The Early Word: Goodbye to brutalist buildings, hello to new Grizzlies
We’re having different conversations about crime, SRVS is working the labor shortage and could Collierville benefit from a district approach?
News Editor
Mary Cashiola has been a Memphis journalist for nearly two decades, beginning her career covering city government and local neighborhoods at the Memphis Flyer before being hired by Memphis Mayor A C Wharton’s administration.
She was also the managing editor of the Memphis Business Journal, which was named one of the top 10 Best Designed Newspapers in the world by the Society of News Design while she was there.
There are 554 articles by Mary Cashiola :
We’re having different conversations about crime, SRVS is working the labor shortage and could Collierville benefit from a district approach?
COVID and the New Bridge are back, new cars make themselves scarce, a Tiger gets his own brand camp and a Cicada makes a move in East Memphis.
We’re making sense of the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational tournament change, welcoming a gold medalist from the Tokyo Olympics and worrying about COVID cases in kids.
We’re talking about masks, a dentist and the return of Mike Conley.
Area schools are showing off before students show up, a local civil rights activist is remembered and we’re taking solace in sandwiches.
We have an Ancer to the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational, questions about critical race theory in schools and a big get for the U of M.
More employers are looking to vaccine mandates (while at least one may be regretting theirs), Dillon Brooks gave ESPN viewers a start, and a new proposal could change the very landscape of Memphis.
Area’s mayors take a united stand against tax assessments, Lenny’s gets a new location and a new home feature no one wants.
A high school coach is pulled from his position, an area financial institution is shooting for the stars and local school districts’ test scores are released.
We’re charting a course for consolidation; 911 wait times are a worry; and Shelby County Schools says it’s not going virtual again in September.
Breakfast restaurant has a longer than anticipated wait, protesters urge a boycott and Scott Street is taking to a change like a viaduct to water.
State calls in National Guard to help out at over-burdened hospitals, new flights are taking off at Memphis International, and the grass is almost greener at Overton Park.
Memphis City Council members cool on consolidation, Collierville Schools has hundreds of students in quarantine and we barely knew Patrick Beverley.
Shelby County is set to pay millions as part of class action lawsuits, we’ve got COVID in schools and we’re asking people to eat, drink and be mask-y.
Plus, a trail is being blazed in local basketball, redistricting is underway and another golf course is getting something of a redesign.
The U of M is hiring, a former Grizzlies’ player LOCs it in and the mask fight will only go away when they do.
Almost 50 people have succumbed to COVID-19 over the past week, Shelby County is giving raises and bonuses ... and so is Methodist.
A new student section sneaks up on us, we’ve got plenty of U of M news and it’s been quite the school year so far, no?
The U of M takes the Bates, lobbies the governor and plans to achieve world domination ... wait, sorry, *checks notes* ... national prominence. Plus, ethics complaints against a mayor, COVID immunity waning and country ham.
Hospital numbers set new record, friends and family remember their favorite uncle, and Shelby County sues Bill Lee.
We have breakthrough data on breakthrough cases, a local family sues Tenn. Gov. Bill Lee and there’s 100% chance of rain.
State reverses course on virtual classes, a concerning trend continues in juvenile court and should we worry that the Tigers don’t have a quarterback yet?
Plus, we’re celebrating 901 Day, considering Tiger basketball’s upcoming season and thinking about visiting Mexico.
When younger children can get a COVID-19 vaccine, how our coronavirus case numbers are looking and who’s “Becoming” a Freedom Award honoree.
Plus, Health Sciences Park still bears some scars and Drake puts up a mysterious billboard in Memphis.