Arkansas Times

Page 16

The Arkansas Times & the Root Café proudly present Little Rock’s

F i r s t A n n uA l

Beard-GrowinG Contest

NothiNg Weird about a beard!

Participants must be certified clean-shaven on December 1st, 2012 at the Root Café between, 8am and 3:30.pm. More Info: Phone: 414-0423 email: theroot@therootcafe.com

C At e g o r i e s Longest beard, thickest beard, most original beard & best Abraham Lincoln (no mustache) Judging will be held at the South Main Mardi Gras celebration Saturday, February 9, 2013.

PRizeS FoR winneRS! Shaving permits for non-participants available at the Root Cafe.

Premier Health & Rehabilitation “Come Experience the Premier Difference” 3600 Richards Road • North Little Rock Main: 501.955.2108 Cell: 501.353.8095 SMorris@slcofarkansas.com

Alzheimer’s Support Group 2nd Monday of Each Month 6-7pm

featuring the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra

16

NOVEMBER 14, 2012

ARKANSAS TIMES

Neither the national or state office of the NAACP took steps to address the complaints of the reformers. So the decision was made to challenge Catha-Jones directly by contesting the next election of officers, to be held on Nov. 15, 2010. The reformers, including Brown, gained control of the election machinery by electing one of their group, Bass, as supervisor of the Election Supervisory Committee of the Crittenden County NAACP. The election would prove to be a rowdy affair. When, as expected, Dale Charles came from Little Rock to “supervise” the election at the Neighborhood Center on East Polk Avenue in West Memphis, he was removed from the premises. Reformer Shabaka Afrika was elected president. Bass filed a lawsuit on Dec. 30, 2010, in Crittenden County Circuit Court to require Catha-Jones to accept her defeat and turn over all property of the organization to Afrika and arguing that Charles had no authority to intervene. After a hearing on Feb. 2, 2011, Judge Hill found that the new election was valid and that the old officers had “failed to follow proper procedures to contest [the] election.” Catha-Jones was ordered to turn over property of the NAACP in her possession to new president Afrika. Apparently following the advice of the state and national offices of the NAACP, Catha-Jones refused to comply with the court’s orders. On March 8, 2011, Hill found CathaJones to be in “willful contempt of this court’s orders” and ordered her confined to jail “for 30 days, or until such time as she complies with the orders of this court.” She would spend three days in jail. Her non-compliance cost the national office a total of around $5,000, depending on how one figures it. In an order dated March 31, 2011, Hill further detailed his reasons for his detention of Catha-Jones, stating in part, that the evidence had showed that “Charles had no other business in Crittenden County that evening than to impress his will upon the members of the Crittenden County NAACP, and to usurp the election in favor of his friend, Catha-Jones. The deputies acted properly in escorting him from the premises. These officers should be commended for the restraint they displayed when confronted with a man described as ‘irate’ and ‘irrational’ by the witnesses who were present that evening and who testified at the Feb. 2 hearing.” Hill’s order noted that a letter from “outside persons” (officials from the national and state offices of the NAACP) did not constitute authority to interfere with his jurisdiction and nothing would until he either changed his order or was overruled. The judge had thrown down


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