Vol. 22 No. 5, May 2002
Index
- Revolution road.
- Letters.
- Trend.
- Triangle should muster its clusters for growth.
- Tobacco tracking stock shows Loews the way.
- Getting paid for the study is another economic impact.
- Lawmaker bristles at return to sender.
- Tattle tales.
- Bondsman should have skipped school.
- Correction.
- Tainted toilet titan can keep his seat.
- Fayetteville Regional Airport.
- International Paper.
- Irvin Aerospace.
- National Spinning.
- New Hanover County Airport Authority.
- Newport Generation.
- Bayer CropScience.
- Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina.
- Carolina Power & Light.
- Konover Property Trust.
- Krispy Kreme Doughnuts.
- Linux software.
- LipoScience.
- Lorillard Tobacco and American Legacy Foundation.
- Magellan Laboratories.
- Panera Bread.
- Paradigm Genetics.
- Triangle population grew by double-digit rates in the '90s, with Johnston's 50% leading the way.
- AeroDyn Wind Tunnel.
- Bank of America.
- Burlington Industries.
- Charlotte's average city and county property tax is the highest of the state's 24 largest cities.
- Garden Ridge Corp.
- Metals USA.
- Rowan Bancorp.
- The Triad is expected to grow more slowly than the state average through 2020.
- Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice.
- Agfa-Gevaert Group.
- Asheville Metropolitan Statistical Area.
- Asheville Smoke.
- Bank of America.
- Beacon Blankets.
- Belk.
- Clay County.
- Drexel Heritage.
- Eaton Cutler-Hammer.
- Fenner Group.
- Lots of college students give Watauga County the region's lowest home-ownership rate.
- Outboard Marine.
- Ruddick Corp.
- Good works: after making millions, Bruce Parker focused on philanthropy. Investors wish he would have been minding his own business.
- Construction construction: the tight economy put a squeeze on many builders, but it wound up squashing one of the state's biggest.
- Liquid assets: like many manufacturers, modern moonshiners are trying to improve their product's quantity, quality and distribution.
- Rapids transit: Bill Medlin has guided Confluence Watersports through trials as harrowing as the white water its boats are built to handle.
- Architects draw up plans for growth.
- It's one way to wrap up your net profits.
- Lawyer gets himself in slippery business.
- Pressure is good for a meter reader.
- He has an affinity for the control key.
- The call of the bile.