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Former CIA interrogator and polygraph expert Phil Houston was on “The Kelly File” to explain.
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"The Kelly File" obtained exclusive, never-before-seen interviews with Lisa's parents recorded in the days immediately after her disappearance.
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Decoding Deceit: How Can You Tell if Someone is Lying?
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Ever wonder if someone is lying to you? Former CIA interrogator Philip Houston joined Fox and Friends this morning to offer tips for decoding deceit.
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That’s undoubtedly the mantra for the managers of the top four sides in the NCEL Premier, as the season rushes towards a thrilling climax.
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Of course Shaw Lane Aquaforce could make it very boring for everyone else involved by simply winning all their games.
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That’s all the Barnsley side have to do to become champions.
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And having taken 18 points from their last six games, they’re certainly looking a good bet for that precious single promotion place.
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Worksop Town, currently top, were hoping that either Heanor or Garforth Town could do them a favour and put a stumbling block in Shaw Lane’s path to glory.
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Both sides certainly gave it a go.
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Heanor were convinced they deserved something from their most recent clash with Aquaforce, claiming poor officiating had cost them – and the video appears to back them up with a slowmotion replay of a handball on the line.
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One referee sees it, blows up and sends the Shaw Lane player off. Another either misses it, or sees it and deems it ball to hand.
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These are the decisions that can decide titles.
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Garforth Town, who have frustrated Worksop immenseley this season with their stubborn but effective defensive displays, gave Shaw Lane even more of a fright, twice taking the lead before succumbing to the greater firepower of the title favourites.
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The signing of Danny Frost looks to be an inspired one for Shaw Lane, but also serves to demonstrate the resources at their disposal - in stark contrast with the financial situation most teams in this division find themselves in.
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Taking goalkeeper Ian Deakin from Heanor Town was another, presumably expensive, masterstroke.
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And looking at the remaining seven Aquaforce games, you can only realistically expect Bridlington, Barton and Cleethorpes to put up a real challenge.
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That by no means is said in disrespect to their other four opponents, but Shaw Lane are simply too good for most of the teams they face.
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Worksop’s task is straightforward. Win five games and see where it takes them.
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Unbeaten in 14, Mark Shaw’s men will feel like 15 points is well within their capabilities.
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Third placed Cleethorpes are the real outside bet, taking on Handsworth, Tadcaster, Shaw Lane and Staveley in the next three weeks. A brutal finish to the season.
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Winning their game in hand will put them above Cleethorpes, and four points behind Worksop.
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It will be a big, big ask for Paul Marshall’s men to take the title.
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Their maximum possible points tally is 92, whereas Worksop’s is 96 and Shaw Lane could reach 100.
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Beware the ides of March indeed - it was a horrible month for Tad, winning only once in the League Cup, losing twice and drawing twice in the league and crashing out of the FA Vase and county cup.
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The League Cup now remains their most likely source of joy, but it’s probably their knockout competition success this season that has proved their downfall in the league.
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You wouldn’t begrudge any of the top quartet the title.
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Shaw Lane could win it despite a fixture list decimated by a woeful pitch.
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Worksop Town almost went out of existence last summer.
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Cleethorpes struggle with a small catchment area for players, and one presumes their resources are dwarfed by others around them in the top half of the table.
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And Tadcaster have had to contend with the crushing of a more-than-distracting Wembley dream.
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Smart money might be on Shaw Lane, but in the words of pop pixie Ellis Goulding, anything could happen.
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Europe Day Ahead: Will Draghi calm those Cypriot waves?
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April 3 - ECB on hold as the President Draghi seeks to reassure investors after the Cyprus crisis. No change in UK interest rates expected, and Spain and France sell bonds.
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Drug under pressure to settle none of the investors off to Cyprus is brush with financial meltdown. ECB president will speak tomorrow off to the Central Bank sets rates no change expected. Against the backdrop of grim economic data set but the ECB is expected to pledge to keep the banking system will lubricate it. That's his fears grow that Slovenia could follow Cyprus and seek a bailout Tom -- global strategist JPMorgan asset management says there's that -- -- -- My fair is that what had been considered the end game setting up a banking union. As a first step towards fiscal and economic union that that might prove to be a cul-de-sac -- -- -- because. There was three. Elements that that was common regulation Coleman supervision. And out Coleman mutual -- nation bad out system web by. The the northern Europeans would be willing to bad out to southern European Bank. To save that southern European banks government haven't vegetable markets and entries austerity. And and they didn't have that vicious cycle kicking it. The Germans went pretty much against that from day one. What we've seen over the Cyprus issue it is -- I did that you do not -- -- common mutual life is patient all the bad banks' problems throughout the eurozone. Like BCB the Bank of England is not likely to move on -- sign that. The central bank's governor Mervyn king and to his colleagues and friends to turn on the printing presses. For two months running now but that's more like you to come in May when the BO he publishes its quarterly inflation report. And hey you're a group Sharon Dutch finance minister Jerome just problem holds his monthly debate in parliament his rhetoric like you to be daunted. After he suggests that the Cyprus deal which involves attacks on bank deposits. Could form a template for future bailouts. Focus ahead of -- be like you descend from a bond market Spain sent to South Korea and five year bonds. Results to come just off the 9:40 AM London time. Barclays Capital estimates maternal race fine and a half billion euros from the sales. As investors seek higher returns from peripheral debt plus strong cells -- to treasury notes. As expected to raise eight billion euros -- key data points to watch -- for imposed as well. From the yours and related services and composite PMI is may show activity at thousands of companies across the broke. Stagnated in March off to falling in February but -- so -- services PMI data from Germany and the UK. And later in the morning analysts polled by Royces expectations from the Euro zone to show off foreign factory prices in February. Off to higher energy costs cause it's a rise for the first time in four months in January. That's all look at the first stage of the legs financial -- -- -- -- today that every weekday at 8 o'clock London time. -- well this has lost.
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ALEXANDRIA — Willmar tennis added to their great start to the year Thursday with a pair of wins at the Alexandria Triangular Thursday afternoon. Willmar defeated Detroit Lakes 7-0 and earned a similarly impressive 6-1 win over their hosts. Willmar's singles players each finished with a pair of wins, all coming in straight sets and the doubles teams were equally impressive with five wins across the two matches. Ty Roelofs earned his first varsity win with a victory against Detroit Lakes at No. 3 doubles and Caleb Laurence working as his partner.
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LITCHFIELD - Thursday afternoon was a fun day at the plate for the Litchfield Dragons who racked up 14 hits, six of which were doubles, in a 13-10 win against Mound Westonka at Optimist Park. The White Hawks got to pitcher Owen Boerema early, scoring three runs in the opening three innings but the Dragons bounced back with three runs of their own to tie it up and added four runs in the following inning to take a 7-3 lead.
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COLD SPRING—Willmar won both the boys and girls sides of the Ed Babcock Invitational Tuesday afternoon at Rocori High School. Kirah Kessler-Gross and Erica Schramm were particularly impressive, winning a pair of events each. Kessler-Gross took home the best times in the 100 meter dash and the long jump while Schramm was first to finish in the 200 meter dash and the triple jump. Kessler-Gross also added a third place finish in the 200 and Schramm took second in the 400.
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BENSON — New London-Spicer won both its matches at the Benson/KMS triangular meet on Tuesday. The Wildcats claimed 4-3 decisions over both Benson/KMS and Lac qui Parle Valley/Dawson-Boyd. In a third match, Benson/KMS defeated LQPV/DB 5-2. NLS' doubles teams did the heavy lifting against B/KMS, recording three of the Wildcats' four points. NLS won two singles points and two doubles points against LQPV/DB. The Wildcats' doubles teams of Wolzen Holland and Jaden Zylstra (No. 2) and Ander Arnold and Riley Pflipsen (No. 3) won both their matches.
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SACRED HEART - The season is young but Renville County West looks like they have things figured out. The Jaguars won by the 10-run rule for the second day in a row, defeating Central Minnesota Christian 15-0 Tuesday. Just two games into the season, the Jaguars have 33 runs in the run column. RCW's pitching was equally strong thanks to a big outing from Tyler Froland who earned the win with four scoreless innings from the bump, 10 strikeouts and just two hits allowed. Brandon Hoberg ended the game with one inning of work and two strikeouts.
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BUFFALO — Willmar pulled away in the second half after being deadlocked at halftime and defeated St. Cloud Apollo 54-44 in the Section 5AAA semifinals on Saturday. The Cardinals will play for a spot in the Class AAA state tournament against Becker at 7 p.m. Thursday in Buffalo. Willmar defeated Becker 69-63 in the season-opener on Nov. 27 in Becker. Against Apollo, Willmar's Madi Linbo scored 13 points and grabbed five rebounds, and Carly Wedel notched a double-double with 10 points and 12 rebounds and she also had six steals.
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NEW LONDON — The ball was magnetized to the net Tuesday night for New London-Spicer. That's how it felt, anyways. The Wildcats started Tuesday night's regular season home finale with an unconscious shooting streak and rolled on to win 68-41 against visiting Rockford. Ryan Wyganowski played a big role in the strong start as his Wildcats jumped out to a 13-0 start against the Rockets, who defeated NLS 69-66 back on Feb. 1. The senior guard knocked down five triples, scoring 17 points during senior night.
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MARSHALL — Willmar couldn't keep pace with Marshall in the second half as the Tigers erased a seven-point halftime deficit and defeated the Cardinals 55-52 on Monday night. The Cardinals shot 45 percent overall from the field and held a 35-24 edge on the boards against the 21-5 Tigers. But Willmar managed just 2-of-16 shooting from 3-point range. Ty Roelofs paced the Cardinals with 22 points and 12 rebounds. Drey Dirksen had 16 points and five boards and Ryan Slette had 10 points and five rebounds. Willmar plays at St. Cloud Tech at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday.
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MONTEVIDEO — Montevideo and Paynesville combined for 90 first-half points but the defenses tightened up considerably after the break, with the Thunder Hawks limiting the Bulldogs to 13 second-half points in a 71-54 win in a Section 3AA-North opening-round game on Thursday. The Thunder Hawks moved on to play North No. 1-seed Eden Valley-Watkins at noon Saturday in Eden Valley. Montevideo led 49-41 at halftime but the teams rustled up a combined 35 points the rest of the way. The Thunder Hawks' Jasmyn Kronback scored a game-high 20 points and she also had nine rebounds.
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Competition laws should definitely be concerned where products or services are priced below their variable costs.
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Like particles behave unpredictably under zero gravity in physics; in economics what works well in a closed economy may not work that effectively in an open economy and vice versa. The current controls over monopolies, anticompetitive practices, abuse of dominant positions and mergers exercised by the Competition Commission of India (CCI) seem inappropriate for an open economy. Somehow, from the days of Joan Robinson, whose work on imperfect competition is the basis of such market interventions, lesser prices are taken to mean better consumer welfare in our socialistic mindset.
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Indian telecom market, which has expanded solely based on cheap and cheaper prices, is an example of how non-remunerative prices can destroy consumer welfare and lead to shoddy services—you cannot even say ‘I love you’ to your beloved on cellphones these days without 3-4 call drops in between! As it stands today, India is a considerably more ‘open economy’ and particularly more so since ASEAN FTA, trade agreements with South Korea and Japan from where virtually most goods are available at zero duty at cheaper import parity prices, and from China despite duties.
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Most manufactured goods can be freely imported—so how can anyone (or in collusion) control or manipulate prices and fix them beyond import parity prices? Conversely, if the Indian prices are lower despite nil-duty imports, it only signifies domestic industry being competitive—so what’s the grouse anyway? Indian firms would be exporting in such cases. In an open economy, the comparative competitive landscape is not just Indian firms, but includes other relevant supplying regions, say China, ASEAN, Japan, Korea and some others, over which CCI has no control.
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Controlling only the domestic subset leads to loss of competitiveness. Bangladesh and Vietnam have taken a huge part of our share in textile trade (the prime reason for a bleak domestic employment scenario is textiles, potentially our largest employer) due to scale economies: average firm sizes in Bangladesh and Vietnam are 10-20 times that of India’s. In some cases, a single machine or unit in China manufactures what the entire Indian industry manufactures or consumes. Scale is an essential component of efficiency and competitiveness and restrictions on them are self-destructive.
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Indian regulators have often gotten into the morals of pricing—the very antithesis of free markets. Indian agricultural produce markets are the most ‘perfect’ competitive—many tiny producer-sellers and many individuals buying: the ideal of any Robinsonian economist. Yet from time to time, tomato and onion prices fluctuate like an ECG graph whose needle has come unhinged—much more violently than tractor prices, airline prices, white goods and electricals. Should CCI get into controlling onion and tomato prices and underlying market practices? These have more impact on the daily lives of more people on the brink than many manufactured goods.
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Does collusion work in India? Price is the main driver for most consumer decisions. It’s not unusual to find a Mercedes buyer bargain for a free key chain. In markets where demand curves have high elasticity, there is limited scope of manipulating prices by firms: small hikes in prices will drive away lots of customers to alternative products. Competition legislations are relevant more for elastic demands.
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Collusive price hikes would lead to reduction in sales in price-sensitive markets. But who would volunteer to take these cuts, like Saudi Arabia does for OPEC? If demand is weak, most players would want to jostle with others and gain market share. If demand is inelastic and hefty price increases are possible with small cuts in production (few such examples in India: can washing machine manufacturers cut production by, say, 5% and achieve 25% price jumps?), will any player cut his volume and watch others make money at his expense? Preposterous.
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As economist William Baumol concluded over half a century ago, firms are more guided by sales maximisation and other such proxies than profit maximising in their behaviour. Collusion requires cooperation. Where sly and open evasion of every rule or tax laws are the norm, gentlemen agreements or voluntary self-controls in India are unthinkable. We are terribly competitive in our behaviour: otherwise you won’t see such uncouth queue-jumping or impatient driving or ‘one for each day in year’ number of national-level political parties. Giving up for greater good is just not in our bloodstream.
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Why be concerned with B2B transactions when both parties are informed, experienced and likely to behave rationally and not psychologically pressurised? Far more collusive behaviour is witnessed in B2C transactions, say, between a doctor (prescribing tests upon irrelevant tests, refusing an operation unless you pass the ‘show me the money’ tests), drug firms and diagnostic labs, or between lawyers, a legal system completely under their thumb, and hapless clients. To focus on such B2C transactions would be far more welfare additive. CCI should focus more on beefing up enforcement and delivery of consumer protection laws.
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Competition laws should definitely be concerned where products or services are priced below their variable costs. A society not paying variable costs is wasting resources. Such cases in telecom, power and petroleum pose huge systemic risks to the financial system. In any case, why would an Ola or Uber recover less than variable costs unless it is to drive away competition and start exploiting when others have folded up. Such practices are a matter of larger concern, but don’t seem to merit the attention of our CCI.
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Competition laws should not be concerned with products that can be imported at zero duties or are being imported in large quantities despite duties or products of discretionary expenditure. Why be concerned with scale or prices of consumer electronics, white goods or cars, except to ensure that contractual obligations are adhered to and people are not ‘cheated’? Let the consumer choose to stay away.
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Competition laws should kick in only when firms reach one-half of ASEAN’s biggest capacity. It can be applicable for lifesaving drugs or non-discretionary products. Others can be followed up based on surveillance or based on grievance from end-users. There are several areas where there are no market structures or performance of existing ones is poor. The commission should work out structures in those areas (for example, market structures for electronic waste, scrapped automobiles, vehicle parking, rural finance and insurance, public distribution system, etc).
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CCI, in our open economy context, seems more a status symbol pining to belong to economic fashion street. If Make-in-India refuses to get up, sub-scale will be one key reason and legislations like CCI will have a lot to answer for. India badly needs to consolidate and scale up for cost competitiveness.
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With Easter just a week away, many area high schools are squeezing in their annual spring musicals before the end-of-year awards and commencement ceremonies start gearing up at the end of April and in mid-May.
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Mentor Theatre’s annual spring musical under director John Greene has become a significant April ticket in recent years with productions of “Titanic,” “Phantom of the Opera,” “A Chorus Line,” and a number of other productions that you don’t normally see attempted on local stages.
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This year is no exception to that rule as Mentor Theatre proudly presents “The Most Happy Fella” April 11-13 at 7 p.m. and April 14 at 2 p.m. Tickets are $12 for adults and $7 for students under 18 and seniors. Theatergoers are invited to visit https://bit.ly/2I6FZpW to choose seats.
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From Frank Loesser, the composer of “Guys and Dolls,” this lesser-known musical is a dramatic and intensely personal love story which Mentor Theatre calls “the best musical you have never heard of.” The story revolves around a May-to-December romance when a city bride is wooed by an aging Italian grape farmer who nearly botches everything.
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Featuring spirited dancing, “The Most Happy Fella” is a simple romance filled with sweeping ballads, intense dramatic arias and tuneful, splashy Broadway-style numbers. The show's lasting popularity has led to two Broadway revivals.
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“This is arguably the most ambitious musical Mentor Theatre has undertaken,” Greene says.
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Now that is saying something. Break a leg to these Mentor Thespians this weekend!
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Not too far down the road from Mentor High School, St. Gabriel School’s Performing Arts Club in Concord will be presenting “The Sound of Music, Jr.” on April 11 and 13 at 7 p.m.
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The play is in the Fr. Pahler Center at the school. Tickets are $6 for adults and $4 for students. Andrea Karpuszka and Michelle Kuch serve as co-directors.
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“The role of Maria is challenging,” Carley DeRespiris says of her lead part. “She is a very complex woman and she is in love with music. That is how she brings joy to the Von Trapp family. Maria is kind, thoughtful and always wants people to be happy.
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"Being a part of the St. Gabriel School Performing Arts has changed my life," Carley added. "For the past few years I have learned so much about music. I have also made so many friendships throughout this experience. I would like to thank Mrs. Karpuszka and Mr. Kuch for believing in me and helping me put on a great show. I hope to bring joy to all when I sing for the audience ‘The Hills are Alive with the Sound of Music.’"
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Break a leg to these Grizzlies, and say hi to Father Fred for me!
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Remaining performances are April 12 and 13 at 7 p.m. and April 14 at 2 p.m. All performances are at Mayfield High School.
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Tickets are general admission and are on sale now. Tickets at the door will be limited and will be cash only. Doors open 30 minutes prior to showtime. Visit www.mayfieldvocalmusic.org for presale tickets or e-mail [email protected] with questions.
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“Shrek, the Musical” is a stage adaptation of the popular 2001 DreamWorks Animation Motion Picture that became a series featuring voice work by Mike Myers, Cameron Diaz, Eddie Murphy, John Lithgow, and Antonio Banderas.
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The stage adaptation features book and lyrics by David Lindsay-Abaire based on the original film screenplay by William Steig and music by Jeanine Tesori.
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RENO, Nev., Feb. 12, 2015 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Ormat Technologies, Inc. (NYSE:ORA) announced today that further to its news release on November 10, 2014, the Company completed the share exchange transaction with its parent entity, Ormat Industries Ltd. ("OIL") following which, it became a non-controlled public company and its public float increased from approximately 40% to approximately 76% of its total shares outstanding.
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Under the terms of the share exchange, OIL shareholders received 0.2592x shares for each share in OIL, or an aggregate of approximately 30.2 million shares, reflecting a net issuance of approximately 3.0 million shares (after deducting the 27.2 million shares that OIL held in Ormat Technologies). Consequently, Ormat Technologies' total shares outstanding increased from approximately 45.5 million shares to approximately 48.5 million shares.
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Additionally, on February 10, 2015, the Company's common stock was successfully listed on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE). The TASE also confirmed that the Company will be included in the TA-25 Index, which is the TASE flagship index that tracks the share prices of the 25 companies with the highest market capitalization on the exchange. The Company will remain subject to the rules and regulations of the NYSE and of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"). Under the local regime for dual listing, the Company will use the same periodic reports, financial and other relevant disclosure information that The Company submits to the SEC and NYSE.
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"This transaction helps to streamline Ormat's corporate structure, and we believe it will significantly enhance the liquidity of our stock, ultimately increasing shareholders value," commented Isaac Angel, Ormat's CEO. "We are pleased to start trading on the TASE, and excited to be included in the TA-25 Index. We believe this listing will also increase the interest in Ormat and diversify our investor base."
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With over four decades of experience, Ormat Technologies, Inc. is a leading geothermal company and the only vertically integrated company solely engaged in geothermal and recovered energy generation (REG). The company owns, operates, designs, manufactures and sells geothermal and REG power plants primarily based on the Ormat Energy Converter - a power generation unit that converts low-, medium- and high-temperature heat into electricity. With over 77 U.S. patents, Ormat's power solutions have been refined and perfected under the most grueling environmental conditions. Ormat has 480 employees in the United States and about 640 overseas. Ormat's flexible, modular solutions for geothermal power and REG are ideal for the vast range of resource characteristics. The company has engineered, manufactured and constructed power plants, which it currently owns or has installed to utilities and developers worldwide, totaling over 1,900 MW of gross capacity. Ormat's current generating portfolio is spread globally in the U.S., Guatemala and Kenya.
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Information provided in this press release contains statements relating to current expectations, estimates, forecasts and projections about future events that are "forward looking statements" as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements generally relate to Ormat's plans, objectives and expectations for the share exchange, the related restructuring of the Ormat corporate group and the anticipated consequences of the transaction and are based upon its management's current expectations. These forward looking statements include, among others, the benefits that Ormat Technologies believes the transaction will create, including those related to expected cost savings, enhanced liquidity, synergies, corporate visibility and identity. Actual future results may differ materially from those projected as a result of certain risks and uncertainties. These forward-looking statements are made only as of the date hereof, and we undertake no obligation to update or revise the forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
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Elle Wearsch, Ava Sturznickel & Ryan Halcik – St. Joan of Arc School’s Penguin Project 2019: The Wizard of Oz!
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The St. Joan of Arc School’s Penguin Project helps to stop bullying!
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The St. Joan of Arc School is partnering once again with the Chagrin Valley Little Theatre for a program called The Penguin Project. This year’s theme is a classic, The Wizard of Oz! Elle Wearsch, Ava Sturznickel & Ryan Halcik are inspiring students and today they gave Hollie a preview.
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Elle, for those who are unfamiliar, please tell them about the Penguin Project.
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Ava, tell us about this year’s theme, The Wizard of Oz!
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Tell us about your individual roles and what you are looking forward to the most!
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Ryan, how does it feel to be involved in this year’s Penguin Project?
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Will you be seeing this year’s Penguin Project, The Wizard of Oz? Tweet us @LIVEONLakeside or find us on Facebook/Instagram at LIVE on Lakeside and let us know!
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Penguin Project: The Wizard of Oz!
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The Dancing With the Stars All Stars 2012 semifinals are here at last and the special themed show tonight is going to be a blast! The Dancing With the Stars 2012 All Stars cast will be performing tonight to the music from Michael Jackson. Guest judge Paula Abdul will return to weigh in on the performances of the DWTS All Stars five semifinalists. Looks like it is going to be an exciting week on DWTS 2012 All Stars. Join us right here for our live Dancing With the Stars All Stars recap to watch the performances and see who emerges as the baddest dancer on Michael Jackson night!
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This post contains Dancing With the Stars 2012 All Stars spoilers for the week 9 semifinals performances. Please stop reading here if you do not want to know what happens!
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Last week on Dancing With the Stars 2012 All Stars, fans watched one of the strongest dancers on the show go home on the elimination results show. While everyone was pretty much expecting Kirstie Alley and Maksim Chmerkovskiy would bite the dust last week, the elimination of Gilles Marini and Peta Murgatroyd came as an unexpected shock to many fans. If you don’t vote, you can’t expect your favorites to make it through to the next round people!
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On tonight’s Dancing With the Stars All Stars 2012 semifinals performance show, the remaining five couples will dance to a Michael Jackson song. The show will also include three special dances set to Michael Jackson songs.
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The couples will also perform a second ‘mash-up’ dance routine on DWTS All Stars 2012 tonight. The themes for the mash-up dances were announced on last week’s Dancing With the Stars elimination results show.
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Only three spots are open for the Dancing With the Stars All Stars finals, so two of the remaining couples will be sent packing on the DWTS elimination results show Tuesday night.
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Ready to find out who rocked it and who failed to impress the DWTS 2012 judges this week? Our live Dancing With the Stars All Stars semifinals recap starts right here at 8PM ET!
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RECAP: To entertain us before the celebrity contestants hit the stage, we have a performance by the professional dancers to some Micheal Jackson music. I always enjoy watching the pros in action, but I’m ready to move along to the actual contestants.
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Thankfully, the ‘entertainment’ intro doesn’t last long and we are on to the live performances! The first routine tonight will be the strange ‘theme’ mash-up routines picked out last week.
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Judges: Len says he has never seen Fred and Wilma dance so well and he really enjoyed it. He says he thought they really caught the flavor of a caveman. Tony had muscle whiel Melissa had hustle. Bruno says it was the most effective use of animal skins since Raquel Welch. He says there was a lot of whiplash and when you turn in the hustle, you have to be spot on. There were a couple of turns where they lost their footing and were shaking. Carrie Ann says it was ‘Yabba dabba fine’ and she loved it. She thought it was a perfect way to bring the two dances together. She liked the caveman parts better than the hustle parts though.
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Judges: Len says it was fantastic and dynamite! Shut up, close the door and call him Mary! Bruno says they have done it Bhangra style. He loved it and it was a mega hit. Carrie Ann asks what you can say to that, it was great. Finally Shawn is out of breath!
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