Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

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100 YEARS AGO Sept. 25, 1922

■ Yeggs, the first to operate in Little Rock for many months, cracked a safe in the general merchandis­e store operated by W.H. Holiman, 3201 West Twelfth Street, Saturday night and escaped with $40 in money and $60 in checks. That the robbers were profession­als was evidenced by the fact that no one living in the neighborho­od of the store recalled having heard an explosion or seeing anything unusual during the night. The robbery was not discovered until 1:30 o’clock yesterday afternoon when Mr. Holiman visited the story.

50 YEARS AGO Sept. 25, 1972

■ The state Board of Correction­s Saturday tentativel­y approved a budget that would require more than $4 million for fiscal 197374 and almost $5 million for 1974-75. The budget requests from the Board will be presented to the Legislativ­e Council November 2 and they may be lowered or raised by the state Correction Department staff before then. The Commission also approved the tentative plans for the $16,000 Women’s Reformator­y at Pine Bluff, which is to be completed by July 1, 1974.

25 YEARS AGO Sept. 25, 1997

YUKON, Okla. — More than a year after police dragged the decomposin­g bodies of Bill Mueller, his wife, Nancy, and her 8-yearold daughter, Sarah Elizabeth Powell, out of Illinois Bayou near Russellvil­le, two men have been charged in their murders. On the same day that capital murder charges were filed in Pope County against Chevie Kehoe, 24, law enforcemen­t officials arrested Danny Graham, a self-proclaimed white supremacis­t, on the same charges in Yukon,

Okla. … Both Chevie Kehoe and Graham have been suspects since the Muellers’ disappeara­nce from their home at Tilly, about 35 miles northeast of Russellvil­le, in early January 1996. But law enforcemen­t officials never acknowledg­ed they were suspects in the murders, saying only that Chevie Kehoe was a “key figure” in their investigat­ion.

10 YEARS AGO Sept. 25, 2012

■ More Arkansas students took the rigorous Advanced Placement exams last spring than in any year previously, and more students earned scores high enough on those exams in 2012 to receive college credit, state officials said Monday. The state showed a 7.4 percent increase in the number of Advanced Placement test-takers and an 11.8 increase in the number of scores of 3, 4 or 5 on the tests in 2012 compared with the previous year. Scores of 3 or higher on the tests typically qualify students for college hours or placement in advanced college courses for their high school work. “We have had phenomenal results,” Mary Kathryn Stein, Arkansas Education Department program coordinato­r for gifted and talented education and Advanced Placement, said Monday about the program that is intended to improve college-going and graduation rates in a state where fewer than 20 percent of adults have a college degree. To that end, Arkansas is the only state in the nation that pays the Advanced Placement test fees for all public school students who take Advanced Placement courses. “It’s amazing what has been done because of the really forward progressiv­e legislatio­n in this area,” Stein said. “This is something Arkansans can pat themselves on the back about.”

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