Credit Counseling New Orleans Headlines
IRS Briefing and Update for Credit Counselors Included at Industry Education Conference
(PRWEB) April 7, 2008 -- The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) will brief and update the credit counseling industry at the Spring Conference of the American Association of Debt Management Organizations...
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Internal Revenue Service to Address Credit Counseling Industry
(PRWEB) March 10, 2008 -- The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) will address the credit counseling industry at the Spring Conference of the American Association of Debt Management Organizations (AADMO)...
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Five Years After Katrina, New Orleans Legal Community Is Finding Its Way
Four months after Hurricane Katrina hit, 5,352 attorneys had offices in New Orleans. Since then, that number has dropped by 19 percent, to 4,342, as attorneys moved elsewhere to make a living. Even so, membership in the New Orleans Bar Association now surpasses its pre-Katrina levels, if only slightly, said Executive Director Helena Henderson. She's encouraged by the bar association's numbers ...
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From New York to Chicago to L.A., this could be an offseason marked by heavy turnover in the managerial ranks
From New York to Chicago to L.A., this could be a change-filled offseason
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Philadelphia Insurance Companies Raises Over $25,000 for Oil Spill Victims
TEAMPHLY crosses the finish line and exceeds their fundraising goal for the "Climbing for Cleanup" campaign.
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Measuring Progress Five Years After Hurricane Katrina
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana - On the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, one of the most destructive storms in U.S. history, President Barack Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama, and members of the Cabinet will travel Sunday to New Orleans. The President will speak at Xavier University to commemorate the more than 1,836 lives lost and the sacrifices that the Gulf Coast has made to recover after ...
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Books take a look back at Hurricane Katrina 5 years later
Today is the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina's landfall, and naturally there are plenty of books to commemorate the worst natural and not-so-natural disaster in U.S. history. Not only do these new books examine the storm's devastation and the causes that exasperated the tragedy, but consider the crisis of culture, family and economics left in its wake.
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