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77 results for "Bailey, David"
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Record #:
13314
Author(s):
Abstract:
Carolina Management Team LLC, co-owned by Wendy Banks and her brother David Van Zee, is a runner-up in the 2010 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA Small Business of the Year competition. Located near Asheville, the company employs twenty and specializes in concrete repair and painting.
Record #:
13315
Author(s):
Abstract:
H & H Homes in Fayetteville, owned by Ralph and Linda Huff, is a runner-up in the 2010 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA Small Business of the Year competition. Founded in 1991, this homebuilding company employs fifty-eight and projects revenues of $100 million in 2010.
Record #:
13317
Author(s):
Abstract:
ICAN, founded by Bill Hester in Fayetteville in 2002, is a runner-up in the 2010 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA Small Business of the Year competition. ICAN hauls waste and recycles construction debris.
Record #:
3121
Author(s):
Abstract:
In the late 1960s, Jim Farr led a group of psychologists and researchers in developing one of the country's most innovative and creative management-training programs at the Center for Creative Leadership in Greensboro.
Source:
Business North Carolina (NoCar HF 5001 B8x), Vol. 16 Issue 8, Aug 1996, p52-57,59-62, il, por Periodical Website
Record #:
2098
Author(s):
Abstract:
There are eighty-nine full time money managers registered in the state who offer diverse investment choices. Investors who utilize them want excellent service, outstanding performance, and strong investment strategies.
Subject(s):
Record #:
2414
Author(s):
Abstract:
Charlotte-based W. R. Bonsal Company has supplied railroad builders, built railroads, and manufactured gravel, sand, and cement-based products from the ton to the bag during its 100-year history. William R. Bonsal, III, now heads the company.
Source:
Business North Carolina (NoCar HF 5001 B8x), Vol. 15 Issue 7, July 1995, p48-52,54,56-59, il, por Periodical Website
Record #:
2417
Author(s):
Abstract:
Of the state's largest privately owned companies, six are 100 years old, with Harvey Enterprises & Affiliates in Kinston the oldest at 124 years. Of the remainder, almost one-third are over 60 years old.
Source:
Record #:
1375
Author(s):
Abstract:
The success of a new barbecue sauce depends on more than taste. In this highly competitive food business, a business plan, sufficient capital, and dogged optimism are also required.
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Subject(s):
Record #:
1445
Author(s):
Abstract:
In 1993, North Carolina was the third ranking pork producer in the nation, up from twelfth in 1965. Sound business practices and verticle integration, such as Carroll's Foods, Inc.'s 1986 alliance with Virginia-based packer Smithfield Foods, Inc., allowed for the industry's growth.
Record #:
1490
Author(s):
Abstract:
Mount Airy, the town that inspired Mayberry (setting of the Andy Griffith Show), is no longer a sleepy little hamlet. Yet while diverse industries and modern life have caused changes, the town still tries to live up to Mayberry's mythical standards.
Record #:
1493
Author(s):
Abstract:
Siler City, where the actress Francis Bavier (\"Aunt Bee\" on The Andy Griffith Show) retired in 1972, is still a fine example of a small town. The future challenge will be to expand economic opportunities without losing the distinctive, small town flavor.
Record #:
1611
Author(s):
Abstract:
BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA and Arthur Andersen & Co. have been researching and publishing the top 100 private companies in the state each year since 1984. This list is recognized as the definitive source of annual information about NC's private companies.
Record #:
1612
Author(s):
Abstract:
Since BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA began compiling the North Carolina 100, an annual list of the top 100 private companies in the state, 234 companies have been listed. Several factors account for the disappearance of some companies from the list.
Record #:
1690
Author(s):
Abstract:
Commercial customers are demanding discounts on medical care for providing hospitals with a large volume of business. State hospitals respond that this discriminates against other, individual customers who don't have this same bargaining leverage.
Subject(s):
Record #:
24328
Author(s):
Abstract:
Sonny Wilburn, president of the Alamance County Chamber of Commerce, hoped Mercedes-Benz would build its first American factory in North Carolina. The German company involved a number of states in a bidding competition which would ultimately decide where the factory would be built.