Vol. 36 No. 9, September 2016
Index
- Correction.
- Purse protector: in the election for state treasurer, one candidate says stay the course and the other says a shake-up is overdue.
- Savory Avery: a favored summer locale for the wealthy, Banner Elk relies on education, golf and cuisine to retain an elite reputation.
- Shaken, not stirred: Herbalife's $200 million settlement with the government prompts a new spin on the nutrition company's approach to recruiting.
- Bringing it together.
- Disagree on free: college sans tuition could halt student debt.
- No regrets: after achieving his desired nest egg by age 50, Mark Erwin has spent the last 25 years focused on family, helping elect Clintons and writing.
- The pursuit of hoppiness: Charlotte startup offers a custom approach to the beer club experience.
- Artistry au naturel: with the body as a canvas, an art form sweeps into North Carolina.
- A monthly snapshot of North Carolina's economy.
- Switching tracks.
- Direct Pack.
- Fayetteville Publishing.
- First Bank.
- Pharmaceutical Product Development.
- Safelite Glass.
- U-Play.
- UNC Wilmington.
- By the numbers.
- Pittsburghers head south.
- Bamboo Therapeutics.
- Humacyte.
- INC Research Holdings.
- N.C. State University.
- State Employees' Credit Union.
- Xylem.
- Luxe redux.
- LabCorp.
- Novant Health.
- Paul Burks.
- Qorvo.
- Sheffield Financial.
- Union Square Campus.
- Skill set.
- Dollar Tree.
- Dynamic Air Engineering.
- S&D Coffee.
- South Tryon Square.
- Tough Tom.
- Appalachian State University.
- Entegra Financial.
- HomeTrust Bancshares.
- Climate change: business schools are adapting their programs to ensure that graduates blossom in today's evolving business environment.
- Community colleges ease career-ladder climbs.
- You say you want a revolution: a historic textile mill in Greensboro is a centerpiece of the effort by North Carolina's third-largest city to achieve an edgier, more creative reputation.
- Creative sparks.
- Shooting star: with $225 million in backing from hotshot investors, Michael Praeger's AvidXchange aims to be the North Carolina tech community's next big score.
- Building a better product: transportation and workforce-development investments support North Carolina's manufacturers, which had an almost $98 billion economic impact in 2014.