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Virginia
Business - January 2003
COVER
STORY
College
crisis
Budget cuts slam Virginia's higher education,
cutting classes, faculty and entire programs. How far
will it go before the state loses its competitive edge
in attracting business?
Hospital
group helps save some nurses
Two
Virginia Nobels in one year
HOTELS
& CONVENTIONS
Keeping
'em coming
Tourism hurt by terrorism and snipers,
but location may make the difference.
Building
better convention spots
Virginia's big expansion is underway, but
how much is too much?
NEWS
& FEATURES
Nursing
shortage approaches critical condition
Hospitals try sign-on bonuses, tuition pay
and recruiting dreives to help.
Best
doctors in Virginia
A third party rates Virginia's "best doctors."
You be the judge.
GENERAL
ASSEMBLY 2003
This
session, it's budget, budget, budget
Mark
Warner: on the budget crisis and plans for a "debate"
to set funding priorities
A quiet
man takes a raucous job
REGIONAL
REPORT
Arlington County and the city of Alexandria
Inner
suburbs play their hole card
Terrorism war, ample public transit, urban
amenities make them competitive again
SPECIAL
ADVERTISING SECTIONS
Alexandria a Small
Town in the Shadow of Our Nation's Capital
Publisher's regional profile
Arlington A World
Class Business Environment
Publisher's regional profile
Business Schools in Virginia
- Getting back
to business
With the economy sputtering, now's the time for
extra schooling
-
Directory of the
state's business schools
DEPARTMENTS
Editor's
Corner
Minding Your Business
- NASA peers into Jamestown's
past
- LEADERS can save lives
- Bored? Try The Perfect
Circles
- Planning ahead
- Expected black population
growth (chart)
Around the Old Dominion
- Is the $200,000
man worth it?
- Wind farms off the Eastern
Shore?
- In Brief
- People
- Virginia's
most profitable hospitals (chart)
- Drawing
Board
Virginia
Ideas
For the Record
Virginia
Lifestyles
A Technicolor dream in your own home
Virginia
Weekend
The year-round treats of Long Branch
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