Vol. 23 No. 6, June 2003
Index
- Taking care of business.
- Trend.
- Fain maintains gains pertain to incentives.
- Slack snack sales puncture Lance.
- CNET/Business North Carolina Index.
- Famous artist may have to get back to her roots.
- Mill owner mulls walking on water.
- Data Bits.
- Tattle tables.
- Board couldn't bank on its shareholders.
- Correction.
- Town tries to trade its past for a future.
- Cape Fear Valley Health System.
- Corning.
- Global TransPark.
- Harriet & Henderson Yarns.
- Minges Bottling Group.
- National Spinning.
- Woodard.
- Arsenal Digital Solutions.
- Butner.
- Crescent State Bank.
- Morganite.
- Of the nation's 100 largest metro areas, only five are more racially integrated than the Triangle.
- Peopleclick.
- Quintiles Transnational.
- R.H. Donnelley.
- Raleigh-Durham International Airport.
- Syngenta Biotechnology.
- The Centennial Authority.
- WakeMed.
- Wyeth.
- YellowBrick Solutions.
- BB&T.
- Burlington Industries.
- Culp.
- Flynt Fabrics.
- GuardiaNet Systems.
- Karastan.
- Krispy Kreme Doughnuts.
- Parks & Woolson Machine.
- Steven D. Bell & Co.
- Targacept.
- Wake Forest University's Babcock Graduate School of Management.
- A Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
- Corinthian Properties.
- Eight of the 14 North Carolina companies on the Fortune 500 are based in Mecklenburg County.
- Goodrich.
- Harris Welco.
- PPG Industries.
- Presbyterian Healthcare.
- Rowan Regional Medical Center.
- Salisbury Mall.
- SPX.
- The Keith Corp.
- The N.C. Banking Commission.
- Timken.
- American DataMed.
- Key City Furniture.
- Macon County Airport.
- MountainBank.
- Plasticard-Locktech International.
- PolyChem Alloy.
- '30s-style tax structure no longer fits the state.
- Growth stock: the nation's largest greenhouse takes great panes to cash in on North Carolina's most-lucrative crop.
- A fan's notes: an editor who bleeds Carolina blue frets over the damage done to UNC's brand of basketball.
- Top of the heap: David Griffin builds a name for himself -- and burnishes that of the company his dad created -- at ground zero.
- One's company: small builders play a big role in residential construction. Like many, Greg Dimmer keeps his business to himself.
- Hickory: a new perspective.
- His customers don't stick to the point.