nj computer repair
nj computer repair

d with his father in the airstrike. "This house was the house of the nation."
Yassin, 37, said little has been changed in the house since his father's death.
"We only posted new framed photos and organized his conference room to allow people to go in and out freely," he said.
The sheik's widow, two of his sons, including Abdel Hamid, and more than 25 relatives still live in the five-room home.
The living room, which served as Yassin's office, is decorated with pictures of the bearded cleric alongside fellow Hamas leaders and Arab dignitaries, including the late King Hussein of Jordan and the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. In the center of the room is the wheelchair Yassin used to get around the house, decorated with a portrait of the cleric wrapped in his trademark brown blanket.
Yassin's bedroom is decorated with more portraits on the bed. Inside a small glass box are the fragments of the wheelchair he was sitting on when he was killed. Nearby are his Quran, and a special metal stand used to attach the book to his wheelchair, a collection of books, videotaped speeches and his old computer.
"This museum will help us revive the memory of the great imam, the martyr Ahmed Yassin, among the Arab and Islamic nation," says an inscription in the guest book by Hamas' prime minister Ismail Haniyeh, who was the sheik's longtime assistant.
The house has played an important role in the history of Hamas, an Islamic movement formed in the 1980s that today has a potent army and controls the Gaza Strip. The house hosted the first meeting of Hamas' leadership. Families would visit to seek Yassin's advice, Arafat would visit on Muslim holidays and Hamas still useimited access to credit sent the industry into a tailspin in 2009. From January through March, survey respondents provided financing for $10.8 billion of equipment purchases, up 34.5% from the same period in 2010. "The dramatic increase in new business volume is, in large measure, the result of strong demand in business equipment in various industries and markets, said William Sutton, president of the Washington-based leasing and finance association. "We see this trend continuing." Seventy-seven percent of the loan applications submitted during March were approved, up from 68% a year earlier and up one percentage point from February. The year-over-year improvement reflects easing credit standards as lenders displayed improved confidence in loan applicants' business outlooks. Credit quality indicators in the survey remained mixed, as the lingering effects of bad loans and tenuous credit of some loan recipients continue to be an overhang for the financing industry. Loans and leases past due by more than 30 days amounted to 3.5% of respondents' net receivables last month. While that's up slightly from February's 3.1%, it's down from 4.2% in March 2010. Loan charge-offs amounted to 1.3% of respondents' net receivables in
http://mckenzie-montana.com
http://www.starttodaypaidtoday.blogspot.com/