Word: atms
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...this was luxurious. Then, after 50 days in custody, I was finally released on bail on Jan. 18, thanks in large part to pressure from Paris-based Reporters Without Borders and New York's Center to Protect Journalists. But the police have yet to return my passport, credit cards, ATM card, mobile phone or address book. And I must still go before the courts to face the charges against me, which carry a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. I am confident the High Court will acquit me of all charges...
...years later, the merger has gone down as one of the worst in global corporate history. The bank has stumbled from one humiliation to another, including ATM network failures, executive turf wars, lingering bad loans, eroding asset values and a stock price that has fallen 85% since its September 2000 listing. Last week came the bleakest news yet: on Jan. 21, Mizuho Holdings president and CEO Terunobu Maeda announced that the bank expects to lose $16.53 billion for the fiscal year ending in March. That would be the largest loss in Japanese corporate history, and is nine times worse than...
...Peterson a.k.a. Benny Blanco from the ’Burbs (MC), Berklee College of Music junior Dave Sherman a.k.a. Lethal D (bass) and Luke W. M. White ’03 a.k.a. Fat Luke (percussion). In the other car are Nicholas J. Britell ’03 a.k.a. Dr. ATM (keyboards), Cameron D.E. Kirby ’03 a.k.a. Covex (turntables), Daniel Z. Levine ’03 (manager) and Alan J. Wilkis ’03 a.k.a. Black Orpheus (guitar [he’s Caucasian...
...other benefit of going high tech: just as filing your taxes electroni-cally dramatically reduces the error rate, so does paying bills electronically. But just because it's a compelling option doesn't make it right for everyone. The American Bankers Association surveyed 1,000 account holders regarding their atm usage. It turns out that 37% say they never--ever--use the machines. It's a good bet that they prefer to pay their bills by hand as well. --With reporting by Cybele Weisser...
...criminal gangs in Latin America who want to net the most cash in the least time. Here's how it works: criminals accost a well-dressed executive late at night in his car or as he emerges from an upscale restaurant. The victim is escorted at gunpoint to an ATM, where he is forced to make the maximum daily withdrawal--generally between $1,000 and $2,000. The kidnappers sometimes wait and force the victim to make another maximum daily withdrawal after the clock turns over, usually at midnight. A victim who doesn't resist usually isn't hurt...