William J. Clinton Foundation

Monday, November 22, 2010

Carlyle Group portfolio EG&G
EXCERPT:
EG&G Technical Services, Inc.
Gaithersburg , MD U.S.

Carlyle Partners II
Acquired: August 1999
Status: Exited

During the period of Carlyle’s ownership, EG&G Technical Services, Inc. was a leading provider of management, engineering, scientific, logistics and technical services primarily to agencies of the U.S. government.

P. Rachanda rejects attempts to bring him into the New World Order
EXCERPT:
There is another potential Trojan horse for the new Nepal. The country's honorary consul in San Francisco is Richard C. Blum, the husband of California Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein. Blum has become wealthier as a result of U.S. wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Blum is chairman of Blum Capital Partners and a major shareholder in URS Corporation, which bought defense contractor EG&G from The Carlyle Group, and now ranks as one of America's largest defense contractors. Blum's association with the new Nepal is a holdover from the old kingdom of Nepal but he serves as an obvious interlocutor for those in the U.S. military-intelligence complex who may try to destabilize Nepal.

EGG Gets $181.3M to Close CAMDS at Deseret Chemical Depot
28-Mar-2010 14:17 EDT

Chemical weapons disposal
(click to view full)EG&G Defense Materials, a division of URS Corp., in Tooele, UT received a $181.3 million cost-plus-fixed-fee contract for Phase 2 chemical agent munitions disposal system (CAMDS) closure as well as CAMDS & Deseret Chemical Depot secondary waste and nerve gas tabun (GA)/Lewisite disposal.

The US Army’s CAMDS, located at Deseret Chemical Depot, ceased chemical munitions disposal in 2005. Initial closure activities were carried out by the Tennessee Valley Authority, who was replaced by private contractor EG&G Defense Materials.

The closure process is currently in phase II, with equipment already removed from the buildings. More detailed closure plans are being written for CAMDS and final closure is expected to be completed by the first quarter of 2012…

According to a report by the National Academies, the main challenges associated with CAMDS closure stem from its age, its use as a pilot facility, and the site having many interconnected buildings and common utility services whose closure requires careful staging.

The report also noted that the Tooele Chemical Agent Disposal Facility, also located at the Deseret Chemical Depot, is being shutdown as well. Tooele is still active, and expects to continue to destroy mustard gas and ton containers into 2011. A detailed closure plan is expected in June 2010. EG&G is also the contractor for the Tooele closure.

Prior to closure, the CAMDS tested reverse assembly incineration technology for chemical weapon disposal. Reverse assembly dismantles the munition in the “reverse” order it was manufactured and incinerates the components. Typically, the munition casing, chemical agent, and the energetic material is incinerated separately.

CAMDS dismantled and incinerated chemical munitions using 3 types of incinerator technology for its different components:

•The liquid incinerator (LIC) is used to destroy liquid chemical agents and spent decontamination solutions. The LIC is equipped with a primary and secondary combustion chamber and a pollution abatement system.
•The metal parts furnace (MPF) treats drained projectiles and bulk items contaminated by chemical agents. No explosives are fed to the MPF. The MPF is a direct-fired roller hearth furnace with an afterburner followed by a pollution abatement system.
•The deactivation furnace system (DFS) incinerates rockets and mines, including fuses, explosives, and propellants from other munitions. The DFS includes a rotary kiln, a cyclone, and an afterburner followed by a pollution abatement system.
For the CAMDS closure, EG&G will perform the work in Tooele, UT, with an estimated completion date of July 30/15. Army Contracting CMD-Rock Island Contracting Center in Rock Island, IL manages the contract (DACA97-89-C-0076).

India and the UN
INDIA AND UNITED NATIONS
Introduction
India was among the original members of the United Nations that signed the Declaration by United Nations at Washington on 1 January 1942 and also participated in the historic UN Conference of International Organization at San Francisco from 25 April to 26 June 1945. Independent India viewed its membership at the United Nations as an important guarantee for maintaining international peace and security at the height of the Cold War especially by working towards eliminating the causes of war and conflict. UN membership has also served as an opportunity for leadership in world affairs. India stood at the forefront during the UN's tumultuous years of struggle against colonialism and apartheid, its struggle towards global disarmament and the ending of the arms race, and towards the creation of a more equitable international economic order.

The end of the Cold War coupled with the rapid integration of the global society with its implications for the international system has evolved into the principal challenges for the United Nations in the twenty-first century. India has been undertaking sincere steps to understand as well as to find ways for adapting to these challenges. An integral part of such efforts is collective action and adoption of multilateral approaches in resolving transnational issues under the auspices of the United Nations. In doing so, India and the United Nations are rediscovering each other.

India believes that the United Nations must undertake reforms that will make it truly representative while enhancing its credibility and effectiveness. In particular, the composition of the Security Council needs to change thereby reflecting contemporary realities. The United Nations must play an active role in ensuring inclusive growth within nations, and inclusive globalization across nations. This calls for, in the short-term a new international initiative to bring structural reform in the world’s financial system with more effective regulation and stronger systems of multilateral consultations and surveillance as well as a collaborative and cooperative global effort for successfully overcoming climate change that leads to an outcome that is fair and equitable while recognizing the principle that each citizen of the world has equal entitlement to the global atmospheric space. India also believes that the UN should play an active role in ensuring genuine global counter-terrorism cooperation, in particular, the conclusion of the continuing negotiations on a Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism.

As the United Nations strives to find solutions to these issues, India pledges to work, with abiding faith and hope, towards UN's success, and to assume greater responsibilities that the world community expects from it.

URS growth strategy tied to defense work May 11, 2003
By Tom Abate, Chronicle Staff Writer

Israel Ramirez, center, readies a soil sample for URS workers Nate Johnson and Sara Kitzes at Midway Village in San Francisco. Chronicle photo by Jeff ChiuURS Corp., one of San Francisco's overlooked industrial giants, recently raised its profile by announcing that a newly acquired division had won a contract worth up to $600 million to help the Army with troop mobilization, weapons systems training and anti-terror efforts.

The win comes at a time when this engineering firm -- known for designing roads, bridges and airports -- is trying to lessen its dependence on a weak civilian sector by tapping into a flush defense budget.

Headquartered in San Francisco, URS employs 25,000 people, including about 1,200 in the Bay Area.

Last year, as the civilian economy sagged, URS jumped into the race for military and homeland defense dollars by acquiring EG&G Technical Services. The privately held Maryland firm has federal contracts to provide services including fighter pilot training and base maintenance.

A URS spokesman said his firm bought EG&G to take advantage of not only the growth in defense spending but also a governmentwide effort to replace federal workers on the U.S. payroll with contract employees, a trend known as outsourcing.

When it said last month that EG&G had won a military maintenance contract that could be worth $600 million during the next five years, URS joined a handful of politically connected firms that are winning defense dollars at a time when civilian cash is scarce.

URS Vice Chairman Richard Blum, who is married to Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D- Calif., controls 23.7 percent of the company's shares through his investment firm, Blum Capital Partners.

While such associations may raise eyebrows in political circles, investors looking at URS must focus on the roller-coaster fortunes of a firm that survived a 1980s accounting scandal to grow through debt-leveraged acquisitions into one of the nation's top engineering firms.

The current history of URS begins in 1987, when the firm was called Thortec International, a name it had adopted during the 1980s to describe its focus on environmental consulting. During its Thortec incarnation, the firm became embroiled in an accounting scandal. For fiscal year 1986, the firm had reported a net income of $8.7 million on revenue of $115.7 million -- figures that were disputed by its audit firm, then Touche Ross.

Perini.com pdf

Donations to William J. Clinton foundation
January 2, 2010 (AP)
The 2009 donors to the William J. Clinton Foundation who have given at least $1,000 to the former president's charity since its founding include:

MORE THAN $25 MILLION:
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Frank Giustra, Chief Executive Officer, The Radcliffe Foundation, UNITAID (most passed through the foundation for commodity purchases),

$10 MILLION TO $25 MILLION:
AUSAID, COPRESIDA (all passed through the foundation for commodity purchases), Government of Norway, Hunter Foundation, ELMA Foundation,

$5,000,001 TO $10 MILLION:
S.D. Abraham, Clinton Giustra Sustainable Growth Initiative - Canada, Elton John AIDS Foundation, Nationale Postcode Loterij, Wasserman Foundation,

$1,000,001 TO $5 MILLION:
Alltel Corporation, Nasser Al-Rashid, Mary Bing and Doug Ellis,Eli & Edythe Broad Foundation, Sherwood Foundation, Clinton Family Foundation and William J. Clinton, Elena Franchuk Anti-AIDS Foundation, Mala Gaonkar Haarman,James R. Greenbaum, Jr. Family Foundation, J.B. and M.K. Pritzker Family Foundation, Walid A. Juffali, Howard and Michele Kessler, MAC AIDS Fund, Walter H. Shorenstein, The Coca-Cola Co., Rockefeller Foundation, Roy and Christine Sturgis Charitable & Educational Trust, Sultanate of Oman, Swedish Postcode Lottery, T.G. Holdings, U.S. Green Building Council, Gerardo Werthein,

$500,001 TO $1 MILLION:
Autodesk, Inc., Bank of America Foundation, Lewis B. Cullman, Michael R. Bloomberg Foundation, Richard C. Blum, Susie T. Buell and Mark Buell, Arki Busson, Lewis B. Cullman, Stanley S. Shuman & The Marc Haas Foundation,

$250,001 TO $500,000:
Acxiom Corp., American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, Gustavo Cisneros & Venevision, Michael J. Cooper, Niko Elmaleh, Frank E. Holmes, Philip Levine, Malaria No More, Pangaea Global AIDS Foundation, The Foundation for AIDS Research, University of California at San Francisco, Verein Aids Life

$100,001 TO $250,000:
Hamza B. Al Kholi, Alibaba Group, Fred Bacher, Alonzo Cantu, Michael and Beth Coulson, William M. Daley, Bal G. Das, Robert Dorrance, Raj Fernando, Fred George,
Global Impact, Paul I. Goldenberg, Thomas Lee and Ann Tenenbaum, Malaria No More UK,
Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, Garfinkle Minard Foundation, Richard S. Park,
Giovanni Perissinotto, Stewart Rahr, Howard A. Rubin, Christopher Ruddy, The California Endowment, The Ford Foundation, The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, Andrew Tobias, University of Southern California

$50,001 TO $100,000:
Wendy Abrams, Betsy and Jesse Fink Foundation, John M. Connors, Evelyn de Rothschild
Elzie Higginbottom, Jay S. Jacobs, Marc Lasry, Hassan Nemazee, Dean Ornish, PGA Tour Inc., David E. Shaw, Brian S. Snyder, The Manoukian Charitable Foundation,
Donald J. Trump, Mikkel Vestergaard Frandsen, James L. Witt, Robert Gerard Yasi

$25,001 TO $50,000:
Abrams, Fensterman, Fensterman, Flowers, Greenberg & Eisman, Ariel M. Aisiks, Aikarakudy G. Alias, Clarence Avant, Bruce W. Bastian, Jill Belasco, Reuven Bigio,
Charles R. Brink, Pamela Buffett, Yoshiko S. Dart, Electronic Marketing Group, LLC, Jorge E. Estrada-Mora, Edward Feigeles, Richard A. Garriott, Don H. Jayawardena,
JDD Holdings, LLC, Steven T. Jurvetson, Linden Trust for Conservation, Stephen D. Messer, Metropolitan National Bank, Nissan North America, Inc., Partners in Health,
Brock Pierce, Lilli J. Rey, Steven J. Ricchetti, Liz Robbins, Adam Said, Nickie Shapira, Sun Congo, Inc., Tsunami Foundation, Helen E. Veit, Michelle O. Walrath

$10,001 TO $25,000:
3M Foundation, Ryan Allis, Anonymous, APR Holdings, LLC, Demetri Argyropoulos,
Nicole S. Arnaboldi, Rosemary T. Auer, Indrajit Bardhan, John W. Bloom, Border Health Federal, PAC, Frank Brunckhorst, Rick Burton, Kuji Chahal, Charles Lawrence Keith & Clara S. Miller Foundation, Chesapeake Energy Corp., Neil Chriss, Joan G. Cooney, Peter Detkin, Stephen DeTommaso, Randeep Dhillon, Michelle DiGiovanni-Harold, Michael Driver, Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund, Fisher Brothers Foundation, Inc., Murray L. Galinson, Berry Gordy, Dean Graziosi, Eric H. Greenberg,
Dule Hill, Jeanette and Wallace Hyde, IBM, Howard Kagan, Kailix Investment Advisors LLC, George B. Kaiser, Karacter Law Firm, Bruce Lindsey, Edward H. Meyer, Martin Miculitzki, MikeFilsaime.com, Inc., Manish Mittal, Elon R. Musk, Charles Myers,
Newsmax Media, Inc., Kevin M. O'Keefe, John M. O'Quinn, Claudio E. Osorio, Nolan Paquette, Elizabeth B. Parker, Joe Polish, Ann B. Portis, William S. Price, Rogal-Bruckenfeld Family Foundation, Randall Sampson, Samuel Finkel Charitable Foundation,
Andrew Schlessinger, Nicole Seligman, Brad Sherman, Susan Stoddart, Technology for Telecommunication and Multimedia, Inc., Jack W. Theimer, Judy L. Trabulsi, Utopia Systems, Inc., Mark A. Wieder, Marc T. Winkelman,

$5,001 TO $10,000:
Christopher Albrecht, Carlos Alvarez, Asofsky Family Foundation, Myrna L. Band, William F. Beemer, BEI Precision Systems & Space Co., Inc. Daniele Benatoff,
Lawrence B. Benenson, Bernadett Family Fund, Aimee N. Blanchard, Martin Bussmann,
Elida J. Cantu, Michael Cavallo, Henry G. Cisneros, ClearEdge Power, Inc. Edgar M. Cullman, Oscar de la Renta, Doctors Hospital at Renaissance, Dr. Scholl Foundation,
Rohit D'Souza, Amy L. Dugan, Jane B. Dunaway, Eric Eisner, Philip A. Falcone,
Sergio Fernandez de Cordova, Winston Fisher, Jay Flatley, Sarajane Foster, Shaun Francis, Carlos Garza, Bradley L. Gerstman, Kay C. Goss, Kamil Hasan, Ruben Hinojosa, Rena S. Hoffman, Geoffrey R. Hoguet, John W. Holloway, Husain Medical Corp., Judith Irving, Deborah J. Jackson, James Stephen Peace & Associates,
Chhanulal Jhunjhnuwala

Dupont's connection to EG&G
EXCERPTS:
1) This little known fact partly underlies an old-industry vs. new industry struggle during recent decades. For example, Rockwell North American (DuPont family dominated - see DuPont control of Conoco and Phillips) reportedly has possession of captured zero point technology, although certain arch conservative DuPonts (some of whom militated for fascism in this country during the 1930's - see the Gen. Smedley Butler story) have bitter competitors, all of them rich and elitist.

DuPonts are typical of "old industry" (Bush supported), and high tech in Silicon Valley is new industry (deeply resentful of Bush's snide cheerleading for Enron as it sacked the California public, causing power outages in Silicon Valley factories). DuPont's have tried to maneuver their part ownership of Boeing into "antigravity" research, and have also tried to corner as much of same in black budget circles as they can. Yet they have bitter competition with vastly more experience in electronics and related technologies. The mainstream public hears little about such subjects.

2) Even George Bush's father works for the Carlyle Group, which manages Nellis Air Force base sites through its EG&G subsidiary. EG&G runs Papoose Dry Lake labs, where whistleblowers (ignored by corporate press) say the greatest concentration of electrogravitic technology is located, hidden in a carefully camouflaged base within a modest sized mountain next to a dry lake bed.

Nellis Air Force Base
EXCERPT:
Nellis Air Force Base Area II

once known as Lake Mead Base, is a separate facility about a mile northeast of the main Nellis air base on the northern outskirts of Las Vegas. Area II is a munitions storage facility for both conventional bombs and "non-conventional" munitions which reportedly include 200 nuclear warheads. Area II is dominated by a high-security triple-fenced compound encompassing several dozen earthen bunkers. Because the fence is well-lit at night, it can be easily seen from Interstate 15 and by passenger jets approaching Las Vegas. A lower security area outside this compound includes support buildings and a federal minimum security prison. Conventional weapons used in military exercises are stored in a separate area from the nuclear compound and are transported to the main Nellis air base via a secured roadway. During the years of nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site, Lake Mead Base was a storage and transfer area for atomic devices to be detonated at the Test Site.

Temple Murders and Brian Quig
EXCERPT:
This affidavit was signed by Hovis Chasteen who was flown in from Nelis Air Force Base just two days before the confiscation of the rifle "to head the mini OSI task force" on the Temple Murders "because of his extensive background with the Thai people.". So in 2 days Hovis Chasteen has his hand on the murder weapon but does not wish to come forward to take credit for this rather brilliant feat.

The rifle was taken away from the teens for more than 3 hours on the 21st of August. Maricopa

THE SATANIC BLOODLINES
Introduction

1. 1. The Astor Bloodline
2. 2. The Bundy Bloodline
3. 3. The Collins Bloodline
4. 4. The DuPont Bloodline
5. 5. The Freeman Bloodline
6. 6. The Kennedy Bloodline
7. 7. The Li Bloodline
8. 8. The Onassis Bloodline
9. 9. The Reynolds bloodline
110. The Rockefeller Bloodline
11. The Rothschild Bloodline
12. The Russell Bloodline
13. The Van Duyn Bloodline
Merovingian (European Royal Families)

Interconnected families:
The Disney Bloodline
The Krupp Bloodline
The McDonald Bloodline

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