Vol. 23 No. 12, December 2003
Index
- Darkness at noon.
- First in hype.
- Johnnys come lately.
- Over your head.
- A historical jewel.
- Trend.
- Region must move beyond what's been Triad-and-true.
- Alutiiq Security and Technology.
- Contempora Fabrics.
- Cover story, October.
- Global TransPark Foundation.
- Gojo Industries.
- Hilton.
- Tech-Sys.
- Wal-Mart.
- Working Capital.
- AlphaVax.
- Americal.
- Bayer Biological Products.
- Channel Master.
- Chatham County has the biggest share of the region's 935 miles of unpaved roads.
- Cree.
- Drug-discovery company ChemCodes changed its name to Nuada Pharmaceuticals.
- Duke University.
- El Segundo, Calif.-based Hughes Electronics, which operates DirecTV, and Littleton, Colo.-based EchoStar Communications, which operates the Dish Network, sued the state in Wake County Superior Court after it refused to refund at least $35 million of sales tax on their services.
- Industrial Microwave Systems.
- Law Enforcement Associates.
- Quintiles Transnational.
- Sony Ericsson.
- BB & T.
- Chinqua-Penn Plantation.
- Cone Mills.
- Duracell.
- Greensboro Bats.
- Meadowlands Development.
- Only two Triad counties had more people move out than move in between 1995 and 2000.
- R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Holdings.
- Southern Community Bank and Trust.
- Tangent Analytics.
- Tanger factory Outlet Centers.
- UNC Greensboro and N.C. A & T State jointly plan to build two research parks.
- Xceldyne Technologies.
- Bassmaster Classic.
- Charlotte-based J.A. Jones filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.
- Defense Technology.
- Duke Energy is the top-rated electric and gas utility in Information Week magazine's annual ranking of the companies.
- Goodrich.
- More of Forbes magazine's 400 richest Americans live in Charlotte than any other Tar Heel city.
- North Carolina Biotechnology Center.
- Ortronics.
- Pillowtex.
- Ruddick subsidiary American & Efird.
- Shelco.
- TIAA-CREF.
- Angel Medical Center.
- Pardee Hospital.
- R & V Warren Farms.
- Silver-Line Plastics.
- Thomas Wolfe House.
- U.S. Forest Service.
- Coach needs to teach ex-assistants a lesson.
- FinancialContent/Business North Carolina index.
- RJR seeks a big gain from net loss of jobs.
- BofA.
- East, not least.
- Final flight: Midway's final flight was not into the sunset but to Kinston Regional Jetport.
- Getting Goofy: Charlotte-based Bank of America, which dispatches employees to Disney World to learn how to handle bellyaching customers, has a few squawkers of its own.
- Goobers and gobblers: The National Wild Turkey Federation and N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission.
- Midway Airlines.
- N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries.
- Of course: Pro golfer Davis Love III might want to refine his redesign of Forest Oaks Country Club, the Chrysler Classic of Greensboro course.
- Shocking development: Three weeks after confirming that Duke Power earned $100 million more in profits than Tar Heel regulators would allow.
- Wrong number: So David Perdue, CEO of Pillowtex just 10 months, didn't walk away with $3.2 million, as was reported (Tattle Tales, June).
- Timberlake brushes off furniture imports.
- City is on slippery ice with its hockey team.
- Analysts wonder whether Boston pops BofA's string.
- Tar Heel stock watch.
- Tar Heel stock watch.
- The education of Molly Broad.
- Cheer up: giving it the old college cry, our Small Business of the Year scores as a cheerleader for cheerleading.
- Images that stick with you.
- Flushed with success.
- Knocking on wood.
- A bridge over troubled water: the fate of Oregon Inlet and the Herbert C. Bonner Bridge pits environmentalists against business interests on the Outer Banks.
- Pillow fight: how a domestic rival knocked the stuffing out of Pillowtex.
- Lots of toys for big boys: John Mills' store is a big reason a shopping mall is the state's second-most-popular tourist destination.
- Cabarrus County bounces back from tough times.
- CEO has a natural way with business.
- Ex-Tar Heel B-school dean plays PAC man.
- His course of action: Ross is still the boss.
- Doctor redefines plastic surgery.
- Bricks & mortar.