Mobile Document Shredding

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RealTime Shredding Expands Installed Base

Colorado Springs (PRWeb) January 3, 2007 -- Businesses and residents in two countries can now shred documents and other materials they need to destroy quickly and conveniently, thanks to more installations of The Self-Service Shredder.

Recent placements of the self-service shredding kiosk, from RealTime Shredding, Inc., include the firm's first international sale.
- Crown Shred & Recycle Inc. - Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
- Eglin Air Force Base, Fla.
- Onondaga County Resource Recovery Agency - Syracuse, N.Y.
- Supplies Etcetera, Inc. - Marshfield, Mass.
- The UPS Store - Greenwood Village, Colo.
- The UPS Store - Monument, Colo.


Start the new year by shredding unwanted pounds

To help raise awareness about how people can protect themselves against fraud and identity theft, TD Canada Trust and Shred-It have joined forces to bring a community shred event to four TDCT branch locations in Oakville. Open to both customers and the general public, this one day event aims to encourage everyone to protect their identity by shredding old documents containing personal information instead of throwing them out.

Shred-it, A Securit Company, is the world's leading on site document destruction company with over 140 branches operating in 16 countries. Shred-it trucks are equipped with custom-built shredders that can efficiently destroy everything from confidential paper documents to CDs. Founded in 1988, Shred-it currently services over 150,000 global, national and local businesses and organizations worldwide.


Crackshot kills, suicide bombs and surviving two bullets

A ROYAL Marine who was hit by Taleban bullets twice in three days last night laughed off his close calls with death.

Eddie Cain initially did not realise he had been struck in his left shoulder during an 11-hour firefight with insurgents in one of the most lawless towns in Afghanistan's Helmand.

Despite facing up to 100 enemy rounds a minute and a barrage of rocket-propelled grenades, Marine Cain said he raced down a hill to reach a heavy machinegun mounted on a nearby vehicle to tackle the fighters.

Marine Cain, 25, of Dumbarton, was based in Garmsir during a two-week deployment. The town is treated as a "proving ground" for insurgents flooding across Afghanistan's porous border with Pakistan.

Holding his desert fatigue shirt bearing two bullet holes, Marine Cain yesterday recounted being sent up a 100-metre-high hill after reports of Taleban activity from a nearby compound west of Garmsir.



 

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