Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Biography. Alney Dale Danks Jr. was born on August 27, 1939, in Miami, Florida, to Alney Dale Danks Sr. and Elizabeth Ross. [2] When Danks was 3, his family moved to Alabama. [2] In 1954, his family moved to Jackson, Mississippi. [2] He graduated from Murrah High School and enrolled in Millsaps College in 1957. [5]
0744-9526. Website. clarionledger .com. The Clarion Ledger is an American daily newspaper in Jackson, Mississippi. It is the second-oldest company in the state of Mississippi, and is one of the few newspapers in the nation that continues to circulate statewide. It is an operating division of Gannett River States Publishing Corporation, owned by ...
He was the city commissioner of Jackson, Mississippi from 1973 to 1977, under mayor Russell C. Davis. [5] [11] In 1973, he became the first Republican to serve on the Jackson City Council. [11] In 1977 and 1981, as a Republican, he ran for mayor against Democrat Dale Danks , but lost.
As Mississippi high school football wrapped up its 2023 season two weeks ago in Oxford, the Clarion-Ledger put together its Small Class All-State first and second teams for this season. The two ...
Michael Chavez, Mississippi Clarion-Ledger December 11, 2023 at 6:01 AM The Clarion-Ledger has released its annual Dandy Dozen, a collection of Mississippi's top high school boys basketball ...
March 25, 2023/Clarion Ledger file photo — KeUntey Ousley of Rolling Fork, Miss., tries to salvage what he can from his mother's boyfriend's vehicle Saturday, March 25, 2023, after a tornado ...
Jerry W. Mitchell (born February 23, 1959) [1] is an American investigative reporter formerly with The Clarion-Ledger, a newspaper in Jackson, Mississippi.He convinced authorities to reopen many cold murder cases from the civil rights era, his investigations providing the basis for prosecutions, prompting one colleague to call him "the South's Simon Wiesenthal". [2]
The hotel opened its doors on May 1, 1922. The Clarion-Ledger, Jackson's newspaper, dedicated two pages of its April 30th Sunday edition to the opening of the five-storey hotel, which was described the first fire-proof building in the state of Mississippi. [1] The hotel opened with 124 rooms, all boasting an electric fan. [2]