Editorial Results (free)
1.
Commission Races Feature Basar Upset, Lowery is Newest Commissioner -
Thursday, May 3, 2018
The 13-member Shelby County Commission will have eight new faces when all of the votes are counted in the Aug. 2 county general election.
Five of the current incumbent commissioners are term-limited from seeking re-election this year and two other incumbents chose not to seek a second term.
2.
Commission Races Feature Basar Upset -
Wednesday, May 2, 2018
The Shelby County Commission will have eight new faces when all of the votes are counted in the Aug. 2 county general election.
Five of the current incumbent county commissioners are term-limited from seeking re-election this year and two other incumbents chose not to seek a second term on the 13-member body.
3.
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.
4.
Harris: Syrian Air Strikes Should Change State’s Stance on Refugees -
Wednesday, April 12, 2017
State Sen. Lee Harris is calling on the Legislature to rethink its stance on refugees amid legal action taken against the federal government after President Donald Trump ordered an air strike against Syria.
5.
Harris: Syrian Air Strikes Should Change State’s Stance on Refugees -
Tuesday, April 11, 2017
State Sen. Lee Harris is calling on the Legislature to rethink its stance on refugees amid legal action taken against the federal government after President Donald Trump ordered an air strike against Syria.
6.
Rising Cost of Medicaid Expansion is Unnerving Some States -
Thursday, October 6, 2016
ATLANTA (AP) – The cost of expanding Medicaid under President Barack Obama's health care overhaul is rising faster than expected in many states, causing budget anxieties and political misgivings.
7.
Commission Considers Statue Move, Bailey Honor -
Monday, July 27, 2015
Shelby County Commissioners consider Monday, July 27, whether to get involved in the city’s plan to move a statue of Nathan Bedford Forrest out of the city park once named for the Confederate general, slave trader and Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard.
8.
Hitting the Accelerator -
Saturday, January 17, 2015
Five years after the Great Recession rocked the nation and nearly destroyed auto manufacturing in Tennessee, the Midstate’s industry is booming again.
Nissan’s growth is no small part of that, largely because of the company’s confidence in the state of Tennessee and Gov. Bill Haslam, according to José Muñoz, executive vice president of Nissan Motor Co. and chairman of Nissan North America, which is headquartered in Franklin.
9.
GOP Governors Don't See 'Obamacare' Going Away -
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
WASHINGTON (AP) — While Republicans in Congress shout, "Repeal Obamacare," GOP governors in many states have quietly accepted the law's major Medicaid expansion. Even if their party wins control of the Senate in the upcoming elections, they just don't see the law going away.
10.
Grants Prove Bioworks is Delivering Good Results -
Saturday, May 24, 2014
One grant is good. Two grants are better.
In 2012, Memphis Bioworks received a grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Environmental Workforce Developmental and Job Training Program (EWDJT). The $300,000 grant issued provided training for 110 persons, 65 of whom already have been placed in full-time jobs.
11.
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.
12.
Shelby Forest Parents Applaud Rezoning Proposal -
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
The first reviews of the tentative Shelby County Schools rezoning plan for students were positive, with the plan winning applause Monday, Feb. 24, from parents in the Shelby Forest area.
The set of public hearings moves Wednesday, Feb. 26, to nearby Woodstock Middle School.
13.
Fisher Named Director Of Economic Development -
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Gwyn Fisher has been named the greater Memphis regional director of economic and community development by the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development. In her new role, Fisher will work with companies, municipalities and stakeholders in Shelby, Fayette, Tipton and Lauderdale counties to create jobs, attract new businesses and expand existing businesses.
14.
Recruitment Ads by For-Profit Colleges Targeted -
Thursday, April 19, 2012
WASHINGTON (AP) – Where do for-profit colleges get the money they spend on all those highway billboards and television and radio ads?
Mostly from the government, at least indirectly. Federal money, most of it through the financial aid that students get, accounts for up to 90 percent of for-profit colleges' revenue – even more in some cases if veterans attend the school on the GI bill.
15.
New York Co. Buys Medical Office Buildings -
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
1333 Poplar Ave.
Memphis, TN 38104
Sale Amount: $2.9 million
Sale Date: Aug. 26, 2011
16.
Sneed Brothers Buys 522.3 Acres in Millington -
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Sneed Brothers, a Tennessee general partnership composed of Marvin E. Sneed, Barry G. Sneed, Kenneth R. Sneed and Terry A. Sneed, has bought three parcels of vacant land totaling 522.3 acres in Millington from Millington Telephone Co. Inc. for $1.2 million. The sale closed Sept. 1.
17.
Trademark Property Co.to Manage Saddle Creek -
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Trademark Property Co. announced Monday it has been hired to lease and manage the Shops at Saddle Creek, Germantown’s 148,000-square-foot lifestyle center at Poplar Avenue and Germantown Road.
18.
Inside The Priest Files: Documents reveal 50 years of abuse, cover-ups in Memphis diocese -
Monday, April 12, 2010
John Doe and his family watched 1999 change to the year 2000 in Memphis.
They were visitors to the city, here for a family medical emergency.
Looking back on it seven years later, Doe would remember “mentally trying to see if the world was going to end because everybody was scared something was going to happen.”
19.
2004 Accusation Not Beginning of Local Abuse Claims -
Thursday, April 8, 2010
When an 18-year-old man filed a John Doe lawsuit in Shelby County Circuit Court in 2004 accusing the Rev. Juan Carlos Duran of sexually abusing him four years earlier, it was a milestone.
20.
Pellicciotti Wins Commission Seat -
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Shelby County Commissioners took several rounds to do it, but got through the last two appointments left from the busy 2009 political year.
At the group’s first meeting of 2010, Republican John Pellicciotti was appointed to the District 4 Position 3 seat vacated in December by Democrat Matt Kuhn. Kuhn resigned to become a policy adviser to interim Shelby County Mayor Joe Ford.
21.
UPDATE: Turner To State House -- Pellicciotti To County Commission -
Monday, January 11, 2010
Shelby County Commissioners took several rounds to do it, but got through the last two appointments left from the busy 2009 political year.
At the group’s first meeting of 2010, Republican John Pellicciotti was appointed to the District 4 Position 3 seat vacated in December by Democrat Matt Kuhn. Kuhn resigned to become a policy adviser to interim Shelby County Mayor Joe Ford.
22.
MOUNTAIN OF DEBT: Americans' Debt Stress is Easing -
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
WASHINGTON (AP) - Unemployment is rising. Nest eggs are in tatters. Home values have tanked. And yet surprisingly, Americans are feeling less stress from debt these days.
Chalk it up to the power of positive thinking combined with people saving more, spending less and trimming debt to cope with the recession.
23.
Catholic Diocese Settles Lawsuits -
Thursday, August 23, 2007
The Catholic Diocese of Memphis has settled three lawsuits alleging child sexual abuse by two priests. Confirmation of the settlements and dismissals last month come a week after two new lawsuits were filed alleging a fourth instance of child sexual abuse by a priest named in three other lawsuits and the rape of an adult by another priest.
24.
Diocese Settles Sex Suits for More Than $300K -
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
The Catholic Diocese of Memphis has settled three lawsuits alleging child sexual abuse by a priest assigned to minister to the city's Vietnamese Catholic community.
The settlements, announced last week, are the first in any of the nine civil lawsuits filed beginning in August 2004 against the Memphis Diocese and five priests. All nine allege child sexual abuse and a cover-up by the Diocese.
25.
Med Nurse Earns State Leadership Award -
Wednesday, November 2, 2005
The Tennessee Nurses Association recognized Dr. Diane Todd Pace with the Alma E. Gault Leadership Award. Pace is a nurse practitioner/nurse scientist with the Regional Medical Center at Memphis/Health Loop Clinics. She earned a doctorate from the University of Tennessee.
26.
UTHSC Names Neonatology Division Chief -
Wednesday, July 27, 2005
Dr. Ramasubbareddy Dhanireddy was named neonatology division chief and Sheldon B. Korones Professor in Neonatology at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center. Dhanireddy also will serve as medical director of the Sheldon B. Korones Newborn Center at the Regional Medical Center at Memphis. He previously served as neonatology division chief at the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center.
27.
Archived Article: Newsmakers -
Wednesday, June 29, 2005
ABWA Presents Business and Community Involvement Awards Orchestral Society Names New Board Members
The Memphis Orchestral Society Inc. named Jeff Sanford chairman of its board of directors, effective July 1. Sanford, president of the Center Ci...
28.
Archived Article: Newsmakers -
Wednesday, February 23, 2005
Rhodes Psychology Professor to Serve as Diversity Delegate at Leadership Conference First Horizon Exec Named to Fed Advisory Council
J. Kenneth Glass was appointed to a one-year term on the Federal Reserve Boards Federal Advisory Council. Glas...
29.
Archived Article: Newsmakers -
Wednesday, December 15, 2004
MBA Elects Officers Memphis Bar Names 2005 Officers, Directors
The Memphis Bar Association announced the election of the following 2005 officers: Susan M. Clark, president; Barbara Zoccola, vice president; David Cook, treasurer; and Amy Amunds...
30.
Archived Article: Real Recap -
Tuesday, July 13, 2004
9 Developer to Build Shoppes of Greys Creek
9.06 acres near
Walnut Grove
Cost: $4.3 million
Borrower: Greys Creek Development Co. LP
Lender: Community Bank, DeSoto County
Trustee: Lancelot L. Minor III
Property: 9.06 acres of...
31.
Archived Article: Memos -
Wednesday, March 19, 2003
Memphis Memos March 19 Ken Newberry was appointed senior vice president at Memphis Area Teachers Credit Union. He earned a bachelors degree from Christian Brothers University. Prior to joining MATCU, he worked at Union Planters Bank. Stan Cardwel...
32.
Archived Article: Market Briefs -
Monday, February 17, 2003
The Memphis Chapter of the Institute of Management Accountants will have a 1 The Memphis Chapter of the Institute of Management Accountants will meet from 11:45 a.m. to 1:45 p.m. Thursday at the Fogelman Center Holiday Inn, 3700 Central Ave.
V...
33.
Archived Article: Real Briefs -
Tuesday, October 17, 2000
Fifty two Memphis-area Crye-Leike sales associates earned the accredited buyer representative (ABR) designation this year A total of 52 Memphis-area Crye-Leike sales associates recently earned the accredited buyer representative designation. They jo...34.
Archived Article: Inv Focus -
Monday, January 29, 1996
1/29 jts investment focus New York Cotton Exchange posts record year Options volume exploded in 1995; trading increase driven by lower production and high demand in developing world By JAMES SNYDER The Daily News The New York Cotton Exchanges 125th ...