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UpdatedFri, May 28, 2021 at 9:46 am ET
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University Heights Branch Manager Sara Phillips holds a copy of Bob Dylan s Self Portrait that was returned this week after being checked out in 1973. (Heights Libraries)
CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, OH In the halcyon days of 1973, a teenage music aficionado wandered into the Heights Libraries and checked out a three-year-old album by Bob Dylan called Self Portrait.
Rolling Stone magazine would later call the album Dylan s weirdest record, but added the music is great. Many of the songs are covers, live recordings, or re-releases of older Dylan hits. It was a departure for the Nobel Prize winner, but it is now remembered for its gleefully indulgent eccentricities.
Well known Buxton man celebrates 100th birthday buxtonadvertiser.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from buxtonadvertiser.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Andy and Nancy Carace, who acquired Pest-End in 1986, finalized the company’s sale to the second-generation in 2020. Daughter, Amanda Forrestall, son, Adam Carace and his wife, Courtney Carace, began taking over day-to-day operations in 2015 leading up to the official sale. Earning a spot on the Top 100 list marks the beginning of a new era for Pest-End Inc., as the family’s second generation begins to execute plans for the business s future.
Since 1977, the business has expanded to include offices in Plaistow, N.H., and Methuen, Mass. Serving both residential and commercial clients throughout New England, Amanda, Adam and Courtney continue their strategic Northeast expansion, focusing on sustainable growth, company culture, and keeping their family’s business values alive and well.
SARASOTA, Fla. Doug Longfellow, president of NatureZone, Sarasota, Fla., was recognized by the Business Observer, a weekly newspaper serving Florida’s Gulf Coast, as a ‘Top Entrepreneur.’
The newspaper praised Longfellow for acquiring a modest $500,000 firm in 2005 and transforming it into a pest control business that now generates nearly $5 million a year in revenue. “Longfellow’s direction has helped lead the company to become one of the largest privately-owned pest control companies in the region. When he bought the business, it had five employees. Now, the payroll is 42 employees,” the article noted.
One of Longfellow’s key strategic decisions, according to the article, was to build a business focused less on earnings and more on client retention.