Vol. 24 No. 7, July 2004
Index
- Surf's up.
- Trend.
- State's tribes need an Indian uprising.
- Elizabeth city.
- Elizabeth city.
- Fayetteville.
- Fayetteville.
- Kinston.
- Nashville.
- Plant expansion will add 40 jobs.
- Working capital.
- Cary.
- Clayton.
- Drug developer plans to go public.
- Durham.
- Durham.
- Hillsborough.
- Morrisville.
- Morrisville.
- Oxford.
- Raleigh.
- Trimeris.
- Asheboro.
- Burlington.
- Burlington.
- Greensboro-based VF is buying Santa Fe Springs, Calif.-based Vans, a designer and marketer of shoes and clothing, and Green Sport Monte Bianco, an Italian designer and marketer of Napapijri-brand outdoor apparel.
- Greensboro.
- Greensboro.
- Greensboro.
- High Point.
- RF Micro shrinks focus to grow faster.
- Winston-Salem.
- Winston-Salem.
- Charlotte.
- Charlotte.
- Charlotte.
- Charlotte.
- Concord.
- Duke energy.
- Gastonia.
- Hickory.
- Lincolnton.
- Morven.
- Partnership wants racers to stay home.
- Salisbury.
- Statesville.
- Statesville.
- It might be Great Smoggy Mountains.
- Morganton.
- Waynesville.
- Wilkesboro.
- ECU researcher vets net to create a school daze.
- GTP boots man who questions authority.
- What they're reading.
- A big help: Eugene McQuade, the FleetBoston executive who became president of Bank of America after the merger, got a $25 million severance package when he left June 30.
- Average number of hours of sleep that business travelers lose during a trip.
- Chicken strips.
- Data bits.
- Gambling on neigh sayers.
- Lost in translation.
- Percentage of Americans who say it is very likely that they will be rich in the future: 10. Somewhat likely.
- Percentage of companies who said that in 2003 they reprimanded workers who snoozed on the job.
- Percentage of delegates at the World Economic Forum in Switzerland who said that corporate social responsibility is the most important measure of corporate success.
- Percentage of female business executives who say golf outings are useful in predicting business behavior.
- Percentage of top U.S. executives who think that same-sex marriage is a key issue of the 2004 presidential election.
- Rank of cell phones, laptops and pagers as the devices techno-obsessed Americans say first lured them into the high-tech world.
- Rank of McKinsey & Co. as the place where MBA candidates most want to work.
- Sold food.
- That sinking feeling.
- They must've gotten us mixed up with Charleston.
- Business again tries to wield culture club.
- His group thinks lobbying can be a wise investment.
- Duke CFO sees light at end of the tunnel.
- She keeps her best work under cover.
- Steel maker strikes while the iron is hot.
- Critics of UNC system mourn Fox on the run.
- Teams pitch downtown ballparks as home runs.
- Doffing the mill houses: doing that, Pharr Yarns begins to relinquish its role as laird of what could be America's last mill village.
- Critical condition: doctors and lawyers maul each other over medical malpractice. It's a real mess, but is it a real crisis?
- Beat the clock: saving--or losing--a patient is often just a matter of minutes in UNC Hospitals' emergency department.
- The state's Best Doctors: these are the specialists that physicians say they'd go to if they needed to see a doctor.
- Cardiovascular Center University Health Systems of Eastern Carolina.
- Carolina Ear and Hearing Clinic, PC.
- ID Consultants, PA.
- Charlotte: a city continues to evolve.
- Face facts: more men choosing plastic surgery.
- Bricks & mortar.