Tuesday, June 02, 2015

"Around the World in 80 Days"




http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/dec/23/qatar-nepal-workers-world-cup-2022-death-toll-doha

theguardian


Owen Gibson, and Pete Pattisson in Kathmandu

Tuesday 23 December 2014 15.54 EST


Death toll among Qatar’s 2022 World Cup workers revealed

Despite Qatar’s promises to improve conditions, Nepalese migrants have died at a rate of one every two days in 2014

Nepalese migrants building the infrastructure to host the 2022 World Cup have died at a rate of one every two days in 2014 – despite Qatar’s promises to improve their working conditions, the Guardian has learned.

The figure excludes deaths of Indian, Sri Lankan and Bangladeshi workers, raising fears that if fatalities among all migrants were taken into account the toll would almost certainly be more than one a day.

Qatar had vowed to reform the industry after the Guardian exposed the desperate plight of many of its migrant workers last year. The government commissioned an investigation by the international law firm DLA Piper and promised to implement recommendations listed in a report published in May.

But human rights organisations have accused Qatar of dragging its feet on the modest reforms, saying not enough is being done to investigate the effect of working long hours in temperatures that regularly top 50C.

The Nepalese foreign employment promotion board said 157 of its workers in Qatar had died between January and mid-November this year – 67 of sudden cardiac arrest and eight of heart attacks. Thirty-four deaths were recorded as workplace accidents.

Figures sourced separately by the Guardian from Nepalese authorities suggest the total during that period could be as high as 188. In 2013, the figure from January to mid-November was 168.

“We know that people who work long hours in high temperatures are highly vulnerable to fatal heat strokes, so obviously these figures continue to cause alarm,” said Nicholas McGeehan, the Middle East researcher at Human Rights Watch.

“It’s Qatar’s responsibility to determine if deaths are related to living and working conditions, but Qatar flatly rejected a DLA Piper recommendation to launch an immediate investigation into these deaths last year.”

Some within Qatar suggest the cardiac arrest death rates could be comparable to those among Nepalese workers of a similar age at home. The Indian embassy argued this year that the number of deaths was in line with the average in their home country. But in the absence of robust research or any attempt to catalogue the cause of death, human rights organisations say it is impossible to properly compare figures.

A series of stories in the Guardian have shown that migrant workers from Nepal, India, Sri Lanka and elsewhere were dying in their hundreds. While some were listed as having been killed in workplace accidents, many more were said to have died from sudden, unexplained cardiac arrest.

The government confirmed in the DLA Piper report that 964 workers from Nepal, India and Bangladesh had died while living and working in the Gulf state in 2012 and 2013.

The report recommended that Qatar do more to record and investigate the causes of death among the migrant population but it has made little outward progress.

After it was published, Qatar said it would reform the kafala system that keeps workers tied to their employer, and better enforce laws that require contractors to provide humane living conditions and ban them from seizing passports.

But the system that Qatar proposed to replace kafala would still leave workers tied to their employer for the length of their contract, which could be as much as five years.

Rather than scrapping the exit visa system, which in effect allows employers to stop their charges leaving the country without permission, Qatar proposed a complex procedure that still allowed employers to raise objections.

There are about 400,000 Nepalese workers in Qatar among the 1.4 million migrants working on a £137bn construction spree in the tiny Gulf state. Many travel to Doha having borrowed money from unscrupulous recruitment agencies, only to find the wages and conditions on offer differ significantly from those promised.

The Qatar government also points to increases in the number of labour inspectors and new laws requiring wages to be paid by electronic transfer as evidence that it is serious about improving workers’ rights and conditions.

But an Amnesty International report last month warned that Qatar was “dragging its feet” when it came to making meaningful changes.

“Despite making repeated promises to clean up its act ahead of the World Cup, the government of Qatar still appears to be dragging its feet over some of the most fundamental changes needed, such as abolishing the exit permit and overhauling its abusive sponsorship system,” it said.

“Six months later, only a handful of the limited measures announced in May have even been partially implemented. Overall, the steps taken so far are woefully insufficient.”

In November the Qatari ministry of labour issued a statement saying it was doing everything possible to improve working conditions. “We believe that the people helping us build our country deserve to be fairly paid, humanely treated and protected against exploitation,” it said. “That is why we are reforming our labour laws and practices.

“We fully appreciate there is much more to do but, as in every country in the world, change does not happen overnight. Significant changes such as these take more time to implement than some may wish, but we intend to effect meaningful and lasting change for the benefit of all those who live and work in Qatar.”










http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/over-900-workers-have-already-died-building-qatars-world-cup-facilities-180950088/?no-ist

Smithsonian.com


More Than 900 Workers Have Already Died Building Qatar’s World Cup Infrastructure

The International Trade Union Confederation says that if conditions don’t improve, at least 4,000 migrants will die before kick-off

By Rose Eveleth

smithsonian.com

March 13, 2014

In 2022, Qatar will host the World Cup. The host city has already made some waves with its stadium shaped like a certain body part. But what you might not know is that, since 2012, about 900 workers have died while working on infrastructure in Qatar, in a building boom anticipating the World Cup.*

Last month, the Guardian reported that over 400 Nepalese migrant workers had already died at building sites. Between 2010 and 2012 more than 700 workers from India lost their lives working on construction sites in Qatar, too. A report by the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) says that if conditions don’t get any better, by the time the World Cup kicks off, at least 4,000 migrant workers will have died on the job.

For comparison, 25 construction workers died during the preparations for Sochi. Only six workers have died during construction for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil that starts this summer. Only eleven men died during the construction of the Golden Gate Bridge in the 1930s.










http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qatar


Qatar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Qatar (officially the State of Qatar, is a sovereign Arab country located in Southwest Asia, occupying the small Qatar Peninsula on the northeastern coast of the Arabian Peninsula. Its sole land border is with Saudi Arabia to the south, with the rest of its territory surrounded by the Persian Gulf. A strait in the Persian Gulf separates Qatar from the nearby island kingdom of Bahrain.


Football

Association football is the most popular sport in Qatar, both in terms of players and spectators. The Qatar national under-20 team finished runners-up to West Germany in the 1981 FIFA World Youth Championship after a 4–0 defeat in the final. In January 2011, the Asian Football Confederation's fifteenth Asian Cup was held in Qatar. It was the second time Qatar had hosted the tournament, with the other instance being the 1988 edition.

On 2 December 2010, Qatar won their bid to host the 2022 FIFA World Cup, despite never previously qualifying for the FIFA World Cup Finals. Local organizers are planning to build 9 new stadiums and expand 3 existing stadiums for this event. Qatar's winning bid for the 2022 World Cup was greeted enthusiastically in the Persian Gulf region as it was the first time a country in the Middle East had been selected to host the tournament. However, the bid has been embroiled in much controversy, including allegations of bribery and interference in the investigation of the alleged bribery. European football associations have also objected to the 2022 World Cup being held in Qatar for a variety of reasons, from the impact of warm temperatures on players' fitness, to the disruption it might cause in European domestic league calendars should the event be rescheduled to take place during winter. In May 2014, Qatari football official Mohammed bin Hammam was accused of making payments totalling £3m to officials in return for their support for the Qatar bid. However, a FIFA inquiry into the bidding process in November 2014 cleared Qatar of any wrongdoing.










http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/fifa/11644986/Fifa-secretary-general-Jerome-Valcke-accused-of-transfering-money-central-to-bribe-case.html

The Telegraph


Fifa secretary general Jerome Valcke accused of transfering money central to bribe case

US prosecutors allege Sepp Blatter's deputy is connected to the bribery scandal engulfing football's governing body


By Raf Sanchez, Washington

10:37AM BST 02 Jun 2015

The crisis engulfing Sepp Blatter deepened on Tuesday when his right-hand man Jerome Valcke was linked to a $10million payment to Jack Warner which the FBI have alleged was a bribe paid by the South African FA.
The payment, made by the South African FA but via Fifa's bank account in Zurich, is alleged by the FBI to have been made to Warner and other officials in return for them having supported South Africa's successful bid to host the 2010 World Cup Finals.

The New York Times wrote on Monday evening that the FBI believed Valcke, Fifa's general secretary, had authorised the payment.


A history of Fifa corruption


Russia and Qatar win World Cup bids

December 2010

English FA is humiliated as Russia is handed 2018 World Cup finals; Qatar gets the 2022 tournament.










From 7/4/1953 ( premiere US film "Where the Trade Winds Play" ) To 8/3/1998 ( Tom Clancy "Rainbow Six" ) is 16466 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 12/2/2010 is 16466 days



From 8/3/1998 ( Tom Clancy "Rainbow Six" ) To 12/2/2010 is 4504 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 3/3/1978 ( "The Cloning of Man" reported in the New York Post ) is 4504 days



From 12/2/2010 To 9/30/2014 ( the United States Centers for Disease Control announces confirmation of the first known case of Ebola in the United States ) is 1398 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 8/31/1969 ( Rocky Marciano killed in airplane crash ) is 1398 days



From 4/16/1989 ( premiere US TV miniseries "Around the World in 80 Days" ) To 12/2/2010 is 7900 days

7900 = 3950 + 3950

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 8/26/1976 ( the first known human case of Ebola ) is 3950 days



From 6/13/2005 To 12/2/2010 is 1998 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 4/23/1971 ( the Vietnam Veterans Against the War medals protest ) is 1998 days



[ See also: http://hvom.blogspot.com/2014/10/around-world-in-80-days.html ]
[ See also: http://hvom.blogspot.com/2015/06/around-world-in-80-days.html ]


http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=88766

The American Presidency Project

Barack Obama

XLIV President of the United States: 2009 - present

Remarks Prior to a Meeting With Newly Elected Governors

December 2, 2010

Thank you very much. Please, have a seat, have a seat. Well, congratulations, first of all, to all of you for your victories, and welcome to the Blair House. You are part of a long line of illustrious visitors in this space. Winston Churchill used to hang out here when he was in the midst of working with FDR during World War II. Truman stayed here for 4 years when they were redoing the White House residence. And Abraham Lincoln was a close friend of the Blairs, so he used to visit here almost every night.

And as some of you I'm sure are aware, I read Lincoln a lot and think about Lincoln a lot.



http://articles.latimes.com/2010/dec/03/sports/la-sp-jones-world-cup-20101203

Los Angeles Times


U.S. out of FIFA World

December 03, 2010 GRAHAME L. JONES

Taking two uncommonly large risks, FIFA, world soccer's governing body, Thursday awarded the World Cup to two countries that as of now are particularly ill-prepared to stage the sport's showpiece event.

Russia, a massive country with a limited infrastructure, most notably in terms of suitable stadiums and reliable transportation, was given the 2018 World Cup.

Qatar, a tiny country with apparently unlimited financial resources but a searing summer climate and a rather strict set of Islamic laws, was handed the 2022 World Cup.

The questions that arise from these decisions are almost unending, but two come to mind right away:

Will Russia allow the unfettered movement of tens of thousands of foreign fans across its vast landscape? How will Qatar react to the thirsty fans seeking an alcoholic drink or to scantily clad fans seeking a sunbath on the Persian Gulf enclave, where tournament-time temperatures will soar well above 100 degrees?

Those questions are only the tip of the iceberg.

In deciding to carry the FIFA flag into these new territories, the Swiss-based organization's 22-man executive committee simultaneously rejected the safer route to award the tournaments to England and the U.S., respectively.

But England was unceremoniously bounced out in the first round of voting in Zurich and, in a humiliating rebuke, received only two votes. Russia won it in the second round by securing 13 votes, well ahead of a joint Spain/Portugal bid with seven and a joint Netherlands/Belgium bid with two.

The U.S., seeking the 2022 tournament, also was never really in the hunt. After Australia was eliminated in the first round, Japan in the second round and South Korea in the third, Qatar trounced the Americans, 14-8, in the final round of voting.

The next chance the U.S. would have to stage soccer's flagship tournament would be in 2026. Four years later, the 2030 tournament is virtually certain to go to Uruguay on the 100th anniversary of the inaugural World Cup played there in 1930.

But U.S. bidders were not looking that far ahead Thursday.

"There's no way around it: I am disappointed," Sunil Gulati, the president of U.S. Soccer, said on the federation's website.

Later, in a conference call from Switzerland, Gulati said FIFA politics had come into play.

"It's politics, it's friendships and relationships, it's alliances, it's tactics," he said. "There are far too many permutations, especially with two World Cups being decided on the same day, and I'm not smart enough to figure out how all those played out in these two elections."

David Cameron, England's prime minister, who had shuttled back and forth between London and Zurich for several days while trying to help England's cause, was similarly shattered by the outcome.

"It is desperately sad," he said. "There hasn't been a World Cup in England in my lifetime. I was hoping we could change that, but not this time."

The U.S., too, was rated as the best prospect, checking all the boxes for 2022 with regard to sponsorship, ticketing, hospitality, licensing and media rights in a confidential report prepared for FIFA.

With that in mind, Hugh Robertson, England's minister for sport, could just as easily have been speaking for the U.S. as for England when he tried to fathom FIFA's choices. "The only possible explanation is the one given by Sepp Blatter when he announced the decision, which was wanting to take football to new frontiers," Robertson said.

"We are going to new lands," Blatter, FIFA's 74-year-old president, gushed when announcing the outcome to a largely somber audience (Russians and Qataris excepted).

Of course, Blatter, and many others on the executive committee, will long have left the stage by the time the difficulties of 2018 and 2022 have to be faced.

Meanwhile, the elation in Moscow and Doha was unrestrained.

"We have everything in Russia to host the World Cup on a worthy level," Vladimir Putin, Russia's prime minister, said in a flag-waving Moscow before flying to Zurich to thank FIFA.

"Of course, we need to accomplish a lot -- stadiums, hotels, roads -- but that is where the challenge is, that is where the advantage of our bid was because that means developing world soccer."

Russia is expected to spend several billion dollars preparing for a tournament to be played in 13 cities.

Qatari reaction was also joyous. "Thank you for believing in change," Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al Thani, Qatar's ruler, said in Zurich.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1519448/releaseinfo

IMDb


Where the Trade Winds Play (1953)

Release Info

USA 4 July 1953










http://www.e-reading.org.ua/bookreader.php/71211/Clancy_-_Rainbow_Six.html


Tom Clancy

Rainbow Six


CHAPTER 21

STAGES


"How are we doing, Henry?" the doctor asked.

"Shitty, Doc, just shitty. Feels like my belly is coming a hart inside out."

"You can feel it?" Killgore asked. That was a surprise. 1 I e was getting nearly twelve milligrams of morphine a day now-a lethal dose for a healthy man, but the really sick ones could somehow take a lot more of the drug.

"Some," Henry replied, grimacing.

"Well, let me fix that for you, okay?" The physician extracted a 50cc needle from his pocket. along with a vial of Dilaudid. Two to four milligrams was a strong dose for a normal person. He decided to go to forty, just to be sure. Henry had suffered enough. He filled the syringe, flicked the plastic body with a fingernail to take care of the little air bubble, then inserted it in the IV line. and pushed the plunger down quickly

"All," Henry had time to say as the dazzling rush hit him. And just that fast, his face went still, eyes wide open, pupils dilated in the last pleasure he would ever know. Ten seconds later, Killgore touched the right carotid artery. There was nothing happening there, and Henry's breathing had stopped at once. Just to be completely sure, Killgore took his stethoscope from his pocket and touched it to Henry's chest. Sure enough, the heart had stopped.

"Nice Fight, partner," the doctor told the body. Then he unhooked the IV line, switched off the electronic drug monitor system, and tossed the sheet over the face. So, that was the end of the winos. Most of them had checked out early, except for Henry. The bastard was a fighter to the end, defying all predictions.










http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19980802&slug=2764257

The Seattle Times


Sunday, August 2, 1998


An Action-Packed Summer Read -- Tom Clancy's Latest Storms The Shores

By Melinda Bargreen

Seattle Times Staff Critic

------------------------------- "Rainbox Six" by Tom Clancy Putnam, $27.95 -------------------------------

Rumblings in the distance are growing louder, as a phalanx of trucks approaches local bookstores. There is a diesel storm rising.

Tom Clancy is back.

Yes, fans, the latest humongous Clancy doorstop of a book - at 752 pages, a veritable Cortez Kennedy among action-thrillers - officially hits stores tomorrow.










http://www.e-reading.org.ua/bookreader.php/71211/Clancy_-_Rainbow_Six.html


Tom Clancy

Rainbow Six


CHAPTER 38

NATURE RESORT


"Well, it's not as good as what we planned, but…"

"Yes," Carol agreed. "But it beats the hell out of life in a federal prison."

"Get everything moving, Bill," John ordered.

"So, what do we do with this?" Clark asked, on waking up.

"Well," Tom Sullivan answered, "first we go to the Assistant Director in Charge of the New York office, and then we talk to a United States attorney about building a criminal case."

"I don't think so," Clark responded, rubbing his eyes and reaching for the coffee.

"We can't just put the arm on them and whack'em, you know. We're cops. We can't break the law," Chatham pointed out.

"This can never see the light of day in a court. Besides, who's to say that you'll win the case? How hard will this be to cover up?"

"I can't evaluate that. We have two missing girls they probably murdered-more, if our friend Popov is right-and that's a crime, both federal and state, and, Jesus, this other conspiracy… that's why we have laws, Mr. Clark."

"Maybe so, but how fast do you see yourself driving out to this place in Kansas, whose location we don't know yet, with warrants to arrest one of the richest men in America?"










http://www.seattlepi.com/news/medical/article/South-Korea-reports-its-first-2-deaths-from-MERS-6301076.php

seattle pi - Seattle Post-Intelligencer


South Korea reports its first 2 deaths from MERS virus

By HYUNG-JIN KIM, Associated Press

Updated 1:39 pm, Tuesday, June 2, 2015

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea on Tuesday confirmed the country's first two deaths from Middle East Respiratory Syndrome as it fights to contain the spread of a virus that has killed hundreds of people in the Middle East.

South Korea has reported 24 cases of the disease since diagnosing the country's first MERS illness last month in a man who had traveled to Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern countries. Most of South Korea's cases have had connections to the first patient — either medical staff who treated him or patients who stayed near him at the hospital before he was diagnosed and isolated, and their family members.

Tests on a 58-year-old woman who died of acute respiratory failure Monday showed she had been infected with the disease before her death, the Health Ministry said in a statement. A 71-year-old man who tested positive for the virus last week also died, it said.

The statement said both stayed at the same hospital with the first patient.

Health officials said Tuesday that about 750 people in South Korea were isolated at their homes or in state-run facilities after having contact with patients infected with the virus. They said the number could rise and that depending on their conditions many of the isolated could be banned from leaving the country.

More than 50 schools and kindergartens near a hospital near Seoul where the 58-year-old patient who died was treated have canceled classes from Wednesday to Friday to let children stay home, according to the education agency in Gyeonggi province, which surrounds Seoul. The measure was taken after many parents asked the schools to take action, agency officials said.

There is a growing sense of public alarm over the virus, with South Korean media criticizing the government for failing to swiftly cope with MERS in the initial stage of its landing in the country. Major shopping malls have reported a sharp increase in sales of masks, hand sanitizers and mouthwashes, and many people have been seen wearing masks on Seoul streets over the past few days.

Last week, the son of one of the patients ignored doctor's orders to cancel a trip to China, where he was later diagnosed as that country's first MERS case. China isolated the South Korean man at a hospital, and Hong Kong authorities said Sunday that 18 travelers were being quarantined because they sat near him, but they were not showing symptoms.

MERS was discovered in 2012 and has mostly been centered in Saudi Arabia. It belongs to the family of coronaviruses that includes the common cold and SARS, and can cause fever, breathing problems, pneumonia and kidney failure. The virus has spread primarily through contact with camels, but it can also spread from human fluids and droplets.

There have been about 1,170 cases of the virus worldwide and about 480 of the patients have died, according to the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control.










http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/doc/1657760351.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Feb+25%2C+2015&author=Baxter%2C+Kevin&pub=Los+Angeles+Times&edition=&startpage=&desc=Qatar+World+Cup%27s+later+start+assailed%3B+Top+soccer+league+officials+say+delaying+event+until+winter+is+the+worst+solution.

Los Angeles Times


Qatar World Cup's later start assailed; Top soccer league officials say delaying event until winter is the worst solution.

Los Angeles Times - Los Angeles, Calif.


Author: Baxter, Kevin

Date: Feb 25, 2015


Section: Sports; Part D; Sports Desk

Abstract (Document Summary)

A FIFA task force's recommendation to avoid Qatar's sweltering summer heat by pushing the start of the 2022 World Cup to November has left European officials a little hot under the collar, igniting a feud between soccer's world governing body and the sport's top professional leagues and players.










http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022_FIFA_World_Cup


2022 FIFA World Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2022 FIFA World Cup will be the 22nd FIFA World Cup, an international football tournament that is scheduled to take place in Qatar in 2022. It will be the first Arab country to host the World Cup and the first time it is held in the Middle East region. The format has not been announced, but under the current format, the tournament will involve 32 national teams, including the host nation.

Instead of being held in the traditional period of June and July, the tournament will be held in late November. It has a reduced timeframe of around 28 days, with the final being held on 18 December 2022


Venues

The first five proposed venues for the World Cup were unveiled at the beginning of March 2010. The stadiums aim to employ cooling technology capable of reducing temperatures within the stadium by up to 20 °C (36 °F), and the upper tiers of the stadiums will be disassembled after the World Cup and donated to countries with less developed sports infrastructure. All of the five stadium projects launched have been designed by German architect Albert Speer & Partners. Leading football clubs in Europe wanted the World Cup to take place from 28 April to 29 May rather than the typical June and July staging, due to concerns about the heat.










http://www.e-reading.org.ua/bookreader.php/71211/Clancy_-_Rainbow_Six.html


Tom Clancy

Rainbow Six


CHAPTER 22

COUNTERMEASURES


"What's this for?" Henriksen asked innocently.

"A fog-cooling system. We got it from your chaps," Aukland said.

"Huh? I don't understand," the American replied.

"One of our engineers saw it in - Arizona, I think. It sprays a very fine water mist. The tiny droplets absorb heat energy and evaporate into the atmosphere, has the same effect as air-conditioning, but with a negligible energy expenditure."

"Ahh," Bill Henriksen said, doing his best to act surprised. "How widely distributed is the system?"

"Just the tunnels and concourses. The architect wanted to put it all over the stadium, but people objected, said it would interfere with cameras and such," Aukland answered, "too much like a real fog."

"Okay, I think I need to look at that."

"Why?"

"Well, sir, it's a hell of a good way to deliver a chemical agent, isn't it?" The question took the police officer seriously aback.

"Well… yes, I suppose it would be."

"Good. I have a guy in the company, former officer in the U.S. Army Chemical Corps, expert on this sort of thing, degree from MIT. I'll have him check it out ASAP

"Yes, that is a good idea, Bill. Thank you," Aukland said, kicking himself for not thinking of that on his own Well, he was hiring expertise, wasn't he? And this man certainly seemed to be an expert.

"Does it get that hot here?"

"Oh, yes, quite. We expect temperatures in the nineties Fahrenheit, that is. We're supposed to think Celsius nowadays, but I never did learn that."

"Yeah, me neither," Henriksen noted.

"Anyway, the architect said that this was an inexpensive way to cool the spectators down, and quite reasonable to install. It feeds off the fire-sprinkler system. Doesn't even use much water for what it does. It's been install, for over a year. We test it periodically. American company, can't recall the name at the moment."

Cool-Spray of Phoenix, Arizona, Henriksen thought He had the plans for the system in the file cabinet in his office. It would play a crucial role in the Project's plat and had been seen as a godsend from the first moment. Here was the place. Soon would come the time.



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 10:59 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Tuesday 02 June 2015