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CAMBECE LAW OFFICE JA CAMBECE LAW LAW OFFICE CAMBECE LAW OFFICES CAMBECE CAMBECE LAW FIRM
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Test Drive: 2008 BMW 328i
Design/Fit and Finish
BMW stylists have come under fire in recent years for tinkering with a design language that many consider timeless. Thankfully, the 3 Series' 2006 redesign was for the most part tastefully done, preserving the car's traditional clipped front overhang and taut proportions. Our biggest beef with the 328i's appearance concerns the sport package's nondescript 17-inch wheels, which aren't up to the standards set by the car's performance — we'd like to see something closer to the striking 18-inch rims that come with the 335i's Sport package. Fit and finish was flawless on our tester, with tight panel gaps and nary a creak or rattle to be heard.
LAW JA CAMBECE: Bentley to cut 300 jobs
• Bentley to cut 300 jobs
• Also cutting production
• Extended Christmas break
Bentley is to cut about 300 jobs at its Crewe factory in response to falling demand in the market.
The manufacturer, which is already on short-time working, is looking to shed the jobs through voluntary redundancies. The company employs 3800 staff.
Bentley is also cutting production, by ending all night shifts on the production of its Continental.
The company is also sending employees on an extended Christmas break, shutting its two production lines on December
Councils can't fine littering motorists
• Bureaucratic error causes delay
• Councils should be able to use CCTV images
• Amendments made to wrong law, though
Councils are unable to fine motorists who litter Britain's roads, because of a bureaucratic error.
Legislation to help councils track and fine drivers who throw rubbish from their vehicles was set to be introduced earlier this year, but has been put on hold after the changes were made to the wrong law.
The new law would have enabled local councils to use evidence collected from CCTV footage and by traffic wardens to fine littering motorists.
Honda Insight revealed - Introduction
Price: £15,000 (est)
On sale: Spring 2009
You'll like:... Saving the planet...
You won't: ...but only a bit
Honda plans an onslaught of petrol-electric hybrid cars within the next three years that will change the way many of us drive.
The company aims to expand its global sales of hybrids from a paltry 11,000 in 2007 to around half a million a year by early in the next decade. Four new models, targeted at buyers in all the world's developed markets, will spearhead the assault.
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