Howard County, Arkansas since 1878 license on state board agenda Lockesburg The Arkansas Board of Education will debate whether to revoke the license woman arrested of former Mineral Springs Saratoga Superintendent Max Adcock Thurs., Oct. 9 during the group’s on drug charges regular meeting. According to the meeting agenda, CHARLES GOODIN her vehicle Adcock is accused of Editor and she said violating standards yes.” that require educa- tors entrusted with MINERAL SPRINGS - A The affi- public funds and traffic stop by city officer davit goes property to “[honor] Chris “Droopy” Gates and on to allege that trust with a BOLO order from Howard that Gates honest, respon- County deputies led to asked to sible stewardship.” SIMS The Professional D.E. RAY | Nashville News the arrest of a Lockesburg look at a Licensure Standards Area emergency workers investigate the scene of a two-vehicle accident Monday woman on drug charges prescription pill bottle Board Ethics Sub- afternoon at the intersection of Highway 27 and Collins Road. Monday. Sims admitted to holding in committee recom- According to the affi- her purse, in which he dis- mended the revo- davit of arrest, 31 year old covered “an assortment of cation following an evidentiary hearing Aubrey Sims was taken different colors and shapes MONDAY ACCIDENT into custody around 9:30 of pills,” aside from the Aug. 1, according to the agenda, and Ad- p.m. after Gates stopped Hydrocodone listed on the cock has requested Truck collision sends two to area hospitals the white GMC truck she bottle. -
Vol 11, No. 1, April, 1987 EDITOR: Amelia Martin ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Sarah Fitzjarrald Mccullough CONSULTING EDITOR: Carolyn Pollan GUEST WRITERS: May Gray Ann M
OFFICIAL SPONSOR VoL 11, No. 1, April, 1987 EDITOR: Amelia Martin ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Sarah Fitzjarrald McCullough CONSULTING EDITOR: Carolyn Pollan GUEST WRITERS: May Gray Ann M. Sims INDEXING: Sarah Fitzjarrald McCullough PROOFREADERS: VOL 11- NO- 1 APR|L, 1987 Staff Warren McCullough Fort Smith Historical Society Ten Years Old 2 BOARD AND OFFICERS: .... „ ~ . , , . , , , , . , , , , . ." What a Decade! 1976-198Q7C QQ6C 4 Joel 0Stubbtefield , nPresident Donald C. Peer, Vice President Mary Nell Euper, Recording Secretary Fmal Sebastian County, Arkansas Jo Tillery, Membership Secretary Sesquicentennial Event, Naturalization 15 Thelma Cousins, Correspondence Secretary Thelma Wray, Treasurer Poets and Poetry, Gretchen Youmans 20 Velma Barber Pat Birkett ln Loving Memory 21 Gilmer K. Dixon Christine Johnson Inquiries 24 Mary Lou Jacobsen Ben B. Johnston Genealogy News 25 Larry Larson Amelia Martin Letters from Readers ... 27 Bob McCann Sarah Fitzjarrald McCullough Arkansas 1836-1986, poem 28 Guy Nichols Elizabeth "Dibby" Reutzel News and Opportunities .... .29 Phil White Membership in the Fort Smith Historical Book Notes 32 Society includessubscriptionto The Journal Contents of Past ,ssues 35 of the Fort Smith Historical Society, which is published semi-annually. Year begins 1886.1887 Newspapers 36 January 1 and ends December 31. Formembership,senddueswithyourname Index 44 and mailing address to: The Fort Smith Historical Society, Inc. CQVER. Bj|| Hutcheson, Mike the Horse, and Phil White. c/o Fort Smith Public Library ph t b c , Copeland. Courtesy of Southwest Times Record. 61 South 8th Street Fort Smith, Arkansas 72901 ©Copyright 1987 ISSN 0736 4261 Types of memberships: By the Fort Smith Historical Society, Inc. Annual $ 10.00 c/o Fort Smith Public Library Annual Contributing 20.00 61 South 8th Street Annual Sustaining 50.00 Fort Smith, Arkansas 72901 Life (Individual) 100.00 Journal Back Issues .. -
Eighty-Seventh Congress January 3, 1961, to January 3, 1963
EIGHTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS JANUARY 3, 1961, TO JANUARY 3, 1963 FIRST SESSION-January 3, 1961, to September 27, 1961 SECOND SESSION-January 10, 1962,1 to October 13, 1962 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES-RICHARD M. NIXON,2 of California;LYNDON B. JOHNSON,2 of Texas PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE-CARL HAYDEN, of Arizona SECRETARY OF THE SENATE-FELTON MCLELLAN JOHNSTON, of Mississippi SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE SENATE-JOSEPH C. DUKE, of Arizona SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES-SAM RAYBURN,4of Texas; JOHN W. MCCORMACK,5 of Massachusetts CLERK OF THE HOUSE-RALPH R. ROBERTS,6 of Indiana SERGEANT OF ARMS OF THE HOUSE-ZEAKE W. JOHNSON, JR.,6 ofTennessee DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE-WILLIAM M. MILLER,6 of Mississippi POSTMASTER OF THE HOUSE-H. H. MORRIS,6 of Kentucky ALABAMA Barry M. Goldwater, Phoenix John E. Moss, Jr., Sacramento SENATORS REPRESENTATIVES William S. Mailliard, San Francisco Lister Hill, Montgomery John J. Rhodes, Mesa John F. Shelley, San Francisco John J. Sparkman, Huntsville Stewart L. Udall,' Tucson John F. Baldwin, Martinez Morris K. Udall,8 Tucson Jeffery Cohelan, Berkeley REPRESENTATIVES George P. Miller, Alameda Frank W. Boykin, Mobile ARKANSAS J. Arthur Younger, San Mateo George M. Grant, Troy Charles S. Gubser, Gilroy George W. Andrews, Union Springs SENATORS John J. McFall, Manteca Kenneth A. Roberts, Anniston John L. McClellan, Camden Bernice F. Sisk, Fresno Albert Rains, Gadeden J. William Fulbright, Fayetteville Charles M. Teague, Ojai Armistead I. Selden, Jr., Greensboro REPRESENTATIVES Harlan F. Hagen, Hanford Carl A. Elliott, Jasper Ezekiel C. Gathings, West Memphis Gordon L. -
Inclusion in Letter of Resignation
RESIGNATIONS Ch. 37 § 4 the State of New York, as re- as a State Governor or city quired by State law.(3) Mayor,(6) to accept an appoint- ment as a Federal(7) or State(8) judge, to create a vacancy and run for the vacant seat, in the case of ( ) § 4. Reason for Resigna- a change in party affiliation 9 or a contested election,(10) to serve a tion; Inclusion in Letter jail sentence on conviction of a of Resignation crime,(11) and, in the case of a Senator, to create a vacancy to be When a Member resigns as a filled by appointment by a State Representative, the basis of, or Governor.(12) reasons for, the Member’s resigna- tion may or may not be included f in the Member’s letter of resigna- Service in the Armed Forces tion. In recent years, the general practice has been for a Member § 4.1 A Member resigned, stat- resigning from the House to in- ing in his letter to the Speak- clude in the Member’s letter of er his intention to serve in resignation the reasons for the the Armed Forces. Member’s termination of service (1) in the House. On Nov. 14, 1944, Speaker Among the reasons for which Sam Rayburn, of Texas, laid be- fore the House a letter from a Members have resigned have been Member stating that he had sub- to serve in the Armed Forces,(1) to mitted to the Governor of his accept an appointment as a cabi- State his resignation as a Member net secretary or in another Execu- (2) of the House and that the reason tive branch position, to assume for the resignation was to serve in office as a Member of the Sen- the Armed Forces. -
The David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History
The David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History University of Arkansas 1 East Center Street Fayetteville, AR 72701 (479) 575-6829 Arkansas Memories Project Parker Westbrook Interviewed by Scott Lunsford September 22, 2011 Little Rock, Arkansas, Arkansas Copyright 2011 Board of Trustees of the University of Arkansas. All rights reserved. Objective Oral history is a collection of an individual's memories and opinions. As such, it is subject to the innate fallibility of memory and is susceptible to inaccuracy. All researchers using these interviews should be aware of this reality and are encouraged to seek corroborating documentation when using any oral history interview. The Pryor Center's objective is to collect audio and video recordings of interviews along with scanned images of family photographs and documents. These donated materials are carefully preserved, catalogued, and deposited in the Special Collections Department, University of Arkansas Libraries, Fayetteville. The transcripts, audio files, video highlight clips, and photographs are made available on the Pryor Center Web site at http://pryorcenter.uark.edu. The Pryor Center recommends that researchers utilize the audio recordings and highlight clips, in addition to the transcripts, to enhance their connection with the interviewee. Transcript Methodology The Pryor Center recognizes that we cannot reproduce the spoken word in a written document; however, we strive to produce a transcript that represents the characteristics and unique qualities of the interviewee's speech pattern, style of speech, regional dialect, and personality. For the first twenty minutes of the interview, we attempt to transcribe verbatim all words and utterances that are spoken, such as uhs and ahs, false starts, and repetitions. -
Arkansas Historical Quarterly Index H
Arkansas Historical Quarterly Index 1942-2000 Hager, Harvey (early settler near Cadron), 10:126 H Hager, Thomas (Van Buren merchant), 15:197 Hagerty, Fr. Thomas (Rom. Cath.), Van Buren, 17:114, H. D. Williams Cooperage Company, Leslie, 33:279–80 40:129, 133n, 136–37 H. D. Williams Hotel, Leslie, 33:280 gives talks at Socialist party mtngs., 40:127 "H. J. Wiebusch, Batesville, Arkansas: A Nineteenth former pres. of American Railway Union, 40:124– Century Stonecarver," by Roberta D. Brown, 25 42:197–206 Hagg, Beulah Sherwood (interviewer of ex-slaves in wins award, 42:188, 357 Ark.), 35:238n H. L. and Lyda, by Margaret Hunt Hill, noted, 53:499 Hagg, Diana Sherwood. See Sherwood, Diana, Little Haas, Julian F., Ashley Co., 18:319 Rock Haas, Mary, 51:32 Haggard, N., Independence Co., 8:138 Habson, Dr. O. H., Washington Co., 10:371, 375, 378 Haggart, Sol (CSA deserter), Monroe Co., 35:79, 87 Haciton. See Heckaton Haggerty, Capt., Cincinnati, Ohio (businessman at Hot Hacker, Meg, paper by, 52:344 Springs), 14:18 Hacket, Nelson (fugitive slave), Fayetteville, 16:140, Haglin, Nannie, Ft. Smith, 14:211 58:12–13 Haglin family, Ft. Smith, 9:313, 316 Hackett, Glen, 58:416, 423–24 Hagood, James A., Washington Co., 5:355, 357 Hackett, William M. (Little Rock bookstore operator), Hagood, James Galitzon (CSA), Ozark 11:59, 223, 12:178 parents of, 33:119n gives Hackett Prize, 12:376, 13:302, 14:178 killed, 11:288, 33:119, 151 Hackett, Sebastian Co., 35:98, 39:60 Hague, Mr. (49er), 6:79 Hacking, Gary, 39:282 Hague, Parthenia Antoinette, book by, noted, 51:97 Hackington, Michael, 56:149 Hague Peace Conference, 38:334 Hackington's Station, at White River, 56:149, 150 Hahn, Steven, "African American Life in the Hackler, Dr. -
Vol. 11, No. 2, September, 1987
Vol. 11, No. 2, September, 1987 EDITOR: Amelia Martin ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Sarah Fitzjarrald McCullough CONSULTING EDITOR: J0URNAL Carolyn Pollan GUEST WRITERS: Judge Morris S. Arnold Nudie Eugene Williams, Ph.D. Mary Lou Jacobsen Joyce Page VOL. 11, NO. 2 SEPTEMBER, 1987 INDEXING: Sarah Fitzjarrald McCullough Letter from the Editor 2 PROOFREADERS: United States Court for the Donald and Carolyn Peer Western District of Arkansas 3 Don and Nell McMinimy Federal Judges, Western District of Arkansas 4 Mary Lou Jacobsen Mary Nell Euper Black Political Patronage in the Warren and Sarah McCullough Western District of Arkansas, 1871-1892 5 BOARD AND OFFICERS: Frank A. Youmans, United States District Judge 9 Mary Lou Jacobsen, President Donald C. Peer, Vice President John E. Miller, United States District Judge 11 Pat Birkett, Recording Secretary City of Fort Smith - Citta Di Cisterna Di Latina Thelma Wray, Treasurer Seal Twinship 17 Leonna Belle Cotner, Correspondence Secretary In Loving Memory 20 Jo Tillery, Membership Secretary Richard L. Mulloy James Cox, Jr. Stewart M. Condren Gilmer K. Dixon Hattie Turner Dennard Mary Nell Euper Lorine Lay Christine Johnson Eula Wright Ben B. Johnston A Hundred Years of Service 23 Larry Larson Bob McCann A Hundred Years of Living 23 Dr. Donald J. McMinimy Young Women's Christian Association 24 Guy Nichols Dibbie Reutzel Dick Reynolds - His Family and His House 28 Franklin L. Wilder News and Opportunities 37 Membership in the Fort Smith Historical Inquiries 41 Society includes subscription to The Journal of the Fort Smith Historical Society, which Genealogy News 42 is published semi-annually. Year begins 1887 Newspapers 43 January 1 and ends December 31.