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Fall 2006 Archive
11/29/06: The Lake of the Ozarks is bucking a national trend
... and the Missouri Theatre Center for the Arts is getting some help from the
National Park Service. On this
edition of Business Beat.
10/25/06: We're spending a frightful amount of money on ... Halloween.
A look at an increasingly expensive holiday. ... And
a Missouri inventor is improving the experience of neutering your
pet by coming up with a device for "the extreme pet owner" ... on this
edition of Business Beat.
10/18/06: The stories of two MU students who are moonlighting
as top internet entrepreneurs. That's this
week's Business
Beat.
10/11/06: Why are consumers turning to organic and local food
production? The answer in this
week's edition of Business
Beat.
10/4/06: What's in over three hundred cities, features ten million
classified ads every month, and is read all over? The answer in this week's Business Beat.
9/27/06: "Downtown, where all the lights are bright" ... this
week, we focus on downtown Columbia. We look at how well it's doing, talk to
City Manager Bill Watkins about its vitality, and explore ways the city plans
to grow. On this
edition of Business Beat.
9/20/06: The Columbia Missourian misses its deadline this week ... what
will become of their twenty-year-old printing press? Professor
Emeritus of Journalism and former Managing Editor of the Missourian George Kennedy
joins us in the studio to explain the fate of the press ... on this
edition of Business Beat.
Spring 2006 Archive
5/10/06: It's springtime, and we've sure
had the rain to prove it … but there are some other
clues as well … new graduates are looking for jobs,
local nurseries are opening up, and more and more people
are commuting to work without cars. All on this
edition of
KBIA's Weekly Business Report.
5/3/06: "A lot of people are going to look
to stay in Missouri and kind of rediscover Missouri." We
take an early-season look at in-state tourism this summer,
on this
edition of KBIA's Weekly Business Report.
4/26/06: Farmers are looking for rain this
time of year, but a virtual torrent is about to come down
the pike:
how a plan to open up reservoirs along upper parts of the
Missouri River could affect the planting season in mid-Missouri.
Plus, a technology giant comes to the MU School of Medicine.
Those stories and more on this
edition of KBIA’s Weekly
Business Report.
4/19/06: Seeing the forest through the trees,
a Missouri congressman says a proposal to sell parts of the
Mark Twain
National Forest won’t happen. Plus, MU students planning
for the future during the University's first-ever Life
Sciences Week. Those stories and more on this
edition of
KBIA's Weekly Business Report.
4/12/06: Mid-Missouri Cellular users now
at Verizon and Boone National Savings and Loan customers
now banking
with Commerce … coming up … we examine the recent
shake-ups in local business … plus take a closer look
at who’s in the corner office, on this
edition of KBIA's Weekly Business Report.
4/5/06: A dramatic change in the
Massachusetts health care system has policy makers and researchers
in
Missouri taking another look at this state’s health
care problems. Plus, renewable energy: we know it's green,
but this time
we're not about talking the environment. Those stories
and more on this
edition of KBIA's Weekly Business
Report.
3/29/06: What lawyers think of Missouri’s
business climate … Closing the door on a Business Loop
mainstay, and a long-time music store manager retires, but
then opens
a door with plans for a new shop. On this
edition of Weekly
Business Report.
3/22/06: How buying a car from a Missouri
manufacturer could save you money. Also, negotiators in Jefferson
City
are trying to save money by discussing the economics of ethanol.
How their decisions will affect both the kind of gas and
car you buy in the future. On this
edition of KBIA's Weekly
Business Report.
3/15/06: After a wave of tornadoes and severe weather, local
businesses are helping people to recover, and one MU economist
says the overall impact will be minimal. Click
here to listen
in streaming audio.
2/22/06: Quin Snyder was given nearly $600,000
to walk away from his coaching job at MU. How does his situation
fit into the larger economic context of big-time college
sports? Plus, the insurance industry in Missouri may change
soon, and a local insurer looks to benefit. Click
here to
listen in streaming audio.
2/15/06: Valentine’s Day … a day for
love … and for infidelity? College students with plasma
TV’s and men working out … together. Click
here to hear this week's report in streaming audio.
2/8/06: Prosperity and hardship: struggling
to find a job in the midst of good economic times. Plus,
something new is brewing in Columbia’s downtown. Those
stories covered in the newest
edition of KBIA’s Weekly
Business Report. Click
here to listen in streaming audio.
Click
here to view Battle of the Beans, a Quicktime slide
show.
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