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20 results for Charlotte--Businesses
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Record #:
38062
Author(s):
Abstract:
A Charlotte company helps customers discover the sound of music in many genres, but in a medium some many consider archaic: vinyl disks. First the name of his Atlanta-based punk rock record company, Scott Wishart affixed the label onto his haven for LPs and 45s. Lunchbox Records features the famous and nearly forgotten in equivalent measures.
Source:
Our State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 81 Issue 6, Nov 2014, p128-130, 132, 134 Periodical Website
Record #:
40652
Author(s):
Abstract:
Now a bustling part of Charlotte, the South End’s robustness is attributed to factors such as the construction of condos and establishment of businesses in industries such as hospitality and the arts. The story of this section’s success is also told in statistics and recollections by local business owners.
Record #:
41198
Author(s):
Abstract:
The owner of a scrap metal company takes the concept of renewal to a new level: people with life setbacks such as criminal backgrounds. By working for Queen City Metal, ex-offenders can rebuild their value as employees, along with their lives.
Record #:
43286
Author(s):
Abstract:
Carolina Tractor & Equipment is one of North Carolina's largest privately held companies with nearly $800 million in revenue from last year and $900 million anticipated in the current cycle. Since 1991, Ed Weisiger has been president and CEO.
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Record #:
43411
Author(s):
Abstract:
Wehn Dale Halton took over as preident of Charlotte's Pepsi Cola Bottling Co. in 1981, she was a rare female CEO. The franchise originally started by her grandparents in 1905, was nearly insolvent at the time Halton arrived on the scene. By the end of Halton's tenure and its sale to Pepsi Bottling Group in 2005, the business had become the ninth largest bottler in the nation.
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