The Nashville Symphony has named a musical director to replace the late Kenneth Schermerhorn. After two-and-a-half years, the search committee unanimously approved Giancarlo [jon-CAR-lo] Guerrero to take over beginning with the 2009-2010 season. The well-known Leonard Slatkin has served as music adviser in the interim and will remain until Guerrero fills the spot. Symphony CEO […]
Symphony Names New Musical Director
Profile of Mayoral Candidate Bob Clement
Next week, Davidson County voters will go to the polls to choose Nashville’s next mayor. Nine-year old Bob Clement’s earliest memory of his life in politics comes from when his father, Frank Clement, ran for governor. Since then, Clement has been in an out of public office. He’s held various jobs in between, including owning a marketing firm and serving briefly as president of Cumberland University. Clement’s hoping to carry all that experience into the mayor’s office. WPLN’s Christine Buttorff has this profile.
Mayoral Forum at TSU
In the waning days of this summer’s election, the two candidates for mayor stuck to their issues last night in a forum sponsored by Tennessee State University. The questions from a panel of civic leaders touched on issues ranging from controlling Nashville’s growth to funding for Nashville General Hospital. Without being asked, both candidates said […]
Financial Disclosures Show Dean on Top of Money Pile
Candidates in Metro’s run-off election made their financial disclosures with the election commission yesterday and the mayor’s race saw a shift. Mayoral candidate Karl Dean had largely self-financed his campaign up until the general election. Since then, the former Metro Law director hasn’t contributed any money to his campaign and still out-raised his opponent Bob […]
Metro Councilmen Look to Go At-Large
This year, elections in Nashville are drawing out a record number of voters in large part because of the Mayor’s race. But former Metro legal director Karl Dean and former Congressman Bob Clement aren’t the only ones in a runoff. Eight other candidates are vying for 4 at-large council seats. Today, in the first of […]
Thermal Transfer Site Remains in Limbo
The most valuable property in the state and some say even the Southeast remains in limbo now that the Metro Council has met for the last time this term. The old thermal transfer site in Nashville on the west bank of the Cumberland River was all-but destined to be home to a minor league baseball […]
Nurses for Newborns Founder Wins Prize
Nurses for Newborns assists families in 30 Tennessee counties. And as of today, its founder is the winner of a national award for social innovation. The Civic Ventures Purpose Prize celebrates people over the age of 60 who’ve devoted the second half of their lives to finding solutions to community problems. Recipient Sharon Rohrbach worked […]
Congress Prepares for Another Iraq Debate
After a month in recess, Congress goes back to work today. And one of the first items on the agenda is Iraq. General David Petraeus will soon report on the progress of the ongoing surge and is expected to suggest some sort of cutbacks in troop levels. Congressman Jim Cooper already has a specific number […]
AG Opposes Fisk/O’Keeffe Settlement, Again
The Tennessee Attorney General may have again disrupted a legal settlement that would give Fisk University some much needed funds from selling off part of its art collection. The school has been in a years-long court battle with the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe over control of the 101-piece Stieglitz collection, donated by O’Keeffe […]
Behind the Property Tax Issue
Metro property taxes have become a hot topic in the weeks leading up to the run-off between mayoral candidates Bob Clement and Karl Dean. The talk mostly has centered around a pledge not to raise taxes. Clement took it. Dean didn’t.
But there’s much more behind the issue.