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  Results 1-20 of 35  
"Livin' the Good Life: Retiring to Texas"
(Pope) No. 1880, Tierra Grande reprint, 2pp. (10/20/2008)
publication imageSnowbirds have always come from the North to winter in Texas. Now. retirees from all over the country are choosing to spend their golden years in the Lone Star State.
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"Here We Grow Again"
(Murdock) No. 1836, Tierra Grande reprint, 1pp. (10/22/2007)
publication imageTexas' population had a larger numerical increase from 2000 to 2006 than any other state, and a growth rate (12.7 percent) twice that of thenation. Houston, San Antonio and Fort Worth had the largest increases. Only ten Texas towns lost 1,000 people or more.
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"Howdy, Neighbor. Katrina Boosts Texas Population"
(Murdock) No. 1810, Tierra Grande reprint, 1pp. (4/15/2007)
publication imageTexas' average annual population increase of 400,000 from 2000 to 2005 increased to 579,000 from 2006 to 2006. Facts support the contention that 120,000 to 160,000 people moved to Texas as a result of Hurricane Katrina.
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"Big State, Big Cities, Big Growth"
(Murdock) No. 1790, Tierra Grande reprint, 2pp. (10/20/2006)
publication imageTexas three cities among the nation's ten largest. But it is the percentage growth among the state's small cities and communities that elicits exclamations of "remarkable" or "phenomenal."
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"Texas Drift: Fast and Furious Domestic Migration"
(Murdock) No. 1785, Tierra Grande reprint, 2pp. (7/13/2006)
publication imageForget immigration. Most new folks in Texas counties with exploding populations are coming from within the United States.
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"From the Outside In: Domestic Migration Boosts Population"
(Murdock) No. 1772, Tierra Grande reprint, 1pp. (4/18/2006)
publication imagePeople are flocking to Texas from other states and south of the border. How does "where" new residents come from affect the real estate industry?
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"Coming to Texas"
(Murdock) No. 1758, Tierra Grande reprint, 2pp. (12/16/2005)
publication imageHurricanes Katrina and Rita brought rain, wind damage, homeless evacuees and renewed debate about whether immigration is good or bad for Texas.
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"Size and the City"
(Murdock) No. 1751, Tierra Grande reprint, 1pp. (10/14/2005)
publication imageFrom north to south, east to west, the majority of Texas cities -- small, medium and large -- are growing.
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"Got Data? Info Upgrade in the Works"
(Murdock) No. 1708, Tierra Grande reprint, 1pp. (1/14/2005)
publication imageReal estate analysts, take heart. The Census Bureau's American Community Survey will provide annualized data for small areas by this decade's end.
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"Big as Texas"
(Murdock) No. 1700, Tierra Grande reprint, 1pp. (10/15/2004)
publication imageProjections have the state's population doubling by 2040, with the bulk of the growth occurring in metropolitan areas.
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"Riding the Wave: Demographics Key to Real Estate Markets"
(Murdock) No. 1680, Tierra Grande reprint, 2pp. (7/15/2004)
publication imageTexas is growing and changing. Recent Census Bureau figures offer a sneak preview of future real estate markets.
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"Information Please: The Scoop on Call Centers"
(Hunt) No. 1623, Tierra Grande reprint, 2pp. (7/10/2003)
publication imageA study of factors influencing call center performance offers insights into the industry and reveals the demographic and geographic characteristics that lead to success.
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"Texas Population: Slow Growth Ahead"
(Murdock) No. 1631, Tierra Grande reprint, 1pp. (7/10/2003)
publication imageThe economy's long downward slide hasn't stopped Texas' population growth, but it has slowed it.
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"Brownsville: Positioned for Success"
(Hunt) No. 1554, Tierra Grande reprint, 4pp. (4/23/2002)
publication imageBrownsville is positioning itself to take advantage of its proximity to Mexico as the U.S. economy grows over time.
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"Population Odyssey:2040"
(Murdock) No. 1553, Tierra Grande reprint, 1pp. (4/23/2002)
publication imageWhether the Texas population grows even faster between now and 2040, one thing is sure: the state's age, sex and race-ethnicity makeup will change.
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"Winter Texans Nest in the Valley"
(Cowley) No. 1530, Tierra Grande reprint, 1pp. (10/18/2001)
publication imageSouthbound streams of silver-haired drivers pulling Airstream trailers and a sure sign that winter has arrived. This article outlines who the winter Texans are and where they go when it gets cold up north.
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"Tex-Mix"
(Luedke, Pecotte, Hoque & Murdock) No. 1506, Tierra Grande reprint, 2pp. (7/18/2001)
publication imageDemographers have been predicting that non-Anglos would become the majority in Texas. Their predictions will soon be a reality.
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"Census Says . . ."
(Murdock) No. 1462, Tierra Grande reprint, 1pp. (3/28/2001)
publication imageThe 2000 Census reveals that Texas and the nation are growing faster than experts predicted.
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"2000 Census: New Data, New Challenges"
(Murdock) No. 1447, Tierra Grande reprint, 1pp. (1/10/2001)
publication imageA brief look at the 2000 Census and how changes in data could have important ramifications for users.
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"You Can't Sell Houses to Babies (and Other Unwritten Real Estate Rules)"
(Murdock) No. 1433, Tierra Grande reprint, 1pp. (10/17/2000)
publication imageKnowing where population growth is coming from can be useful in predicting real estate markets.
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Results 1-20 of 35 Next >>
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