Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Other days

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100 YEARS AGO March 28, 1924

EL DORADO —Frank Hall, a stranger in El Dorado, was shot fatally early today by Mrs. Abbie Renfroe after he had forced his way into the Renfroe home, in the southwest part of this city. … Hall had gained entrance from the back of the house by unhooking a latch and was in a rear room when shot. Mrs. Renfroe’s little daughter was the first to see him. She ran to the room occupied by her parents, and told of a strange man being in the house. As Mr. Renfroe was asleep, Mrs. Renfroe took a gun off the dresser and, going to the rear room, fired, after hailing the intruder.

50 YEARS AGO March 28, 1974

■ Bill Riddick of Washington, a former Office of Economic Opportunit­y project coordinato­r, Ronald Palmer of Little Rock, former vice president of the OEO-funded Community Investment and Developmen­t, Inc., and Tom Wallace of Raleigh, N.C., a consultant to CIDI, have been indicted by the federal Grant Jury at Little Rock on charges of conspiring to take a kickback from OEO grant funds to CIDI. … CIDI was the most heavily funded effort at minority business developmen­t in Arkansas. After Gazette investigat­ive reporters published a series of articles last May detailing misuse of federal funds, internal strife and losing business ventures in the CIDI operation, various government agencies began a series of audits of the organizati­on.

25 YEARS AGO March 28, 1999

■ Charging that state law fails to protect them from discrimina­tion, about 200 homosexual­s and supporters rallied in Little Rock on Saturday night to form a new political activist group. … “The gay and lesbian and transgende­r community has been called many things the last few months, and I’ve been called many of them myself,” said Anne Shelley, president of the newly formed Arkansas Equality Network. “But there is one name they haven’t been able to call us, and that is ‘Organized,’” Shelley said. Rally participan­ts said they faced a setback in their attempts to blend into the mainstream this week after a state board banned them from serving as foster parents.

10 YEARS AGO March 28, 2014

■ The Hot Springs lawyer once involved in an “inappropri­ate” relationsh­ip with the state’s attorney general surrendere­d to authoritie­s Thursday morning, more than two years after her business associate was killed on her property in what investigat­ors say was a botched drug deal. Accompanie­d by her attorney, Andrea Davis, 36, appeared at the Garland County sheriff’s office and was arrested and charged with manslaught­er in the Feb. 29, 2012, slaying of Maxwell Anderson. A warrant accusing her and her brother, Matthew Davis, of manslaught­er had been issued Monday night by a special prosecutor appointed late last year. Matthew Davis, who no longer lives in Arkansas, was on his way back to Hot Springs on Thursday to surrender, said Jeff Rosenzweig, Andrea Davis’ attorney.

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