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Now Approving Business Loans & Business Credit Lines

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Sales)
Thu Feb 13 05:31:07 2014

To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
From: "Sales" <Sales@areticedsen.us>
Date: Thu, 13 Feb 2014 02:31:07 -0800

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Now Approving Business Loans & Business Credit Lines 

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FRANKFURT, Germany  The European Central Bank and its president, Mario Draghi, 
have played a key role in fighting the government debt crisis afflicting 
the 17 European Union member countries that use the euro.The ECB is 
the issuer of the euro currency and serves as the top monetary 
authority for the eurozone and its 333 million people.Some of its key 
steps have been:LOWER INTEREST RATES: The ECB has cut its key interest 
rate four times since Draghi become president. This month the ECB lowered 
the so-called main refinancing rate further by a quarter-point to a record 
low of 0.5 percent.The refinancing rate is what the bank charges on 
the credit it offers to eurozone banks and thereby influences interest rates 
on the loans banks provide to each other, businesses and consumers. Theoretically, 
a lower rate means cheaper borrowing costs and more incentive to borrow 
money and expand a business. In practice, a slack economy has meant 
weak demand for loans.UNLIMITED BOND BUYS:  In 2012, high borrowing costs 
were threatening to push indebted countries such as Italy and Spain into 
a financial collapse that could have broken up the euro.Draghi took a 
major step toward calming the eurozone crisis by announcing last year that 
"within our mandate, the ECB is ready to do whatever it takes 
to preserve the euro."The ECB followed through on Sept. 6 by offering 
to purchase unlimited amounts of bonds issued by heavily indebted countries, 
lowering their bor
from the university, the official told the AP.The law enforcement official 
said information about Tazhayakov's status was in the Homeland Security 
Department's Student and Exchange Visitor Information System, called SEVIS, 
when Tazhayakov arrived in New York in January.The official spoke on the 
condition of anonymity because this person was not authorized to discuss 
details of Tazhayakov's immigration history.DHS spokesman Peter Boogaard 
said when Tazhayakov arrived on Jan. 20, Customs and Border Protection officials 
had not been notified that he was no longer a student.Boogaard said 
in an emailed statement that DHS had recently reformed the student visa 
system to ensure that CBP would have access to all relevant student 
visa information. Later, however, he clarified the statement to say that 
the reform was ongoing."At the time of re-entry there was no derogatory 
information that suggested this individual posed a national security or 
public safety threat," he said.Tazhayakov and another student from Kazakhstan, 
Dias Kadyrbayev, were detained last month on immigration charges. They were 
arrested on federal criminal charges of conspiracy to obstruct justice. 
Robel Phillipos, 19, was also arrested and charged with willfully making 
materially false statements to federal law enforcement officials during 
a terrorism investigation.Questions about Tazhayakov's immigration status 
came up Wednesday during an immigration hearing in Boston when a jud

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    1998 Coney Island Avenue,Brooklyn, New York 11223<br>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">March 23, 2013: In this file photo provided by the Vatican paper 
L'Osservatore Romano, Pope Francis, right, and Pope emeritus Benedict XVI 
meet in Castel Gandolfo.  Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi 
said Tuesday April 30, 2013 that retired Pope Benedict XVI is moving 
into his new retirement home in the Vatican gardens on Thursday. Benedict 
has been living at the papal residence in Castel Gandolfo, in the 
hills south of Rome, ever since he resigned on Feb. 28AP/Osservatore RomanoVATICAN 
CITY  Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI comes home on Thursday to a 
new house and a new pope, as an unprecedented era begins of 
a retired pontiff living side-by-side with a reigning one inside the Vatican 
gardens.All eyes will be on Benedict's physical state as he is welcomed 
by Pope Francis at his new retirement home, a converted monastery tucked 
behind St. Peter's Basilica. The last time he was seen by the 
public  March 23  Benedict appeared remarkably more frail and thin 
than when he left the Vatican on his final day as pope 
three weeks earlier.The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, has 
acknowledged Benedict's post-retirement decline but insists the 86-year-old 
German isn't suffering from any ailment and is just old."He is a 
man who is not young: He is old and his strength is 
slowly ebbing," Lombardi said this week. "However, there is no special illness. 
He is an old man who is healthy."Since his Feb. 28 resignation, 
Benedict has bee
 wer, in 
order for them to share sensitive details with an attorney - Issa 
had sought specifics on this process from the administration last month.The 
letters offered some details on that process, though attorney Victoria Toensing 
questioned why it took so long for the departments to produce those 
letters in the first place."They're stonewalling," she told Fox News on 
Wednesday.Toensing, who is representing one of the State Department employees 
looking to come forward, earlier told Fox News that her client and 
others were threatened."I'm not talking generally, I'm talking specifically 
about Benghazi - that people have been threatened," Toensing said in an 
interview Monday. "And not just the State Department. People have been threatened 
at the CIA."Three Republican senators on Wednesday also renewed a request 
for the administration to provide the names of the Benghazi survivors to 
Congress in order for lawmakers to conduct interviews."This information 
will allow Congress to meet its oversight obligations and will help ensure 
our government is taking the proper steps to protect American lives abroad 
and prevent future terrorist attacks," they wrote.The letter to President 
Obama was signed by Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz.; Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H.; and 
Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.
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