Editorial Results (free)
1.
Final Goodbye: Roll Call of Some Who Died in 2017 -
Monday, January 1, 2018
They made music that inspired legions of fans. Rock 'n' roll founding fathers Chuck Berry and Fats Domino, rockers Tom Petty and Gregg Allman, grunge icon Chris Cornell, country superstar Glen Campbell and jazz great Al Jarreau were among the notable figures who died in 2017, leaving a void in virtually every genre of music.
2.
NBC Fires Matt Lauer Over 'Inappropriate Sexual Behavior' -
Thursday, November 30, 2017
NEW YORK (AP) – NBC News fired "Today" show host Matt Lauer for what it said Wednesday was "inappropriate sexual behavior" with a colleague, making him perhaps the most familiar figure in America brought down so far by the misconduct accusations that have swept through Hollywood and the media over the past two months.
3.
Poll: Many Want to Avoid Political Talk This Thanksgiving -
Thursday, November 23, 2017
WASHINGTON (AP) – Pass the turkey – but maybe hold the politics. The already-fraught topic now includes allegations of sexual misconduct against politicians of various political stripes.
4.
Events -
Thursday, June 25, 2015
Mid-South Association for Financial Professionals will meet Thursday, June 25, from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Overton Room at the Holiday Inn University of Memphis, 3700 Central Ave. Eric Spiegel and Chris Glenn of Dixon Hughes Goodman LLP will discuss cybersecurity. Register at midsouthafp.org.
5.
Memphis Bar Judicial Poll Released -
Tuesday, July 1, 2014
The Memphis Bar Association poll of attorneys on the judicial races on the Aug. 7 ballot shows 16 percent to as high as 38 percent of the attorneys participating have no opinion in many of the judicial races.
6.
Harris Files Ford Challenge at Deadline -
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Memphis City Council member Lee Harris is challenging Democratic state Sen. Ophelia Ford in the August primary for District 29, the Senate seat held by a member of the Ford family since 1975.
7.
Eddleman Joins Family Safety Center -
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Vernetta Eddleman has joined the Family Safety Center, Memphis and Shelby County’s center for victims of domestic violence, as director of client services.
In her new role, Eddleman will be responsible for the planning, design, development and management of client services, and will also supervise and train staff and partner agency providers in delivering quality care to victims and their families.
8.
Cohen to Address the State of Housing Monday -
Friday, April 22, 2011
The Memphis Chapter of National Association of Real Estate Brokers will present a panel discussion on the “State of Housing” Monday.
U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Memphis, will kick off the discussion, followed by an panel covering an array of subjects from legislative acts to mortgages to state-funded programs that stop foreclosure proceedings.
9.
MAAR Presents 2010 Realtor Awards -
Thursday, December 16, 2010
The Memphis Area Association of Realtors has named Mary Sharp of Crye-Leike Inc. Realtors as its Realtor of the Year.
10.
October Home Sales Dip 29 Percent -
Monday, December 6, 2010
While Memphis-area home sales took yet another hit in October, falling 29 percent from the same month a year ago, the average sales price indicates the market is starting to recover.
Home sales in the metropolitan area totaled 958 in October, down from 1,349 in October 2009, according to the most recent data from the Memphis Area Association of Realtors.
11.
Shadows of Doubt -
Monday, November 29, 2010
As the housing market continues to improve, a significant backlog of foreclosed and distressed properties that have not been put on the market could bring the recovery to a screeching halt.
Many lenders across the nation – mostly banks – are struggling to keep up with the overwhelming number of borrowers who have stopped making their mortgage payments. And with the fledgling recovery in housing still weak, banks, institutional investors and even some homeowners who want to sell their homes are waiting until the market shows marked improvement.
12.
September Home Sales Decline Nearly 16 Pct. -
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Total home sales for September dropped 15.9 percent from August, with 1,026 total sales recorded in the Memphis Area Association of Realtors MAARdata property records database. The catalog includes records of all property transactions in the Memphis area, including Shelby, Fayette and Tipton counties.
13.
MAAR Home Sales Show Improvement -
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Memphis-area home sales increased 14.2 percent from July to August, with 1,136 total sales recorded in August 2010, according to the Memphis Area Association of Realtors MAARdata property records database.
14.
Agent Launches New Realty Board -
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Five months after clashing with the Memphis Area Association of Realtors, real estate agent Larry Mayall has formed an independent realty organization.
Mayall, of First National Realty Inc., earlier this month launched the Mid-South Real Estate Board, which he touted as a trade association for real estate professionals who don’t want to become members of the National Association of Realtors.
15.
GOP Carries Countywide Offices -
Friday, August 6, 2010
The only thing Republican candidates in Shelby County were denied in the Aug. 5 elections was a majority on the Shelby County Commission. The local GOP slate swept every countywide partisan race on the ballot with Thursday’s election results.
Voter turnout – early and Election Day – was almost 30 percent of Shelby County’s 600,000 voters. All election returns will be audited and must be certified by the Shelby County Election Commission.
Republican Bill Oldham, the former chief deputy of the Sheriff’s Department under outgoing Sheriff Mark Luttrell, beat Democrat Randy Wade in the race for sheriff.
The unofficial returns with all precincts reporting were:
Oldham: 89,613 (52%)
Wade: 82,981 (48%)
Wade, who was the Democratic nominee for sheriff in 2002, linked his 2010 campaign to the re-election bid of Democratic U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen. Wade, a former sheriff’s deputy, is Cohen’s district director.
Oldham campaigned on continuing the policies of Luttrell. But his campaign faltered when Oldham was forced to resign his job as chief deputy – the No. 2 position in the department – following a complaint to the U.S. Justice Department that his candidacy violated the Federal Hatch Act.
The civil complaint investigated by the Justice Department’s Office of Special Counsel left Oldham with the choice of either quitting the job or quitting the race. To keep both could have jeopardized federal funding the department receives.
The complaint was unique because deputies and high-ranking officers running for sheriff has been a regular feature of the sheriff’s race for decades. It wasn’t until 2002 that those in the department were required to take a leave of absence if they ran.
In other general election races, challenger Ken Hoover lost to Shelby County School Board Chairman David Pickler in the race for the District 5 seat on the seven-member board.
Pickler has been chairman for 11 of the 12 years the school board has been an elected body. Pickler ran on his record as chairman. Hoover also ran on Pickler’s record, saying his leadership style was too autocratic and not transparent enough.
The unofficial results were:
Pickler: 5,123 (51%)
Hoover: 4,956 (49%)
In the two other contested school board races, former Bolton High School principal Snowden “Butch” Carruthers beat Millington parent Charlene White in District 1. And political newcomer David Reaves beat fellow newcomer Lara A. McIntyre, both of Bartlett, for the District 3 seat.
White and McIntyre both called for change in school board methods during their campaigns.
District 7 school board member Ernest Chism ran unopposed.
The even-numbered district school board seats are on the 2012 county ballot.
After running for Probate Court clerk three other times, Democratic nominee Sondra Becton could not claim the office on her fourth try – even with the incumbent she campaigned against the three other times out of the race. Republican contender Paul Boyd easily beat Becton in the race for the office Chris Thomas gave up to run for and win a seat on the Shelby County Commission.
Becton lost to Thomas by 604 votes four years ago and was among the four Democratic challengers who unsuccessfully challenged the results in Chancery Court. This time she lost by more than 6,500 votes.
The vote totals were:
Boyd: 82,259 (52%)
Becton: 75,702 (48%)
Republican Tom Leatherwood easily defeated Democratic challenger Coleman Thompson to remain Shelby County register. The two faced each other in 2006, with Leatherwood winning.
The results Thursday were:
Leatherwood: 96,531 (58%)
Thompson: 68,784 (42%)
As early voting began, Thompson’s Pyramid Recovery Center was evicted from its longtime South Memphis space that was also an early voting site and an election day polling place. The landlord agreed to leave the voting sites up and running. But the possibility of a change in polling places served to highlight Thompson’s financial problems.
Late publicity about financial problems took a toll on another Democratic contender.
Newcomer Corey Maclin began campaigning early for Shelby County clerk, with incumbent Republican Debbie Stamson not seeking re-election. Maclin lost to Republican nominee Wayne Mashburn, the son of late county clerk Sonny Mashburn.
The unofficial returns were:
Mashburn: 88,619 (55%)
Maclin: 72,651 (45%)
Stamson’s husband, Steve Stamson, retired as Juvenile Court clerk, setting up the race that was won by Republican nominee Joy Touliatos, the chief administrative officer of the clerk’s office. She beat Democratic nominee Shep Wilbun, who won appointment to the clerk’s office in 2000 but lost to Stamson in the 2002 election and was beaten by Stamson again in 2006.
With all precincts reporting, the numbers were:
Touliatos: 85,849 (51%)
Wilbun: 73,345 (44%)
The remaining votes went to independent candidate Julia R. Wiseman.
Also seeking a return to countywide office was Minerva Johnican. Johnican, the Democratic nominee for Criminal Court clerk, lost to Republican nominee Kevin Key, the son of outgoing Criminal Court Clerk Bill Key and an administrator with the Circuit Court Clerk’s office.
The results were:
Key: 79,755 (49%)
Johnican: 74,831 (46%)
Independent candidate Jerry Stamson: 8,581 (5%)
Johnican, also a former Memphis City Council member and Shelby County Commissioner lost the clerk’s job in 1994 when she was upset by the elder Key.
Incumbent Republican Circuit Court Clerk Jimmy Moore easily defeated Democratic challenger Ricky Dixon. Although Dixon was part of the effort by Democratic party leaders to get voters to vote the entire party slate, Moore continued to show up at Democratic functions and make his case for crossover votes.
Regina Morrison Newman, the third Shelby County tustee in four years, lost her bid for a full term in the office to Republican challenger David Lenoir. It was an impressive political debut for Lenoir, who had heavy backing from the local GOP.
The results were:
Lenoir: 77,166 (49%)
Newman: 72,618 (46%)
Independent candidate Derrick Bennett: 6,353 (4%)
Newman was appointed to the office by the Shelby County Commission following the 2009 death of Trustee Paul Mattila. Mattila was appointed to the office and won a special election for the position following the 2008 death of Bob Patterson. Patterson was re-elected to a four-year term in 2006.
In the judicial races:
Attorney Bill Anderson Jr. emerged atop a field of 20 candidates for General Sessions Criminal Court Judge Div. 7 with 15 percent of the vote. Assistant County Attorney Janet Lansky Shipman was second and the only other contender to go into double digit percentages. The 20 candidates were the largest field in any race – primary or general – on the Shelby County ballot.
Prosecutor Bobby Carter, who had the backing of District Attorney General Bill Gibbons and former District Attorney General John Pierotti, was elected judge of Criminal Court Div. 3 in a close race with attorneys Glenn Wright and Latonya Sue Burrow.
Carter got 26 percent of the vote to Wright’s 25 percent and Burrow’s 24.7 percent.
The results in the three other special judicial races saw the three appointed judges rejected by voters.
- Lee Wilson, the appointee to General Sessions Criminal Court Judge Div. 10, lost to former General Sessions Court Clerk Chris Turner by more than 64,000 votes. Turner’s victory was the strongest proof of the strong Republican turnout for races across the general election ballot. Turner had been the General Sessions Court clerk until 2006, when he was upset by Democratic challenger Otis Jackson. He is also a former Republican state legislator.
- Lorrie Ridder, the appointee to Circuit Court Judge Div. 4, lost to attorney Gina Higgins by about 5,000 votes.
- Rhynette Northcross Hurd, the appointee to Circuit Court Judge Div. 8, lost to attorney Bob Weiss by more than 12,000 votes.
Ridder and Hurd had been appointed to the Circuit Court vacancies by Gov. Phil Bredesen, who picked them each from a list of three finalists from the Judicial Nominating Commission. Bredesen even taped a robo-call on behalf of Hurd, his first robo-call for any candidate in the state.
Wilson was appointed to the General Sessions vacancy by the Shelby County Commission and adopted a domestic violence case docket for the court.
...16.
Bank Sales Slip As Housing Market Rebounds -
Monday, July 12, 2010
People who sold their houses benefited more than banks from the final months of the homebuyers’ tax credit in Memphis, where overall sales during the second quarter of 2010 rose 7 percent from a year ago.
17.
Bar Association Announces Endorsements -
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
The first bar endorsements in the August judicial elections are out. A committee of the Ben F. Jones chapter of the National Bar Association has endorsed candidates in all five of the special judicial elections on the Aug. 5 ballot. The committee also endorsed candidates in three of the court clerk races on the ballot.
18.
Ben F. Jones Chapter Endorses In Judicial Races -
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
A committee of the Ben F. Jones chapter of the National Bar Association has endorsed candidates in all five of the special judicial elections on the Aug. 5 ballot.
The committee also endorsed in three of the court clerk races on the ballot.
19.
MAAR Launches Redesigned Website -
Thursday, June 24, 2010
The Memphis Area Association of Realtors this week unveiled a redesigned website, www.maar.org.
The site, according to the organization’s press release, features an “enhanced ‘front door,’ or home page, that is easier to navigate and has a fresh design.”
20.
US Home Sales Tumble as Tax Credit Expires -
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Sales of new homes plummeted in May, falling 31 percent locally and 33 percent nationally as potential homebuyers scurried from the market once the homebuyers tax credit expired.
The nosedive created concerns that the housing market will endure a “double dip,” with sales numbers showing significant declines for the second time since the recession first hit.
21.
US Home Sales Plummet in May as Tax Credit Expires -
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Sales of new homes plummeted in May, falling 31 percent locally and 33 percent nationally as potential homebuyers scurried from the market once the homebuyers tax credit expired.
The nosedive created concerns that the housing market will endure a “double dip,” with sales numbers showing significant declines for the second time since the recession first hit.
22.
May Home Sales Up 3 Percent -
Monday, June 7, 2010
May brought torrential weather to the area with an onslaught of storms and flooding, but it also delivered a torrent of home sales, generating Shelby County’s most productive month since last fall.
23.
Tax Credits Fuel 6 Percent Rise in April Home Sales -
Thursday, June 3, 2010
WASHINGTON (AP) – A rush of homebuyers aiming to meet a deadline to qualify for a federal tax credit pushed the number of signed sales contracts to the highest level since October.
The National Association of Realtors reported Wednesday its seasonally adjusted index of sales agreements for previously occupied homes rose 6 percent in April from a month earlier to a reading of 110.9. March’s reading was revised upward to 104.6.
24.
Home Sales Decline in April but Market Leaders Optimistic -
Friday, May 7, 2010
Real estate professionals won’t call April’s home sales disappointing, but with all the buzz surrounding the homebuyers tax credit that expired at the end of last month the final tally was underwhelming to say the least.
25.
March Home Sales Up 4.9 Percent -
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
The Memphis Area Association of Realtors on Tuesday released its March data, confirming that the homebuyers tax credit had a positive effect on home sales.
The tax credit, which expired Friday, helped the Memphis area notch 1,323 home sales, a 4.9 percent increase from 1,261 home sales in March 2009, according to MAAR figures.
26.
Home Sales Inch Up in Q1 -
Monday, April 12, 2010
This past weekend the Memphis Area Association of Realtors hosted a citywide “open house” along with Realtor associations across the country.
The event, which spotlighted hundreds of homes for sale throughout the area, was designed to increase sales as the homebuyers tax credit approaches its April 30 deadline and also give the industry an overall spark before the busy summer season.
27.
Madness Comes to March Home Sales Totals -
Thursday, April 8, 2010
“March Madness” refers to the frenzy of college basketball from coast to coast each spring, but the term might also be applied to the local real estate market, which last month saw an impressive flurry of home sales.
28.
Open House Push To Close Out Tax Credit -
Thursday, March 25, 2010
The countdown is on for the homebuyers tax credit.
With the April 30 deadline in exactly five weeks – or 25 business days – the real estate industry is kicking into high gear in hopes of drumming up sales.
29.
Home Sales Rebound Despite Weather Obstacles -
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
February, the shortest month of the year with only 28 calendar days, is at a natural disadvantage when it comes to home sales.
Toss in this past February’s record cold temperatures coupled with winter storms wreaking havoc on the area, and it probably wouldn’t surprise anyone to see the housing market suffer yet another slow period.
30.
A subtle improvement -
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
From declining sales to falling prices, the housing industry has been hammered recently, and nowhere is that more evident than in Memphis Area Association of Realtors membership numbers.
MAAR, the local trade organization for real estate professionals, has seen its membership dwindle steadily since its high point in August 2007, when it boasted 5,406 members. The latest numbers show membership at just 3,797, a 29.8 percent decline from its pinnacle two and a half years ago and the lowest point since 3,943 in February 2004, the last time it sat below 4,000.
31.
MAAR Prez: Stage Set for Better Home Sales -
Monday, January 11, 2010
2009 went into the books as the worst year for home sales in 18 years, but a slight improvement in the final quarter signaled a sliver of hope for a beleaguered real estate industry.
Shelby County saw just 14,600 home sales last year, an 11 percent decline from 16,406 home sales during 2008 and a 29 percent decline from 20,706 home sales during 2007, according to the latest data from real estate information company Chandler Reports, www.chandlerreports.com.
32.
Moore Ascends To MAAR Presidency -
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
When Glenn Moore was growing up in the Longview Heights community of South Memphis, he and his dad would spend Sunday afternoons driving around the city checking out new housing developments.
33.
Home Sales Outpace Nov. ’08 Performance -
Thursday, December 10, 2009
For the first time all year, Shelby County’s home sales outpaced the same month of 2008, perhaps signaling an end – or at least the beginning of the end – to the local housing slump.
November notched 1,154 sales, a 17 percent improvement from 983 sales in November 2008, according to the latest data from real estate information company Chandler Reports, www.chandlerreports.com.
34.
Stars Start to Align In Residential Real Estate Market -
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
The first week of November brought a double dose of good news for the beleaguered real estate industry. Not only did Congress extend and expand its first-time homebuyers tax credit, but the most recent local sales report was peppered with positive signs.
35.
Q3 Home Sales Up Slightly From Q2 -
Monday, October 12, 2009
Of all the real estate figures floating around, perhaps the most telling is the one showing shrinking membership in the Memphis Area Association of Realtors.
MAAR, the trade association for local real estate professionals, saw its lowest member total in more than five years during the third quarter of 2009 (July through September).
36.
Deadline Looms For Homebuyers’ Tax Credit -
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
To extend or not to extend? That is the question.
At least it is for real estate professionals, who have their eyes on Nov. 30, the date when the $8,000 first-time homebuyers federal tax credit is set to expire.
37.
Housing Market Takes Shallow Dip in Q2 -
Monday, July 13, 2009
Regina Hubbard is one of the local Realtors who saw the challenge of a down market as an opportunity. Instead of hunkering down or following business-as-usual practices, Hubbard reacted to the housing slump with renewed vigor.
38.
Hope Emerges from June Home Sales -
Thursday, July 9, 2009
The traditionally busy summer home-buying season got off to a slow start with June sales well off the mark from the same month a year ago.
But signs of life also emerged, as June notched the second highest sales total of 2009, a handful of submarkets enjoyed modest growth during the month and foreclosure sales waned.
39.
Influence 1 Foundation Names Hartsfield COO -
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Felicia Hartsfield has been named chief operating officer of Influence 1 Foundation.
Hartsfield will oversee the continued stability and growth of the foundation’s fiscal, strategic, organizational and operational functions. Her duties also will include building and maintaining relationships with community leaders, as well as creating collaborations, which will enhance the foundation’s strategic model.
40.
2008: Year to Forget in Real Estate -
Monday, January 12, 2009
Of all the real estate storylines from 2008, perhaps the most revealing was that bank sales – i.e., foreclosures – accounted for 37.3 percent of the residential market share in 2008, up from 24.7 percent in 2007.
41.
Calipari Tapped to Rally Real Estate Community -
Thursday, January 8, 2009
For many local sports fans, the lasting image of 2008 was the University of Memphis men’s basketball team suffering a heartbreaking loss to Kansas in the national championship game.
For many local Realtors, the lasting image of 2008 was the housing market suffering a continued slump.
42.
Q3 Home Sales Drop 22 Percent -
Monday, October 13, 2008
The real estate market hasn’t plunged as dramatically as the stock market has, but much like the Dow Jones industrial average, housing has seen better days.
The downward spiral continued in the third quarter of 2008 as residential sales declined 22.3 percent in Shelby County compared to the same quarter a year ago, according to the latest numbers from real estate information company Chandler Reports, www.chandlerreports.com.
43.
In the Tank -
Friday, May 16, 2008
As gas prices soared to another record high earlier this week, Lorraine Williams plotted ways to minimize her drive time and save some money.
Williams, an affiliate broker for Crye-Leike Inc.’s Bartlett office, had to attend a home re-inspection, buy a housewarming gift for one of her clients and pick up a graduation present for her granddaughter without driving all over the city, so she mapped her errands in the same part of town.
44.
Smith Named President at Zycron Inc. -
Wednesday, February 6, 2008
Steven Howard Smith of Zycron Inc., Tennessee's largest minority-owned information technology services firm, has been chosen as the company's new president.
Smith joined Zycron in July as executive vice president. He has more than 21 years of management experience in the information technology consulting industry.
45.
Weak Real Estate Market Translates To Poor Bottom Line -
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Without polling every Realtor in town or reviewing their tax returns, it's impossible to know exactly how much money each one of them gained or lost in commissions between 2006 and 2007.
But a closer look at industry averages - including 2007's declining home sales - reveals a potentially disastrous income year for real estate professionals as a whole.
46.
2007's Top RealtorsHonored by MAAR -
Thursday, January 17, 2008
The Memphis Area Association of Realtors recently handed out awards at its annual gala, including one to John Linthicum of Crye-Leike Inc., who was named 2007 Realtor of the Year. Randy Jefferson of The Hobson Co. Realto47.
MAAR ElectsBoard of Directors -
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Members of the Memphis Area Association of Realtors (MAAR) elected five directors to the organization's board at last week's annual meeting.
The new directors are Bill Maury of Hobson Co48.
Despite Q1 Sales Decline, Realtors Optimistic About Rest of '07 -
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Home sales are down in Shelby County, but most area real estate practitioners aren't concerned. They remain bullish on the Memphis housing market, which is coming off an all-time sales record set in 2006.
49.
Methodist Director Elected President Of Tennessee Board of Pharmacy -
Wednesday, March 28, 2007
Sheila Mitchell, director of pharmacy services at Methodist Le Bonheur Germantown Hospital, has been elected president of the Tennessee Board of Pharmacy. Mitchell has worked for Methodist for more than 20 years. She is an assistant professor at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center's College of Pharmacy and has served on several committees for the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy. The Tennessee House of Representatives honored her in 2002 for her local contributions to her field.
50.
Phillips to Become President of Optometry School -
Wednesday, January 24, 2007
Dr. Richard W. Phillips has been named president-elect of Southern College of Optometry in Memphis. Phillips is a 1978 graduate of the college and the former regional executive director for Tennessee operations for TLC - Laser Eye Centers. He will be only the sixth person to hold the office in the college's 75-year history. Phillips will assume the presidency May 17. He is replacing William E. Cochran, who is retiring.
51.
Women's Foundation Director Shines as Woman of Character -
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Ruby Bright has been recognized as a 2006 Woman of Character by the Girl Scout Council of the Mid-South. Bright, who is the executive director of the Women's Foundation for a Greater Memphis, was recognized for her courage, confidence and leadership.
52.
Morman Named Branch Director at MATCU -
Wednesday, September 13, 2006
Cheryl Morman has been named branch director of Memphis Area Teachers' Credit Union's (MATCU) Central branch. She previously was deposit services manager at Marriott Employees' Federal Credit Union in Bethesda, Md.
53.
Just Say No to Payments -
Friday, July 21, 2006
Shelby County is experiencing a continued downward trend in the number of mortgages filed during the second quarter 2006, according to The Daily News Online, www.memphisdailynews.com.
However, some area real estate professionals say they think improvements in technology eventually could help the market rebound.
54.
Archived Article: Memos -
Wednesday, August 27, 2003
<rphoto> Judge Earnestine Hunt Dorse has been sworn in as the 33rd chairperson of the Judicial Council of the National Bar Ass Judge Earnestine Hunt Dorse was sworn in as the 33rd chair of the Judicial Council of the National Bar Associatio...
55.
Archived Article: Real Briefs -
Tuesday, October 10, 2000
Michael Millwood of ACC Real Estate Services in Charlotte, N Michael Millwood of ACC Real Estate Services in Charlotte, N.C., the newly elected Regional 13 vice president of the Institute of Real Estate Management will speak about the future of IREM...56.
Archived Article: Real Briefs -
Tuesday, September 26, 2000
The Village at Germantown, a new retirement community, is hosting an informational seminar from 10 a The Village at Germantown, a new retirement community, is hosting an informational seminar from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Wednesday at the Germantown Count...57.
Archived Article: Memos -
Wednesday, December 29, 1999
Russell Gwatney, Gwatney Cos Russell Gwatney, Gwatney Cos. president, was named chairman of the Memphis Area Chamber of Commerce. Gwatney has served on the board since 1995. Other officers elected to serve in 2000 are: Larry Jensen, chairman-elect; ...58.
Archived Article: Memos -
Wednesday, March 3, 1999
Glenn J Glenn J. Brown has been named vice president and general manager of the identification technology division of Lamination Service Inc. He is a graduate of Mississippi State University. Kent Landers has joined Thompson & Co. as an account ...59.
Archived Article: Back -
Tuesday, March 19, 1996
3-19 back Downtown Memphis Award nominees announced The Exchange Building and the Memphis Convention & Visitors Bureau are among this years nominees for the Center City Commissions Downtown Memphis Awards. The commission received over 50 percent...