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17 May

Senate Budget Committee boss Gov. Christie’s reve

Posted in Abroad on 17.05.12

File photoState Sen. Paul Sarlo also borrowed a line from Bruce Springsteen — Gov. Chris Christie’s favorite musician — to mock the governor’s often-repeated slogan of a “Jersey Comeback.”

TRENTON — The head of the state Senate Budget Committee said the Christie administration’s revenue estimates through next year are off by nearly $1 billion and said lawmakers may need to reconsider tax cuts.

State Sen. Paul Sarlo also borrowed a line from Bruce Springsteen — Gov. Chris Christie’s favorite musician — to mock the governor’s often-repeated slogan of a “Jersey Comeback.”

“It looks like the governor’s comeback is stuck somewhere in the swamps of Jersey,” Sarlo said.

The Treasury Department issued figures today that show revenue collections for the first 10 months of the year are $230 million below expectations, with business and income tax collections lagging. The Christie administration expected revenue to grow by about 5 percent this year, but actual growth has been about half that, figures show.

In March, the non-partisan Office of Legislative Services and the Christie administration were already $537 million apart on revenue projections through fiscal year 2013, with the OLS anticipating a slightly lower revenue rebound.

And the April figures broaden that divide. The Treasury Department will provide the administration’s final revenue projections next week.

“Right now, I anticipate OLS and the administration to be off by about $900 million and growing,” said Sarlo.

The budget chairman also said any decision on a tax cut should be delayed until the administration and OLS give their final revenue projections. He is not opposed to scrapping the plans.

“We have to know how much money we have,” said Sarlo.

Senate President Stephen Sweeney and Christie were poised yesterday to announce a compromise on competing tax cut proposals. The announcement was delayed after a few key Senate Democrats became angry that they were not informed of the deal.

Sarlo was among the Democrats not informed.

The compromise did not include the 10 percent income tax rate cut that Christie wanted and instead adopted Sweeney’s plan to give a tax credit equal to 10 percent of residents’ property taxes. according to sources.

The credit would be applied against residents’ income taxes and be capped at $1,000. Sweeney did agree to raise the income eligibility requirements from $250,000 to $400 Windows XP Key,000, expanding the program and making it more costly.

The compromise also included the reinstatement of the Earned Income Tax Credit Where to buy windows 7 key, which benefits the working poor, sources said.

Related coverage:

• Gov. Christie Windows 7 oem key, Sen. Sweeney’s quickly canceled press conference causes confusion in Trenton

• N.J. April revenues fall short of expectations

• Sen. Sweeney continues to push tax cut plan despite weak revenue

• Assembly Democrats lobby for tax-cutting proposal in wake of revenue shortfall

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17 May

Ain’t No Mountain High Enough Director Steve Bind

Posted in Abroad on 17.05.12

More than 450,000 people stood shoulder to shoulder in New York’s Central Park on July 21, 1983 to see Diana Ross perform a free concert. One man, director Steve Binder, was responsible for capturing every detail. Now for the first time, the legendary concert will be available for home entertainment on May 15 when it’s released on DVD.

Binder began his career in television when he was just in his twenties. By the late ’60s he had made a name for himself at NBC and became the director to work with on musical television specials. In 1968 he was asked to direct and produce Elvis Presley’s special titled Elvis, otherwise known as The ‘68 Comeback. Not only was the show a ratings success, Binder’s vision helped re-establish Presley’s image after years of doing feature films.

For Ross’ concert in Central Park, titled “For One and For All,” Binder, who won a Cable Ace Award for his direction of the show, knew what he wanted to achieve.

“One thing that I noticed when I looked at Simon & Garfunkel and Barbra Streisand’s [Central Park] concerts, aside from the openings, there was very little visual in terms of where we were. It could’ve been in just any city in the world,” Binder said. “I thought it was important throughout the show to keep reminding people that we were in New York.”

Binder accomplished his vision by positioning cameras in and around the park, including one on top of the then-45-story Gulf+Western Building.

The concert was shown via satellite around the world on Showtime, which was starting to come into its own after years of competing with HBO. Binder designed a shooting script down to the very word Ross was going to sing and then would call the camera shots to his team.

Then the unexpected happened. Less than a half hour into the show, the skies opened up and those in Central Park were caught in a storm. As winds whipped up to 50 mph, Ross stood her ground, braved the elements and continued to perform. From the technical trailer backstage, Binder was forced to improvise all of his original ideas.

“It was just great to sit in that chair and say, ‘I’m a part of this; I’m watching history being made in front of our eyes,’” he said.

Eventually Ross realized that everyone was in serious danger with all the electrical equipment running through the park and the show could not continue. Before she told the audience to go home, she stunned everyone involved with the production by announcing that she would return the next day and do take two.

Twenty-nine years later, every twist and turn is available for all to witness. When asked about the release of the DVD, Binder exclaims, “Finally!”

When watching the commentary on the DVD, you seem so excited that this is now available.

To be honest with you, the day after we did it I was thinking, “This has got to be seen.” I know nobody saw it when it was done. Showtime was just in its infancy. Even though it was satellite around the world, when it comes from New York, it’s probably 3 or 4 in the morning at most places in the world.

And yet everyone seems to recall Diana Ross in Central Park.

I never met a person who didn’t say, “I was there watching it.” I think in reality people just talked to each other about it and then saw all these really horrible YouTube clips that people bootlegged. I know we went through a whole period of time where it couldn’t be released because the publishing had to be cleared on all the songs. It would be better said by Diana than myself replica watches, but she has said to me on several occasions, “If it were not for you, this would not be coming out.” I really did stay with it. I never gave up. I drove John Frankenheimer [Ross' attorney] crazy. To me — and I’ve worked with her so many times — even she has said it, [the concert] couldn’t have gotten any better. The public had to see this, as opposed to just talking about it.

You and Diana Ross have a long history together.

Over the years we’ve done several projects together. We’ve become personal friends. I think I’m one of the few people who actually calls her Diana and not Miss Ross. (laughs)

Tell us about that first meeting to discuss the Central Park show.

It took place at the Beverly Hills Hotel. She had a bungalow there. She called me over and said, “I’m thinking of doing this New York project.” I think her main focus at that time was getting the Diana Ross children’s park built in Central Park. She said, “What do you think about it?” When Diana asks anything with, “I’m thinking,” I know that she’s way beyond that in her head. I immediately started reaching out to my crew.

What is it like when you work with Diana Ross?

I’ve worked with a lot of artists, and I won’t say they phone it in, but Diana goes way beyond. She starts thinking beyond what the song list is going to be. She starts speaking of concepts. My first real job with her was her 1981 TV special on CBS. Michael Jackson and Quincy Jones appeared. When I first put the show together and then pitched it to her, she said, “That’s great, Steve. Now throw it all away and bring me something that will really knock me out.” It taught me a lesson. I’ve applied that throughout my whole career. I think all the first ideas are sort of the first things that come to mind. When you dig deeper, you start to come up with how to embellish those original ideas.

That ‘81 TV special was simply called “Diana.” What do you recall about it?

We had taken an arena, the LA Forum, and we made it a 360 [degree] in the round performance. They had just done a Muhammad Ali birthday celebration there. They said it was a 360 and it was a disaster. Everyone was saying that it can’t be done. Well, the word “can’t” is a red flag for me.

Charles Lisanby, this great art director, came to me and said that we’ll put Lucite on the stage and we’ll light a big “D I A N A” from underneath. Then he said that he could basically do the same thing at half the price. Initially Diana’s reaction was to do it for half the price. Then as we got closer and closer, she said, “Let’s do the Rolls-Royce version instead of the Ford version.” Diana will always go for the best.

Were there any memorable moments from that show?

I’ll never forget this, she was singing “Home.” When we were watching it in editing she said she could see the veins in her neck and she wanted the close-up cut out. I said, “Diana, if you make me cut that shot out, you lose the entire passion of what you put your heart and soul into while singing that song.” She went along with it. I don’t think we’ve ever had a discussion in all these years about her saying to me, “I want that shot taken out.” I interpret that as one of the few artists who totally trusts me, and I totally trust her.

How would you describe Diana Ross’ performing style?

I can’t think of another performer who has absolutely no fear of her audience. Her big frustration in Central Park was not being able to go out into the park physically. She asked me on many occasions how she could get closer. We built a little ramp for her. In fact, she was a little frustrated [when the ramp didn't go out at the right moment]. It wasn’t that I was delaying the ramp from going out; I couldn’t get it technically out there when I called for the cue.

A day before the Central Park show she asked you to remove two cameras, but you refused. You said those cameras were going to capture the “money shots.” Could you share with us her concerns?

I took her out to see the environment the night before we did the show. We walked into the park. The set was already built. The cameras were all in position. She goes on the stage and she’s walking around and she’s really happy. Then all of a sudden she sees these two giant cranes staring her in the face about 50 yards into the grass. She says to me, “Do those cameras have to be there?” I told her, “Yes.” She said, “They are going to block people’s views.” I told her that when there are 400,000 people in the park, you’re not going to even notice those cameras. She walked away.

Two minutes later Barry Diller (head of Paramount Pictures) comes up to me. He says, “Look Steve, you’re a bright guy. I know you can find a way to get rid of those two cameras. Diana really wants them out of there.” I said replica watches, “Barry, Diana didn’t bring me to New York not to protect her. I need those cameras. I’m filming this. When she sees it back, she’s going to want to know where those shots were. I’m not taking those cameras out.” Barry said, “You’ll work it out.” Then he walked away.

And it wasn’t over there –

I knew it wasn’t over. I went back to my hotel room. There was a knock at my door and there was Diana. She’s all by herself. I can see the tears in her eyes. Again she said, “Steve, you’ve got to get rid of those cameras.” I said, “Diana, I’m here to protect you. You’re going to have to accept it. I need those cameras to photograph you.” She looked at me and away she went.

What happened the next day?

There was no comment about it. This is the conclusion that I’ve drawn. I think every artist is terrified at performing. In the case of Diana, in the back of her head — and I could be 100 percent wrong — she was saying, if this fails with little me standing on this stage, aside from blaming herself, she could say, well, if those cameras weren’t there, it would’ve worked. It was just something that wouldn’t put all the weight on her shoulders. The irony is that as soon as the rainstorm started and the crowd became so wild, people climbed up on the wooden barriers we had in front of those two cameras. They were even trying to sit on the cameras. Overnight, we took axle grease and covered the wooden barriers so nobody could climb up on them.

Where were you located during the show?

You know where she’s yelling during the Friday [second] show, “I’m coming, I’m coming out.” She ran from the door of my control room. I was standing right behind her saying, “Go!”

Once it became clear that the storm was not going to let up, on the spur of the moment Diana says to the audience, “We’ll do it again tomorrow.” A second show was never in the plan, especially returning after a storm. What was going through your mind when you heard her say that?

First of all, we’re in the control room in a mobile truck and we’re up to our ankles in water. We are on a powder keg ready to explode electronically because we have so much electricity going in and out of the truck. We were concerned for our safety as well. When she’s saying, “We’re coming back tomorrow,” my technical director is saying replica watches, “If we can come back tomorrow!” There were a lot of logistical questions that had to be answered. When we finished, we all regrouped. Hardly anyone went back to their hotels. We had no idea if it was physically or even feasible to do again.

How would history have been different if she didn’t come back the next night and do the show?

I think it still would’ve been a front-page story, but I don’t think it would’ve ever been aired on APT (American Public Television) or released through Shout! Factory if it had just been the rainstorm.

What are your thoughts 29 years later of that second and complete concert?

The second night to me, non-stop, of all the concerts I’ve done with her, was the best she ever did, looked and sounded. The second day was a case of, “Okay, I know I’ve got them in the palm of my hand; I’m going to entertain the hell out of them.” She didn’t want to get off that stage. The show ended 20 minutes before she left. The band kept vamping that “All for One.” I think she went into a great depression when it was all over. It would’ve been a normal reaction to go from that high. I can’t imagine what it would be like to be Diana Ross and ending something and knowing you did it. It’s everything you wanted it to be and more and then leave and go back to your regular life.

How involved was Diana on this DVD release?

I worked with her very closely on this. In fact, when we screened it, she screened it with her daughters. I was thrilled when one of them turned to me and said, “Steve, thank you.” They were just blown away with it.

Will you and Diana work together again?

I’m ready, willing and able to work with Diana when she picks up the phone. We do stay in touch.

Do you have any final memories you’d like to share about Central Park?

I just remember our first big meeting about Central Park after her and I initially had talked. She said, “Would you mind just being the director on this one and I’ll be the producer?” I told her it was no problem. Now I get to New York and she just bought an office building. At the building I wasn’t expecting the crowd that was there. It had to be at least 75 to 100 people. There were promoters, park commissioners, on and on and on. We walk in and Diana’s not there and everybody is gathering. In comes Diana like a whirlwind. She looks phenomenal. She welcomes everybody and tells them how great it’s going to be. I’m expecting her to start laying out the show. Then she says, “If you have any questions about the show, talk to Steve Binder.”

Diana Ross: Live in Central Park is available May 15. Visit www.shoutfactory.com to purchase your copy.

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17 May

Exxon Valdez sold, likely destined for scrap heap

Posted in Abroad on 17.05.12

John Gaps III | ASSOCIATED PRESSA APRIL 9 Tattoo Kits, 1989 FILE PHOTO

NEW DELHI (AP) — The notorious Exxon Valdez tanker, responsible for one of the worst oil spills in U.S. history two decades ago, has been bought by an Indian company almost certainly to be scrapped for its steel and spare parts.

Best Oasis Ltd. would not disclose the price or purpose of its purchase, but it buys old ships solely to dismantle them, reuse salvageable material and discard the rest.

On March 24, 1989, millions of gallons of crude oil spewed into Alaska’s ecologically sensitive Prince William Sound when the Exxon Valdez dashed against rocks, coating the shoreline with petroleum sludge and killing nearly 40,000 birds. The spill caused incalculable environmental damage and demolished the fishing industry in the area.

Texas-based Exxon Mobil Corp. Kuro Sumi Tattoo Ink, spent $900 million in restitution in a 1991 settlement and is battling more litigation from the spill.

The tanker moved on, with five name changes since the spill and ownership changing repeatedly, apparently to keep the ship in use while distancing it from the disaster.

Best Oasis official Gaurav Mehta said his company bought the ship recently. It’s now a converted ore carrier known as the Oriental Nicety Tattoo Kits For Sale, but he did not disclose its current location and status.

“I can confirm that Best Oasis has bought the tanker, but can give no details till we take delivery of it,” Mehta said.

The ship is 26 years old, not significantly aged for tankers, but it was considerably damaged in its lifetime. It was split open by rocks in the Alaska spill and was damaged in a collision in the South China Sea in 2010.

Hong Kong-based Best Oasis is a wholly owned subsidiary of Priya Blue Industries in the western state of Gujarat.

India has one of the world’s largest industries for breaking down old ships and oil tankers in the town of Alang, along the Gulf of Cambay in Gujarat.

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17 May

Kindle Fire Shipments Fizzle

Posted in Abroad on 17.05.12

Amazon likes to tout the Kindle Fire as “the #1 bestselling, most gifted, and most wished for product” it peddles (without ever disclosing actual sales numbers). But evidently that doesn’t mean quite as much as you’d think. After an initial and impressive surge, sales of the device appear to be declining — precipitously.

According to IDC’s review of worldwide tablet shipments for the first quarter of 2012, Kindle Fire shipments dropped from 4.8 million units in the fourth quarter of 2011 to less than 750,000 units last quarter.

From 16.8 percent to “just over 4 percent” global market share is a swift decline indeed, and enough to cost Amazon its second-place spot in IDC’s ranking of tablet vendors. Amazon is now in third place, behind Samsung.

In the first-place slot: Apple. While the company shipped 11.8 million iPads in the first quarter Homemade Tattoo Guns, down from 15.4 million units in the fourth Tattoo Gun Buy, that was more than enough to maintain its dominant position and grow its market share to 68 percent from 55 percent.

One last detail worth noting: Worldwide tablet shipments for the quarter reached 17.4 million units The Best Tattoo Machine, about 1.2 million units below IDC’s projections. That said, they were more than double the 7.9 million units shipped in the same period a year earlier.

(Image courtesy of Someecards)

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16 May

Wis. Recall Gov. Walker In Dead Heat With Top Dem

Posted in Abroad on 16.05.12

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

A new Marquette Law School poll in Wisconsin shows Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett within a single percentage point of Republican Gov. Scott Walker in a head-to-head match-up of the recall election.

Barrett, who ran against Walker in 2010 and was defeated by a margin of 5 percentage points, has a 47-46 lead over Walker among all registered voters. However, when the pool is narrowed to likely voters, the lead flips, and Walker has 1 percentage point over Barrett of 48 percent to 47 percent.

Barrett seems poised to be the Democrats’ choice to battle Walker in the June 5 recall election. With less than a week until the May 8 Democratic primary Replica Hale Bob Dresses, the Marquette poll shows Barrett with a 38-21 lead over former Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk–a big increase from the last Marquette poll in March, which showed Barrett up by only 7 points.

The numbers represent a strong improvement for Barrett among both Democrats and Republicans.

“Despite Barrett’s late entry into the race, he has improved his position both among Democratic primary voters and in the general recall contest against Walker. Barrett trailed Walker by 6 percentage points in January but cut that to two points in March. The contest is now essentially a tie,” writes Marquette Law School poll director Charles Franklin.

With a little over a month until election day, donors in both parties are opening up their wallets to help with the cause.

Figures released earlier in the week showed that Walker had raised a staggering $13 million from mid-January until the end of April. Walker has raised more than $25 million to fight his recall election, undoubtedly benefiting from a quirk in Wisconsin election law which allowed him to raise unlimited funds during the time signatures for his recall were being gathered and approved.

Some 66 percent of the $13 million he took in during the first few months of 2012 came from donors living outside of Wisconsin.

Barrett has actually been out-fundraised by Democratic challenger Kathleen Falk Christian Audigier Clothing sale, who brought in $977,059 to Barrett’s $831,508. However, $332,162 of Falk’s money has come from outside spending groups, while almost all of Barrett’s money has come from individual donors. Barrett also entered the race in March, almost three months after Falk.

Walker is the first governor in Wisconsin state history to face a recall, mainly over his push to strip some state unionized workers of their collective bargaining rights. If he is defeated, he will be the third governor in U.S. history to be recalled.

SHOWS: World News

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15 May

ReportScion iQ delayed until Summer

Posted in Abroad on 15.05.12

Scion iQ – Click above for high-res image gallery
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Word on The Internets is that the Scion iQ won’t be hitting our shores anytime soon. The pint-sized hatch was originally supposed to arrive here in the United States by March of this year Tattoo Supplies, but GreenCarReports.com has indicated that the city car may not arrive until sometime this summer. The move is thought to be as much about production delays as marketing. Scion has said that it wanted to give the 2011 tC enough time to have the company’s stage all to itself without having the limelight stolen away by its newest sibling.

At the same time, the company said that the first prototypes from Japan were a few months late in arriving and that the delay pushed back the production schedule. Whatever the hold up, buyers clamoring for a competitor to the Smart ForTwo will have to wait a few more months for the pleasure of grabbing the keys to a Scion iQ. As of this writing, there’s no telling whether the car will show up as a 2011 model as first thought or whether it will be labeled a 2012 when it finally shows up.

Related Gallery2011 Scion iQ
[Source: GreenCarReports.com]

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14 May

Jeep blacks out with crowdsourced Altitude edition

Posted in Abroad on 14.05.12

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If you were in Houston back in January for the car show there, you may have seen a murdered-out Grand Cherokee there which Jeep dubbed a “production-intent concept.” The most iconic of Chrysler brands then rolled into Geneva with a similar GC with more of a Storm Trooper look Replica Bandage dresses, joined by a blacked-out Compass. These, too, were called “production-intent concepts” – a name that wasn’t all that dynamic. So Jeep opened a contest called “Name My Ride Discount Herve Leger gown,” and the handle chosen was “Altitude.” Now Jeep is putting the Altitude into its product catalog for the Grand Cherokee, Compass and the Patriot, too.

Like the concepts, the production Altitude special editions are characterized by their blacked-out approach. For the Grand Cherokee, that means a black grille surround, black headlamp trim, black liftgate light bar, blacked-out 20-inch alloys and a black interior, complemented by “platinum chrome” on the lower fascia and the mesh grille. For the Compass Karen Millen Dresses sale, the Altitude edition blacks out the grille, headlamp bezels Cheap Bandage dresses, roof rails, step pad and 18-inch alloys (as well as the interior) Cheap DKNY Clothes, whole the Patriot Altitude gets black 17-inch alloys and cabin but trades in most of the rest for chrome and polished steel.

If this all strikes you as just too dark, each model is available in other colors for the bodywork, in which case the black trim provides the contrast. They all come packed with optional extras as well, with prices starting at $20,240 for the Patriot Altitude edition, $22,190 for the Compass Altitude and $35,595 for the Grand Cherokee Altitude. Like what you see? Check ‘em out in the high-res image gallery and the full press release after the jump.

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14 May

GM offering 0% financing for month of March

Posted in Abroad on 14.05.12

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General Motors just posted a 12-percent sales increase for the month of February, and now the automaker is hoping to continue its strong sales trend by offering 0 percent financing for 60 months on sales that occur during the month of March. Curiously, this announcement comes just a few days after Toyota started its own 0 percent campaign. GM’s vice president for U.S. marketing Discount Karen Millen Dresses, Susan Docherty, argues that the Toyota incentives had nothing to do with The General’s decision to offer similar financing options Cheap Marc Jacobs Dresses, saying Cheap Chanel Dresses, “We’re going headstrong into truck month for both Chevrolet and GMC Herve Leger gown sale, which is a traditional play that we have normally done during March.”

GM’s program will cover roughly 55 percent of all 2010 models on sale. What’s more, the company is also offering 0 percent financing for 72 months on its remaining 2009 model inventory, covering about 97 percent of what’s left on dealer lots.

We’ll be interested to see if these incentives help boost sales for both Toyota and GM throughout the next month. We’re also wondering if any other manufacturers (ahem Cheap Christian Audigier Clothes, Ford) will follow suit.

[Source: Automotive News, sub. req.| Image: David McNew/Getty]

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14 May

2013 Dodge Dart sample configurator goes live, pri

Posted in Abroad on 14.05.12

Members of the Dodge Dart Lovers Club unite: Dodge needs your help pinning down the price and model matrix for the Dodge Dart. As Ford recently did with the 2013 Escape, Dodge has set up a configurator with tentative pricing and options for five trims of the small sedan. According to the automaker, the point is to “provide us with information on how you want to see the all-new Dart,” but it’s a survey more than a true builder, so “Please note the packaging and pricing information on this site is for survey purposes only.”

As of now, the not-finalized price of entry is $17,200 for a Dart SE with the 2.0-liter Tigershark powerplant with 160 horsepower. The standard engine remains the same but the options swell on the next three models: the $19,00 SXT adds things like bigger wheels and keyless entry; the $20 Buy Christian Audigier Clothes,500 Rallye gets a new front fascia and a leather-wrapped steering wheel; the $21 Karen Millen Dresses sale,500 Limited installs the 8.4-inch infotainment center and seven-inch reconfigurable dash cluster; and with the top-of-the-mountain Cheap Missoni Dresses, manual transmission, $24,000 R/T you upgrade to the 2.4-liter, 184-horsepower Tigershark engine Buy DKNY Clothing, bigger wheels and dual exhaust.

The options are plentiful – all trims are offered in manual and automatic, and the 1.4-liter turbo is an engine option on the SXT, Rallye and Limited. Remember, though, some options wouldn’t exactly make sense if this were a finalized model. The $19 Chloe Dresses sale,400 SXT comes with Keyless Entry, but on the $24,000 R/T you have to purchase the $1,400 Technology Group that includes Keyless Entry. Our highly scientific test involved checking every option on an automatic R/T. The result: a $31,050 Dodge Dart.

That’s why, as the site says Replica DKNY Clothing, “The features and prices for the final 2013 Dodge Dart will become available when the vehicle goes on sale in Q2 of 2012. The information on this site may change frequently, so don’t be surprised if things look different next time you visit.” Head over to the configurator and get cracking, and see all 12 available colors in our gallery below.

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13 May

REPORTPorsche planning mini-Cayenne

Posted in Abroad on 13.05.12

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Remember when Porsche only made sportscars? It’s hard to recall when its line-up has been growing with sport-sedans and sport-utes, but we’re assured it wasn’t all that long ago. Somebody needs to remind the herren in Stuttgart Imitation Breitling Watches, though Replica Hublot Watches, because if the latest reports are to serve as any indicator Replica Richard Mille Watches, Porsche is drifting further into the mainstream and away from its erstwhile core purpose.

After the Panamera four-door hits the market Replica Tag Heuer Watches, insiders are speculating that Porsche’s next project will be to produce a baby brother for the Cayenne sport-ute. Positioned against the BMW X3, a baby Cayenne could potentially share components from the upcoming Volkswagen Tiguan and Audi Q5 to help keep development and production costs down Replica Romain Jerome Watches, although it would be built in-house at the new plant Porsche has built for the Panamera. Power would be tipped to come courtesy of the Cayenne’s V6 and V8 engines, though we wouldn’t expect a turbo version.

A smaller version of the Cayenne would undoubtedly be one of the best performing mini-utes on the market, but is this just another answer to a question no one was asking?

[Source: AutoZeitung via Motor Authority]

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