Vol. 23 No. 1, January 2003
Index
- Why that guy?
- Trend.
- Business pays steep price when cost of college rises.
- Rocky road lies ahead for aggregates maker.
- Tar heel stock watch.
- Cooking school could get burned by pols' promise.
- Museum exhibits need to loan out.
- Greenhouse thumbs.
- Tattle tales.
- Two logos you can take to the Banks.
- BellSouth wants city to go out of business.
- Camtuck Ventures.
- Cingular Wireless.
- Consolidated Diesel.
- FCC.
- Kinston Indians.
- Paraclete Armor and Equipment.
- Smith Investment Properties.
- Cogent Neuroscience.
- Durham County businesses failed at a higher rate than in neighboring Orange, Granville and Chatham.
- Embrex.
- Faison & Associates.
- Harris.
- Interface Fabrics Group.
- Midway Airlines.
- North Carolina Central University.
- PharmaNetics.
- Pinpoint Networks.
- Progress Energy.
- Salix Pharmaceuticals.
- American City Business Journals.
- BB&T Insurance Services.
- FedEx Express.
- FNB Southeast.
- Glass Dynamics.
- Goodyear Tire & Rubber.
- Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings.
- Rockingham County Airport Authority.
- Sara Lee.
- Steven D. Bell & Co.
- The Triad metropolitan area is the second-most-sprawling of the nation's 83 largest metro areas.
- Unifi.
- Bank of America.
- Coca-Cola Bottling Company Consolidated.
- CT Communications.
- Duke Power.
- Eaton.
- High employment and low poverty help rank Charlotte among the best locations for raising black families.
- Parkdale Mills.
- Piedmont Natural Gas.
- Rowan Regional Medical Center.
- Royal & Sun-Alliance USA.
- SPX.
- Swisher International.
- US Airways.
- Battery Park Associates.
- eWorker Technologies.
- Jones Media.
- Lowe.
- Oldham Saw Co.
- The west is home to the North Carolina county with the best rate of high-speed Internet access *.
- Welch Allyn.
- Boss Basnight: in Raleigh, the Senate is the one place where everybody knows who's in charge: our Mover and Shaker of the Year.
- Bear necessity: the winner of our stock-contest eked out a 0.6% gain. Not bad. Most of our pickers saw double-digit declines.
- Pete's place: in Duplin County, Wendell Murphy's brother builds a high-end development that's no place like home.
- The legal elite: 2003 Edition.
- Cabarrus County races to prosperity.
- For buyers and cellars, he's toast.
- She plays a saloonkeeper who also drives the stage.
- This broker cannot let his guards down.
- Bricks & Mortar.