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Mansion Casino: Rewarding Affiliates ...
MANSION.com unveils the mansionaffiliates.com VIP Poker and Casino Affiliates Club, offering three exclusive Membership levels� Silver, Gold and the esteemed Platinum status. Affiliates of the Gibraltar-based online gaming company who continue to promote harder and smarter for MANSION.com stand to reap richer rewards simply by being part of the MANSION.com Affiliate Programme. Essentially a loyalty scheme, the mansionaffiliates.com VIP Club recognises and rewards Affiliates ability to drive quality traffic and refer active players. �As a key promotional asset of our company, our Affiliates deserve compensation commensurate with their energy, enthusiasm and overall contribution to our business.� says MANSION.com CEO Mr. Guy Gussarsky. �We are excited to unveil a VIP Club that sets the industry standard in Affiliate loyalty programmes, as our partnerships continue to thrive in this �win-win� environment,� adds Gussarsky.
Jason Chan to Appear at CAC Macau
EntertAsia.com CEO, Jason Chan, is slated to speak at next month's first ever Casino Affiliate Conference in Macau. CAC Macau is scheduled for November 28-29, 2007 at the recently built Venetian Hotel & Casino in Macau, PR China. Who better to appear than the man who is helping to drive online gambling ventures into the Asian market, Jason Chan. "You simply can�t use the American business practice or gaming culture to apply to rest of the world. It simply doesn�t work especially when players have many choices," Chan told Gambling911.com in regard to breaking the barriers of the Asian online gambling market. His EntertAsia firm offers customers wanting to get into Asia a unique opportunity. Mr. Chan will be meeting with affiliates and operators alike during CAC Macau.
Airline's shakeup sends 2 to Phila.
Mann, president of industry analyst R.W. Mann Associates in Port Washington, N.Y., said Ciminelli should prove valuable because of his experience at LaGuardia in New York. Unlike the Phoenix and Las Vegas airports, America West's hubs, LaGuardia and Philadelphia both have hundreds of flights a day, operating at airports hemmed in by development and in the midst of the high-traffic area of the Northeast. Both airports also have highly unionized workforces, he said. "They're bulking up," Mann said of US Airways. "If this was the White House, they would call it a surge." Contact staff writer Tom Belden at 214-854-2454 or tbelden@phillynews.com. .
Some Hostages Released In Standoff At Clinton's N.H. Office
Law enforcement sources told WNBC.com's Jonathan Dienst that the suspect has demanded to speak with the presidential hopeful. The suspect was tentatively identified as Leeland Eisenberg. The Clinton campaign issued the following statement: "There is an ongoing situation in our Rochester, NH office. We are in close contact with state and local authorities and are acting at their direction. We will release additional details as appropriate." Police said the man is in his 40s with salt-and-pepper hair, TV station WMUR reported. The man entered the office around 1 p.m., ordered people onto the floor and then let a mother and her baby leave, said State Police Maj. Michael Hambrook. The two hostages he kept were volunteers, said Bill Shaheen, a top state campaign official.
RP envoy says lobby firm to push nation’s agenda with US govt
WASHINGTON D.C. - Ambassador Willy Gaa revealed they are in the final stages of negotiating a lobbying deal with the influential DC law firm Covington & Burling LLP. "I can confirm that we are in negotiations with Covington & Burling for a consultancy with them," the country's top envoy here told select newsmen at the Army and Navy Club Thursday (Dec. 27). The deal, which Gaa said may be signed by January, has been criticized by Senator Mar Roxas. "What can Covington do that our own Philippine Embassy can not accomplish?" he asked, claiming that the lobby would cost Philippine taxpayers $50 million over a period of six months. But Gaa said Roxas got his figures wrong because the contract will cost only $500,000 over six months. "The amount that appeared in the newspapers in the Philippines is quite exaggerated," he averred.
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