Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Mortgage and Loans - Mortgage Refinance, Home Loans

Mortgage and Loans - Mortgage Refinance, Home Loans


Keiser Report №103: Markets, Finance FUBAR!

Posted: 15 Dec 2010 06:12 AM PST

This time, Max Keiser and co-host, Stacy Herbert, examine Jamie Dimon’s sore spots and the Department of Justice’s PR stunts and ask whether or not Americans are plunging deeper into debt. In the second half of the show, Max Keiser talks to Michael W. Hudson, author of The Monster: How a Gang of Predatory Lenders and Wall Street Bankers Fleeced America — and Spawned a Global Crisis.” RT on Facebook: www.facebook.com RT on Twitter: twitter.com

Kiwibank Home Loans – Warren and Olivia from Porirua

Posted: 15 Dec 2010 03:48 AM PST

Kiwibank customers Warren and Olivia tell us about their home loan experience with Kiwibank and how their Mobile Mortgage Manager Mike helped. For more info visit www.kiwibank.co.nz

Finding the Birth Certificate for a target person

Posted: 15 Dec 2010 01:04 AM PST

If you are trying to locate someone or build a set of control data about them you will definitely need a copy of their Birth Certificate and this you can easily accomplish by accessing State and County databases online.   It will also facilitate an address search.

A birth record can provide an individual with a plethora of information, including the person’s full name, his or her birth date, his or her place of birth, the name of his or her mother and father (as well as the mother’s maiden name), and even the physician who attended the birth.

The Birth Certificates have been relatively widespread in usage at the State or County level since about 1900 and are typically issued, per State Law, by either State Agency or at the County Level.

Although each state has their own database for birth records (there is currently no nationwide database for birth records), and therefore their own search engines for birth records, the process of finding birth records is typically easy to complete.

Birth records can provide an individual with a plethora of valuable information on another individual.   They can be very useful when researching an ancestor’s or relative’s birth for genealogy purposes.  You can also trace the lineage of adopted persons by using this document, as legally adopted persons have their lineage listed on a modified record, reflecting their adoptive parents in lieu of birth parents.

You will need to access and obtain a birth certificate through the appropriate office in the State or County where that date is kept.   You should start at the State level in the State of question, to determine if that State maintains a central file or if the date is kept at the County level, and some key information of the individual along with a small fee will typically produce the document.  There are some states that require an official request for a birth record so you may have to utilize a people finder.

To find the address of your state or local vital records office, you can contact the National Center for Health Statistics by either calling them at (301) 458-4636 or by visiting www.cdc.gov/nchs.

Once you arrive at your state or local vital records office, you will need the following information: 

•        Full name of the person on which you are requesting the birth record

•        The sex of the individual

•        The parents’ names, including the mother’s maiden name

•        The city of birth

•        The reason for requesting the birth record

The more information you have regarding the individual in question, the easier it is to locate the appropriate birth record.  The appropriate agency that maintains the vital records for the county or state will typically charge a small fee for providing a certified copy of the Certificate.

All U.S. States and Territories now have computerized databases of birth and death records.   Thus, locating a birth record online through an easily searchable database is quite simple to accomplish.  If you need a certified printed copy of the BC document you will typically need to visit that agency in person, but if all you need is an information copy this can almost always be obtained via the internet.

If you are trying to find a person from another country you may be able to accomplish this online as well. There are also many online searchable databases that allow individuals to search for birth records from other countries.  Internet access to worldwide records of this nature have made the process much easier to accomplish.

Mortgage market and interest rate update for Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

Posted: 14 Dec 2010 11:37 PM PST

Mortgage market and interest rate update from Bruce Brown, CMPS with First Security Mortgage in Kansas City and radio host of Dollars and Homes on KCMO Talk Radio 710.

How to get prospective clients for an insurance company?

Posted: 14 Dec 2010 01:37 PM PST

I have just recieved a new task for my new job in an insurance company. My boss wants me to collect personal information about 50 people by the end of this week including their phone number, marital status, level of income and type of insurance.

I need ideas on how to get such information. Should I go around the streets to stores and try to get information from clients, or could I contact people by phone through the phonebook? Any other ideas or hints.

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