Browse Archives: /

The New Year

This is another long weekend for most area businesses, including ours. We

Airport adds system for fingerprint checks

In an effort to improve security, the Nashville International Airport today will introduce a new $30,000 high-tech criminal background check system. The system will More

Bellevue grocery plan gets second look

An Urban Design Overlay (UDO) proposal was submitted to the Metro Planning Department for a historic property in the heart of Bellevue. Even though neighbors defeated a Planned Unit Development proposal for a 49,950-square-foot retail building designed for an H.G. Hill store in August, the property at the corner of Old Harding Pike and Bellevue Road may still become the site of a grocery store. More

Legendary Capitol Hill reporter, Drue Smith dies

Drue H. Smith, one of Nashville's most beloved and respected media figures, died at Baptist Hospital Thursday evening of heart failure. A native of Chattanooga, where she got her journalism start at The Chattanooga Free Press and The Chattanooga Times, Ms. Smith covered Capitol Hill for roughly 60 years, most recently as a reporter with the Green Hills News and as a Tennessee Radio Network commentator. More

DCA's Herndon lowers boom on opposition

Donelson Christian Academy does not know how close it was to rooting for a basketball player named Stork Legs. It all goes back to when current 6-foot-11 senior Justin More

Review could generate more Metro pay hikes

One of Metro

Out with the old and in with the new

Nashville is an ever-changing city in an ever-changing world. But even though we said good-bye to a landmark or two in 2001, we welcomed buildings and ideas sure to make Country Music USA greater than it was a year ago. An era ended when Midtown's 30 year-old International House of Pancakes served its final flapjacks on Halloween night. We bid adieu to the downtown public library, a repository of knowledge for knowledge 35 years, but we cheered its magnificent replacement in June. More

Yesterday, a tree; today, it

Metro Public Works, in conjunction with the Metro Parks, will be turning Christmas trees into mulch from now through Jan. 15. More

McNair responds

Vandy readies for SEC

End of the semester, end of the year, end of the tune-ups

Commodore women inventing own road rules

In

Preds satisfied with Dunham

The struggles of goaltender Mike Dunham are old news. Just ask Nashville Predators coach Mitch Korn if you don

Journey from NFL to radio

VU's Sanderson to address Old Timers

His baseball days in Nashville may be long gone, but Scott Sanderson still makes a point of touching all the bases here when the occasion arises. Sanderson, a former Vanderbilt pitching ace (1976-77) who strode the mound for seven major league teams in nineteen years, is the guest speaker for the 64th annual banquet of the Old Timers Baseball Association, to be held Jan. 18 at the Maxwell House Hotel. More

Vols prepare for Wolverines

Tennessee and Michigan feel their New Year's Day clash in the Capital One Florida Citrus Bowl is about regaining respect after late-season stumbles denied each team conference crowns and the possibility of greater gridiron glory in BCS bowls. It's the first meeting between the tradition-rich football powers, who both thought they might be playing elsewhere in the New Year. More

Bulldogs hope to break jinx

Apparently three victories over three Southeastern Conference teams in previous Music City Bowls isn

Bowl games, music specials headline week

TODAY - The college bowl season continues with a trio of fames Friday. The first matches Texas A&M against Texas Christian University in the Galleryfurniture.com Bowl. The second is local attraction, the Music City Bowl, that pairs Boston College and Georgetown. Although it wasn More

City Picks

Here are just a few of the headlines in today's City Picks: Jo Dee Messina kicks off New Year's Eve, Paul Burch keeps it country, Lewis Black explodes at Zanies and The Village hosts Kwanzaa Celebration.

This year

It is truly a miracle if more than half the songs on a CD pique my interest. In the course of our first year of publication, 'The City Paper' has been deluged with material that ranges from ungodly to sublime, with the majority falling in the former category. And while I try to be fair in my reviews, rarely would I want to spend my own money on these albums. More

Good, better, best -- the top restaurants of 2001

Let