News From The NET
News On Finance:
Whole New Concept In Used Vehicle Market Ready To Launch
Exit Only Inc. EX T0
$0.41
Exit Only entered the Canadian market in may of this year. Websites that
market used vehicles are not new to the internet. The new concept here
is allowing its clients to post vehicles to the database without charge
or hidden fees. Now sellers are only paying for the contact information
of actual interested buyers, and at only $2 per lead.
Interest Highlights:
- Initially marketed in Canada, response from consumers exceeded all
expectations.
- The marketing teams projected year end numbers were surpassed 4 months
early.
- The US version of the site is now ready to be released to the market.
- Exit has partnering with several high volume web services to provide
fast market exposure.
- Exit is also providing mobile access for sellers. The system will
deliver real-time leads of buyer information directly to their mobile
phone.
As the US market is considerably larger, patterned results in the US can
instantly put this new company on the map. Review any market data
website for more details.
World Update:
U.N. food program officer seized, jailed in Somalia ----- MOGADISHU,
Somalia -- The head of U.N. food agency operations in the
violence-wracked Somali capital was taken away Wednesday by 50 to 60
heavily armed government security officers who stormed the U.N.
compound, the agency said. The World Food Program suspended aid
distribution in Mogadishu in response. Interior Minister Mohamed
Mohamoud Guled denied government officers carried out any operation at
the U.N. compound. But he added that the WFP last month distributed food
aid without consulting the government, a reason that the government has
in recent months used to block distributions to areas perceived to be
against the government.
American News:
FBI agent: Boss rooted for mob family ----- NEW YORK -- The anecdote is
so ingrained in Mafia lore that it was mimicked in a scene from the
television show "The Sopranos": A corrupt FBI agent slapping his desk
and celebrating news of another killing in a bloody mob civil war. A
current FBI agent testified Wednesday that it happened in a real-life
slip-up by ex-agent R. Lindley DeVecchio, now on trial for murder.
"We're going to win this thing," DeVecchio blurted out at headquarters,
according to the witness. Prosecutors said the 1992 outburst was further
proof that DeVecchio secretly aligned himself with an informant within
one of the warring factions of the Colombo crime family.
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