Vol. 26 No. 11, November 2006
Index
- Better late than never.
- Trend.
- Stock watch.
- State should press the sales tax into services.
- aaiPharma.
- Cape Fear Bank.
- CSS Neuse State Historic Site.
- Drug researcher prescribes expansion.
- DuPont.
- Working capital.
- Applied Control Technology.
- Cree.
- INC Research.
- Plants' closing puts new one on a roll.
- R.H. Donnelley.
- Vescom America.
- Xerium Technologies.
- Burlington bags Virginia textile jobs.
- Deluxe Financial Services.
- Global Textile Alliance.
- Hanesbrands.
- Lexington Home Brands.
- Thomasville Furniture Industries.
- TransTech Pharma.
- TriPath Imaging.
- U.S. Xpress Enterprises.
- American City Business Journals.
- BNP Residential Properties.
- Euromarket Designs.
- Family Dollar Stores.
- Hospital chains want links in Mint Hill.
- Nucor.
- Progress Energy.
- Wachovia.
- Blue Ridge Parkway Association.
- Ethan Allen Interiors.
- Lenoir gets to the meat of the matter.
- North Carolina Mountain State Fair.
- Spruce Pine Community Hospital.
- Levi's Will.
- Owners fear being tithed to the tracks.
- Prof can't make students pay more than attention.
- Season of Life.
- The Ultimate Question: Driving Good Profits and True Growth.
- Cities will be up the river without a ladle.
- CEO seeks fans to flame hotter image for his bank.
- He wants products to show some class.
- Consultant has auto motive for this plan.
- State can still play to its strengths: economic-development experts say exploiting North Carolina's advantages will help it stay at the forefront.
- Cashing the first stone: hard rock, once the bane of Jamie Hill's existence, turns out to be a real gem for the Hiddenite emerald hunter.
- More banks for the buck: our Financial 100 ranking shows fresh competition keeps flooding the field even as the economy softens.
- Cash over flash: as bank of America's CEO, Ken Lewis thinks performance trumps personality. And he has the numbers to prove it.
- Sliver me timbers: sell the high trees, come a board, walk the plank--it's all life on the cutting edge at a lumber yard.
- Bricks & mortar.