Thursday, September 27, 2012

Buddhist "Iron Man" Found by Nazis Is from Space

Known as the "iron man," a 24-centimeter-high sculpture was likely created from a piece of the Chinga meteorite that was strewn across the border region between Russia and Mongolia between 10,000 and 20,000 years ago


Image: Elmar Buchner

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A Buddhist statue brought to Germany from Tibet by a Nazi-backed expedition has been confirmed as having an extraterrestrial origin.

Known as the "iron man," the 24-cm high sculpture may represent the god Vai?rava?a and was likely created from a piece of the?Chinga meteorite?that was strewn across the border region between Russia and Mongolia between 10,000 and 20,000 years ago, according to Elmar Buchner of the University of Stuttgart, and his colleagues.

In a paper published in?Metoritics & Planetary Science, the team reports their analysis of the iron, nickel, cobalt and trace elements of a sample from the statue, as well as its structure. They found that the geochemistry of the artifact is a match for values known from fragments of the Chinga meteorite. The piece turned into the iron man would be the third largest known from that fall.

Given the extreme hardness of the meteorite ? "basically an inappropriate material for producing sculptures" the paper notes ? the artist or artists who created it may have known their material was special, the researchers say. Buchner suggests it could have been produced by the 11th century Ben culture but the exact origin and age of the statue ? as opposed to the meteorite it is made from ? is still unknown. It is thought to have been brought to Germany by a Nazi-backed expedition to Tibet in 1938-39. The swastika symbol on the piece ? a version of which was adopted by the Nazi party ? may have encouraged the 1938 expedition to take it back with them.

"While the first debris was officially discovered in 1913 by gold prospectors, we believe that this individual meteorite fragment was collected many centuries before," said Buchner in a statement. "The Iron Man statue is the only known illustration of a human figure to be carved into a meteorite."

Although this item may be the only known human figure carved into a rock fallen to earth, other meteorites have also been used by many religions across the world. A 15-ton example in North America called the?Willamette meteorite?is sacred to some native Americans, while some have suggested that the Black Stone in the Kaaba in Mecca is a meteorite.

This article is reproduced with permission from the magazine Nature. The article was first published on September 26, 2012.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=97a74164dfd3d258d65876aaed5aa47c

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Romney decries military cuts; Obama talking jobs

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) ? President Barack Obama pledged to create many more jobs and "make the middle class secure again" in a campaign-closing appeal on Thursday ? more than five weeks before Election Day ? to voters already casting ballots in large numbers.

Republican Mitt Romney, focusing on threats beyond American shores, accused the commander in chief of backing dangerous cuts in defense spending.

"The idea of cutting our military is unthinkable and devastating. And when I become president we will not," declared the challenger, struggling to reverse a slide in opinion polls.

Romney and Obama campaigned a few hundred miles apart in Virginia, 40 days before their long race ends. They'll be in much closer quarters next Wednesday in Denver ? for the first of three presidential debates on the campaign calendar and perhaps the challenger's best remaining chance to change the trajectory of the campaign.

In a race where the economy is the dominant issue, there was a fresh sign of national weakness as the Commerce Department lowered its earlier estimate of tepid growth last spring. Romney and his allies seized on the news as evidence that Obama's policies aren't working.

There was good news for the president in the form of a survey by The Washington Post and Kaiser Family Foundation suggesting he has gained ground among older voters after a month-long ad war over Republican plans for Medicare.

The pace also was quickening in the struggle for control of the U.S. Senate.

Prominent Republican conservatives pledged financial and political support for Rep. Todd Akin in Missouri. That complicated Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill's bid for re-election. But it also left Romney, running mate Paul Ryan and the rest of the GOP hierarchy in an awkward position after they tried unsuccessfully to push Akin off the ballot in the wake of his controversial comments about rape.

Farther west, in Arizona, Republican Rep. Jeff Flake unleashed an ad calling Democratic rival Richard Carmona "Barack Obama's rubberstamp." It was not meant as a compliment in a state seemingly headed Romney's way, a response for sure to Democratic claims that the Senate contest was unexpectedly close.

In the presidential race, early voting has already begun in Virginia as well as South Dakota, Idaho and Vermont. It began during the day in Wyoming as well as in Iowa, like Virginia one of the most highly contested states. Early voters had formed a line a half block long in Des Moines before the elections office opened at 8 a.m.

Campaigning in Virginia Beach, Obama said, "It's time for a new economic patriotism, an economic patriotism rooted in the belief that growing our economy begins with a strong and thriving middle class." It was a line straight from the two-minute television commercial his campaign released overnight.

He said that if re-elected he would back policies to create a million new manufacturing jobs, help businesses double exports and give tax breaks to companies that "invest in America, not ship jobs overseas." He pledged to cut oil imports in half while doubling the fuel efficiency of cars and trucks, make sure there are 100,000 new teachers trained in math and science, cut the growth of college tuition in half and expand student aid "so more Americans can afford it."

He also touted a "balanced plan to reduce the deficit by $4 trillion," but he included $1 trillion in reductions that already have taken place, and he took credit for saving half of the funds budgeted for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that no longer are needed.

Obama also said he would "ask the wealthy to pay a little more," a reference to the tax increase he favors on incomes over $200,000 for individuals and $250,000 for couples. It is perhaps his most fundamental disagreement on policy with Romney, who wants to extend expiring tax cuts at all levels, including the highest.

Obama's campaign put out a second, scathing commercial during the day based on Romney's recorded comments from last May that 47 percent of Americans don't pay income taxes and feel they are victims entitled to government benefits. Romney added that as a candidate his job is not to worry about them.

In the ad, Romney's by-now well-known comments are heard as images scroll by of a white woman with two children in a rural setting, a black woman wearing workplace safety goggles, two older white men wearing Veterans of Foreign Wars hats; a Latino, and finally a white woman with safety goggles ? each of them meant to portray millions whom Romney described dismissively in the appearance before donors four months ago.

Romney countered with a new ad of his own, pointing to comments Obama made four years ago when he said he would support proposals to raise the cost of business for facilities than run on coal. "So if somebody wants to build a coal-powered plant, they can; it's just that it will bankrupt them," the then-presidential candidate is seen saying.

The narrator adds, "Obama wages war on coal while we lose jobs to China, which is using more coal every day. Now your job is in danger."

Romney campaigned at an American Legion hall in Springfield, Va., a suburb of Washington, D.C., accusing Obama of supporting cuts in the defense budget that would be detrimental to the nation's military readiness.

"The world is not a safe place. It remains dangerous," he said, referring to North Korea, Syria, Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan. "The idea of cutting our military commitment by a trillion dollars over this decade is unthinkable and devastating."

Appealing for support from his audience, he said, "You realize we have fewer ships in the Navy than any time since 1917. ... Our Air Force is older and smaller than any time since 1947, when it was formed. This is unacceptable. And the idea of shrinking our active duty personnel by 100,000 or 200,000 ? I want to add 100,000 to active duty personnel."

To have a strong military, he said, it's imperative to have a strong economy, yet he added that growth in China and Russia is stronger than in the United States. He predicted that under Obama, there would be no improvement.

"So two -- two very different paths. One is the path the president's proposed, which is the status quo. His is the path of -- well, he calls it 'forward.' I call it 'forewarned.' All right? All right?

The $1 trillion Romney mentioned in defense cuts had the support of Republicans and Democrats alike in Congress, although he says GOP lawmakers made a mistake in voting for the reductions and several now want to prevent them from taking effect.

____

Associated Press writers Matthew Daly in Springfield, Va., Beth Fouhy in New York and Ben Feller and Jim Kuhnhenn in Washington contributed to this report. Espo reported from Washington.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/romney-decries-military-cuts-obama-talking-jobs-212034437--election.html

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Video: Romney: Obama campaign engages in character assassination (cbsnews)

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Bureau Of Trade Raises $1.2M From Foundation Capital & Others For New Men?s Shopping Site

bureau-of-trade-logo-07jul2012Bureau of Trade, a new online marketplace for men's shopping, is today launching into public beta and announcing a $1.2 million round of seed funding led by Foundation Capital,?with contributions from Founder Collective, Founders Fund, and other angels. Offering a catalog filled with thousands of unique, primarily pre-owned items sourced from collectors,?enthusiasts, brick-and-mortar merchants, antique dealers and elsewhere, the site aims to serve not only as a place to shop, but also a place to learn and be entertained.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Sjh1Y0qMUQ0/

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Horses, rhinos come to air cargo's aid in recession | Funny & Odd ...

FRANKFURT (Reuters) ? Milano de Flore, waiting dozily at Frankfurt airport for a flight to Buenos Aires after competing in the London Olympics, had no idea how important he is to the air freight business.

That is because he is a horse ? one of the many millions of live animals whose transport by air has helped operators cushion the ups and downs of the air cargo sector in the past few years with lucrative specialty freight business.

?It?s stayed relatively constant throughout the crisis. There?s hardly any volatility like with usual freight. People just love animals,? Axel Heitmann, head of Lufthansa Cargo?s Animal Lounge in Frankfurt, told Reuters.

And like other kinds of speciality freight ? such as pharmaceuticals that have to stay cold, perishables like flowers or valuables like gold ? animal cargo is more profitable than general freight.

Larger animals in particular ? such as dolphins bound for a water park in Dubai, giant pandas on their way to a new home in Paris or thoroughbred race horses ? offer carriers hefty margins.

Lufthansa Cargo, the freight arm of Germany?s leading airline Deutsche Lufthansa transports around 100 million live animals per year, almost as many as the number of passengers served by parent Lufthansa.

That number does however include 3,000 tonnes of worms to be used as fishing bait and a lot of tropical fish, Heitmann said.

ABSOLUTELY PROFITABLE

At around 30 million euros ($39.4 million) in annual sales, Lufthansa Cargo?s live animal business is still small, compared to its overall sales of 1.4 billion. But it?s ?absolutely a profitable business,? Heitmann said.

Lufthansa invested at least 10 million euros in a new 4,000 square metre animal facility, the Animal Lounge opened in 2008, when its old facilities reached capacity and it was having to turn down business.

Lufthansa Cargo expects its animal business to grow revenues by about 3-4 percent this year, Heitmann said. That compares with a fall of 9.2 percent in volumes for Lufthansa Cargo?s overall business in the first six months of the year.

Animals have been transported by air since the early 1930s.

In Germany, the demand for moving pets via planes was driven in the early days by army personnel, who wanted to take their dachshunds back with them to the United States.

Nowadays few airlines transport live animals because there are very strict regulations on the facilities they need to offer and how animals should be treated to keep them safe and well.

GIRAFFES RISK HEART ATTACKS, RHINOS NEED SEDATION

Zoo animals are often especially challenging because they may be especially large, fragile or poisonous. Rhinoceroses, unsurprisingly, have to be sedated throughout the flight.

?You don?t want such a large animal lumbering about in flight,? Lufthansa?s Heitmann said.

And giraffes are so sensitive and at such risk of heart attacks that they have to gradually get used to rising noise levels on the plane before taking off.

But the dangers of transporting animals are worth it for those cargo carriers that are willing to make the investment.

KLM Cargo, part of Air France-KLM, which ships animals ranging ?from bumblebees to giraffes and from guppies to horses?, says it has seen no declines in demand for animal cargo in the crisis.

Industry-wide, demand for overall air freight meanwhile declined by 2.8 percent in the seven months through July this year, according to airline industry body IATA.

Horses like the 12-year-old stallion Milano de Flore, who placed 64th at the London Olympics, are a particular growth area for cargo carriers. This is due to the popularity of events such as the Spruce Meadows show-jumping in Canada and relatively new tournaments, including the Dubai World Cup.

Data from the Federation Equestre Internationale, the international body governing equestrian sport, shows a marked rise in events over the last four years. Since 2008, the start of the financial crisis, the number of annual events has jumped 34 percent.

?Given the growing popularity of equestrian sport worldwide, we expect the number of FEI competitions at all levels to continue growing,? a spokeswoman for the federation said.

Cargolux, a freight-only carrier that flies up to 3,000 horses a year, recently invested in new horse containers that allow it to carry as many as 78 horses per flight on its Boeing 747-400 freighters, or 90 on the new 747-8F.

PRICE NO OBJECT?

Growth of animal cargo ?is not necessarily linked to economic factors,? Hiran Perera, Senior Vice President ? Cargo Planning Freighters at Dubai-based Emirates, said.

Animals flown on cargo aircraft can be very valuable, and owners are much more concerned with safety and reliability than with how much the trip will cost.

Air freight is generally more popular for transporting valuable goods such as gold or pharmaceuticals than ships or trucks. Air cargo accounts for just over a third of goods transported around the world by value but only about 0.5 percent of the tonnage, according to data from IATA.

It can cost anywhere between 5,000-8,000 euros to transport a horse from Europe to North America, compared with around 800 euros for a medium-sized dog.

Unlike pets such as cats and dogs, horses do not fit in the hold of regular passenger planes, which are only 1.60 metres high, and so have to fly on freight aircraft and require special containers that can fit up to three horses side-by-side.

If no horses are booked for the return trip, the container has to be flown back empty, which the cost of the shipment needs to cover as well.

Emirates has been transporting horses since 2001 and in April this year brought 70 of them from Oman to Britain for the Queen?s Diamond Jubilee, a record number for the company.

?Pet and horse transportation has increased. It?s partly because of the aircraft that we have and the fact that we?ve invested in all of this. It?s beginning to pay off,? Perera said.

Perera said Emirates has worked with aircraft maker Boeing to ensure the 777 freighter planes it was buying would be suitable for the shipment of animals as well as other cargo.

Such planes may require, for instance, heating as well as seats for grooms that travel with the animals.

On one of its 777s, Emirates flew thoroughbred horses from Sydney to upstate New York in 2010 ? its longest non-stop cargo flight ever at 17.5 hours ? and says the horses may have been worth more than the aircraft on which they were travelling.

A 777 Boeing freighter is worth $280 million at list prices, while a thoroughbred racehorse can cost hundreds of thousands or even tens of millions of dollars.

($1 = 0.7606 euros)

(Additional reporting by Peter Maushagen; Editing by Anthony Barker)

Article source

Source: http://funnyandodd.com/horses-rhinos-come-to-air-cargos-aid-in-recession.html

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Silicon Valley?s Next Great Company

Jack Dorsey, Chairman of Twitter and CEO of Square, speaks at TECHONOMYDETROIT.

Jack Dorsey, chairman of Twitter and CEO of Square

Photo by Bill Pugliano/Getty Images.

Ever since Facebook went public, people in Silicon Valley have been a bit bummed out about the tech industry. Keep in mind that the Valley is infinitely optimistic, so even when they?re bummed, folks here keep smiling. Still, in numerous conversations over the past few months, I?ve detected a sense of gloom, and it?s obvious why.

Social networking had long been hailed as the next big thing, a revolutionary tech that promised to change the world and rake in big money, too. While it?s still promising, Facebook?s dismal stock performance (not to mention that of related companies like Zynga) has cooled the industry on big, ad-sponsored consumer websites. Meanwhile, Google is trying to figure out what it wants to do with its future, while Apple, the tech world?s engine of hardware innovation, feels less exciting than it did when the iPhone and iPad were new products. So far, there?s no sign that Tim Cook?s company is interested in pursuing anything more than incremental, hyper-profitable annual updates to its product lineup (not that there?s anything wrong with that).

The Valley likes to anoint standard-bearers, companies whose amazing, unreasonable success points to sunny days ahead. Before Facebook, everyone was gaga for Google, and before Google there were all those dot-coms. Now there?s a hole in the industry?s crystal ball. There?s no consensus on which company will define the next era of technology.

I believe the tech industry?s next great company is Square. If you?ve heard of Jack Dorsey?s three-year-old firm, you likely think of it as a payments startup. Square is famous for its white plastic card reader, a device that lets small businesses use phones and tablets to accept credit cards. But calling Square a mere payments company minimizes its potential, and it misses Dorsey?s world-changing mission.

If you study Square?s products and its pricing, and if you talk to Dorsey about his plans, you?ll find that the company?s real mission is to alter the psychology of consumption. Dorsey is bent on creating frictionless commerce. His long-term goal is to make accepting payments a breeze for businesses, and he wants to make paying for stuff invisible?for everyone, across the entire economy, for all types of goods and services. If Square succeeds in that mission, it will become a persistent, ever-present part of our daily lives. You?ll use it every time you engage with businesses?which might mean you?ll interact with Square more often than Google, Facebook, Amazon, or even Apple.

I spoke to Dorsey and Keith Rabois, Square?s chief operating officer, at the company?s gleaming San Francisco office last month. I?d come to chat about two recent announcements that won lots of headlines, but whose combined effects haven?t really been appreciated by the tech press. In August, Square announced that, beginning this fall, it will process all credit card payments at Starbucks stores. When the system is fully up and running, customers will be able to shop at Starbucks just by saying their names: After you opt in, your name and photo will pop up on the Starbucks cashier?s screen when you enter the store with your phone in your pocket. To pay, you?ll just tell the cashier to put it on your tab. That?s it?you don?t have to remove your phone or swipe or sign anything.

A few weeks after the Starbucks deal, Square dropped the other shoe. The company had long charged businesses a 2.75 percent fee to process payments through Square, which is less than most credit card processing companies ask for. But now Square has made the deal even better, rolling out a flat fee of $275 per month. The price applies to transactions under $400 on the first $250,000 in a business?s yearly sales, which means that the fee can be as low as 1.3 percent. Businesses that go over the $400-per-item or $250,000-per-year limits pay 2.75 percent on those transactions; the 2.75 fee is also still available for businesses with a low volume of monthly credit transactions. ?The basic premise of the program is we wanted to remove any excuse for not taking credit,? Rabois says. ?There is no longer any excuse for an American business to not accept credit cards today?they're handicapping their own sales and profits if they don?t, and their customers will be happier if they do.?

Taken together, the Starbucks deal and the monthly pricing plan address what had been Square?s greatest problem?the chicken-and-egg hurdle that all online marketplaces face when starting out. Square?s pay-by-name system will only achieve its potential if lots of stores accept it, but stores have little incentive to sign up with Square if there aren?t a lot of customers clamoring to pay that way. These two announcements solve both sides of the puzzle. The Starbucks collaboration will introduce millions of new customers to the magic of paying with Square, while the new pricing plan will give businesses a clear financial incentive to sign up. Once both sides get together, Square will be unstoppable.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=7dee080922868769de51d218615a1380

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Friday, September 14, 2012

South Africa's gold sector goes from one crisis to another

Published Date: 12-09-2012
Source: Workers World, AP
Source Date: 05-09-2012

Further state-sponsored violence has been used against South African mineworkers, despite the?universal condemnation of the Marikana massacre three weeks ago. See: "Peace" still eludes South Africa following the Marikana massacre

In early September, police, joined by security guards,?fired rubber bullets and tear gas at? gold miners, sacked by management of the ?Gold One mine near Johannesburg, and allegedly who had attacked other workers.

The mine was bought two years ago by a group that included Southa African president Zuma's nephew and a grandson of Nelson Mandela.

Currently these two men are accused of never paying for the mine, instead stripping most of its assets. They are also said to have failed to honour court orders to pay tens of thousands of dollars to the dismissed workers.

South African miners cheer as murder charges dropped

By Abayomi Azikiwe

Workers World (USA)

5 September 2012

Some 50 workers celebrated outside the jail as South African authorities announced on Sept. 2 that they were provisionally dropping murder charges against 270 miners. All the jailed workers were scheduled to be released by Sept. 6.

The group had been charged with murder after police on Aug. 16 shot and killed 34 miners during a wildcat strike at the Marikana platinum mine, 80 miles northwest of Johannesburg.

Miners from the Lonmin Platinum facilities at Marikana are continuing to pressure their bosses, demanding higher pay and better working conditions. The rock drill operators have been blocking production at the platinum facility for weeks.

Early last month, 10 workers had been killed in clashes between miners represented by two rival unions. The police then massacred the 34 workers in a confrontation after failed efforts to break up their occupation of a hill near the mines. A video of the shooting was seen widely.

In the aftermath of the unrest and shootings, the prosecuting authorities in the North West Province brought murder charges against 270 mineworkers based on an old apartheid-era law related to "common purpose." Under this law, any form of unrest resulting in deaths allows the state to prosecute any people involved in the struggle, even if they were fighting against injustice.

Broad sections of the South African public expressed outrage at this use of "common purpose" legal provisions against the mineworkers. The Congress of South African Trade Unions, the main federation of trade unions, which does not represent the jailed miners, called the murder charge "absurd."

That's why the National Prosecuting Authority announced Sept. 2 that it would suspend the murder charges pending the completion of an investigation. South African President Jacob Zuma had launched a commission of inquiry in the immediate aftermath of the Aug. 16 massacre.

Minister of Justice Jeff Radebe on Aug. 31 demanded that the NPA provide sound legal reasons for charging the mineworkers with murder. Radebe noted that the charges had sparked "shock, panic and confusion" inside the country. (Wall Street Journal, Aug. 31)

The continued detention and murder charges were egregious, since it was the police who fired on the miners. While some workers were armed with traditional weapons, the police used automatic rifles, teargas and water cannons. Autopsies showed many of the miners had been shot in the back.

Mathew Phosa, secretary treasurer of the governing African National Congress, spoke out: "Charging some of the role players in the face of a Commission of Inquiry is reckless, incongruous and almost absurd - the consequences too ghastly to contemplate." (Wall Street Journal, Sept. 1)

Mathole Motshekga, the ANC's chief whip in Parliament, indicated on Sept. 2 that he was glad to see the charges dismissed for now. Nonetheless, the NPA suggested that the prosecution of the miners may resume if the Commission of Inquiry unearths evidence of wrongdoing on the workers' part.

Acting NPA director, Nongcobo Jita, said that those jailed miners who could prove their places of residence would be released pending the outcome of the government inquiry. She blamed the initial murder charges on the North West Province prosecutor, Johan Smit.

The Marikana mines are located in the North West Province. Smit continued to defend the murder charges, saying the decision had legal merit.

Unrest continues in other mines

Since the Marikana massacre, miners have opened struggles at other mining facilities throughout South Africa. In late August and early September, the Royal Bafokeng mines experienced three days of work stoppages. There were strikes and other disruptions in the gold sector.

Four workers were injured when police opened fire Sept. 3 with rubber bullets at the Gold One mine located in Modder East. Just four days earlier, Julius Malema, the expelled president of the ANC Youth League, had spoken at the Aurora Mines, where workers from Gold One had been present.

However, there had been unrest at Gold One since June. Malema blamed the government for what he called collaboration between ANC officials and mining bosses.

At Gold One, bosses dismissed 1,000 workers in June for participation in what the bosses say was an "illegal strike." Of the fired workers, some 300 have been rehired and mine executives claim that others may be taken back if they apply and go through an interview process.

Gold One bosses also claimed that two of their employees were killed in the unrest and another injured due to intimidation by wildcat strikers against other workers. The company has offered a reward for the identification of those responsible.

Most people blame the outbreaks of wildcat strikes throughout the mining sector on the low pay rates and unfavorable conditions of employment. At the profitable Marikana mine, rock drill operators are making less than $500 per month, which cannot sustain the workers and their families.

Fundamental change needed

The ongoing problems in the mining sector of the South African economy stem from the lack of fundamental transformation in the relations of production. The ANC government, which has been in office since 1994, is coming under tremendous pressure to institute changes that would transfer ownership of the mines and other sectors of the economy to the workers and the communities in which they live.

The Congress of South African Trade Unions - COSATU - has 2 million members and is the largest workers' federation in the country. Founded in 1985 during the struggle against white-minority rule, the federation was instrumental in building support for the ANC in the struggle against apartheid and in winning the first one-person, one-vote elections in 1994.

That vote resulted in an overwhelming victory for the ANC and Nelson Mandela, who became the first president in the new South Africa.

However, the world capitalist crisis has had a tremendous impact on Africa's largest economy. Unemployment remains high. The high rates of poverty are totally unacceptable to the majority of people.

That the ANC has not instituted sweeping industrial and agricultural reforms has resulted in internal struggles within the union movement itself. The breakaway Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union, which called the Lonmin strike, is a reflection of this crisis within labor.


South African police, security shoot and injure 4 at gold mine in latest mining clash

By: Michelle Faul

The Associated Press

4 September 2012

JOHANNESBURG - South African police and security guards fired rubber bullets and tear gas Monday at sacked gold miners who were attacking colleagues to block them from working, the mine owner said. Police said four people were wounded at the mine that used to be partially owned by the president's nephew.

The clash at the Gold Fields mine east of Johannesburg, reported by police and Neal Froneman, the CEO of Gold One International, was the latest violence to hit South Africa's mines in months of unrest.

Company spokesman Sven Lunsche said some 12,000 of the company's workers "continue to engage in an unlawful and unprotected strike" that began Wednesday. He said it involved an internal dispute between local union leaders and members of the National Union of Mineworkers, the country's
largest union.

After apartheid ended in 1994, South Africa pressed to share the country's vast mineral wealth with its impoverished black majority. But the hoped-for result has not occurred.

A small black elite has become billionaires off mining while most South Africans continue to struggle against mounting unemployment, deeper poverty and a widening gap between rich and poor that makes the country one of the most unequal on Earth.

The mine where the violence took place Monday has previous business ties to relatives of Nelson Mandela and President Jacob Zuma - and was the site where firebrand politician Julius Malema, an avowed enemy of Zuma, pledged last week to make the nation's mines ungovernable.

South Africa's mining unrest reached a bloody climax on Aug. 16 when police shot 112 striking workers, killing 34 of them, at a platinum mine at Marikana, northwest of Johannesburg. The state violence was reminiscent of apartheid days and has seriously damaged the government's image.

Outrage at the police killings was exacerbated by prosecutors, who last week charged some 270 miners arrested at the scene with the murders and attempted murders of their striking co-workers - people who were killed by police. The National Prosecuting Authority was forced to retract Sunday, withdrawing the charges made under an apartheid-era law.

On Monday, 91 arrested miners were released, much to the joy of their ululating and singing family members and supporters. But there were tears for the many more who remained in custody.

The Independent Complaints Police Directorate has reported receiving complaints from more than 140 miners that they were beaten up in custody by officers trying to get them to name the strikers who hacked to death two policemen who were among 10 people killed in violence that led up to the shootings.

The directorate also is investigating police officers on 34 murder charges and 78 attempted murder charges in the shootings, although no officers have been suspended. A judicial inquiry is to report to the president by January.

Policy say they acted in self-defence. No officer was hurt during the Marikana shootings.

Also Monday, the Khulumani Support Group of some 80,000 survivors of human rights violations under apartheid said it filed an urgent appeal for a U.N. special rapporteur to assess what happened to the miners killed at Marikana, after reports that autopsies showed that many had been shot in the back.

In Monday's violence at Gold Fields, miners dismissed after a wildcat strike in June joined miners who lost their jobs two years ago to try to stop other workers and managers from reaching the mine.

Froneman said as police were called to disperse them, the protesting miners stoned a vehicle carrying people to work.

"Our security had to intervene, they used rubber bullets and police used rubber bullets and tear gas," Froneman told The Associated Press. "Four people were slightly wounded and all have been released from the hospital."

But police spokeswoman Pinky Tsinyane said one of those wounded was in critical condition. The different versions could not immediately be reconciled. Tsinyane also said four people were arrested for public violence.

The Gold Fields mine was bought two years ago by a group including Zuma's nephew and a grandson of anti-apartheid icon Mandela. The two allegedly never paid for the mine but stripped it of most assets and now are being sued by liquidators. They have also failed to honour court orders to pay tens of thousands of dollars to the miners who were thrown
out of work.

Cabinet ministers, meanwhile, sought to reassure investors Monday even as news of the latest clash emerged.

"The tragic incident at Marikana is not a reflection of the business environment in South Africa," Collins Chabane, the minister of state in the presidency, told foreign reporters. "The government remains in control of the situation and law and order continues to prevail. The country continues to fully support direct investment and appropriate incentives and the legislative framework is in place to give confidence and predictability to investment decisions."

Legislator James Lorimer of the opposition Democratic Alliance blamed the latest violence on Malema, an expelled youth leader of the ruling African National Congress who has been using the unrest to try to oust Zuma from power.

Malema, who has called for the nationalization of South Africa's mines and for Zuma to resign over the police killings, went to the gold mine last week and told miners they must fight for their economic freedom.

He sent a message on Twitter on Monday saying he was addressing striking workers at the Gold Fields mine. "(The) Mining Revolution goes on and on and on," he wrote.

The violence that led to the police shootings at London-registered Lonmin PLC mine at Marikana and the Gold One International gold mine was at least partially rooted in union rivalry. Upstart unions have stolen thousands of members away from the dominant National Union of Mineworkers.

Negotiations continued Monday between Lonmin managers, unions and the Department of Labor to resolve workers' demands for a minimum monthly wage of R12,500 ($1,650).

Lonmin said only 4.5 per cent of workers reported for work Monday. The strike that began Aug. 10 is crippling the company, which has said it probably cannot meet debt obligations due at the end of September.

Like the ANC, the politically connected National Union of Mineworkers is accused by rank-and-file workers of cozying up to management, of being more concerned with business than with workers' needs and with losing focus by spearheading Zuma's bid for re-election as ANC president next December.

The general secretary of the powerful Congress of South African Trade Unions vowed Monday to speak out.

"What I will not do is agree to be blackmailed and to keep quiet when things are going so wrong in society," Zwelinzima Vavi, who heads a faction that wants Zuma out, told shop stewards in Johannesburg.


South Africa drops Lonmin miners' murder charges

Cecilia Jamasmie

Mining.com

2 September 2012

South African prosecutors have temporarily withdrawn murder charges against the 270 miners accused Thursday of killing 34 striking colleagues shot dead by police at the platinum miner Lonmin's Marikana mine, but warned they could be recharged when inquiries were complete.

According to the BBC, Nomqcobo Jiba, the acting director of public prosecutions, said all detained miners would be freed with a warning, providing police could verify their home addresses.

Sunday's announcement comes as a result of increasing criticism from political parties, trade unions, civil society and legal experts.

In a news conference held Sunday, the National Union of Metal Workers called for the suspension of the police task force "that executed the Marikana massacre."

The union's central committee "calls on the commission to find out and make public who, between the minister of police and the national police commissioner, gave orders to shoot workers with live bullets when they peacefully assembled on that fateful mountain," the union's secretary general Irvin Jim was quoted as saying by The Citizen.

Police had said most of the miners died when officers opened fire as the strikers charged them. Witnesses and journalists who have examined the scene have questioned the police's account.

Talks to resolve the dispute continue at the mine, which has been shut for the past three weeks.

Source: http://www.minesandcommunities.org//article.php?a=11896

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Thursday, September 13, 2012

Sunlighten Saunas Benefit Health, Wellness & Fitness Businesses ...

Did you know that Sunlighten has a whole sales team dedicated to providing our saunas to other businesses? Doctors, chiropractors, physical therapists, spas, fitness centers, massage therapists, and athletic trainers all use Sunlighten infrared saunas as a part of their practice or business.

One such business, Devon Fitness near Philadelphia, was recently featured on the local news, showing off its Sunlighten infrared sauna and talking about the sauna benefits fitness center clients take advantage of.

Over 2,000 commercial facilities world-wide use Sunlighten saunas, which are recommended by more health professionals over any other. Many businesses use the saunas as an added value for customers while others use it as an income-generating tool in and of itself.

A Sunlighten infrared sauna is a low cost investment that immediately generates revenue. With our financing option, many of our customers even pay off the balance with the revenue generated.

Another fitness center client had this to say about her club?s sauna to Sunlighten owner Connie Zack:

Dear Connie,

We have had our [Sunlighten infrared sauna] since July of this year [ed. note: this was a few years ago]. We absolutely love it. Our customers are already falling in love with it. They tell us their skin is softer and also those with complexion trouble spots are seeing improvement. Of course, many of our ladies love the burning the extra calories after their workouts. I have arthritis and it helps me reduce the stiffness. Many of us are finding that we are more relaxed after using it. We are glad that we took the time to find what we believe is the best manufacturer in the industry. . . . She [club employee] tells me all the time that it [the sauna] helps her to sell gym memberships and I agree. You can call us anytime.

Sincerely,

Judith Wiatrowski, Owner Altered Image Fitness
Schereville, Indiana

Source: http://blog.sunlighten.com/2012/09/sunlighten-infrared-sauna-business-benefits

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Paying for healthcare benefits only the rich

TALK about a flip-flop. Having initially promised to reverse it, Republican nominee Mitt Romney now says that if he wins the presidency, he will retain some elements of "ObamaCare".

Romney may find some clues on what to keep in The Lancet, which last week published research showing that having all Americans take out health insurance is the only way to get a healthcare system that truly benefits everyone (doi.org/jbv).

In countries such as China, Vietnam, the Philippines, India and Ghana, up to half of all costs are paid "out of pocket", that is, directly at the time of treatment. Data from 120 countries, cited in another paper (doi.org/jbw), showed that for each 10 per cent increase in government health expenditure per head, 5 per cent fewer women die in childbirth. But for each extra 10 per cent paid out of pocket, there were 11 more deaths per 1000 women.

The key to effective universal healthcare is to have pooled financesMovie Camera, through either direct taxation related to income or mandatory insurance, says Bill Savedoff of the Center for Global Development in Washington DC, lead author of one of the papers. "If everyone pays out of pocket, the rich get the care they want but the poor don't," he says. "When you combine people's payments into a pool, you start to be able to manage care for whole populations."

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Wholesale inventories rise could help growth in third quarter

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Wholesale inventories in July rose by the most in five months, beating forecasts and suggesting economic growth started the third quarter on slightly better footing than expected.

A separate report on Wednesday showed import prices rose in August as the cost of imported oil jumped, a factor that could weigh on American consumers and temporarily boost inflation.

Wholesale inventories climbed 0.7 percent in July to $485.2 billion, the Commerce Department said. Sales unexpectedly fell, dropping 0.1 percent.

Inventories are a key element in the government's measure of changes in gross domestic product. Weaker growth in inventories dragged on GDP during the second quarter, when the economy expanded at a 1.7 percent annual rate.

July's gain in inventories was enough for some economists to slightly raise forecasts for third-quarter GDP, although others said the drop in sales negated the boost.

"It just shifts the balance of growth from sales to inventories," said Daniel Silver, an economist at JPMorgan in New York.

U.S. economic growth has been woefully slow since the 2007-2009 recession and too weak to push the unemployment rate below 8 percent. The sluggish economy has fueled expectations the Federal Reserve could try to lower borrowing costs by announcing a bond buying program as soon as Thursday.

In July, automobile inventories rose 0.4 percent and computer equipment stocks jumped 3.8 percent, while metals fell 0.7 percent.

Before the inventory data was published, economists were expecting GDP growth in the third quarter to match the second quarter's lackluster pace, according to a Reuters poll.

With the data in hand, Barclays raised its estimate for third quarter growth by two tenths of a point to a 2.2 percent rate. Macroeconomic Advisers lifted their forecast by a tenth to 1.4 percent.

Financial markets largely ignored the data. U.S. stocks rose, boosted by the decision of a top German court to support the euro zone's new 700-billion-euro bailout fund in the latest effort to stem the region's debt crisis. Yields on U.S. government debt also rose.

The European debt crisis looms as a major threat to the U.S. recovery from the 2007-2009 recession.

ENERGY PRICE PRESSURE

In a separate report, the Labor Department said U.S. import prices rose in August for the first time in five months, climbing 0.7 percent.

The cost of petroleum imports increased 4.1 percent. Higher prices at the pump threaten to hurt consumers' pocket books. Analysts had expected overall import prices would rise 1.4 percent in August.

Many economists expect higher fuel costs will contribute to a short-term rise in inflation that could be seen in a report due on Friday on consumer prices.

"Significant energy price gains are likely to be a feature," said Barclays economist Peter Newland.

There was little sign of broader inflation pressures in the import data. Non-petroleum import prices declined 0.2 percent, a sign that the cooling global economy is reducing companies' ability to raise prices.

Prices for imported consumer goods outside automobiles fell 0.3 percent, while prices were flat for cars and auto parts brought into the country.

Import prices were flat from major trading partners Japan and China. Import prices from the European Union fell 0.4 percent.

The report also showed export prices rose 0.9 percent last month. Analysts had expected export prices to rise 0.4 percent.

(Editing by Neil Stempleman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/import-prices-post-first-gain-five-months-oil-123516330--business.html

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Molecular 'X-ray' shows first anatomical differences

Sharing more leads to tighter bonds ? even in the world of molecules. The most detailed images yet made of the chemical bonds in a molecule vividly show what large-scale models had long assumed: the more electrons two atoms share, the shorter the bond. Bonds that are more electron-dense also appear brighter in the new images.

In molecules, the atoms can share one or more of their outermost electrons in a covalent bond. Whether they share two, four or six electrons determines the bond's strength, which is an important factor in predicting the molecule's geometry, stability and reactivity.

The new pictures, taken with a modified atomic force microscope, marks the first time that scientists have been able to observe the true physical differences between these bond types, which could give a deeper understanding of chemical reactions. It may also help researchers size up molecules for use as electrical components in tiny circuits.

"We have seen bonds before, but we could not differentiate between bonds," says Leo Gross of IBM Research in Zurich, Switzerland. "Now we can image these very tiny differences between different bonds. This is really exciting to me."

Buckyball portrait

In 2009, Gross and colleagues imaged the individual bonds between the atoms of a molecule for the first time. They used a type of atomic force microscopy, in which a vibrating needle-like tip is scanned over a surface, and differences in vibrational frequency due to the presence of electrons below are recorded at different spots. The result was a picture of the bonds linking the carbon and hydrogen atoms that make up the flat molecule pentacene.

But though the team noticed that some of the bonds looked brighter and longer than others, they weren't sure if they were seeing true physical differences, or just artefacts of the imaging process.

Now they have used the same technique to image buckyballs, cage-like molecules made of 60 carbon atoms each. They also imaged two flat molecules, hexabenzocoronene and DBNP, which were synthesised specially for the imaging.

Structural symmetry in these carbon-containing molecules let the researchers distinguish actual differences in their bonds from background effects caused by the imaging method.

In addition to differences in brightness, Gross and colleagues found that bonds that are more electron-dense actually appear shorter than bonds that share fewer electrons ? though only by a few picometres, or 10-12 of a metre.

Molecular transistor

Gross is most interested in using the imaging technique to ask fundamental questions about the way bond type influences the properties of a molecule. For example, questions such as "What happens to the rest of the bonds in a chain of carbon rings if you pinch a hydrogen atom off the end?" are very difficult to address unless you can resolve small differences between bonds.

The findings could also have applications in molecular electronics, a potential future version of electronics where individual molecules serve as transistors and switches.

"The ability to determine fundamental properties of individual chemical bonds could affect many technologically relevant fields," writes Ruben Perez of the Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain, who was not involved in the work, in an accompanying article.

Journal reference: Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.1225621

If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.

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Saturday, September 8, 2012

AAA New Mexico: Decreases at pump expected as summer driving season ends

Gas prices are expected to decrease the summer driving season ends.

AAA analysts expect prices at the gas pump to decline as demand decreases with the end of the summer driving season, refineries switch to less expensive winter-blend fuel and the hurricane season comes to a close in November.

?We?re hopeful relief is on the way soon,? AAA Texas/New Mexico Representative Doug Shupe said.

Drivers in New Mexico are paying an average of $3.61 for a gallon of gas, which is up two cents from last week, according to the AAA New Mexico Weekend Gas Watch.

Of the major metro areas surveyed, motorists in Albuquerque and Santa Fe are paying the most at $3.58 and drivers in Las Cruces are paying the least at $3.51. The national average is $3.82.

National gas prices increased last week as the Gulf Coast braced for Hurricane Isaac. Refineries with more than one million barrels per day of production capacity had announced closures in preparation for the storm and wholesale gas prices in regions supplied by these facilities surged higher. But those prices weakened once the market determined the storm would have a limited impact on long-term production.

More information is online.

Average gas prices:

  • National $3.82
  • New Mexico $3.61
  • Albuquerque $3.58
  • Las Cruces $3.51
  • Santa Fe $3.58
  • Texas $3.66
  • Colorado $3.58
  • Nevada $3.80
  • Arizona $3.70
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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_13/~3/u8G7J1AyJgU/aaa-new-mexico-decreases-at-pump.html

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Friday, September 7, 2012

Arthur Harris COX - Ennever

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Ennever & Enever family history & ancestry. Click here to return to the home page WJ Ennever (1869-1947). From the portrait by J Seymour R.A., exhibited in the Royal Academy.

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Printer-friendly Male 1893 - Yes, date unknown
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Personal Information ?? | ?? Event Map ?? | ?? All ?? | ?? PDF
  • Born? 1893? Lower Selma, Nova Scotia, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location?
    Gender? Male?
    Died? Yes, date unknown?
    Person ID? I29329? 1. Essex Ennevers
    Last Modified? 6 Sep 2012?

    Father? Rupert COX, ? Died:? Yes, date unknown?
    Mother? Mary Alice SUGATT, ? Died:? Yes, date unknown?
    Family ID? F9335? Family Group Sheet

    Family (spouse)? Gertrude Millicent ASKEY, ? Born:? Abt 1902, Bermuda Find all individuals with events at this location, ? Died:? 18 May 1954, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location?? (~ 52 years)?
    Married? 21 Aug 1926? Victoria, British Columbia, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location?
    • Marriage Date: 21 Aug 1926
      Marriage Place: Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
      Groom's Name: Arthur Harris Cox
      Groom's Age: 33
      Groom's Birth Date: 1893
      Groom's Birthplace: Lower Selma, Nova Scotia Canada
      Groom's Marital Status: Bachelor
      Groom's Residence:
      Groom's Father's Name: Rupert Cox
      Groom's Mother's Name: Mary Alice Sugatt
      Bride's Name: Gertrude Millicent Askey
      Bride's Age: 24
      Bride's Birth Date: 1902
      Bride's Birthplace: , Bermuda
      Bride's Marital Status: Spinster
      Bride's Residence:
      Bride's Father's Name: Charles Preston Askey
      Bride's Mother's Name: Rose Agnes Smale
      Film Number: 2074504
      Digital Folder Number: 4401586
      Image Number: 187
      BC Archives Film Number: B13751
      Registration Number: 187
      Banns or License: License

      --------------------------------------------------------------
      Name: Millicent Askey
      Gender: Female
      Spouse Name: Arthur Harris Cox
      Spouse Gender: Male
      Marriage Date: 21 Aug 1926
      Marriage Location: Victoria
      Registration Number: 1926-09-300361
      BCA Number: B13751
      GSU Number: 2074504

    Family ID? F9334? Family Group Sheet

  • Event Map

    (nb pins may represent approximate locations)

    Link to Google MapsMarried - 21 Aug 1926 - Victoria, British Columbia, Canada Link to Google Earth
    ?= Link to Google Maps?
    ?= Link to Google Earth?


Source: http://www.ennever.com/getperson.php?personID=I29329&tree=Ennever1

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Roofing System - firedamagerepairindianapolis.com

Last updated 1 hour 10 minutes ago

When it comes to roofs, most homeowners tend to think of the top layer only. While shingles are important, the typical roof is made of several other important components. In this short video, we get a close look at the components of a typical roof.

Roofing felt keeps a roof waterproof, while underlayment protects against ice dams and long-term damage. A quality roof also needs proper ventilation in order to prevent cracking and hot air accumulation. To learn more, watch the entire clip.

If you have any questions about roof components, contact Fentress Building, Inc. Roof installation, cleaning, and repair are just a few of the many home improvement services we provide for the Indianapolis area. Call us today at (317) 899-9381 for a free estimate.

Source: http://www.firedamagerepairindianapolis.com/540136/2012/09/06/essential-components-of-a-proper-roofing-system.html

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Press watchdog: No probe over Prince Harry pics

LONDON (AP) ? Britain's press watchdog said Thursday it will not for now open an investigation into a tabloid's publication of nude photos of Prince Harry because royal officials have not filed a formal complaint.

The Sun was Britain's only national newspaper to carry the pictures of Harry frolicking in the nude with an unidentified woman in his Las Vegas hotel room after the images appeared online and drew international attention.

The Press Complaints Commission said it received around 3,800 complaints after The Sun published the pictures, but royal officials were not among those filing.

The commission said Thursday that it is talking with Harry's representatives but since they have not yet formally complained it would be "inappropriate" to open an investigation at this point as any probe without consent would have the potential to "itself pose an intrusion."

When asked about a possible formal complaint, Harry's office said it is still considering matters and will make a decision "in our own time."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/press-watchdog-no-probe-over-prince-harry-pics-183438817.html

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Thursday, September 6, 2012

Firemans Contractors, Inc. Attracts Investment Interest For Franchise ...

Explosive Opening Success of First Franchise Drives Opportunity for Firemans to Offer Franchisee Financing - Firemans Franchise Development Financing Initiative

DALLAS, Sept. 5, 2012 // PRNewswire // -- Firemans Contractors, Inc. (OTCBB: FRCN) (OTCQB: FRCN), a commercial contractor offering business to business commercial franchises and services in the pavement maintenance and parking lot maintenance industry, announced today that its first franchisee has experienced an explosive opening ? generating revenues in excess of 75% of the franchise cost ? in just the first two months in operation; this spurring interest from investors, possibly affording Firemans the ability to provide financing programs to prospective franchisees.

"We expect that every new franchise opened under the Firemans brand can generate revenues substantial enough to cover the initial franchise cost as well as deliver a ROI within the first year of operating a Firemans Contractors' branded franchise," stated Renee Gilmore, CEO of Firemans Contractors. "While it is still a little early to be sure, if the initial two months of our first franchisee's operations is any indication of the brand's overall potential, this franchisee could see a possible ROI in excess of 400% should the current positive momentum continue."

Sources close to the company suggest that interested investors are quite amazed at the initial success of the first franchise launch just two months ago. A spokesperson for the company also indicated that observing investors are equally impressed by the number of prospects having already expressed interest in the Firemans brand. Gilmore herself is in awe of the overwhelming attention Firemans brand is receiving stating, "We'd love to sign up forty franchises in our first year. However we believe strongly in our franchise development team as they strongly advise that we are methodical; building our franchise infrastructure carefully and without undo haste."

Firemans Contractors recently launched its Franchise Development Program that is lead by a team of highly successful experienced franchise development professionals that has successfully facilitated well over 7,000 franchises sales in their 300 cumulative years of franchise industry experience during the course of their careers. Under their direction, the company will intentionally limit the number of new franchises within the company's official first year of franchising its brand. It is intended that this slow growth method will help to ensure that Firemans brand, which is expected to continue garnering interest from franchising prospects nationally, is streamlined, tried, and proven; along with the financing model being vetted and adapted.

Gilmore concluded, "We are currently in the process of exploring our second franchisee prospect opportunity. This deal can possibly be concluded within the next 30 days. Other financing options for our new franchisees can also become a possibility by the time we launch our third or fourth franchise. This is extremely exciting for the growth of Firemans. We believe the reach of our brand, business structure and 'systems' will be multiplied exponentially should we be successful in offering a finance program to our prospective franchisees."

About Firemans Contractors

Firemans Contractors, Inc. (OTCBB: FRCN) is a full-service contractor providing professional services for commercial and government clients, offering Business to Business Franchise Opportunities. Its services include Road Improvements, Pavement Maintenance, Seal Coating, Parking Lot Striping, Pavement Marking, Asphalt Maintenance and Repair, and ADA Compliance. Firemans Contractors has completed its FDD requirements with the Federal Trade Commission and has developed franchise territories across the U.S. The company's goal is to develop hundreds of new franchise locations in the next 24 to 48 months. Firemans Contractors brings a professional value system delivering outstanding results through honorable customer relationships and repeat business. Local firefighters are supported by a portion of profits which are donated to local Firefighter Associations. For more information about Firemans Contractors, visit: www.FiremansContractors.com

Media Contacts:

Firemans Contractors, Inc.
2406 Gravel Road
Fort Worth, TX 76118
800-475-1479
info@FiremansContractors.com

Public Relations
Danielle O'Neal
PR@FiremansContractors.com
800-475-1479

SOURCE Firemans Contractors, Inc.

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