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Allegiant to Hold Live Webcast of Fourth Quarter, Full Year 2007 ...

LAS VEGAS, Jan. 10 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Allegiant Travel Company (Nasdaq: ALGT) will hold its conference call for fourth quarter and full-year 2007 financial results on Jan. 30, 2008. A live broadcast of the conference call will be available through the company's Investor Relations website homepage at http://ir.allegiantair.com. The webcast will be also be archived on the "Events & Presentations" section of the site.

About the Company

Las Vegas based Allegiant Travel Company (Nasdaq: ALGT), is focused on linking travelers in small cities to world-class leisure destinations such as Las Vegas, Nev., Phoenix, Ariz., Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Orlando, Fla. and Tampa/St. Petersburg, Fla. Through its subsidiary, Allegiant Air, the Company operates a low-cost, high-efficiency, all-jet passenger airline offering air travel both on a stand-alone basis and bundled with hotel rooms, rental cars and other travel related services.


Daily report | Winner, loser and the top10

Ford Motor Co. reported Friday its U.S. light vehicle sales fell 3.9 percent in January, even when compared with a weak performance a year ago. Ford said it sold 159,355 light vehicles for the month as it continued a strategy to wean itself from low-profit rental car and other fleet sales. That was down from January 2007 when the company sold 165,877 cars and trucks. Shares rose 21 cents to $6.85.

Today's Top 10

OPEC WON'T PUMP MORE OIL

OPEC decided against pumping more oil in a rebuff to Washington and a possible prelude to cuts as early as next month should the wounded U.S. economy sap demand for crude.

GANNETT PROFITS PLUNGE

Gannett Co., the largest newspaper publisher in the nation, said falling revenue from broadcast and newspaper ad sales along with an impairment charge drove fourth quarter earnings down 31 percent.


OurSound in the Newspaper

Our Sound music columnist Bill Henry turns his eyes and ears on the area's vibrant, multi-genre music scene every week in The Sun Times. From blues to bluegrass, folk to funk, pop to punk and classical to celtic, Henry writes about the area's performers and music trends. The veteran Sun Times news reporter, photographer and local musician's Our Sound column mixes profiles, feature stories, advance concert coverage, occasional reviews and scene-setting observations to chronicle the rich and diverse Grey-Bruce music community. Read Bill Henry's Our Sound column every Thursday on The Sun Times entertainment section front...

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Man dies after shopping centre fall

No matter what you think, you do stay and look, you question why he did what he did and would desperately like to help. Believe me, as a parent, many thoughts go through your head, it is not the ghoulish aspect that holds you as many of you are suggesting. Despite comments to the contrary I thought the one man and one woman that obviously knew what they were doing were excellent, keeping him alive, talking to him; as I'm sure they were trained to do. Don't knock the Glades staff. .


Civilian UAVs: No Pilot, No Problem

Technology is not the limitation," says Rich O'Lear, vice president for Unmanned Aerial Systems at Lockheed Martin. "It's the ability of people to conceive of ways to use the technology."

Civilian UAVs have already demonstrated potential in a wide variety of missions. In 2005 researchers at the National Oceanographic & Atmospheric Administration flew a 6-ft.-long Aerosonde into the heart of tropical storm Ophelia. Such flights are currently conducted by piloted transport planes at a relatively safe altitude of 10,000 ft. But because a UAV puts no crew at risk, the Aerosonde can be flown a few hundred feet above water, where winds whip at 175 mph and waves can top 60 ft. "It gets us to an area that's very difficult to observe with manned aircraft, because of the danger," says Joe Cione, the project's lead scientist.


No cable, no problem – until next year

Yes, there are pangs of disappointment and longing for Discovery Channel and TLC from time-to-time, but for what it saves me. I can buy most of the Discovery Channel stuff on DVD for what I save in a month or two.

OTA is not dead and picking the right TV with ATSC built-in is a painless upgrade to the old tube-based models. If you can put up an antenna mast, or even a decent antenna in the attic, show Rogers the door! Ploy or not, if there are enough people enjoying FTA/OTA programmingm, it will not go away. Posted 29/02/08 at 12:12 PM EST | Alert an Editor | Link to Comment .


SNP 'not fit to govern'

Here he seems to have missed a rather basic point. The SNP are proposing a tax cut. They have made that point clear, describing it as the largest tax cut in a generation.Mr. Midwinter says that moving from the council tax to the local income tax will raise £831 million less in tax than at present. That is half true. £450 million less will be raised. Put another way (and one I suspect that will ring more true to taxpayers) that means £450 million will be returned to Scottish taxpayers. That is a central feature of the SNP plans.This leaves £381 million in dispute. This £381 million is the amount of the current council tax rebate. Mr. Midwinter assumes that this money would be lost to Scotland in the maw of the Treasury.What we know from the Burt Review is that arrangements are flexible enough to deal with their proposed alternative to Council Tax.


Active Desktop Calendar 7.42

This fully customizable calendar with notes, tasks, alarms and contacts provides seamless integration and interactivity with the desktop background. You can organize data in layers and share them in a local network. The program integrates with Outlook to show its appointments/tasks on the desktop. Connection with Google calendars and web based ICS files is available as well as preset calendars with holidays for different countries. You can choose calendar icons, fonts, colors and type: one, two or three months on the desktop. Through interactive desktop the program accepts clicks on dates, appointments and tasks. Printing calendar data is easy, in monthly view or as a list of appointments in a chosen date range. Built-in address book allows you to keep details about all your contacts and import them from other programs.


Sympathy wanes for German rail strikers

Public sympathy for the union behind Germany's biggest rail strike seemed to be waning on Friday when millions of commuters struggled to get to work in freezing weather.

The 62-hour walk-out by the GDL train drivers' union over pay has crippled goods transport and hit the steel and retail sectors, raising fears the strike could have a lasting impact on the economy if a solution is not found soon.

More strikes are possible from Tuesday, the GDL said.

Shipping containers piled up in Germany's largest port in Hamburg, authorities said. Only half the usual freight traffic was running in the northern city on the strike's third day.

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