| Once you've found a few used cars you are considering
for purchase, always remember this important point. Always know the
vehicle's history. As a buyer, you have a right to know the complete
history of the vehicle for sale. |
You can find your vehicle's VIN number from the car
itself. A VIN is visible on the lower right hand (driver's side) corner
of the dash when looking through the front windshield.
The VIN is also printed inside the drivers door on the frame. You
may also find the VIN on registrations, titles and proof of insurance
cards.
Once you have the VIN number, you can use it to do a
Vehicle Title Search on our website above. It's that easy! |
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General Motors Corp.
Date: Mar 18, 2005
Contributor: Marylou Elsen
Saab chief out after GM decision to send work to Germany
After losing a bid to produce General Motors Corp.'s midsize cars, Saab Automobile AB's Chief Executive Peter Augustsson said Wednesday he will resign in April to start his own company.
Jan-Aake Jonsson, the current chief of sales and marketing for GM's Nordic region, on April 1 will replace Augustsson, who has led Saab since 2000.
Augustsson's announcement came five days after GM chose an Adam Opel AG plant in Ruesselsheim, Germany, as its hub for production of future generations of GM's midsize cars in Europe, over Saab's plant in Trollhaettan. But the U.S.-based auto company guaranteed that the Trollhaettan plant will keep producing automobiles until 2010, including a new Cadillac BLS model aimed at the European market.
Augustsson said GM's announcement Friday provided "a fitting moment" to end his career with Saab.
"If I was going to stay, I'd have to commit for several more years," he said. "I don't feel like I can do that. I want to do something else now."
He said he plans to start a business development company, but declined to provide details.
Carl-Peter Forster, president of GM Europe, will take Augustsson's place as chairman of the Saab board, the company said.
After GM acquired a stake in Saab in 1990, the automaker has posted profits just twice. Since 2000, when GM acquired Saab, the company has been in the red but Augustsson said, "I don't feel like I've failed."
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