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Dr. Paul F. White

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ERS Group
Washington, District of Columbia
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    www.bentoncourier.com/content/view/105987/ - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/17/2008    Last Visited: 1/17/2008  

    Paul White of Benton has announced as a candidate for the new Saline County Circuit Court judgeship.The nonpartisan Division 4 position was created last year by the Legislature.The judgeship will be decided May 20, during the primary election, unless there is a runoff.White, who has been practicing law for 15 years, has served as a special judge in Saline County Circuit Court and in the Bauxite and Haskell district courts.White, 41, is the second person to announce for the new judgeship.
    ...
    "I take very seriously the responsibility of our judges to be the protectors of our justice system," White said."We are privileged to have three excellent judges in Saline County.I want to continue the tradition of reason, fair-mindedness and judgment that our current judges have each exhibited in their respective terms in office.I believe that I have the right mix of experience, discretion, stability and judgment to serve Saline County well."White's wife, the former Angela Stracener of Benton, has been the choral director at Benton High School for 10 years.White's law practice, which is based in Bryant, has focused on probates, wills, trusts and guardianships.He also has experience in other areas, including contracts, insurance issues and personal injury cases.White has presented seminars to church and community groups on wills, trusts, probates and church legal liability.White is a 1989 graduate of Ouachita Baptist University at Arkadelphia and the University of Arkansas at Little Rock School of Law. Following law school, White spent three years as assistant city attorney in Little Rock.He prosecuted cases in Little Rock Municipal Court and Pulaski County Circuit Court.He also represented the city and its employees in state and federal court in contract disputes, employment matters, civil rights cases and personal injury defense.White is a member of the First Baptist Church in Benton, where he teaches a ninth-grade boys Sunday school class.In 1995, White was selected vice president and general counsel of the Arkansas Baptist Foundation in Little Rock.The foundation is one of the largest nonprofit organizations of its kind in Arkansas.When White was an officer, the foundation was entrusted with more than $100 million for the Arkansas Baptist State Convention and its agencies, institutions and churches.White represented the foundation in a number of areas, including charitable giving, regulatory matters, church liability education, probates, contracts and employment issues.Local community activities for White include Kiwanis Club, Benton Panther Foundation Advisory Board and Watchdog program for fathers at Howard Perrin Elementary School.

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    www.jonesborosun.com/archived_story.php?ID=30998 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/7/2008    Last Visited: 1/8/2008  

    Paul White, pastor at Highland Hills Baptist Church, grew up in a home with an alcoholic father.A former Jonesboro resident now living in Highland, White said he opposes a petition that would allow citizens to vote to turn Sharp County wet.

    "My daddy was a good man, but he drank, and I've seen firsthand the consequences of alcohol," White said.
    ...
    Neither of those arguments sway White.

    The pastor argues that the additional tax money will be offset by the increased need for police to monitor the roads looking for intoxicated drivers.He also said that Sharp County would become a destination for people in nearby counties looking for alcohol, and that drivers entering the county would nullify the environmental benefit gleaned from Sharp County residents not having to drive as far.

    "How could someone live with themselves if they voted to let this happen and then a drunk killed someone in their family?"White said.
    ...
    If the wet-dry issue makes it to the ballot, White said he will encourage his 200-person congregation to vote against it.

    "I'll say that 100 percent of them will," he said."Well, there might be one or two that don't, but most of them will."

    White said he is so passionate about the wet-dry debate that he's decided to take out an ad in the local paper denouncing Reynolds' and Freigy's efforts.

    "A can of beer never sent anybody to hell, but a lot of beer cans have sent people to their grave," White said.

    Looking back

    A pastor at Highland Hills for more than nine years, White said he knows how addicting fermented beverages can be.White said he drank before finding religion when he was 21.

    "I didn't know the harm I was doing to myself or my family," he said."At one point I finally got right with God, and I haven't touched a beer or anything else in 35 years."

    Glamorization of drinking by the national media is a myth, White said.

    "They show people on the beach drinking, or at a barbecue drinking and having a big time," White said."They never show the shattered homes of alcoholics, the children who suffer immeasurably or the bums on the street who are just looking for another drink."

    As a child, White said his father would take his paycheck, spend it at the bar and then call for a ride home.

    "He was a good man, but he had an addiction he couldn't overcome," he said."I've never seen a real positive thing come from drinking alcohol."

    A former Jonesboro native, White said he railed against alcohol sales in private clubs around Craighead County, which is also dry.

  • View Online Source
    www.ersnet.com/staff_displayBio.asp?BioID=17 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/18/2007    Last Visited: 3/18/2007  

    Paul  F.  WhiteERS Group :: Staff :: Paul F. White , Ph.D.
    ...
    He has been with ERS since 1993.His practice areas cover all aspects of employment discrimination cases, including: compensation, hiring, promotion, and termination.Dr. White's labor and employment practice also includes OFCCP investigations of federal contractors, proactive monitoring of compensation and employee selections, FLSA wage and hour cases, economic damages (single-plaintiff, multi-plaintiff, and class actions), union contract negotiations, and NLRB hearings.Additionally, Dr. White has conducted analyses on mutual fund trading practices, asbestos exposure, and prescription drug pricing.

    Dr. White has testified numerous times on behalf of plaintiffs and defendants, in local, state, and federal courts.He served as the case manager or testifying expert witness in cases such as Dukes v. Wal-Mart, Lott v. Westinghouse, NAACP v. Florida Department of Corrections, and Iliadis v. Wal-Mart.In addition, he has assisted employers such as Duke Energy, Coca Cola, and the University of Georgia in their OFCCP compensation audits.

    Dr. White served as an adjunct member of the graduate school faculty at Florida State University from 1996 through 2002.He has published papers in the Journal of Forensic Economics and the Journal of Applied Business Research.He has served as a referee for the Journal of Forensic Economics, Litigation Economics Review, and Contemporary Economic Policy.

    Dr. White often makes presentations to legal, human resources, and economic associations and is a frequent presenter at ERS Group seminars.

    Dr. White received his Bachelor of Science degree in economics from James Madison University, and his Masters and Ph.D. degrees from North Carolina State University, where he concentrated in labor economics, health economics, and statistics.">
    ...
    Paul F. White, Ph.D.

    Dr. White is a Director of ERS Group and the manager of the Washington, D.C. office.

    He has been with ERS since 1993.His practice areas cover all aspects of employment discrimination cases, including: compensation, hiring, promotion, and termination.Dr. White's labor and employment practice also includes OFCCP investigations of federal contractors, proactive monitoring of compensation and employee selections, FLSA wage and hour cases, economic damages (single-plaintiff, multi-plaintiff, and class actions), union contract negotiations, and NLRB hearings.Additionally, Dr. White has conducted analyses on mutual fund trading practices, asbestos exposure, and prescription drug pricing.

    Dr. White has testified numerous times on behalf of plaintiffs and defendants, in local, state, and federal courts.He served as the case manager or testifying expert witness in cases such as Dukes v. Wal-Mart, Lott v. Westinghouse, NAACP v. Florida Department of Corrections, and Iliadis v. Wal-Mart.In addition, he has assisted employers such as Duke Energy, Coca Cola, and the University of Georgia in their OFCCP compensation audits.

    Dr. White served as an adjunct member of the graduate school faculty at Florida State University from 1996 through 2002.He has published papers in the Journal of Forensic Economics and the Journal of Applied Business Research.He has served as a referee for the Journal of Forensic Economics, Litigation Economics Review, and Contemporary Economic Policy.

    Dr. White often makes presentations to legal, human resources, and economic associations and is a frequent presenter at ERS Group seminars.

    Dr. White received his Bachelor of Science degree in economics from James Madison University, and his Masters and Ph.D. degrees from North Carolina State University, where he concentrated in labor economics, health economics, and statistics.

  • View Online Source
    www.bepress.com/jbvela/editorialboard.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/3/2007    Last Visited: 7/3/2007  

    Paul White ERS Group

  • View Online Source
    www.jonesborosun.com/story.php?ID=30998 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/7/2008    Last Visited: 1/7/2008  

    Paul White, who doesn't think alcohol should be sold in Sharp County, is encouraging his congregation at Highland Hills Baptist not to sign a petition that would allow the issue to be placed on the November ballot.
    ...
    Paul White, pastor at Highland Hills Baptist Church, grew up in a home with an alcoholic father.A former Jonesboro resident now living in Highland, White said he opposes a petition that would allow citizens to vote to turn Sharp County wet.

    "My daddy was a good man, but he drank, and I've seen firsthand the consequences of alcohol," White said.
    ...
    Neither of those arguments sway White.

    The pastor argues that the additional tax money will be offset by the increased need for police to monitor the roads looking for intoxicated drivers.He also said that Sharp County would become a destination for people in nearby counties looking for alcohol, and that drivers entering the county would nullify the environmental benefit gleaned from Sharp County residents not having to drive as far.

    "How could someone live with themselves if they voted to let this happen and then a drunk killed someone in their family?"White said.
    ...
    If the wet-dry issue makes it to the ballot, White said he will encourage his 200-person congregation to vote against it.

    "I'll say that 100 percent of them will," he said."Well, there might be one or two that don't, but most of them will."

    White said he is so passionate about the wet-dry debate that he's decided to take out an ad in the local paper denouncing Reynolds' and Freigy's efforts.

    "A can of beer never sent anybody to hell, but a lot of beer cans have sent people to their grave," White said.

    Looking back

    A pastor at Highland Hills for more than nine years, White said he knows how addicting fermented beverages can be.White said he drank before finding religion when he was 21.

    "I didn't know the harm I was doing to myself or my family," he said."At one point I finally got right with God, and I haven't touched a beer or anything else in 35 years."

    Glamorization of drinking by the national media is a myth, White said.

    "They show people on the beach drinking, or at a barbecue drinking and having a big time," White said."They never show the shattered homes of alcoholics, the children who suffer immeasurably or the bums on the street who are just looking for another drink."

    As a child, White said his father would take his paycheck, spend it at the bar and then call for a ride home.

    "He was a good man, but he had an addiction he couldn't overcome," he said."I've never seen a real positive thing come from drinking alcohol."

    A former Jonesboro native, White said he railed against alcohol sales in private clubs around Craighead County, which is also dry.

  • View Online Source
    www.jonesborosun.com/story.php?ID=31507 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 2/9/2008    Last Visited: 2/9/2008  

    Gov. Mike Beebe visits with the pastor of Highland Hills Baptist Church, Paul White, inside what remains of the Highland church on Friday.

  • View Online Source
    goblackbears.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/stats/2007-2008/g - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 9/15/2007    Last Visited: 5/2/2008  

    Line judge: Paul White; Back judge: Bryan Thomas; Field judge: Rusty Acree;
    ...
    Line judge: Paul White; Back judge: Bryan Thomas; Field judge: Rusty Acree;

  • View Online Source
    www.lifeline-fbc.org/id4.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 10/15/2008    Last Visited: 2/16/2008  

    1955 ... Paul White is called to be the first pastor of First Baptist, serving until 1960

  • View Online Source
    Australian Alternative Varieties Wine Show Gallery - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 8/20/2008    Last Visited: 8/20/2008  

    Paul White, NZ, our first international judge

  • View Online Source
    CASA of Memphis - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/19/2006    Last Visited: 9/15/2007  

    Paul WhiteCASA of Memphis and Shelby County616 Adams AvenueMemphisTN 38105

    Phone: (901) 405-8824Fax: (901) 405-8856
    ...
    Paul White is the Director of Development with CASA and has been with CASA since January 2001.He received a Master of Divinity degree from Ashland Theological School, a Master of Science in Counseling from Florida State University and a Bachelor of Science in Psychology from Ohio State University.Before coming to CASA he served as Senior Pastor of the First Baptist Church of Plymouth, Michigan, and as a college counselor at Lane College, University of Rio Grande, Lincoln University, and Florida State University.

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