Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.
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8 results
for North Carolina Vol. 49 Issue 8, Aug 1991
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Abstract:
Governor Martin and other key state politicians put their weight behind the proposed creation of a combined international cargo airport and manufacturing complex.
Abstract:
Worried that neighboring states are doing a better job of attracting tourists, North Carolina's tourism industry marshals its forces behind legislative initiatives and a new marketing scheme.
Abstract:
Joe S. Epley is founder and president of Epley Associates Inc., a Charlotte public relations firm, and 1991 president of the Public Relations Society of America. Founded in 1968, the company has annual billings of over $2 million and employs a staff of forty-two full-and part-time persons. He is featured in North Carolina magazine's Executive Profile section.
Abstract:
Iredell County is featured in this month's North Carolina magazine Community Profile.
Abstract:
Two-hundred and eighty years ago in what is now rural Greene County, North Carolina a fort fell after three days of fighting, ending a bloody war. The fort belonged to the Tuscarora Indians and the war was against the American colonists that lasted from 1711 to 1713. This summer, archaeologists from East Carolina University are excavating to determine what remains.
Abstract:
International trade for North Carolina fell 32 percent, or $84 million, from the previous quarter, in large part due to the conditions caused by the Persian Gulf War.
Abstract:
There is an ongoing concern over North Carolina's occupancy taxes, and who they should benefit. For the state's travel and tourism industry, especially Convention and Visitors Bureaus, the occupancy tax should go to travel and tourism, just as gas taxes and other highway-use fees go toward building and maintaining highways.
Abstract:
In the face of a cooling economy, office buildings and high-rise skyscrapers have become impossible to finance through traditional lending practices. Thus, some of North Carolina's city centers are overbuilt with recently finished or nearing completion towers.