Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
For a list of companies based in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, go to List of companies in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex. One AT&T Plaza, the headquarters of AT&T in Downtown Comerica Bank Tower, the headquarters of Comerica Bank in Downtown The headquarters of Southwest Airlines The headquarters of Texas Instruments
Whitacre Tower - AT&T's corporate headquarters in Dallas Headquarters of AMR Corporation, American Airlines, and American Eagle in Fort Worth Southwest Airlines headquarters in Dallas Comerica Bank Tower. The following are the Fortune 500 companies headquartered in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex: [2] 9 McKesson ; 13 AT&T
Austin, Texas; Atlanta, Georgia (metropolitan area); Birmingham, Alabama; Boston, Massachusetts; Charlotte, North Carolina; Chicago, Illinois (metropolitan area ...
Whitacre Tower, also known as One AT&T Plaza, and formerly known as One Bell Plaza, is a 37-story high-rise in Downtown Dallas, built adjacent to the Akard Street Mall in 1984. The building is the headquarters for AT&T and Southwestern Bell Telephone , which operates as "AT&T Southwest".
Affiliated Computer Services, Inc. (ACS) was founded by Darwin Deason and Charles M. Young, both former MTech Communications executives, in 1988. [6] Deason had served as CEO at MTech and decided to launch another data processing firm after a management buyout bid of him and other executives had lost to another bid in 1988.
As the bank expanded, in 1964 it sought to reclaim the tallest-in-Dallas title. The bank hired architects Harrell & Hamilton to achieve this by designing a taller companion to adjacent Republic Center I. However, height limit was restricted by the FAA. Upon completion in 1964, Republic Center Tower II was only tallest-in-Dallas on some lists ...
DallasNews Corporation, formerly A. H. Belo Corporation (/ ˈ b iː l oʊ /), is a Dallas, Texas-based media holding company of The Dallas Morning News and Belo + Company.The current corporation was formed when Belo Corporation separated its broadcasting and publishing operations into two corporations (with the broadcasting division going to the "old" Belo; it was later purchased by Gannett ...
Dallas Gold and Silver Exchange continued operating as a subsidiary of American Pacific Mint. In January 1992, after seeing that subsidiary achieve record results and a 19% jump in profits, American Pacific Mint announced their plan to move their headquarters to Dallas and rename the entire company as Dallas Gold and Silver Exchange. [4]