| Erasing European Credit Card Debts
Statistics show that 35% of Europeans have some form of debt, most of them for a home loan. It is common knowledge amongst bankers that most people do not know how to handle their loan account well and end up paying thousands in unnecessary interest. Banks are making millions in profit because Europeans are unable to take proper care of their Loan Accounts. Gordon Gecko is an American consultant who is now in Europe and he is advocating the use of Debt Consolidation. This is a totally new concept for Europe. Many people in Europe are paying a house loan, car loan, another loan for appliances and credit card payments. �This is ridiculous� says Gordon Gecko �By utilizing debt consolidation one may take out one loan to pay off many others. This has the added advantage of securing a lower interest rates, and a fixed interest rate whilst conveniently dealing with only one loan agency� he continued.
Former Milwaukee Police Officer Deported
I enjoyed my time here and I have no regrets," he said. He said being a police officer was his dream job. "I love this country," he said Saturday. "I love everything it has to offer." Ayala-Cornejo's family moved to the U.S. from Guadalajara in 1992. He will be staying with relatives who remained behind. In a November, Ayala said his father helped him change his identity to Jose Morales, a cousin who was a U.S. citizen but who died as a child of stomach cancer. He had told his father he wanted to become a police officer after the department recruited at his high school. He said he would have had to go back to Mexico when he became an adult to wait years before becoming a citizen, and his father did not want to separate the family.
Analysis: World’s top deposit-taker gets a new stamp
The tiny post office in Hyotanbuchi, a farming community in south-western Japan, is hardly a financial powerhouse. But postmaster Taketoshi Iki and his two colleagues are now part of the world's biggest bank, which opened its doors to business on Monday. The launch is part of the largest privatisation in Japanese history, transforming the country's 136-year-old postal service into a holding company, with a bank, insurer and two mail services operations under its umbrella. The post office's banking service is now Japan Post Bank, with Y189,000bn ($1,630bn, £798bn, €1,146bn) in deposits and a network of 24,000 post offices, making it the world's largest bank by those measures. .
More Obama substance!
So Obama boldly stood with a mere 86 fellow Senators .... " P.S.: What's the word for trumped-up contrarianism? Sister Fauxjah? ... **--Thanks to commenter "Trevor" on bloggingheads for the link. 2:08 P.M. link Sunday, December 24, 2006 On to New Hampshire! The mighty Hillary juggernaut closes its vise-like grip on the post of Senate Majority Leader. A Concord Monitor poll shows the same weakness as last week's survey from Iowa. RCP summarizes: Just like in Iowa, Hillary loses to Rudy and McCain but beats Romney. And just like in Iowa, Obama beats them all. Edwards doesn't run as strong in New Hampshire as in Iowa - no surprise there - but he still manages a dead heat against McCain and Giuliani and handily beats Romney. So even though Hillary is clinging to a lead at the top of the field, she's once again giving off the "unelectable" vibe in comparison to her two most serious primary challengers.
NICC planning construction work
They do know in concept what they need, they've just never put it on paper," Wills said. A group of administrators, including Wills, will be determining how the money is spent, and have been meeting weekly since the bond was approved. The school also is in the process of forming community groups to weigh in on the projects. The two groups will represent the northern and southern parts of the district and will be "purely advisory," according to Wills. "They will be kept informed of all the decisions and we will run things past them," said Wills, who said the community college is seeking committee members without a "vested interest" in the school. "Nobody related to the college will represent the taxpayers," she said. .
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