Vol. 24 No. 2, February 2004
Index
- At least a chance.
- A story with depth.
- Darkness at noon.
- Too busy to brawl.
- Trend.
- General delivery: a native son who chaired the Joint Chiefs of Staff discusses the military's impact on North Carolina.
- War is hale: so is the business it spawns. Except for bases, N.C. doesn't get its due.
- War fare: as a force for creating jobs amid the ranks of the state's top employers, military might is minuscule.
- Rain, politics and scandal kept cropping up last year.
- Big banks seek best bang for their bucks.
- Public works provide structure for builders.
- Manufacturers cannot get comfortable at home.
- Crisis causes some malignant growth.
- Techies hope recovery can reboot the industry.
- Blue Cross wasn't only one singing the blues.
- Makers wait for folks to take their medicine.
- Stores start to feel wind in their sales.
- By the old mill run, jobs and companies go under.
- Movers and shakers help and hurt sector.
- Most hosts discover travel didn't unravel.
- For one, year was about the power and the gory.
- A moving target: regions with military bases didn't take as big a hit as they did during the first war with Iraq.
- AdvantageWest.
- Charlotte Regional Partnership.
- Piedmont Triad Partnership.
- Research Triangle Regional Partnership.
- Southeast.
- Eastern Region.
- Northeast Partnership.
- Counting by counties: measuring the vital statistics of North Carolina's 100 counties.
- North Carolina's largest cities.