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‘Escalade Wheels’ Category

  1. New Opening For Assistant On-line Income Progress Copywriter Introduced By USAPaydayForever.com

    March 25, 2012 by dwani

    They Are Hiring An Assistant For Their Executive Copywriter ShareThis Email PDF Print Helping our customers with our online cash advance services is one of the most important things to us (PRWEB) January 10, 2012 A financial news article at Yahoo news recently reported that Wall Street finished on a high note on Monday.

    To make good use of their success, they have decided that it is necessary to go further with their online cash advance promotional campaign. To this end, USAPaydayForever.com has announced an opening in their company for a assistant copywriter, under their Executive Copywriter.

    They figure a new copywriter is necessary to help promote their online cash advance services by taking some of the additional workload. This statement is quoted as having said, Were happy that news of the stocks being up again might be a good sign. We find it to be critical to go ahead with our online cash advance promotional campaign.

    This is the best time to capitalize on our success. The statement continued, Therefore, our resources are being directed at hiring an assistant copywriter for our online cash advance services.

    Undoubtedly, we are looking for an outstanding writer who can keep up with the online cash advance work that the Executive Copywriter gives him. Helping our customers with our online cash advance services is one of the most important things to us. Because of this we are making every effort to seek out a new copywriter who can actually handle our current business.”

    Vocus, PRWeb, and Publicity Wire are trademarks or registered trademarks of Vocus, Inc.

    Source: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2012/1/prweb9091851.htm


  2. Why Is It So Hard To Build A Fuel-Efficient Vehicle?

    January 22, 2012 by dwani

    When purchasing a new car, fuel economy was an important factor for at least one-third of American car buyers. With the amount of people now very concerned with global warming, pollution and dependency on foreign oil, you might be surprised to know that in 1992 General Motors built a car that actually got 100 miles per gallon. There was also a car that looked a lot like the Geo Metro and weighed 1000 pounds, which boasted 75 miles per gallon gas mileage. Balanced growth of the vehicle, the engine that had 3 cylinders, was dropped because, in order to meet American safety principles, it had to be reinforced which added 200 pounds to its weight.

    It was certainly not the only protype developed by GM which ended up on the scrapheap. The GM Lean Machine of 1982, which could get 80 mpg, and the GM Ultralite which achieved a fabulous 100 mpg, were two of these vehicles. GM seemed to be selling cars to the shopping public in 1992 that did 20 mpg, while Honda was getting 50 mpg with their Civic VX, but right then GM already covertly had cars doing 100 miles per gallon. If perhaps cars that had been able to get 100 miles per gallon had already been developed way back then, why is it that such cars are not being sold today?

    It’s a strange phenomenon that some companies sell traditional vehicles in the US, but sell different, more efficient cars in other countries. Buyers in Japan and Europe have for many years now been able to get cars that do 70 miles per gallon and more. A case in point of a car never sold in the US and capable of 78 mpg, is the Lupo by Volkswagen. A car known as the Jazz elsewhere in the world was introduced to the States in 2007 as the Fit. There are economy-boosting options with the Jazz in Japan, such as a smaller engine and other ways to reduce consumption, but not so with the Fit in the US.

    In America the manufacturers say they have to build big cars because that is what the American public wants. Building a small commuter type vehicle doesn’t make the manfacturer big money, unlike with a large SUV. A Tank on Wheels is the thing to have – that’s the message that the commercials beguile the American public with. The reality that options have never been provided demonstrates where the big companies have their interests. Leading the way in fuel economy might have been General Motors, but they opt to often be the leader in SUVs instead. The many other auto producers did the same thing by producing fuel-efficient cars, then again denied them to Americans.

    All of us live in a community that has conducted wars over oil, that has been polluted, and car makers have never even given the choice to people in this country of fuel-efficient cars. How many people would have loved having a car that got good gas mileage, and were never given the option? Perhaps it is time for you to get those outdated plans back out and build a vehicle that has already been built before. Watch escalade wheels.