Daily Archives: March 1, 2012

Colonial Life–Celebrate Freedom Foundation partnership benefits students nationwide

Posted: March 1, 2012 at 6:12 pm

COLUMBIA, S.C.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Thousands of middle and high school students will have access to expanded educational opportunities provided by the Celebrate Freedom Foundation, supported by a new partnership with Colonial Life & Accident Insurance Company.

Colonial Life has committed $100,000 over the next three years to help support the Celebrate Freedom Foundations educational programs. The programs focus on STEM subjects science, technology, engineering and math that are considered essential to the nations competitiveness and leadership role in the world economy. The goal is to encourage students to learn more about and pursue careers in fields that rely on these skills. The partnership will help fund:

This effort builds on Colonial Lifes long history of support for the Celebrate Freedom Foundation, says Randy Horn, Colonial Lifes president and chief executive officer. Were committed to developing the leaders of tomorrow by investing in educating and developing our future workforce. Nearly half of our total corporate social responsibility funding is education-focused, and Celebrate Freedom Foundations efforts align well with this focus.

Colonial Lifes support will greatly help our efforts to deliver effective educational opportunities and recognize outstanding JROTC participants, adds Jack Lovelady, Celebrate Freedom Foundations president and chief operating officer. These programs help develop critical skills greatly needed in the global workplace. Theyll help us maintain the U.S. technological advantage essential to assuring the health of our nations industry and, ultimately, Americas freedom.

To learn more about the Celebrate Freedom Foundation or its educational and JROTC programs, call (803) 708-4752 or visit http://www.CelebrateFreedomFoundation.org.

About the Celebrate Freedom Foundation

The Celebrate Freedom Foundation is a nonprofit educational and historical 501 (c)3 corporation dedicated to educating children, promoting lasting patriotism and honoring the military past, present and future. It provides innovative educational outreach programs in unconventional settings, focusing on science, technology, engineering and mathematics in elementary, middle and high schools. For more information visit http://www.CelebrateFreedomFoundation.org or call (803) 708-4752.

About the Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps

The Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps is a federal program sponsored by the United States Armed Forces in high schools across the United States. The program was originally created as part of the National Defense Act of 1916 and later expanded under the 1964 ROTC Vitalization Act.

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Colonial Life–Celebrate Freedom Foundation partnership benefits students nationwide

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Freedom of Information not so free at the state house.

Posted: at 12:58 pm

Freedom of Information not so free at the state house.

A recent restructuring bill forced a lot questions from citizens concerned about the separation of powers in state government. So through theFreedom of Information Act, many wanted details on how law makers put together the bill. But South Carolina legislators are exempt from such disclosure.

The Freedom of information Act or FOIA went into effect in 1967. In short, its purpose is to allow the release of previously undisclosed documents, controlled by the government. But in some cases, such as those at the South Carolina state house, the rules don notalways apply. An email obtained by the South Carolina Policy Council, shows that lawmakers are well aware of what they have to release and when. And they do not have to release anything.

Lawmakers passed a law back in 1980 which allows them to ignore FOIA requests. Rick Brundrett from the Policy Council, says there is no real recourse for tax payers who have questions.

Citizens have a right to know how their government operates. And freedom of information is designed to give citizens the opportunity to learn how their government operates. When the legislature has this exemption set for themselves no other state agency has citizens cannot learn as much about how their government operates.

The policy council reports they first found out the scope of the emotions, when they tried to get information on Boeing incentives and were stonewalled. Meantime a bill is up for debate that could end the law.

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Freedom of Information not so free at the state house.

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Freedom's new principal adjusts

Posted: at 12:58 pm

By KENNETH KNIGHT | The Tampa Tribune Published: February 29, 2012 Updated: February 29, 2012 - 12:00 AM

David Sheppard's first official day as Freedom High's new principal went as he expected.

He described Feb. 20 as "an average, good old hardworking day."

Shortly before 2 p.m., Sheppard, who served as Wharton High's assistant principal of curriculum before his promotion, just had wrapped up a visit with a parent and chatted briefly with Assistant Principal Rosemary Owens.

"It's a whirlwind," Sheppard said, as he tried to grab a quick snack shortly before the end of school.

His day had been filled with meeting teachers and staffers, greeting students and conferencing with a parent or two who wanted to address an issue.

"The conversations I have had and the issues I've dealt with are very similar to an average, good old hardworking day," he said.

"It's been a good start," said the youthful 42-year-old, who replaced Chris Farkas, Freedom's popular former principal. "Most of the staff and several students have welcomed me."

That same day, Farkas started his new job as the school district's first-ever Area 8 leadership director, a post created to help devote more attention to public schools in south Hillsborough County.

Sheppard said he and Farkas were scheduled to meet a few more times during the next week or two to discuss school matters as part of the handoff.

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Freedom's new principal adjusts

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Freedom Energy Confirms International Funding Received

Posted: at 12:58 pm

FORT WAYNE, Ind., Feb. 29, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Freedom Energy Holdings, Inc. (Pink Sheets: FDMF) CEO Brian Kistler today confirmed that the company has received the funding to produce and ship KC 9000 for the previously mentioned Middle East trial.

Kistler stated, "The first trial tentatively set to take place in April 2012 has been moved up to early March. The purpose of this trial is to show the effectiveness of cleaning, oil covered, drill cuttings from wells being drilled on shore. The parties requesting the trial have funded all expenses of product, shipping, travel and lodging for me to attend this event. The location for the trial has not been disclosed to me at this time; however all plans are being coordinated through our agent in Dubai."

Kistler further stated, "There are approximately 1 million tons of drill cuttings that have been accumulated that are yet to be processed from this one location. The current cost of cleanup is $65 per ton. Using KC 9000, costs show to come in under $50 per ton. Using this model would call for approximately 2 million gallons of KC 9000 to process the whole 1 million tons already accumulated. Moving forward the plan is to set up modular processing plants at the sight of the new wells being drilled so that the cuttings are able to be processed immediately which will save costs from transportation and storage of the cuttings."

"It is very rewarding to finally reach this point. When dealing with the foreign oil companies (which are all governmentally owned) it takes a great deal of perseverance and coordination to overcome the high degree of scrutiny and the barrier of entry. Thanks again to all of our shareholders for their patience," concluded Kistler.

ABOUT FREEDOM ENERGY HOLDINGS, INC:Freedom Energy Holdings, Inc. (FDMF.PK) is a publicly traded company that specializes in the identification and development of technologies with commercial applications in the energy industry sector. The company's original primary focus is the commercial development of its proprietary, heavy oil technology. KC 9000, a breakthrough technology, provides an effective and cost efficient system to enable heavy oil deposits to flow without heat. Recent research has developed and shown a new product SR-139 to be effective at breaking down asphalt shingles allowing the extraction and recovery of hydrocarbons.

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTThis press release contains certain "forward-looking" statements, as defined in the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 that involve a number of risks and uncertainties. Statements, which are not historical facts, are forward-looking statements. The Company, through its management, makes forward-looking public statements concerning it expected future operations, performance and other developments. Such forward-looking statements are necessarily estimates reflecting the Company's best judgment based upon current information and involve a number of risks and uncertainties, and there can be no factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those estimated by the Company. They include, but are not limited to, the Company's ability to develop operations, the Company's ability to consummate and complete the acquisition, the Company's access to future capital, the successful integration of acquired companies, government regulation, managing and maintaining growth, the effect of adverse publicity, litigation, competition, sales and other factors that may be identified from time to time in the Company's public announcements.

Contact: Brian Kistler CEO, 260-490-9990Freedom Energy Holdings, Inc. Investor Relations Steven Marcus DME Capital LLC 917-648-0663 http://www.freedomenergyinternational.com

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Freedom Energy Confirms International Funding Received

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Freedom Road conflicts continue in Cranberry

Posted: at 12:58 pm

When it comes to Freedom Road, Bruce Mazzoni, chairman of the Cranberry supervisors, is just plain tired of discussing how property should be used.

That was the summation of several minutes of comments underscoring township officials' frustration with the continuing conflict over the zoning of the property that flanks Cranberry's notorious bottleneck.

The issue came to a head Thursday as the board considered whether to accept an application from a consortium representing 13 Freedom Road property owners seeking a rezoning of their land. The application for rezoning accompanies pending appeals to the township zoning board and Butler County Common Pleas Court.

Supervisors voted unanimously against acceptance of the rezoning request.

The issue has been simmering for years. Township officials thought it was resolved in October 2010 when they approved a zoning overlay to allow property owners to develop their land for lower-impact commercial uses. The underlying residential zoning remained in tact, allowing property owners who didn't want to develop to continue unchanged.

The discussions about the zoning of the property along Freedom Road from Route 19 to the Beaver County line have been ongoing since the late 1990s.

In 1999, the Cranberry Planning Commission began looking at a request from residents along Freedom Road who wanted their land to be rezoned from residential to commercial.

In the township's early days, Freedom Road was one of two main thoroughfares cutting through farmland.

Houses were built on either side.

But, as the township developed, the road evolved from a residential street to a commercial throughway.

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Freedom Road conflicts continue in Cranberry

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Behind full-court press, Liberty Hill Lady Panthers aim for state title

Posted: at 12:57 pm

By Danny Davis

AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

LIBERTY HILL The plan called for celebrating Liberty Hill's precious berth in the girls state basketball tournament with a sleepover at the home of senior guard Lorrie Potts.

But after traveling to Corpus Christi this past weekend for a pair of Class 3A playoff games the second being a regional-final victory over Burnet and then heading back home, the Lady Panthers discovered they weren't up for staying up late, gossiping about boys and gorging themselves on pizza.

No, they just wanted to sleep.

"We were all in the same house, sleeping," said senior guard Kourtney Bevers. "There wasn't much celebration, because we worked so hard."

The Lady Panthers' tired state could be partly attributed to their aggressive defensive play, which limited West Oso to 13 points on Friday in the regional semifinals before Burnet scored 36 points Saturday.

Liberty Hill, which opens play today in the Class 3A state tournament at the Erwin Center, boasts a defense that has allowed only 37.1 points a game this season. Anchored by a full-court press, the defense shifts into different looks once opponents reach midcourt with the basketball. Lady Panthers coach Matt Kirschner said Monday that his team's defense has forced more than 30 turnovers per game.

"Our defense leads directly into our offense," said Kirschner, who emphasizes this philosophy by intertwining defensive drills into offensive workouts during Liberty Hill's practices. "We're one of the few teams that will press on everything. Miss, make, turnover, we're going to press you."

Liberty Hill's defense has benefited from the team's depth, as nine players routinely play in the first quarter of a game.

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Behind full-court press, Liberty Hill Lady Panthers aim for state title

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Liberty Dialysis Holdings, Inc., a Portfolio Company of KRG Capital Partners, Completes Merger with Fresenius Medical …

Posted: at 12:57 pm

DENVER--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Liberty Dialysis Holdings, Inc. (Liberty), a leading provider of dialysis services, completed its merger with Fresenius Medical Care (Fresenius) on February 28, 2012. Liberty is the holding company for Liberty Dialysis and Renal Advantage. KRG Capital Partners, a Denver-based private equity firm, is the primary investor in Liberty, along with co-investor Bain Capital Ventures.

Based in Mercer Island, WA, Liberty provides dialysis services for patients who have been diagnosed with chronic kidney disease (CKD) or end stage renal disease (ESRD). Under the Liberty brand, the Company pioneered the physician joint venture model working collaboratively with empowered physician owners to drive excellent and cost-effective care. Under the Renal Advantage brand, the Company built a successful track record of developing and acquiring dialysis programs and working closely with market-leading physicians. Liberty has been the fastest growing dialysis company over the last five years and has grown from 15 programs in 2005 to over 280 at the end of 2011.

Libertys management team has done an outstanding job of executing on its growth plan while maintaining its focus on patient care, said Mark King, Co-founder and Managing Director of KRG Capital Partners. Throughout KRGs partnership with Liberty, the team has driven significant growth through its existing joint ventures, new programs and accretive acquisitions, including Renal Advantage.

Partnering with KRG provided the resources needed for Liberty to expand rapidly and become the worlds third largest dialysis provider while consistently providing outstanding quality care, said Mark Caputo, CEO of Liberty. We chose to partner with KRG because of its track record of supporting growth, its ability to make quick decisions and its focus on assisting management teams in building true industry leading companies.

Fresenius was advised in this transaction by Baker & McKenzie. KRG and Liberty were advised by Ropes & Gray LLP.

About Liberty Dialysis

With more than 280 dialysis programs operating under the Liberty Dialysis and Renal Advantage brands, Liberty Dialysis is dedicated to providing outstanding care for patients with kidney disease and a rewarding career experience for its 5,300 caregivers and employees. Liberty has a history of developing programs in underserved communities in conjunction with local physicians and non-profit organizations. Liberty partners with local nephrologists and hospitals in developing, owning and operating these centers. Liberty was founded in 2002 by Mark Caputo and Bob Santelli and currently generates more than $1 billion in annual revenues. In 2010, KRG Capital Partners acquired a significant stake in Liberty from Bain Capital Ventures and subsequently financed Libertys merger with Renal Advantage, adding another well respected brand to its portfolio. Liberty's primary equity sponsor is KRG Capital Partners. For more information on the company, please visit the website for Liberty Dialysis at http://www.libertydialysis.com.

About KRG Capital Partners

Founded in 1996, KRG is a Denver-based private equity buyout firm with $4.3 billion of cumulative capital either deployed or available for future investment, which includes approximately $1 billion deployed since inception on behalf of equity co-investors. The firm seeks investment opportunities for its partners where KRG can work in concert with owners and operating managers who are committed to expanding their companies and becoming industry leaders. The result is a partnership that focuses on creating a significantly larger enterprise through a combination of internal growth and complementary add-on acquisitions. Since inception, KRG has invested in 41 platform companies and has completed 128 add-on acquisitions for those platforms. For more information on KRG, please visit http://www.krgcapital.com.

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Liberty Dialysis Holdings, Inc., a Portfolio Company of KRG Capital Partners, Completes Merger with Fresenius Medical ...

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The Cast-Iron Pan: The Black-Iron Heart of America

Posted: at 12:56 pm

A new cookbook reminds us of the age-old glories of cast iron

Ozersky's latest book, The Hamburger: A History, was published in 2008. He is working on a biography of Colonel Sanders.

Let me tell you about my cast-iron pan. I bought it when I was at a Waldbaums in Jersey City, on a rainy night, for the cost of what then amounted to two pizzas. (Today, it would be one.) This black and craggy pan mistreated, temporarily misplaced, abused, taken for granted and used in unspeakably heavy rotation for over 20 years still sits on my range. It looks almost ludicrous atop the transhuman cool of that glass ceramic surface, like a MacBook Pro wired up to a punch-card reader. But thats OK. This range will be out of fashion in a year or so, and the pan will be sitting on something else. Thats the point of these pans. They stand outside of the times and the trends, and all the bad ways we have trivialized and commodified the way we eat and live.

(MORE: Ozersky: Why I Wont Be Boycotting Chick-Fil-A)

I recently got hold of a copy of the newly publishedThe Lodge Cast Iron Cookbook: A Treasury of Timeless, Delicious Recipes, compiled and edited byPam Hoenig. I dont know why it came out now. Lodge has been making cast-iron pans since 1896; why would its customers need new or, for that matter, old recipes? The idea for the cast-iron pan has been around for hundreds of years, a relic of an age before cookbooks, let alone blogs, recipe apps, and all the rest. Its an enduring, sacred object that transcends almost everything we think and believe about cooking. Its a wonder to me that even I, a person who traffics in meditations on food and history, took it for granted so long. But then, thats easy to do when something has no label, no parts, no color, and virtually no cost. I would suggest that every household in America needs to own a cast-iron pan, even if you arent in the habit of making fried chicken, one of the many dishes for which it is absolutely indispensable.

(VIDEO: Ozersky: The Organic Taste Test)

This pan, this mute dense tool, roots us to our parents, and our grandparents, and the hundreds of generations that came before them. It is Confucianism cast in black iron. Every one that was ever made, whether by Lodge or the million nameless smithies and shops across America, is basically the same: a heavy, immovable piece of metal that takes a long time to heat up, that picks up a patina with long use, and which grows to fit the hands that hold it. The modern way of cooking is to buy a pan, use it for a while, and then throw it out when a flashier or better version comes along. I have thrown out dozens of non-stick pans, ranging from toxic tin bought in Indiana superstores, to luxury versions purveyed by Sur La Table and Williams-Sonoma. Ive had copper pans that cost a fortune, and which I never used before losing in a divorce or a move, or ruined by leaving on the stove too long. But I still have this same black pan, which has accompanied me, like the last survivor of a shipwreck, through every turn of a life radically wrenched on multiple occasions.

(MORE: Ozersky: The Case for Eating Horse Meat)

I didnt take good care of mine over the years because I didnt take great care of myself and even committed the cardinal sin of leaving it to soak in the sink. (Cast-iron pans dont get washed; they get cleaned out with salt and rags, another of their weird but loveable idiosyncrasies.) It has gashes and chips and knife marks from where I tried, one night in 2003, to scrape out some burned hash browns. It is damaged; it has baggage; it has lived a life. And unlike me, these pans are indestructible. Parents bequeath them to their children, who bequeath them to their children. And one can only hope that the memories and traditions that come with them last as long as they do. Of course, the pan isnt any good for making Hot Pockets or Lean Cuisines, or tofu tetrazzini, although I suppose you could try. Its made for an elemental kind of cooking, using whole ingredients and open flames, that has become marginal in the age we live in. But as long as the pans are still around, the kinds of cooking they do will be too, and maybe, just maybe, the bent, burned, damaged traditions that the pans embody will be too. You can forget these pans, leave them in the garage indefinitely, go years without using them, and theyll still be there for you when you are ready for them. I think maybe that time, for some of us anyway, is now. It is for me.

MORE: Pawn Stars Teaches Good Value

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Gun carriers want old polling places

Posted: at 12:56 pm

By P.J. REILLY Staff Writer

Supervisors from two townships on Wednesday asked the Lancaster County Board of Elections to reverse polling place changes made last year in their municipalities.

Part of the reason they want the changes undone is so voters can exercise their Second Amendment right to keep and bear firearms.

Duane Sellers, chairman of the Martic Township board of supervisors, asked the Election Board to move the township's polling place from Martic Elementary School back to Mount Nebo United Methodist Church.

And Conestoga Township Supervisor Steve Charles requested his township's polling place revert back to Conestoga Volunteer Fire Company, reversing last year's move to Conestoga Elementary School.

Both men said their constituents want the old polling places restored for a variety of reasons, including the fact that they cannot legally carry guns onto school property.

"It's not really so much that I want to carry that day, it's that it's another right that's trying to be eroded," Sellers said.

Conestoga resident Dan Behmer told the Election Board he's a law-abiding citizen who doesn't like being unarmed.

"I don't want to go to the polls with an M-1 strapped to my side," he said. "That's not the condition. The condition is you disarm me for one whole day, and I do not appreciate that."

The two polling places were moved to the elementary schools in October after Penn Manor School District Superintendent Michael Leichliter answered a call from the county commissioners who were seeking more local schools for polling places.

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Gun carriers want old polling places

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Gun toters want old polling places

Posted: at 12:56 pm

By P.J. REILLY Staff Writer

Supervisors from two townships on Wednesday asked the Lancaster County Board of Elections to reverse polling place changes made last year in their municipalities.

Part of the reason they want the changes undone is so voters can exercise their Second Amendment right to keep and bear firearms.

Duane Sellers, chairman of the Martic Township board of supervisors, asked the Election Board to move the township's polling place from Martic Elementary School back to Mount Nebo United Methodist Church.

And Conestoga Township Supervisor Steve Charles requested his township's polling place revert back to Conestoga Volunteer Fire Company, reversing last year's move to Conestoga Elementary School.

Both men said their constituents want the old polling places restored for a variety of reasons, including the fact that they cannot legally carry guns onto school property.

"It's not really so much that I want to carry that day, it's that it's another right that's trying to be eroded," Sellers said.

Conestoga resident Dan Behmer told the Election Board he's a law-abiding citizen who doesn't like being unarmed.

"I don't want to go to the polls with an M-1 strapped to my side," he said. "That's not the condition. The condition is you disarm me for one whole day, and I do not appreciate that."

The two polling places were moved to the elementary schools in October after Penn Manor School District Superintendent Michael Leichliter answered a call from the county commissioners who were seeking more local schools for polling places.

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Gun toters want old polling places

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