Posts Tagged ‘U.S.’

GM to start selling an all-electric Chevy in 2013

October 18th, 2011 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Auto Loans
Diane Alter – AHN News Reporter

Detroit, MI, United States (AHN) – General Motors announced Wednesday that it would start selling its first all-electric Chevrolet small car in the United States starting in 2013. The electric concept will debut after the launch of the gasoline version in 2012.

The Chevrolet Spark EV minicar will compete with Nissan Motor’s Leaf, currently the only all-battery powered car available in the U.S. from a major auto maker.

GM did not provide additional information such as pricing or expected driving mileage on a full charge.

The verdict is still out about whether U.S. consumers are ready for all-electric vehicles. Charging stations and reliability remain top concerns.

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U.S. Open 2011 Preview: Phil Mickelson turns 41, he’s excited and upbeat

June 16th, 2011 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Auto Loans
Tom Edrington – AHN Sports Reporter

Bethesda, MD, United States (AHN Sports) – Lefty turns 41 on Thursday.

That afternoon, Phillip Alfred Mickelson will tee off in the 111th U.S. Open, searching for his first win in this major championship that has eluded him for 20 years.

He’s finished runner-up five times starting in 1999 at Pinehurst when Payne Stewart embraced him at the 72nd hole and told him to be happy and proud because he (Mickelson) was about to become a father.

It was the beginning of Mickelson’s close-call legacy in our national championship. He was runner-up again in 2002, 2004 and 2006 then most recently in 2009. Despite his shortcomings in the Open, Mickelson is upbeat, excited, ever the optimist.

“I feel terrific,” Mickelson said as he wrapped up his preparations at Congressional Country Club, a beast of a course that will be the longest in Open history. “I’m more flexible and stronger than I have been in a long time.”

He’s learned to live with his psoriatic arthritis. He says his swing is “longer and more flowing, it’s not quite as violent.”

Mickelson will need his swing and short game to be in order this week as this venue figures to be what the USGA wants it to be — a stern test and a complete examination of a golfer’s skills. It’s goal is to identify the best player for the four days.

“I think it’s a wonderfully fair test for such a difficult, long course,” Mickelson observed. “It’s a matter of picking your spots. I’m not going to play perfect golf. I’m not going to hit every fairway.”

Mickelson says he plans to hit a lot of drivers, figuring he’d rather get as close to the greens as possible and deal with the rough from shorter distances. He’s also added a souped-up two-iron to his bag for use on selected tee shots.

You can see a good demeanor in Mickelson, perhaps due to the fact that after supporting his wife and mother through their battles with breast cancer, he knows that golf is perhaps less important than he once viewed it.

He’s also learned through his previous failures.

“If you focus on the result, if you focus so much on winning, sometimes you can get in your own way,” he said. “I am trying to enjoy the challenge.”

The challenge will begin on his birthday afternoon at 1:35 when he tees off the 10th hole with young Rory McIlroy and long-hitting Dustin Johnson.

Happy birthday, Lefty.

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Double whammy for Bahraini peace and prosperity drive

June 13th, 2011 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Auto Loans
The Media Line Staff

Manama, Bahrain David E. Miller – Bahrain’s efforts to restore peace and prosperity received twin blows over the weekend as opposition forces staged their first rally since martial law was lifted and the governing body of world Formula One racing rescinded a decision to hold the Bahrain Grand Prix in October.

A mass demonstration by the country’s majority Shiites on Saturday was peaceful. Under the slogan “Bahrain, a homeland for all,” thousands of protesters gathered in the Shiite city of Sar to demand political reforms and a more democratic legislature. But human rights activists warned that the rally was organized by moderates and that demands for more far-reaching reforms would be testing the government’s tolerance.

“There are opposition groups that demand to topple the regime and others that demand reform. Al-Wefaq demands reform,” Nabeel Rajab, president of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights told The Media Line, adding that more radical oppositionists were still held in prison.

A day before the rally, Bahrain’s most senior Shiite cleric, Sheik Isa Qassim said Friday there is no chance for talks with the nation’s Sunni rulers so long as security forces maintain their clampdown on protests. “We cannot negotiate in such conditions,” Sheik Qassim told worshippers in a mostly Shiite area outside the capital of Manama, according to the Associated Press.

King Hamad Al-Khalifa is in a delicate position. While many in his government feel threatened by what they say is Iranian interference aimed at toppling his Sunni regime, Bahrain is under pressure from the U.S. and from human rights groups to end the wave of arrests and summary justice. Those concerns could jeopardize Bahrain’s role as a regional financial center.

Speakers at Saturday’s rally made a special effort to emphasize national unity and disregard sectarian divisions, and Bahraini police responded in kind by not intervening to quell the protest.

In an effort to assuage government concerns about covert Iranian involvement with the opposition and charges of dual loyalty, a banner posted Sunday on the Facebook page of Al-Wefaq, the country’s main Shiite opposition group, declared, “Sunni and Shiite Brothers, we will not sell our nation.” and “Come, my dear Sunnis, let us join hands and develop our political structure and safeguard the future of our children.”

“Today, everyone is talking about reform,” Jasim Hussain, a former parliament member for Al-Wefaq, which organized Saturday’s rally, told The Media Line. “There are serious efforts to bring things back to normal.”

King Hamad imposed martial law on March 15, one day after he called in a Saudi-led Gulf force to crush weeks of protests. At least 30 Bahrainis were killed and thousands injured in clashes with the army. The Saudi troops remain and many opposition leaders remain jailed, but martial law was formally lifted June 1.

And, in an effort to show he is talking with the opposition rather than just suppressing it, a day before he lifted martial law, the king announced the formation of a national dialogue committee.

While protestors were calling for democratic reforms during the weeks of protests, the opposition was mostly Shiites, who constitute about 70 percent of the island kingdom’s population but face discrimination in jobs, housing and political power. Shiite leaders vehemently deny the charges that they are allied with Shiite Iran.

“The opposition isn’t calling for the establishment of a state similar to Iran, but for the participation of everyone in reform for the sake of Bahrain,” Sheikh Ali Salman, leader of Al-Wefaq, announced during Saturday’s rally.

Rajab said the opposition still demands the government refurbish Shiite mosques damaged during the riots and release political prisoners, incorporating them in the process of national dialogue.

King Hamed on Saturday appointed parliament chief Khalifa Dhahrani to head the national dialogue with the opposition, set to begin on July 1. But Al-Wefaq said it opposed the nomination.

“The real dialogue to take place with the opposition should be conducted by the king or the crown prince,” Al-Wefaq parliament member Khalil Al-Marzouq told Reuters. “The dialogue in question is a central point of contention between the royal family and the people.”

Rajab, the human rights activist, agreed that nominating Al-Dhahrani bode ill for the government’s seriousness.

“The parliament doesn’t represent the people,” Rajab said. “The nomination of the head of such a controversial institution sends a negative message about the legitimacy of this dialogue.”

Meanwhile, Bahrain Grand Prix – an annual event that the government uses to showcase the kingdom – has stalled. The race, traditionally held in March, was canceled in the face of the mass protests that paralyzed the kingdom. But soon after martial law was imposed, officials began lobbying to reschedule the event.

Formula One czar Bernie Ecclestone supported a proposal for a rescheduled October race, but the organization representing 11 of the 12 racing teams said they opposed the reinstatement. In a statement, they said their opposition was based on logistical and insurance grounds rather than human rights concerns.

Nevertheless, the reversal strikes a blow to the economy both in terms of lost revenue from spectators and other tourists and to the country’s image.

Unnamed Bahraini businessmen expressed their disappointment at the decision. They told the Bahraini daily Al-Watan on Sunday that the country stood to loose between $300 million to 500 million as a result of the cancelation.

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Cars trump guns as cause of death in Middle East

May 17th, 2011 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Auto Loans
The Media Line Staff

Jerusalem, Israel David Rosenberg – The Middle East and North Africa capture the world’s headlines when there’s a war, a terror attack or a bloody government crackdown. But the deaths caused by soldiers and gunmen are tiny compared to the carnage that the region’s residents create getting behind the wheel of a car.

Some 72,000 people died in road accidents in 2007, the last year for which comparative data are available, in the countries ranging from Morocco to Iran, according to data compiled by the United Nations World Health Organization (WHO). That’s more than twice the number in the U.S., even though the Middle East’s population of 390 million that year was just 60 percent bigger and the number of cars on the road is far smaller.

WHO believes the death toll on the region’s roads is considerably higher – perhaps 120,000 — because many countries don’t report all their fatalities.

“They are very high. There about 32 per 100,000 population and the global average is about 18.8 and in the European region it’s about 13,” Tami Toroyan, who is responsible for WHO’s global reporting on road safety, told The Media Line, citing estimated 2004 numbers. “In the Middle East it’s a leading cause of death, but it hasn’t received public attention.”

The U.N. organization is just getting interested in road safety and published its first report comparing international rates of road accidents in 2009. WHO is worried that as the world grows wealthier and more people take to the road, the number of accidents will grow. Seven years ago, road accidents were the ninth leading cause of death around the world; by 2030 they could be the fifth, outpacing HIV/AIDS and lung cancer, according to WHO.

As it launched on May 11 its “Decade of Road Safety,” Toroyan is compiling new data that will serve as a benchmark for measuring whether the next decade’s worth of efforts at reducing traffic accidents succeeded.

The Middle East has the most to gain from any improvement. In 2004, the last year for which there is figures, it was the sixth-leading cause of death, three places ahead of war and conflict. Most critically, they strike the youngest and most productive members of society: Among children age 5-14 and adults 30-44, it’s the second leading cause of death. Among young people in between, it’s No. 1, according to WHO.

It also weighs down on economies, struggling with high rates of population growth and high unemployment. WHO estimates road deaths cost the region, including Pakistan and Afghanistan, some $7.5 billion annually. Iran and Jordan have both independently estimated that accidents lowered gross domestic product by about 2 percent.

More worryingly, death from roads happen just as frequently among the Middle East’s rich countries as among its poor, in contrast to much of the world where money buys better roads and safer cars. Based on WHO’s estimate for real, rather than reported fatalities, in Saudi Arabia, the rate is 29 deaths in 2008 per 100,000 population, close to the median for the region, while in Qatar its 23.7 and in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), the rate is 37.1.

Among poorer countries, the rate is higher – Libyans died in automobile accidents last year at a rate of 40.5 per 100,000 people, just behind Egypt’s 41.6. That makes Egypt the second-deadliest place in the world to drive after the tiny Cook Islands, whose 13,000 people suffered six deaths in 2008.

“No one follows any rules … There needs to be a traffic officer by every light in order for people to abide by the law,” Joseph Fahim, an editor with the Daily News Egypt, said about his fellow drivers in Cairo in an interview with The Media Line. “We don’t have the concept of people sticking to the lanes.”

Some 40 percent of the country lives on less than $2 a day and the number of drivers is 4.3 million in a population of close to 80 million. But some 17 million people are squeezed into greater Cairo, creating huge traffic jams and masses of pedestrians vulnerable to being hit by a car. Motor scooters and other small vehicles that fill the city’s streets are more risk-laden than sedans and trucks. Once you leave the “nightmare” of Cairo even into the suburbs, driving is safer.

Why can’t the Middle East learn to drive?

The WHO’s Toroyan attributes the problem to several factors. One is the rapid pace of car usage over the last decades which has in many places outpaced the development of infrastructure. The region’s population is very young, and young drivers all around the world are the worst. The ban on alcohol by Islam, by far the predominant faith of the region, creates problems, as well.

“A lot of countries in the Middle East don’t have drunk-driving laws because alcohol is officially banned,” she said. In addition, road safety takes back seat to other health issues. “In a lot of countries there has been a lack of ownership of the issue. It falls between the cracks.”

However, Dubai, with one of the world’s highest auto death tolls, is cracking down on bad driving. Police estimate that road deaths increased 60 percent between 1998 and 2007 before starting to head downwards as authorities got tough on bad driving. Still, a fender-bender occurred about every three minutes in the tiny emirate.

Last year, police in Dubai, one of the UAE’s constituent emirates, embarked on a campaign to reduce the number of road fatalities to zero per 100,000 people by 2020. Police Chief Lt. Gen. Dahi Khalfan Tamim says he wants to make Dubai roads among the safest in the world through a campaign of carrots, sticks and education.

Police unveiled a plan on Monday to reward good drivers with “white points” that allow them to remove minor violations from their driving record. For the incorrigible, police have installed a system that links speed cameras, radar guns and traffic-light cameras with roaming police vehicles. Within minutes of being identified, speeders and other violators of traffic laws can expect to be pulled over by a patrol car. For the next generation, the Roads and Transport Authority has begun a program of lectures and promotional literature to teach about the dangers of speeding and the need to wear seat belts.

“We aim to achieve zero fatalities from road accidents by 2020; this is no doubt an ambitious target,” said Maj. Gen. Saif Al Zafein, director-general of Dubai Traffic Police.

David E. Miller contributed to this story.

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Some Useful Information On Auto Loans For Military

February 27th, 2011 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Auto Loans

You can obtain a military car loan for if you are in the active service in the United States armed forces. Typically, military auto loans are kinds of car finances that are tailored to cater to the requirements of the members of the U.S. military personnel. In comparison to other conventional auto finances, military auto loans offer much more advantageous terms besides a host of other benefits which ordinary auto loans do not provide. With the help of military car finance you could purchase both new as well as used cars. Here is some crucial information pertaining to the same that could guide you in your endeavor to be eligible for one.

Auto loans for military are car loan finances which are subsidized by the federal government and to that effect prove to be more beneficial than ordinary auto finances. Almost anyone can qualify for auto loan finance as these loans are specially designed to cater to the needs of the military. Besides, when you are approved for military car financing, you are guaranteed much lower monthly auto loan installments on account of attractively low rates of interest. Apart from this, typical military auto loan programs offer a greater degree of flexibility as far as loan repayment terms and conditions are concerned. Additionally, even the loan amounts granted by lenders could be considerably higher in comparison to what they might provide to normal citizens.

The requirements for getting an approval for secure auto loans for military personnel too are very much flexible. Loan applicants are required to furnish is proof of being in active services and particulars of your current posting. No evidence is needed to be submitted regarding your permanent residence. But you could also be required to provide information on your telephone number, e-mail and contact details. The online procedure for filing an application is simple, easy and hassle free. Besides, even if you have joined the job recently, you could still qualify for military auto financing.

However, to obtain a car finance which is affordable, it is always advisable to apply for a blank check car loan. This could invariably enable you to determine the affordability of your monthly auto loan payments prior to approaching a car loan lender who provides auto loans for military personnel. An expert assistance could be of immense help in the entire process since it could enable you to get proper guidance which is very much essential when applying for any kind of auto financing solution.

Shelin Michel PhotoAbout Author
The author Shelin Michel is an new and used car loans financial expert by profession. She has worked as a consultant to many leading car financing institutions in America and has even contributed her valuable knowledge by providing useful information on approved military auto loan financing on various websites.

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Alissa Czisny back to winning ways at U.S. Figure Skating Championship

February 4th, 2011 by admin | 1 Comment | Filed in Auto Loans
Kareem Shaker – AHN Sports Reporter

Greensboro, NC, United States (AHN Sports) – Alissa Czisny put on a spectacular performance, earning a score of 128.74 on her free skate and 191.24 overall to win the 2011 U.S. Figure Skating Championship Saturday.

“I knew exactly what I had to do,” said Czisny told the New York Daily News. “Before every jump I thought about what I was here for. I fought for every single thing. It went so fast, I landed the last triple toe before I was ready for the program to be done.”

Experience was on the side of the 23-year-old Czisny, who began skiing at the tender age of 1 and edged defending champion Rachel Flatt, 18.

Flatt didn’t put on a true exhibit of her talent, but made the world team with a second-place score of 183.38. Mirai Nagasu, the 2008 champ, failed to complete her simple sit spin and finished third.

For Czisny, also the 2009 champ, it was a bit of a redemption after her calamitous 10th-place finish last year at nationals and a disappointing show at the 2009 worlds.

The Ohio native is no stranger to succes, however, and is also the 2010-2011 Grand Prix Final champion, the 2007 bronze medalist, and two-time (2005, 2010) Skate Canada champion.

Czisny bolstered her world ranking to No. 7, the highest-ranked American as determined by the International Skating Union.

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Israeli driver encounters perfect storm as gasoline prices reach record

February 4th, 2011 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Auto Loans
The Media Line Staff

Jerusalem, Israel David Rosenberg – It’s the Israeli driver versus the global economy and his government – and the guy behind the wheel is losing.

Motorists pulling into their local filling stations Tuesday morning were greeted with a pump price of 7.26 shekels a liter for the benchmark 95 octane fuel most cars in Israel use after prices were raised for the fifth time in as many months. That works out to $7.60 a gallon, the highest ever in Israel, including the days when world oil prices touched $145 a barrel in July 2008.

“If I’m driving on weekends more than 200 kilometers round trip I actually rent a car. It’s cheaper than filling up the family van,” said Dov Hoch, who lives in the Tel Aviv suburb of Ra’anana and topped up his tank the day before the latest price hike. “The savings on the gas pays for the rental.”

The cost of filling his Mazda mini-van was 450 shekels (about $121), compared with about 350-360 shekels ($95) not so long ago, he said. And, that was before the latest 1.7 percent price hike went into effect.

Hoch and Israel’s other drivers have met the energy equivalent of a perfect storm in the last two months. The price for benchmark Brent North Sea crude for delivery in March delivery reached $101.73 a barrel on Monday, its highest since Sept. 29, 2008.

Meanwhile, the shekel has been weakening against the dollar, raising the prices for fuel or other imports. Only a month ago, 3.54 shekels bought a dollar – on Tuesday, it took 3.69 shekels, 4 percent more. Indeed, the weaker shekel accounted for 0.12 shekel of the 0.13-shekel hike on Tuesday.

The Israeli government has also played a large role in the price increases. From Jan. 1, it boosted the excise tax on gasoline by 0.20 shekel, and it plans another increase a year from now. As recently as last June, the price for 95 octane was just 6.35 shekels ($2) per liter.

“That’s a major increase in a short time and it may well be that price will continue to rise due to increasing oil price,” Amit Mor, chief executive officer of the energy consulting firm Eco Energy, told The Media Line.

Oil analysts say that unrest in Egypt is threatening to choke the supply of petroleum shipped through the Suez Canal and they fear strikes and protests may spread elsewhere in the Middle East, which holds the world’s biggest reserves of oil.

Israelis aren’t big drivers by global standards. The country is tiny and its international borders are blocked to ordinary car traffic, so the longest trip can’t exceed a few hours.

There are only 251 passenger cars per 1,000 people in Israel, compared with 451 in the U.S. and 601 in Italy, according to the International Road Federation

Still that’s no comfort for the Israeli motorist. Since 2001, gasoline prices have risen 33 percent so that the cost of fueling a typical car traveling 15,000 kilometers a year is now 10,273 shekels ($2,775), up from 6,149 shekels — the equivalent of about a month-and-half’s wages — a decade earlier.

Not surprisingly, pump shock has emerged as a political issue. Israeli gasoline prices are subject to strict controls and are among the most heavily taxed in the world, with the government’s stake accounting for 56 percent of the price at the pump. Members of Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, have pointed to the unrest in Egypt and have warned that something similar could happen in Israel.

“Nations around us are turning out for mass demonstrations against dictators, to fight for equal rights and basic values – and especially because of the economic situation, with prices for basic commodities skyrocketing,” Aryeh Bibi, who represents the opposition Kadima Party, said this week. “It is no embarrassment to admit a mistake and to reduce the gasoline prices to what they were six months ago.”

The Finance Ministry justified the increase, saying on Monday that the higher excise tax was needed to ensure enough tax revenue as it lowers rates for personal and corporate income tax. It also justified a higher levy of fuel as a way of discouraging unnecessary driving and preserving the environment.

In spite of the storm in the Knesset, Egyptian-style protests haven’t materialized in Israel over gas. A call over the Internet to boycott gasoline stations didn’t gain much traction this week and a vote of no-confidence in the government on the issue of higher gasoline prices failed by a margin of 39 to 56 on Monday.

The Knesset Research Department found that the average price of gasoline in 15 Western European countries was 1.15 euros per liter in December 2010, while in Israel it was 1.41 euros – a difference of almost 25 percent. Related costs – marketing, delivery and profit — were 80 percent higher in Israel than in the European countries.

But ECO Energy’s Mor cast doubt on those comparisons. He said a study he conducted covering the month of January found Israeli pump prices were close to the average for Western Europe.

“Petrol prices in Israel are a bit high, but electricity prices are relatively low,” he said. “Those will have to rise in the long term to ensure a stable market environment. But gasoline prices are fine—they shouldn’t be raised any more.”

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Roman Polanski’s “The Ghost Writer” Sweeps European Film Awards

December 12th, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Auto Loans
Anne Lu – Celebrity News Service Contributor

Tallinn, Estonia (CNS) – Roman Polanski’s film has dominated the 23rd European Film Awards on Saturday. The filmmaker, who remains a wanted man in the U.S. for his decades-old sex crime, won Best Director for his political thriller “The Ghost Writer.”

Polanski, 77, wasn’t able to attend the ceremony in Estonia, but he accepted his award through Skype video web from his home in Paris.

He said, “You have rewarded a truly European venture.”

The film, an adaptation of the Robert Harris novel “The Ghost,” also won the major prize of the night, European Film 2010. It also nabbed another trophy for Polanski and Harris for the screenplay and a best actor honor for star Ewan McGregor, who also wasn’t able to attend the show but sent a pre-recorded message from the Thailand set of his new film.

Co-producer Timothy Burrill, who accepted Polanski’s awards on his behalf, told BBC News, “Obviously I’m thrilled for Roman. He went through a period of trauma during post-production on the film, and the fact he was editing it from jail did not make it any easier.”

He was referring to Polanski’s arrest in Switzerland last year on a U.S. warrant relating to his charge of unlawful sex with a 13-year-old girl in 1977. The “Rosemary’s Baby” director spent nine months in jail and under house arrest after that.

The EFA awarded best actress to French actress Sylvie Testud for “Lourdes” and honored German actor Bruno Ganz and Lebanese composer Gabriel Yared with a Lifetime Achievement award.

The event was hosted by German comedienne Anke Engelke and Estonian actor Mart Avandi.

The 23rd European Film Awards list of winners:

  • Film: “The Ghost Writer”
  • Director: Roman Polanski, “The Ghost Writer”
  • Actress: Sylvie Testud, “Lourdes”
  • Actor: Ewan McGregor, “The Ghost Writer”
  • Screenwriter: Robert Harris and Roman Polanski, “The Ghost Writer”
  • Carlo Di Palma European Cinematography Award: Giora Bejach, “Lebanon”
  • Editor: Luc Barnier and Marion Monnier, “Carlos”
  • Production Designer: Albrecht Konrad, “The Ghost Writer”
  • Composer: Alexandre Desplat, “The Ghost Writer”
  • Discovery – Prix FIPRESCI: “Lebanon”
  • EFA Documentary – Prix ARTE 2010: “Nostalgia de la Lux (Nostalgia for the Light)”
  • Animated Feature Film: “The Illusionist”
  • Short Film: “Hanoi – Warszawa (Hanoi – Warsaw)”
  • Co-Production Award – Prix EURIMAGES: Zeynep Ozbatur Atakan, producer
  • EFA Lifetime Achievement Award: Bruno Ganz, actor
  • European Achievement in World Cinema: Gabriel Yared, composer
  • People’s Choice Award for Best European Film: “Mr. Nobody”
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C.H. Robinson Worldwide to Participate in the Stephens Fall Investment Conference

November 4th, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Auto Loans

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc. (Nasdaq: CHRW) will deliver a company presentation at the Stephens Fall Investment Conference on November 17, 2010. The conference will be held at the Palace Hotel in New York City. The C.H. Robinson presentation will be at 10:00 a.m. U.S. Eastern time on November 17. Live audio webcast of the presentation will be available via the Internet at www.chrobinson.com, in the Investors section. For more information about the presentat

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Travel and Tourism Improve in U.S., Enjoy Big Growth in China, India and Brazil, Says Plunkett Research

September 21st, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Auto Loans

HOUSTON–(BUSINESS WIRE)–A brief look at the latest trends in the travel industry based on in-depth market research. Includes links to a complimentary video overview and introduction to the travel, airline and hotel industry.

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