Question of the Day [Women's History Month]: In what year were women in the US first enabled to get a business loan without the signature of a male relative?
Question of the Day [Women's History Month]: In what year were women in the US first enabled to get a business loan without the signature of a male relative?
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Answer: 1988 after HR 5050: Women's Business Ownership Act was signedRead More...
Answer: 1988 after HR 5050: Women's Business Ownership Act was signedRead More...
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Answer: Vince McMahon ($2.3 billion) and Michael Jordan ($1.7 billion) Read More...
Answer: Vince McMahon ($2.3 billion) and Michael Jordan ($1.7 billion) Read More...
In the span of a single year, more than half of all Black renters have been priced out of becoming homeowners. The toxic combination of record-high home prices and higher mortgage interest rates has made the dream of homeownership unattainable for about 52% of Black renter households, according to a recent report from the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University. That’s compared with about 44% of renters of all races who have been priced out of buying homes. And the problem appea...
In the span of a single year, more than half of all Black renters have been priced out of becoming homeowners. The toxic combination of record-high home prices and higher mortgage interest rates has made the dream of homeownership unattainable for about 52% of Black renter households, according to a recent report from the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University. That’s compared with about 44% of renters of all races who have been priced out of buying homes. And the problem appea...
It is imperative that women be informed, educated and clear on how our wealth will fund our future
It is imperative that women be informed, educated and clear on how our wealth will fund our future
Lover's Lane Pool at Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, D.C. Beatrix Farrand, one of America’s greatest landscape architects, was born 150 years ago. The anniversary comes at a good time to celebrate her work: several of her important gardens are undergoing extensive restoration, a previously private garden is now open to the public, and a lavishly-illustrated biography is heading for publication. Beatrix Farrand At age 27, Farrand was the only woman of 11 founders of the American Society of Land...
Lover's Lane Pool at Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, D.C. Beatrix Farrand, one of America’s greatest landscape architects, was born 150 years ago. The anniversary comes at a good time to celebrate her work: several of her important gardens are undergoing extensive restoration, a previously private garden is now open to the public, and a lavishly-illustrated biography is heading for publication. Beatrix Farrand At age 27, Farrand was the only woman of 11 founders of the American Society of Land...
Foreword by CEO Bill Lowman:
As a CEO in the later stages of my career, my desire is to leave behind a legacy of inclusivity and equality, being part of much-needed and long-awaited change for our industry.
Foreword by CEO Bill Lowman:
As a CEO in the later stages of my career, my desire is to leave behind a legacy of inclusivity and equality, being part of much-needed and long-awaited change for our industry.
At APM, we feel that the best way we can honor the heritage of our APM family members during Black History Month, is by listening and learning from the stories they share.
At APM, we feel that the best way we can honor the heritage of our APM family members during Black History Month, is by listening and learning from the stories they share.
Gilded Age mansions are a living reminder of a time long past when America’s richest families — like the Astors, Vanderbilts, Carnegies, and Rockefellers — used their sprawling estates to assert status and give everyone a visual representation of their vast family fortune. And nobody did it better than the Vanderbilt family. The Vanderbilts were one of the nation’s wealthiest families, owing their fortune to Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt, the 19th-century industrialist and railroad magn...
Gilded Age mansions are a living reminder of a time long past when America’s richest families — like the Astors, Vanderbilts, Carnegies, and Rockefellers — used their sprawling estates to assert status and give everyone a visual representation of their vast family fortune. And nobody did it better than the Vanderbilt family. The Vanderbilts were one of the nation’s wealthiest families, owing their fortune to Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt, the 19th-century industrialist and railroad magn...