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Instructive Business Guides Featured in LibraryBub Selection for June

/PRNewswire/ LibraryBub, an industry first, is dedicated to making strong, mutual connections between indie and small-press authors and an extensive network.

Pride of Baltimore II shines despite weather

HAVRE DE GRACE — The Pride of Baltimore II is spending the weekend docked at Tydings Park and the crew is amazed at the steady stream of visitors in spite of the unpredictable weather. Jan Miles, captain of the schooner, said people came Friday to greet them, and returned Saturday even though rain fell on and off all day. “They are so enthralled with looking at the boat and they get curious about the things in the rigging that are fuzzy,” he said. “They are called baggywrinkles. It saves the sails from the rigging.” Having sailed around the world on The Pride of Baltimore, Miles has noticed that there are always the questions about the ship, but its history leans toward the host port.

Curbside theater comes to closed off street in Belfast with  As you like it

Patricia Saucier, Ken Kornfield, Phoebe Norman, Tom Crutcher, and Mark Durbin. (Photo by Jeff Mabee) L-R: Autumn Stupca, Erin Hayes, and Dakota Wing. (Photo by Jeff Mabee) BELFAST The Belfast Maskers is reconstructing 2020’s production of William Shakespeare’s comedy As You Like It. This telling of the tale is set in a late ‘60s/early ‘70s of the mind; featuring costumes, props, and scenery right out of that era. The language, however, is Shakespeare’s original tale of discovery, transformation, and, above all, the power of love. The 2021 performances will take place “al fresco” on the front lawn of the Basil Burwell Community Theater, 17 Court Street, in Belfast. Shows are Thursday, May 20 through Sunday, May 23, at 7 p.m.

Three Ohio energy giants haven t paid federal income taxes in three years

Ohio Capital Journal Photo from Getty Images. They’re making billions and they’ve gotten hefty subsidies from ratepayers. Yet three big energy companies doing business in Ohio haven’t paid federal income tax since the 2017 Trump tax cuts, according to a new report. In fact, Akron-based FirstEnergy, Columbus-based AEP and Charlotte, N.C.-based Duke Energy had negative effective tax rates, according to the report by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a nonprofit, non-partisan think tank.  The paper, which analyzed tax disclosures in the corporations’ annual reports, found that 55 profitable companies didn’t pay any federal income tax in 2020, and 26 hadn’t paid any in the three years since the Trump tax law, known as the “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.”

Three Ohio energy giants haven t paid federal income taxes in three years

Three Ohio energy giants haven’t paid federal income taxes in three years John Minchillo/AP In this Wednesday, May 20, 2015 photo, contractors walk past a capacitor bank at an AEP electrical transmission substation in Westerville, Ohio. (AP Photo/John Minchillo) and last updated 2021-04-07 07:12:47-04 CLEVELAND — The following article was originally published in the Ohio Capital Journal and published on News5Cleveland.com under a content-sharing agreement. They’re making billions and they’ve gotten hefty subsidies from ratepayers. Yet three big energy companies doing business in Ohio haven’t paid federal income tax since the 2017 Trump tax cuts, according to a new report.

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