Known to almost every non-commissioned airman in the service, it is responsible for the training of more servicemen in the Air
Force than any other institution.
Not exact matches
Additionally, nearly 56,000 people were displaced,
forced to flee into the forests, as mobs burned down more
than 5,600 houses, 300 churches, and
other Christian
institutions.
As used in this paragraph, a «Covered Borrower» means any person who, at the time such person becomes obligated on a loan transaction or establishes an account for consumer credit, satisfies the requirements under any one or more of the following classifications, or is otherwise under applicable laws deemed to be a «Covered Borrower» under the Military Lending Act, 10 U.S. Code Section 987: (a) An active duty member of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air
Force or Coast Guard, or a person serving on active Guard and Reserve duty (a person described in this clause (a) of the definition of «Covered Borrower» is hereinafter referred to as a «Service Member»); or (b) Any of the following persons, relative to a Service Member: (1) The spouse; (2) A child under the age of 21; or (3) If dependent on the Service Member for more
than one half of such person's support, any one or more of the following persons: (i) A child under the age of 23 enrolled in a full time course of study at an
institution of higher learning; (ii) A child of any age incapable of self support due to a mental or physical incapacity that occurred before attaining age 23 while such person was dependent on the Service Member; (iii) Any unmarried person placed in legal custody of the Service Member who resides with such Service Member unless separated by military service or to receive institutional care or under
other circumstances covered by Regulation; or (iv) A parent or parent - in - law residing in the Service Member's household.
NDP: Update the Consumer Protection Act to cap ATM fees at a maximum of 50 cents per withdrawal; ensure all Canadians have reasonable access to a no - frills credit card with an interest rate no more
than 5 % over prime; eliminate «pay - to - pay» by banks in which financial
institutions charge their customers a fee for making payments on their mortgages, credit cards, or
other loans; take action against abusive payday lenders; lower the fees that workers in Canada are
forced to pay when sending money to their families abroad; direct the CRTC to crack down on excessive mobile roaming charges; create a Gasoline Ombudsperson to investigate complaints about practices in the gasoline market.
Even though many financial
institutions have online application processes that can make it far easier to open an account
than it was in the past, there are still regulatory requirements that
force banks and brokerage companies to verify your identity and take
other steps to ensure the security of your account.
While the recent upsurge of feminist activity in this country has indeed been a liberating one, its
force has been chiefly emotional — personal, psychological and subjective — centered, like the
other radical movements to which it is related, on the present and its immediate needs, rather
than on historical analysis of the basic intellectual issues which the feminist attack on the status quo automatically raises.1 Like any revolution, however, the feminist one ultimately must come to grips with the intellectual and ideological basis of the various intellectual or scholarly disciplines — history, philosophy, sociology, psychology, etc. — in the same way that it questions the ideologies of present social
institutions.