Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Other days

-

100 YEARS AGO April 7, 1924

MOUNTAIN HOME — A thief visited the Bob Hurst cleaning and pressing establishm­ent Friday night. When Hurst closed up, he went out to the line in the rear of his establishm­ent to get a pair of trousers he had cleaned and hung out to dry. The trouser were gone. Yesterday, when Hurst came down town, he found the trousers hanging on the line with the following note pinned to them: “They didn’t fit.”

50 YEARS AGO April 7, 1974

MONTICELLO — The first annual Arkansas state tobacco spitting contest is open to anyone who can compete without getting sick. “Anybody can enter,” Mrs. Carol Dawson, who is in charge of the event, said. “We’re not discrimina­ting. Women will be allowed to spit, cheek by jowl, with the men and may the best spitter prevail.” The great tobacco spitting contest will be held April 2 on the square in downtown Monticello. Prizes are three engraved spittoons.

25 YEARS AGO April 7, 1999

m The ACLU filed suit Tuesday against the Child Welfare Agency Review Board and the Arkansas Department of Human Services because it said the board oversteppe­d its authority and violated the state and federal constituti­ons by prohibitin­g homosexual­s from being foster parents. Six Arkansans are named as plaintiffs: two gay couples, one lesbian woman and the father of an 18-year-old gay son. In a press conference Tuesday afternoon, the plaintiffs said they would like to serve as foster parents but cannot because of a rule the board passed in March. Under the regulation, private child welfare agencies cannot place foster children in homes where the prospectiv­e parents or any other adults living in the house engage in homosexual activities.

10 YEARS AGO April 7, 2014

m Young adults in need of educationa­l or job-related assistance shouldn’t have to venture out of their neighborho­od to receive it, said partners in a new Young Adult Opportunit­y Center that has popped up on West 12th Street in Little Rock. The center, at 4317 W. 12th St., is a project of New Futures for Youth and the Bishop Leodies and Goldie Warren Community Developmen­t Center — a product of the Greater Christ Temple Pentecosta­l Church. The Young Adult Opportunit­y Center will be open Mondays from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and will cater to people ages 18 to 30. Volunteers at the center hope to assist with whatever a person needs. Whether that is criminal or civil issues in court, a lack of a high school diploma and job skills, or a spiritual need, the founders of the center said they want to steer participan­ts in the program to a better life.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States