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Editorial Results (free)

1. California Company Buys Cordova Shopping Center -

A California-based company has purchased a Cordova shopping center and its adjoining 2.5-acre lot.

Pleasanton, California-based Logical Group Inc. bought the shopping center at 1658 Appling Road from Appling Center Partners for $1.8 million on Aug. 6, according to the Shelby County Register of Deeds.

2. California Company Buys Cordova Shopping Center -

A California-based company has purchased a Cordova shopping center and its adjoining 2.5-acre lot.

Pleasanton, California-based Logical Group Inc. bought the shopping center at 1658 Appling Road from Appling Center Partners for $1.8 million on Aug. 6, according to the Shelby County Register of Deeds.

3. DHS Reports About 2,000 Minors Separated From Families -

WASHINGTON (AP) – Nearly 2,000 children have been separated from their families at the U.S. border over a six-week period during a crackdown on illegal entries, according to Department of Homeland Security figures obtained Friday by The Associated Press.

4. Blockchain Tech ‘is the Shiny New Penny’ -

During the General Assembly session that just ended legislators debated a number of hot-button issues: guns, abortion, Confederate statues and medical marijuana.

But tucked among the headline-grabbers was a brief bill, less than 300 words long, that attracted no controversy whatsoever.

5. Jones Named Managing Partner of Fisher Phillips’ Memphis Office -

Fisher Phillips has appointed David S. Jones regional managing partner of its Memphis office. Jones, who has 18 years’ law experience, represents clients exclusively in immigration-related employment and compliance matters, and that will continue to be his primary focus as regional managing partner. In addition, he will oversee development of the office, attorneys and staff, and will play a greater role in the management of Fisher Phillips as a whole as a member of the operations group. Jones takes the reins from Jeff Weintraub, who served in the role for six years, as part of a routine leadership rotation.

6. Innovating Human Resources -

If you boil down the function of human relations to logical extremes, you end up with polar opposites.

On one hand you have the traditional view of HR: a place to fill out all of your essential employee paperwork, ask questions about benefits, send out messages about birthdays, and a place to be heard if you have an issue with a manager or boss.

7. Belly Button Meeting Tips -

We get hired to moderate and facilitate a lot of meetings. Sometimes they are annual strategic workshops. Sometimes they are customer co-creations. They range from strategy to innovation and every combination between the two poles.

8. ‘Ugly’ Titans Offense Can No Longer Be Ignored -

It had been festering for weeks, but the Tennessee Titans seemed to push the matter aside as they were squeezing out close wins against the NFL’s third-easiest schedule.

“Winning ugly” is how it was seen through rose-colored glasses, with an 8-4 record as exhibit 1.

9. Sports & Business Tag-Team Partners in DeSoto County -

When Snowden Grove Park, a 17-field baseball-only facility was built in 1999 in Southaven, it cued a change in dynamics. And not just for local and regional competitive baseball teams that would now have a place to compete on miniature professional quality fields.

10. Raising The Ceiling -

Here’s the thing about expectations: You either embrace them, turning them into some divine combination of daily bread and rocket fuel, or they crush you.

There is no middle ground. Not when the statistical mid-point – a .500 season – would be an undisputed failure.

11. Tigers’ Jimario Rivers Has Head Start On Doing the Dirty Work -

When Josh Pastner recruited Jimario Rivers from Southwest Tennessee Community College, the University of Memphis coach envisioned him as a small forward who could play some at the four.

After Pastner left for Georgia Tech and Tubby Smith became the basketball coach, Rivers initially thought that would still be his role. He provided some spark off the bench, but then 6-11 Chad Rykhoek got hurt and Rivers was starting and basically playing the role of a 4/5 player – at 6-8 and 195 pounds.

12. Riding New Wave -

In 2007, about a half-dozen Memphis companies came together to found the Urban Land Institute Memphis chapter. It was a fine start. Six years later, ULI Memphis was convening a group of mayors from the tri-state area and, at least initially, trying very hard to make it informal and non-threatening.

13. What are the Odds? Blackburn is Still the Favorite -

Tennessee has its search firm and its search committee is in place to find the replacement for Dave Hart as the university’s athletic director.

Hart announced last August he would retire June 30, and with Tennessee undergoing a transition in its chancellor’s position, the search for Hart’s replacement was put on the back burner.

14. View From the Hill: Cooperatives Ready to Fill Broadband Void -

Rural broadband backers such as Misty O’Beirne in Rutherford County can take heart. Legislation to spread high-speed internet into cyberspace deserts is making the right connections.

15. Students Taking One Step Toward Leadership -

Brian Booker’s gateway to being able to travel to more than 30 countries around the world came through education.

16. Anne Dixon Joins BRIDGES as CFO -

Anne Dixon has joined BRIDGES as vice president of finance and chief financial officer. Dixon, who is a Bridge Builders alumna, is responsible in her new role for financial reporting and analysis to help BRIDGES leadership in performing their responsibilities. 

17. New UCI Board Chair Pledges More Grants, Transparency -

Jill Crocker, new board chairman of The Urban Child Institute, says the organization is essentially starting with a clean slate.

18. Google’s Challenge Accepted -

When Google offered its “Little Box Challenge” to the scientific world about a year ago – asking inventors to make the smallest, most efficient two-kilowatt inverter possible – Daniel Costinett was intrigued.

19. No Empty Nest: Young Women Live With M & D Like It's 1940 -

Young women are living with their parents or relatives at a rate not seen since 1940 as more millennial women put off marriage, attend college and face high living expenses.

A Pew Research Center analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data found that 36.4 percent of women between the ages 18 and 34 lived with parents or relatives in 2014, the most since at least 1940, when 36.2 percent lived with family.

20. Fred Smith: Expect More M&A -

FedEx Corp. president and CEO Fred Smith made a rare public appearance Wednesday, Oct. 7, to talk about the global trading economy and the future of the logistics industry.

21. Memphis Search Marketing Firm Nabs Spot on Inc. 500 -

Search marketing firm HigherVisibility LLC was the highest-ranked Memphis company on the annual Inc. 5000 list, which ranks the nation’s fastest growing companies.

22. Memphis Firm HigherVisibility Nabs Spot on Inc. 5000 -

Search marketing firm HigherVisibility LLC was the highest-ranked Memphis company on the annual Inc. 5000 list, which ranks the nation’s fastest growing companies.

23. Two People Emerge For Airport Chairman Post -

A three-member committee of the Memphis-Shelby County Airport Authority is recommending two candidates to replace outgoing chairman Jack Sammons.

24. Two People Emerge for Airport Chairman Post -

A three-member committee of the Memphis-Shelby County Airport Authority is recommending two candidates to replace outgoing chairman Jack Sammons.

25. Amazon.com Offering to Help Get Jobs Done Around the House -

SEATTLE (AP) – Amazon.com is introducing a referral service to help people to get projects and chores done around their homes.

The recommendation system, called Amazon Home Services, marks the e-commerce company's latest attempt to expand its empire beyond online shopping. It debuted Monday across the U.S. after several months of testing in New York, Los Angeles and Amazon.com's home city of Seattle.

26. European Cruise Giant Viking Plans Mississippi River Tours -

NEW ORLEANS (AP) – European river cruise giant Viking, already gaining a high profile in the United States with its sponsorship of popular PBS television shows, announced Tuesday that it will make New Orleans its first North American home port for Mississippi River cruises expected to begin by late 2017.

27. Newby's Owner Raising Money to Keep Doors Open -

Newby’s owner Todd Adams has turned to crowdfunding to help him raise money that will be used to keep his bar and music venue on the Highland Strip open.

Adams has set up a GoFundMe account to raise $25,000 to help keep the doors open at Newby’s, which Paragon Bank foreclosed on this summer. The owner of Newby’s since 1997, Adams wants to get to the point where he can buy back the property, after which he then has a plan to reshape its layout and include a bevy of additions.

28. Puzzled Groups Across the Land -

DAVIDSON, N.C. – A few years ago, Brown University had the largest puzzle-related student activities organization in the country. Its Puzzling Association, with over 30 members, met weekly to solve, discuss and construct. New York Times puzzle editor Will Shortz declared a “Brown Week” in the autumn of 2010, publishing a crossword by a different student for six consecutive days. Natan Last, Class of 2012, had 14 Times puzzles published before he graduated.

29. Springing to Life -

When Ridgeland, Miss.-based development firm the Bryan Co. broke ground on The Horizon condominium tower in 2007, it was at the peak of the housing bubble and optimism from elected officials and Downtown boosters was equally high.

30. Cannon Works for Golf Tournament's Success -

The putter and a few white golf balls sit next to a wall in Phil Cannon’s office at TPC Southwind. It seems logical, the long-time director of the FedEx St. Jude Classic having golf equipment within easy reach.

31. Grizzlies Descend Deeper Into Unconscionable Chaos -

Hard as it is to believe now, it was only May 3 when the Grizzlies last played a basketball game. Less than three weeks later, that Game 7 loss at Oklahoma City stands as the franchise’s last normal moment.

32. Rules to Limit Marketing Unhealthy Food in Schools -

WASHINGTON (AP) – Even the scoreboards in high school gyms will have to advertise only healthy foods under new rules announced Tuesday by the Obama administration.

Promotion of sugary drinks and junk foods around campuses during the school day will be phased out under the rules, intended to ensure that such marketing is brought in line with health standards that already apply to school foods.

33. Laufer Bolsters Third-Party Logistics Service With Memphis Office -

Laufer Group International Ltd. has continued its Southeast expansion by making an entry into the Memphis logistics market with a Downtown office.

The third-party logistics (3PL) provider is focused on providing highly sophisticated value-added solutions to importers at competitive prices, and establishing a presence a key distribution hub like Memphis made sense.

34. Ramsey Brings Wealth of Experience to Frayser School -

For a new school principal arriving in Memphis, this might seem like at least an interesting time and place to become a school administrator.

For Russ Ramsey, he is also starting a new school in August that is part of the state-run Achievement School District in an area of Memphis where all but one school is among the lowest performing in the state in terms of student achievement.

35. ‘Real Big Decisions’ Looming for Grizzlies -

The Grizzlies returned from Los Angeles down 2-0 to the Clippers, the idea of “Believe Memphis” being put to the test.

Thursday night, April 25, the Clippers and Grizzlies were to play Game 3 at FedExForum, and then Saturday, April 27, Game 4.

36. Argent Financial Sees Growth in Memphis, Beyond -

Argent Financial Group hasn’t let its foot off the gas since arriving in Memphis.

The Louisiana-based wealth management firm, which is now responsible for more than $5.5 billion in client assets, has continued to expand both in Memphis and beyond.

37. Dunavant Grows Logistics, Transportation Divisions -

Dunavant Enterprises Inc. continues its transformation into a purely third-party logistics and asset-based transportation firm.

38. FTN Financial Grows With New Offices, Hires -

First Tennessee Bank’s capital markets subsidiary has been on a tear lately. FTN Financial has grown on several fronts, including with the addition of a public finance department as it expands into the general market municipal bond sector and with the opening of new offices as part of that expansion. The company also has opened additional new offices around the country and added employees in other areas to handle general growth.

39. Lawrence’s Background a Fit for Work at EDGE -

It might be said that John Lawrence has a background made to order for looking at the big picture – one of real estate, urban planning, marketing and organization management. Through the course of various career moves, he’s developed the tools necessary for the use in his position as manager of strategic economic development planning for Memphis and Shelby County’s Economic Development Growth Engine (EDGE).

40. Schools Merger Budget Sent Back -

The first and very preliminary draft of a budget for the first year of the consolidated public school system in Shelby County was probably dead on arrival this week.

Even before a public hearing Monday, Jan. 4, that drew several hundred people, countywide school board members spent most of the day reviewing the numbers with the transition steering committee – a group of top administrators from both school systems.

41. Memphis Primary Care Aligns With Baptist Group -

The trend of consolidation in the local health care industry marches on as Memphis Primary Care becomes the latest private physician practice to align with a major hospital system, joining Baptist Medical Group.

42. Cognitive Biases Affect Strategic Decision Making -

You are biased. Chances are very good that your team is also biased, no matter how talented or experienced they are in your industry. Human bias can blind you to real market demand and open opportunity.

43. Blu Logistics Rebrands, Grows Memphis Presence -

Blu Logistics has made its move into Memphis and hopes to fill a niche in the local logistics market.

The company opened a Downtown office in early September and adopted a new brand image in mid-November.

44. Atheist Group Plans to Lobby Tenn. Legislators -

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A national group of atheists plans to lobby Tennessee lawmakers on issues involving separation of church and state.

According to The Tennessean (http://tnne.ws/NgxoKA ), the Secular Coalition for America announced intention on Tuesday to organize a local chapter aimed at increasing the clout of local atheists and agnostics.

45. Hunter Brings Unique Teaching Methods To The Martin Institute Conference -

John Hunter teaches only two days a week. That’s because the fourth-grade teacher from Charlottesville, Va., is now on the road a lot. He and his World Peace Game that teaches critical thinking skills and collaboration are the subject of a 2010 movie documentary that has garnered a lot of attention.

46. Dog Park at Heart of Overton Park Changes -

Overton Park Conservancy leaders formally open a dog park Saturday, June 2, with a corporate sponsor paying for the undertaking, a new executive director on the job for about a month and plenty of maintenance work under way in other parts of the Midtown park.

47. Argent Opens Trust Office in Nashville -

It’s been a few years now since Louisiana-based Argent Financial Group, a diversified financial services company responsible for more than $3 billion in client assets, arrived in Memphis.

Since then, Argent has solidified its ties to the city. Now, it’s grown beyond Memphis deeper into the state.

48. Hotel Upgrade -

Jay Michael and his business partners in Chicago were interested in a portfolio of apartment buildings in Chicago going up for auction in 2010 when they came across a hotel in Memphis in the grouping.

49. Support Builds for Special Session on Health Care -

NASHVILLE (AP) – Republican lawmakers are building support for a plan to wait until the end of the year to take action on state requirements set by President Barack Obama's federal health care law.

50. Relocated Campus Spotlights NCBT’s Growing Presence -

The National College of Business and Technology is in the very early stages of the planning process for its new brick-and-mortar campus in Memphis.

The private college – which is based in Roanoke, Va., and has locations in six states – plans to relocate its Lamar campus. The existing facility is nearing capacity (approximately 400 students), so NBCT will move to a larger, soon-to-be-constructed two-story building at 2576 Thousand Oaks Cove, just off Interstate 240 in East Memphis.

51. MATA Takes Proposed Bus Route Changes to Public -

Memphis Area Transit Authority officials formally opened the new Airways Transit Center Tuesday, Nov. 8, the same week consultants are hearing from the public about several options to change the MATA route system as well as the week a fare increase goes into effect.

52. Hometown Exploration -

Cruise by Sun Studio any day of the week and you’ll see tourists from every corner of the globe taking photographs of its famous brown brick façade and queuing up for a ticket to the birthplace of rock ‘n’ roll.

53. Accredo Health Parent Merges With Express Scripts -

Medco Health Solutions Inc., the parent company of Memphis-based Accredo Health Group, announced Thursday, July 21, it had signed a merger agreement with Express Scripts Inc.

54. CRE Retail Duo Finds Success In Pairs -

About eight years ago, The Shopping Center Group LLC began encouraging its agents to work on deals in teams.

55. Sharpen Your Negotiation Skills -

Negotiating is an art. It’s more than offering up a series of compromises until you get to your bottom line.

Old school negotiators tell you to shoot for 10-15 percent more than what you’re actually willing to take. With this approach, it’s more about taking advantage of the other party versus creative problem solving – truly understanding what both parties would like to achieve and why, and finding an innovative way to get there.

56. Bridging the Gap -

Between now and the end of the year, transportation planners in the tri-state area and beyond will round up the final work product that will go into the preliminary search for a new Mississippi River bridge at or near Memphis.

57. Baer Leaves Mathematics To Pursue Law Degree -

Cara R. Baer started out pursuing mathematics because of its certainties and wound up with a different set of certainties – the law.

She’s part of the business services group of the Butler, Snow, O’Mara, Stevens and Cannada PLLC law firm, working in intellectual property.

58. Callan Joins Methodist as Perioperative Director -

Thomas E. Callan has joined Methodist University Hospital as administrative director of perioperative services.

Hometown: New York City
Education: I earned a master of arts in health care administration from The George Washington University in Washington, D.C. I also received my bachelor of science degree with majors in nursing, biology and psychology from The George Washington University.
Work Experience: More than 39 years of progressive responsible experience in hospital, health system management and managed care from both a provider and a third-party reimbursement perspective. For the past 31 years, I have served as a program director, senior consultant, senior health system administrator and patient care administrator.
Favorite quote: “One is not defined by their abilities, but rather by their choices.”
Last book read: “Stranger in a Strange Land” by Robert A. Heinlein
Favorite music: Blues and jazz
Favorite movie: “The Lion in Winter”
Sports team: New York Yankees
Activities you enjoy outside of work: I enjoy traveling and playing amateur softball.
Who has had the greatest influence on you? The person who has had the greatest influence on me is a former supervisor who taught me that it is all about taking risks in order to succeed.
Why did you pursue a career in health care administration? I chose a career in health care administration because I felt it was the most logical step to provide the maximum effect in health care.
What drew you to Methodist University Hospital? What attracted me to Methodist is the organization’s approach to patient- and family-centered care.
What do you consider your greatest professional accomplishments? I consider some of my greatest accomplishments to include managing major managed care contracts that exceeded revenues of $250 million; designing and implementing a specialty care transplant contract inclusive of pre-operative, operative and post-operative care; and performing as the corporate clinical resource for contract negotiations for other specialty care areas including HIV and thoracic surgery.
What do you most enjoy about your work? I enjoy having the opportunity to mentor other people.

59. Malone's Barnes & Noble Bid a Bet on the Nook -

NEW YORK (AP) – Why buy a bookstore?

John Malone, who made a fortune in cable television, is offering $1 billion for Barnes & Noble – trying to jump into a business so sick that its No. 2 competitor, Borders Group Inc., is on life support.

60. Baptist Group Partners With Stern Cardiovascular -

Baptist Memorial Medical Group has announced a partnership with Stern Cardiovascular Center, one of the region’s largest cardiology group practices.

“We are very excited and honored to partner with a prestigious group like Stern,” said Jason Little, vice president of Baptist Memorial Health Care. “This represents the logical next step in the long rich history between our two organizations.”

61. Memphian to Screen Feature Film -

Jason Weter isn’t the first Memphian to fund creative endeavors through his day job, but with the creation of a new feature film, he hopes to start doing both at the same time.

Weter’s homegrown film production company, Cellardoor Cinema, will present its new 91-minute drama, “Blind People,” Sunday at 7:30 p.m. at the Evergreen Theatre (formerly Circuit Playhouse).

62. Gaining Speed -

For years the Whitehaven community has been fighting against urban decay, crime and economic decline, including the effects of the recent recession.

But with ambitious plans for Graceland in the offing, committed political leadership in place and cooperation from the major players in the area, Whitehaven seems poised to turn an important corner.

63. Cotton Leads April’s Slow CRE Numbers -

Cotton was king of commercial real estate in April as transactions involving three merchants – a pair of longtime Memphis companies and one area newcomer – represented two of the month’s top sales.

64. American Snuff Files Permit for Improvements to Hickory Hill Property -

5106 Tradeport Drive
Memphis, TN 38115
Permit Amount: $3.2 Million

Project Cost: $3.2 million
Permit Date: Applied April 2010
Completion: TBA
Owner: American Snuff Co. LLC
Tenant: American Snuff Co. LLC
Contractor: N/A
Architect: N/A

65. Calif. Company Buys Two Foreclosed Buildings -

A California company called Logical Group Inc. has paid $1.1 million for a pair of commercial buildings that recently were foreclosed.

66. White Elected to Board for Boys and Girls Club of America -

Leigh Taylor White, an associate at the Memphis office of Glankler Brown PLLC, recently was elected to the board of directors for the Porter Board of the Boys and Girls Club of America.

67. Justin's Empire: Timberlake drives business interests where it all began -

Justin Timberlake might be best known for hit records, dance moves and sold-out concerts, but the 28-year-old entertainer extraordinaire is much more than a singer/dancer/performer. The award-winning, chart-topping Timberlake – or, simply, JT – has become an institution, a brand name that transcends his showbiz persona and carries as much cachet as any living celebrity.

68. Highland Hip -

The Highland strip is growing a skyline. The Stratum on Highland Street, a five-story apartment complex, was the first new structure west of the University of Memphis to sprout last August on the storied commercial strip itself.

69. Diamond Int’l To Expand -

Change is coming to the northeast corner of East Brooks and Millbranch roads in Whitehaven, where Diamond International Trucks Inc. will double its size by taking over the former Chuck Hutton Toyota dealership.

70. Conference to Promote Orthopedics Industry -

The Musculoskeletal New Ventures Conference keeps Memphis at the forefront of the orthopedics industry by showcasing the city’s competitive advantages and connecting investors to companies, its organizers say.

71. Swaggers Turn to Shudders a Year After Market High -

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – Just a year ago, investors were swaggering as the stock market surged to an all-time high. Now, almost everyone on Wall Street and Main Street seems to be shuddering amid a frightening reversal of fortune that has erased $8.3 trillion in shareholder wealth in the past year.

72. Ghost River Enters Microbrew World -

The roots of Chuck Skypeck’s passion for handcrafted beer dates back to the late 1980s, when he began brewing at home and sharing his libations with a handful of other homebrewers at gatherings around town.

73. Multifamily Properties Mostly Unfazed by Credit Crisis -

As residential real estate continued to slump in the third quarter of 2007, the multifamily industry continued to soar, proving that the two industries remain headed in opposite directions at least for now.

74. Germantown Leaders Position Town For Smarter Growth -

If you can't grow outward, grow upward.That's the tack Germantown has chosen for "Vision 2020," an ambitious redevelopment initiative centered on Smart Growth, a movement designed to transform the city's commercial core and put the "urban back into suburban."

75. Gordon to Represent Health Care Leaders Across Tennessee -

When time permits, Robert S. "Bob" Gordon rides his motorcycle wherever it takes him, and when time is limited, he travels the world as an amateur radio operator.

That openness to visiting new places and meeting new people could come in handy next month when Gordon assumes his position on the American College of Healthcare Executives' Council of Regents.

76. Griffee Advocates Early Estate Planning -

Memphis attorney Virginia W. Griffee has had a solo practice since 1994. She practices exclusively in wills, trusts, estates and business law.

Previously, Griffee served as senior counsel for Great Western Consumer Finance Group and as an associate at Armstrong Allen. Fresh out of law school, she clerked on the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals for the Hon. Harry W. Wellford.

77. Archived Article: Quarterly Lead - By Andy Meek

Business Activity Slows in First Quarter

Business license filings hit by high fuel prices, slow spending

ANDY MEEK

The Daily News

The symbol that best sums up new business activity in Metro Memphis during first quarter 20...

78. Archived Article: Lead - ANDY MEEK

Historic Neighborhood Awaits Rebirth

South Forum project focuses on revitalization, preservation

ANDY MEEK

The Daily News

You cant tell it by the way the neighborhood looks today, but the blighted South Forum District behind...

79. Archived Article: G'town Pkwy (lead) - ANDY MEEK

Germantown Corridor Continues to Grow

Retail, residential growth attracts further development

ANDY MEEK

The Daily News

The area of Germantown Parkway near Interstate 40 and south of the 1.1 million-square-foot Wolfchase Gall...

80. Archived Article: Law Focus - Law

Counsel on Call Offers Quick Staffing Fix

LANCE ALLAN

The Daily News

Most law firms especially after this winters severe influenza outbreak can attest to the problem sick days can create. Even if an associate only misses a day or two...

81. Archived Article: Law Talk - Law Talk Questions

Winding Career Path Leads to Corporate Work

MEGAN CATHEY

The Daily News

Charles D. Reaves, an attorney with Armstrong Allen PLLC in Memphis, earned a law degree from the University of Alabama Law School and a master of...

82. Archived Article: Vv (lead) - The Center City Commission has narrowed its selection for an urban planner for the Victorian Village area to four choices

Plans in Works for Victorian Village

CCC to name urban planner for the historic area

ANDREW BELL

The Daily News

...

83. Archived Article: Law Focus - Lottery battle heating up Lottery battle heating up in Memphis By MARY DANDO The Daily News Tennesseans, many of whom watched from the sidelines as residents of seven other states took part in one of the biggest payouts ever, might be able to partic...

84. Archived Article: Marketplace - Daily News Article Owners marketing plan pointers hit bulls eye By JENNY McLENDON Special to The Daily News When developing a marketing plan for your small business, consider archery as an analogy. In this sport, success involves more than just laun...

85. Archived Article: Real Focus - Super Terminal construction may begin in 2001 Super Terminal construction on track for 2001 By SUZANNE THOMPSON The Daily News   Its hard to imagine something as large as a railroad car getting lost yet annually hundreds of them are misplaced f...

86. Archived Article: Tech Focus (e-degree) - By SUZANNE THOMPSON U of M announces e-commerce masters degree By SUZANNE THOMPSON The Daily News The University of Memphis is accepting applications for students interested in pursing a masters degree in electronic commerce. University officials an...

87. Archived Article: Gpac (lead) St - By SUZANNE THOMPSON City of Germantown funds Iris orchestra By SUZANNE THOMPSON The Daily News The City of Germantown has awarded a $200,000 grant to establish a community-based orchestra. The 38-member Iris orchestra, named after the Tennessee stat...

88. Archived Article: Gpac St - By SUZANNE THOMPSON City of Germantown funds Iris orchestra By SUZANNE THOMPSON The Daily News The City of Germantown has awarded a $200,000 grant to establish a community-based orchestra. The 38-member Iris orchestra, named after the Tennessee stat...

89. Archived Article: Law Focus (juries) - By STACEY PETSCHAUER Trial before the jury By STACEY PETSCHAUER The Daily News In a multimedia society, secrets are scarce. Most topics of any public interest are bound to land in the public spotlight, whether through television, newspapers or the I...

90. Archived Article: Tnb - In a move aimed at gaining position with top mobile communications equipment manufacturers, Thomas & Betts Corp Thomas & Betts buys battery pack company Acquisition will fulfill mission to improve standing with top electronic equipment manuf...

91. Archived Article: Senior Housing Lj - lj 10/5 cates New DeSoto Co. development targets relocating retirees By LAURIE JOHNSON The Daily News When developer Tim Paxton discovered that more than 60 percent of a recent projects homes were bought by senior citizens, he decided the time was r...

92. Archived Article: Med Manuf - 2/9 jts med. manuf. Labor base, tradition secures Memphis medical manufacturing By JAMES SNYDER The Daily News Memphis has evolved into a competitive base for medical manufacturing, adding to the citys reputation for transportation and distribution....