Arkansas History PD on Arkansas Ideas Course Hours

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Arkansas History PD on Arkansas Ideas Course Hours Arkansas History PD on Arkansas Ideas From the 2016-2017 Cycle (can be used to get the two hours for the 2020-2021 cycle if not used in the 2016-2017 cycle) Course Hours Agri Arkansas-Introduction (AHA15070) 0.5 Agri Arkansas-Poultry & Beef (AHA15071) 0.5 Agri Arkansas-Agri Economics (AHA15072) 0.5 Agri Arkansas- Rice (AHA15073) 0.5 Agri Arkansas- Dairy (AHA15074) 0.5 Agri Arkansas- The Honeybee (AHA15075) 0.5 War in the ‘60’s- A Civil War Documentary 1 (AHA16010) Sanatorium Hill (AHA16031) 0.5 Music in Arkansas: Origins (AHB16030) 2 Life Interrupted- The Japanese American Experience 6 in WWII Arkansas (AHA15031) The Road to Little Rock (AHA15059) 0.5 Hoxie- The First Stand (AHA15067) 1 Una Vida Mejor- A Better Life (AHA15068) 1 A New Island- The Marshallese in Arkansas 1 (AHA15069) The Edge of Conflict: Arkansas in the Civil War 2 (SOA14001) City of Visitors: The Story of Hot Springs (SOA14004) 2 Delta Dreams (SOA14008) 1.5 The Forgotten Expedition (SOA14017) 1.5 It Started Here: Early Arkansas and the Louisiana 1 Purchase (SOA14023) Historic Bridges of Arkansas (SOA14024) 1 Arkansas’s First People: Ancestors (SOA14026) 0.5 Arkansas’s First People: Nations (SOA14027) 0.5 Arkansas’s First People: Removal (SOA14028) 0.5 Arkansas’s First People: Warriors (SOA14029) 0.5 Arkansas’s First People: Preservation (SOA14030) 0.5 Troubled Water (SOA14037) 1.5 Arkansas: A Six Region Journey- Ozark Plateau 1 (SOA14038) Arkansas: A Six Region Journey- Arkansas River Valley 1 (SOA14039) Arkansas: A Six Region Journey- Ouachita Mountains 1 (SOA14040) Arkansas: A Six Region Journey- Gulf Coastal Plain 1 (SOA14041) Arkansas: A Six Region Journey- Mississippi Alluvial 1 Plain (SOA14042) Arkansas: A Six Region Journey- Crowley’s Ridge 1 (SOA14043) Arkansas’s Champion Trees (SOA14080) 1.5 Bayou Bartholomew- World’s Longest Bayou 1 (SOA14081) African American History in Arkansas: Legislators in 0.5 Arkansas- Post Civil War to Present (SOB14018) African American History in Arkansas: African 0.5 Americans in the Military- The American Revolution to World War I (SOB14019) African American History in Arkansas: African 1 Americans in the Military - 1941 to Present (SOB14020) African American History in Arkansas: African 0.5 American Teachers in Arkansas- 1865-Present (SOB14021) African American History in Arkansas: The Mosaic 0.5 Templars (SOB14022) The Crisis Mr. Faubus Made: The Role of the Arkansas 1 Gazette in the Central High Crisis (SOG14025) The Old Gray Lady: Arkansas’s First Newspaper 2 (SOG14033) The Buffalo Flows (SOG14044) 1.5 Added in the 2020-2021 Rotation Course Hours Men and Women of Distinction: Dr. Joycelyn Elders 0.5 (AHA20045) Men and Women of Distinction: Dale Bumpers 1.5 (AHA20043) Men and Women of Distinction: Mike Beebe 1.5 (AHA20041) Men and Women of Distinction: Korto Momolu 0.5 (AHA20052) Men and Women of Distinction: Milton Crenchaw 0.5 (AHA20044) Men and Women of Distinction: Mary Lowe Good, 0.5 Ph.D. (AHA20046) Men and Women of Distinction: David Pryor 2 (AHA20053) Men and Women of Distinction: Ray Rodgers 0.5 (AHA20054) Men and Women of Distinction: John Paul 1.5 Hammerschmidt (AHA20047) Men and Women of Distinction: Sid McMath 1.5 (AHA20051) Men and Women of Distinction: Francis McBeth 0.5 (AHA20050) Men and Women of Distinction: Judge Morris Arnold 0.5 (AHA20042) Men and Women of Distinction: Miller Williams 0.5 (AHA20055) Men and Women of Distinction: Jane Krutz 0.5 (AHA20049) Men and Women of Distinction: Gene L. Hatfield 1 (AHA20048) Dream Land: Little Rock's West 9th Street (AHA18005) 1.5 .
Recommended publications
  • (Extra)ORDINARY MEN
    (Extra)ORDINARY MEN: African-American Lawyers and Civil Rights in Arkansas Before 1950 Judith Kilpatrick* “The remarkable thing is not that black men attempted to regain their stolen civic rights, but that they tried over and over again, using a wide va- riety of techniques.”1 I. INTRODUCTION Arkansas has a tradition, beginning in 1865, of African- American attorneys who were active in civil rights. During the eighty years following the Emancipation Proclamation, at least sixty-nine African-American men were admitted to practice law in the state.2 They were all men of their times, frequently hold- * Associate Professor, University of Arkansas School of Law; J.S.D. 1999, LL.M. 1992, Columbia University, J.D. 1975, B.A. 1972, University of California-Berkeley. The author would like to thank the following: the historians whose work is cited here; em- ployees of The Arkansas History Commission, The Butler Center of the Little Rock Public Library, the Pine Bluff Public Library and the Helena Public Library for patience and help in locating additional resources; Patricia Cline Cohen, Professor of American History at the University of California, Santa Barbara, for reviewing the draft and providing comments; and Jon Porter (UA 1999) and Mickie Tucker (UA 2001) for their excellent research assis- tance. Much appreciation for summer research grants from the University of Arkansas School of Law in 1998 and 1999. Special thanks to Elizabeth Motherwell, of the Universi- ty of Arkansas Press, for starting me in this research direction. No claim is made as to the completeness of this record. Gaps exist and the author would appreciated receiving any information that might help to fill them.
    [Show full text]
  • Arkansas Department of Health 1913 – 2013
    Old State House, original site of the Arkansas Department of Health 100 years of service Arkansas Department of Health 1913 – 2013 100yearsCover4.indd 1 1/11/2013 8:15:48 AM 100 YEARS OF SERVICE Current Arkansas Department of Health Location Booklet Writing/Editing Team: Ed Barham, Katheryn Hargis, Jan Horton, Maria Jones, Vicky Jones, Kerry Krell, Ann Russell, Dianne Woodruff, and Amanda Worrell The team of Department writers who compiled 100 Years of Service wishes to thank the many past and present employees who generously provided information, materials, and insight. Cover Photo: Reprinted with permission from the Old State House Museum. The Old State House was the original site of the permanent Arkansas State Board of Health in 1913. Arkansas Department of Health i 100 YEARS OF SERVICE Table of Contents A MESSAGE FROM THE DIRECTOR ................................................................................................. 1 PREFACE ................................................................................................................................................. 3 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................... 4 INFECTIOUS DISEASE .......................................................................................................................... 4 IMMUNIZATIONS ................................................................................................................................. 8 ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
    [Show full text]
  • GOP Ticket Leads in Arkansas
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE September 22, 2014 INTERVIEWS: Tom Jensen 919-744-6312 IF YOU HAVE BASIC METHODOLOGICAL QUESTIONS, PLEASE E-MAIL [email protected], OR CONSULT THE FINAL PARAGRAPH OF THE PRESS RELEASE GOP ticket leads in Arkansas Raleigh, N.C. – PPP's newest Arkansas poll finds Republicans leading across the board in the state's key races for this year, led by Tom Cotton with a 43/38 advantage over Mark Pryor and Asa Hutchinson with a 44/38 lead over Mike Ross at the top of the ticket. Cotton's lead is up slightly from 41/39 on our previous poll. Voters aren't in love with him- 40% see him favorably to 41% with an unfavorable opinion. But Pryor continues to have tough approval ratings, with 36% giving him good marks to 51% who disapprove. Both candidates are receiving 77% of the vote from within their own party but Cotton has a substantial advantage with independents, getting 53% of their vote to 20% for Pryor. The Governor's race is pretty steady with Hutchinson's 44/38 lead little changed from 43/38 in early August. Hutchinson has positive favorability numbers (43/35) while voters are pretty closely divided in their feelings about Ross (35/36). The strong GOP advantage with independent voters carries over to this race too- 48% support Hutchinson to 23% for Ross. Barack Obama has a 31/62 approval rating in Arkansas, including 13/80 with independents, and that's probably making things hard for the Democratic ticket in the state. The news isn't all bad for progressives in Arkansas.
    [Show full text]
  • Quality Digital Learning Study Committee Report to the Arkansas General Assembly Pursuant to Act 1280 of 2013
    Arkansas Digital Learning Study State of Arkansas Quality Digital Learning Study Committee Report to the Arkansas General Assembly Pursuant to Act 1280 of 2013 May 2014 Acknowledgements THE DIGITAL LEARNING STUDY DATA COLLECTION, VALIDATION AND REPORT PRODUCTION TEAM: Team Member Representing Team Member Representing Brittany Kincaid ADE Kendall Wells Cabot School District Cathi Swan ADE Larry Clary CT&T Cody Decker ADE Becky Rains DIS Greg Rogers ADE Dana Thompson DIS Holly Glover ADE Don McDaniel DIS Jeremy Lassiter ADE Jack Tipton DIS Jim Boardman ADE Jeff Dean DIS Meagan Witonski ADE Mike Hill DIS Michelle Griffin ADE David Rainey Dumas School District Mike Hernandez ADE Winston Himsworth E-Rate Central Susan Harriman ADE Brady Kraft IEN Joe Holmes AEDC James Werle Internet2 Jonathan Duran AGIS Gary Rawson JFW Consulting Shelby Johnson AGIS Jimmy Webster JFW Consulting David Merrifield ARE-ON Mark Johnson MCNC Scott Ramoly ARE-ON Jennifer Yaney OSP Kendall Gibbons Arvest Julie Lombard OSP Adrienne Gardner ASTA James Guy Tucker Pacific GeneTech John Ahlen ASTA (President Emeritus) Carl Wood Tyson SPECIAL APPRECIATION: Office of Governor Mike Beebe Arvest Bank Governor’s Workforce Cabinet Connect Arkansas Arkansas Cable Telecommunications Council of Chief State School Officers Association Department of Finance and Arkansas Association of Two-Year Colleges Administration, Office of State Arkansas Department of Education Procurement Arkansas Department of Higher Education Department of Information Systems Arkansas Economic Development
    [Show full text]
  • Reddie Report Magazine for Alumni and Friends of Henderson State University
    Reddie Report Magazine for Alumni and Friends of Henderson State University Henderson State University’s 15th President Dr. Charles Welch Spring 2009 Letter from the President Alumni and Friends, There are amazing things happening on the Henderson campus, and I welcome every opportunity to share the good news with you. Our faculty, staff and students have been actively participating in planning and implementing changes that will make Henderson more progressive and efficient in the future. I am committed to building an even stronger university with an environment of inclusiveness and collaboration. Enhancing our image and increasing enrollment are top priorities. We are developing and PR / Steve Fellers renewing partnerships with our community, public schools, community colleges, other universities and the businesses that employ our graduates. This improved connectivity will boost Henderson’s enrollment and positively impact the citizens in our region. We are celebrating the completion of two fantastic new additions to our beautiful campus, the Nursing Building and the Charles D. Dunn Student Recreation Center. We have also embarked on the creation of a new campus master plan which will assist in the wise use of our resources as we look to the future. We are also strategically planning effective ways to enhance our image in order to more effectively communicate what an exciting and vibrant university we have. Please be looking for a new and improved website in the near future! It is an exciting experience for me to meet alumni, former faculty, staff and friends of the university. Mandy, Wheatley, Emma and I feel blessed to be a part of the Henderson family, and we look forward to celebrating the exciting future of our university with each of you.
    [Show full text]
  • Board of Trustees 1
    Board of Trustees 1 Steve Cox Board of Trustees Steve Cox of Jonesboro graduated from the University of Arkansas in 1982 after having earned All Southwest Conference and All America The trustees of the University of Arkansas System are appointed by the honors during his football career as a punter and kicker, later playing in governor of Arkansas to 10-year overlapping terms. The board sets policy the NFL for the Cleveland Browns and Washington Redskins. He rose for the University of Arkansas as well as other universities, colleges and through the ranks of banking before becoming a managing partner at institutes within the system. Rainwater and Cox LLC, which oversees ownership and management of an array of commercial, hotel and agricultural properties. His term expires in 2028. Stephen Broughton, chair Dr. Stephen Broughton of Pine Bluff is a staff psychiatrist for the Southeast Arkansas Behavioral Health System. Broughton earned his Ed Fryar bachelor’s degree from the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff and Edward Fryar Jr. of Rogers is a graduate and former professor of the completed his medical education at the University of Arkansas for Medical University of Arkansas. He earned degrees in economics and agricultural Sciences. His term expires in 2022. economics and was a professor of agricultural economics for more than 13 years. He co-founded Ozark Mountain Poultry in Rogers in 2000, which grew from 15 employees to more than 1,800 before selling it in C.C. "Cliff" Gibson III, vice chair 2018. He was inducted into the Arkansas Agriculture Hall of Fame in C.C.
    [Show full text]
  • 2016 ANNUAL Report
    2016 ANNUAL Report ARKANSAS STATE HIGHWAY AND TRANSPORTATION DEPARTMENT AHTD Mission Statement To provide a safe, efficient, aesthetically pleasing and environmentally sound intermodal transportation TABLE OF system for the user. CONTENTS 4 DIRECTOR’S MESSAGE 6 ARKANSAS STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION 8 TOP TEN CONTRACTS OF 2016 10 CONSTRUCTION HIGHLIGHTS 14 IMPROVING OUR HIGHWAY SYSTEM 16 GROUNDBREAKINGS & RIBBON CUTTINGS 18 PUBLIC INVOLVEMENT 19 IDRIVEARKANSAS AND TWITTER STATISTICS 20 RECOGNITIONS & ACCOMPLISHMENTS 22 DISTRICT INFORMATION PHOTO THIS PAGE / Highway 70 Railroad Overpass (Roosevelt Rd., Little Rock) photo by Rusty Hubbard 24 ORGANIZATION & WORKFORCE FRONT & BACK COVER PHOTOS / Highway 70 Bridge (Broadway St.) over the Arkansas River photo by Rusty Hubbard 2 3 WORK CONTINUED ON REPLACING the Broadway Bridge (U.S. HIGHWAY 70) CONNECTING Little Rock and DIRECTOR’S message North Little Rock HE ARKANSAS STATE HIGHWAY AND TRANSPORTATION DEPARTMENT (AHTD) is proud to present our annual report and share the highlights and successes that the Department experienced over calendar year 2016. For the year, the Department let to contract 263 projects totaling just overT $1.2 billion. The largest of those projects was on Interstate 40 in Prairie County. In addition, work continued on replacing the Broadway Bridge (U.S. Highway 70) connecting Little Rock and North Little Rock and on improvements to Interstates 49 and 440. This report provides information on projects in all 10 of our Districts across the State. Each reflects our commitment to making our highway system one of the best in the nation as well as one of the safest. Our two major road improvement programs progressed well in 2016.
    [Show full text]
  • Principal State and Territorial Officers
    / 2 PRINCIPAL STATE AND TERRITORIAL OFFICERS EXECUTIVE OFFICERS Atlorneys .... State Governors Lieulenanl Governors General . Secretaries of State. Alabama. James E. Foisoin J.C.Inzer .A. .A.. Carniichael Sibyl Pool Arizona Dan E. Garvey None Fred O. Wilson Wesley Boiin . Arkansas. Sid McMath Nathan Gordon Ike Marry . C. G. Hall California...... Earl Warren Goodwin J. Knight • Fred N. Howser Frank M. Jordan Colorado........ Lee Knous Walter W. Jolinson John W. Metzger George J. Baker Connecticut... Chester Bowles Wm. T. Carroll William L. Hadden Mrs. Winifred McDonald Delaware...:.. Elbert N. Carvel A. duPont Bayard .Mbert W. James Harris B. McDowell, Jr. Florida.. Fuller Warren None Richard W. Ervin R.A.Gray Georgia Herman Talmadge Marvin Griffin Eugene Cook Ben W. Fortson, Jr. * Idaho ;C. A. Robins D. S. Whitehead Robert E. Sniylie J.D.Price IlUnola. .-\dlai E. Stevenson Sher^vood Dixon Ivan.A. Elliott Edward J. Barrett Indiana Henry F. Schricker John A. Walkins J. Etnmett McManamon Charles F. Fleiiiing Iowa Wm. S.'Beardsley K.A.Evans Robert L. Larson Melvin D. Synhorst Kansas Frank Carlson Frank L. Hagainan Harold R. Fatzer (a) Larry Ryan Kentucky Earle C. Clements Lawrence Wetherby A. E. Funk • George Glenn Hatcher Louisiana Earl K. Long William J. Dodd Bolivar E. Kemp Wade O. Martin. Jr. Maine.. Frederick G. Pgynp None Ralph W. Farris Harold I. Goss Maryland...... Wm. Preston Lane, Jr. None Hall Hammond Vivian V. Simpson Massachusetts. Paul A. Dever C. F. Jeff Sullivan Francis E. Kelly Edward J. Croiiin Michigan G. Mennen Williams John W. Connolly Stephen J. Roth F. M. Alger, Jr.- Minnesota.
    [Show full text]
  • News Release
    NEWS RELEASE For Release: June 25, 2020 Contact: Sheri Singer, [email protected], 703-346-7111; or Shannon M. McCabe, CAE, [email protected] Glen E. Dabney, RF, ACF, Named Distinguished Forester from the Association of Consulting Foresters Williamsburg, VA –For his lifetime dedication to contributing to forestry and to the Association of Consulting Foresters of America, Inc. (ACF), Glen E. Dabney, RF, ACF, retired president and founder of Eagle Forestry Services, Inc. and EFS GeoTechnologies, Monticello, AR, has been honored with the organization’s national Distinguished Forester award. “Glen truly deserves this award for his many valuable contributions to the forestry industry,” said Michael R. Wetzel, ACF, Principal, Ecce Silva, LLC, Aiken, SC, and president of ACF. “Now retired, Glen built two complimentary firms providing aerial photography services and geographic information service to states across the southeast United States, and was active in ACF and related organizations.” The award marks a forester’s contributions to the application of forestry on private lands, to the advancement of the profession, to private ownership of forestlands, and to the national organization. “Through ACF, I am very proud to have participated in protecting our professional entrepreneurial right to practice without undue competition from government, to protect private landowner rights and our rights to practice as consulting foresters,” said Dabney. Before managing his two firms, Dabney was co-owner and president of Kingwood Forestry Services, Inc.; cofounder and co-owner of Davis Forestry of Arkansas, Inc.; and a state supervisor with Davis Forestry Services, Inc. Dabney has been an ACF member for 34 years and currently is a lifetime retired member.
    [Show full text]
  • Remarks to a Joint Session of the Arkansas State Legislature in Little Rock, Arkansas January 17, 2001
    Administration of William J. Clinton, 2001 / Jan. 17 But I grew up in a national park, and I have Steve. never forgotten that progress uprooted from har- mony with nature is a fool’s errand. The more NOTE: The President spoke at 10:15 a.m. in the perfect Union of our Founders’ dreams will al- East Room at the White House. In his remarks, ways include the Earth that sustains us in body he referred to historian and author Stephen E. and spirit. Today we have honored three who Ambrose; Ken Burns and Dayton Duncan, who made it so. Thank you very much. wrote and produced the documentary ‘‘Lewis and Now I would like to ask Stephen Ambrose Clark: The Journey of the Corps of Discovery’’; to come to the podium. But as I do, I would and Amy Mossett and James J. Holmberg, board like to thank him for many things: for teaching members, National Lewis and Clark Bicentennial America about World War II; for, most recently, Council. The proclamations on the Buck Island making sure we know how the railroad was built Reef National Monument, Carrizo Plain National across the country; and for all the works in Monument, Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National between. But I rather suspect, having heard him Monument, Minidoka Internment National talk about it, that nothing has quite captured Monument, Pompeys Pillar National Monument, his personal passion and the story of his family Sonoran Desert National Monument, Upper Mis- life like the odyssey of Lewis and Clark and souri River Breaks National Monument, and Vir- the beauties that they found—that he and his gin Islands Coral Reef National Monument are family later discovered for themselves.
    [Show full text]
  • Tribute to Sid Mcmath
    University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review Volume 26 Issue 3 Article 2 2004 Tribute to Sid McMath Bill Wilson Follow this and additional works at: https://lawrepository.ualr.edu/lawreview Part of the Legal Biography Commons Recommended Citation Bill Wilson, Tribute to Sid McMath, 26 U. ARK. LITTLE ROCK L. REV. 519 (2004). Available at: https://lawrepository.ualr.edu/lawreview/vol26/iss3/2 This Essay is brought to you for free and open access by Bowen Law Repository: Scholarship & Archives. It has been accepted for inclusion in University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review by an authorized editor of Bowen Law Repository: Scholarship & Archives. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Tribute to Sid McMath Cover Page Footnote The UALR William H. Bowen School of Law and the UALR Law Review would like to bestow a special debt of gratitude on Governor Sidney S. McMath for his distinguished service to our nation and the State of Arkansas as a military officer, governor, attorney, and icon in the legal community. The essay that follows is one of six in this issue that pays tribute to Governor McMath's accomplished life and illustrates the impact of his legacy. He will be forever remembered in the hearts and minds of those whose lives he touched. This essay is available in University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review: https://lawrepository.ualr.edu/lawreview/ vol26/iss3/2 TRIBUTE TO SID MCMATH Bill Wilson* Sidney Sanders McMath was valiant, whether dodging bullets in the South Pacific or enduring the slings and arrows flung by those who wanted to deny educational opportunities and civil rights to minorities.
    [Show full text]
  • Research in the Rock Fall 2015
    Research in the Rock . Fall 2015 Research in the Rock Editors/Writers Office of Research and Sponsored Programs Amy A. Manning Paula Casey, JD Emily Davis Interim Vice Provost for Research Photography Staff Megan Douglas Tammie Cash, BS, CRA Director Contributing Photographers Tina Kennedy Monica L. Guzman Administrative Specialist III Krista Smith Grants and Contracts Processing and Submission UALR Center for Arkansas History and Culture Sharon Kaufman, BS, CRA UALR Center for Integrative Nanotechnology Sciences Associate Director UALR Office of Communications Dan Shelton, BBA Ken West Photography Grants and Contracts Specialist Kenji Yoshigoe Emily Davis, MA Editor/Grants and Contracts Administrator II Electronic Research Administration Christina Laurentia, MBA Research Technology Specialist Grants and Contracts Management and Accounting Gayle Lenard, BS Associate Director Juanita Sherman, BA Grants and Contracts Specialist Kristen Dickson, MBA Grants and Contracts Coordinator Michael O’Bryan, MS Grants and Contracts Specialist The Office of Research and Sponsored Programs at UALR provides information, services, and support to members of the UALR community to enable them to compete successfully for outside funding to conduct scientific research; create works of art; compose music; write books and articles; improve their performance in the classroom; and better serve their students, professions, and the public. In accomplishing this mission, ORSP ensures accountability, compliance, and stewardship for sponsored programs as directed by
    [Show full text]