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How About $11 Million For An Accident Case?

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Learn how attorney Daniel Simon of Las Vegas helps clients settle multi-million dollar cases.


Think $1.8 million for a settlement. OK, how about $3 million for one? If that is not good enough, clients could even be rewarded upwards of $11 million for a case. Attorney, Daniel Simon is known for his expertise, multi-million dollar cases, and readily helps clients reach these shocking, relieving numbers on a continuous basis.

Over the past 20 years, Daniel Simon of Simon Law Group of Las Vegas has resolved high-end cases such as auto trucking accidents, chemical accidents, slip and fall occurrences, wrongful death, assault cases and more. Although results obviously will vary, this personal injury attorney of Las Vegas is known for his determined attitude and ability to get people the money they merit.

Whether people live in Las Vegas or are visiting the area, they can easily get hurt. People of Las Vegas clearly are not strangers to casino incidents. Las Vegas is also no stranger to DUIs and when people fall subject to these drivers, the situations cannot and should not be taken lightly. Daniel Simon is a Las Vegas native who knows best when it comes to handling the individualistic shenanigans that come with Sin City itself. He graduated from Whittier College of Law in 1992 and even graduated with honors. A case that may seem small could end up with a surprisingly, amazing turn out.

Find out if a case worth digging into today. Call Daniel Simon and Simon Law Group at (702) 364- 1655 or visit http://www.simonlawgrouplv.com/ to book a free consultation.

Company Contact Information
Simon Law Group
Daniel Simon
810 S. Casino Center Blvd
Las Vegas, NV
89101
(702) 364- 1650

News and Press Release Distribution From I-Newswire.com Reported by i-Newswire.com 14 hours ago.

Chris Hemsworth Risks His Life to Race in First 'Rush' Trailer

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Chris Hemsworth Risks His Life to Race in First 'Rush' Trailer Intense rivalry between Hemsworth's James Hunt and Daniel Bruhl's Niki Lauda leads the two sworn enemies to put their lives on the racing line to be the world champion. Reported by AceShowbiz 10 hours ago.

Injured cyclist praises Daniel

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This is Devon --

A TEENAGER has been praised by a Tiverton woman for helping her off the ground when she came off her bicycle at rush hour, when others appeared to ignore her.

Sara Venner, 48, sprained her wrist, suffered bruising and fractured her elbow and needed stitches to her forehead after she collided with a wall near to the junction between Chapel Street and Gold Street.

The accident happened while she was on her way to work at around 8am on Tuesday, March 5, and while two people stepped out into the road to walk around her, Tiverton High School pupil Daniel Sumner, 14, rushed back to her aid.

Mrs Venner, a Boots' dispenser who lives at Leofric Road, said: "I am so grateful to him.If it wasn't for Daniel, nobody else would have helped." Reported by This is 5 hours ago.

Four-Year-Old Shoots Wife of County Deputy

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A four-year-old child shot the wife of Wilson County deputy Daniel Fanning April 6 while at the couples home for a cookout, the Tennessean reported. The four-year-old picked up a loaded gun from a bed and fired one round, killing Josephine G. Fanning, 48.  Daniel Fanning and a male guest were looking at guns in

The post Four-Year-Old Shoots Wife of County Deputy appeared first on The Epoch Times. Reported by Epoch Times 25 minutes ago.

Daniel Dunn Elected Selectmen Chairman

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Daniel Dunn Elected Selectmen Chairman Patch Arlington, MA --

Today is Tuesday, April 9. Here are five things you need to know.

*1.)* Selectman *Daniel Dunn* was elected board chairman by his colleagues Monday night in a unanimous vote. Selectman *Diane Mahon* was elected vice chairman, also in a unanimous vote. Dunn said he was excited to receive the honor. He had served as vice chairman over the last year.

*2.)* Also at the meeting, see Kevin Greeley’s response to Saturday’s “Yes” vote on Question 1.

*3.)* The Arlington High girls’ softball team opened it season Saturday with a 9-4 home win over Westford Academy. The Spy Ponders will be back at Peirce Field at 3:45 p.m. this afternoon for a showdown with Stoneham. The high school’s girls’ track (3:30 p.m.), baseball (3:45 p.m.) and girls’ lacrosse (6 p.m.) teams are also home today, while the boys’ track team is at Belmont at 3:30 p.m., the boys’ lacrosse team at Woburn at 5 p.m.

*4.)* Did you miss our look inside the most expensive Arlington home on the market?

*5.)* It should be sunny by this afternoon with a high near 72, according to the National Weather Service. Reported by Patch 22 hours ago.

Alisha L. Gordon, M.Ed.: A Broken Heart And A Man Named Daniel

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I've been in a love affair with a guy named Daniel for years. He's accompanied me to church, Bible study, Sunday school and small groups. He's been my shoulder to cry on when life's kitchen had the heat on hell and reminded me that there was always a "fourth man" standing in the "furnace" with me. It was his life's story that reminded me that even in the mouth of the lion, God will save me, redeem me and elevate me.

All of his heroic stories shaped who I am. I believed what every preacher has ever said about him, and I never questioned whether or not the miraculous things that occurred in the book of Daniel were really legit.

Today, I found out that they were not -- they're fictional.

Yep. Fictional, fake, made-up, fabricated, imagined.

I sat in the lobby of Candler this morning with my mouth agape and my heart tormented.

"What do you mean, book of historical commentary on Daniel, that the stories of heroism that I've held so dearly is fictional?" I asked myself.

I flipped through my Bible's commentary to find some kind of solace, some explanation that would solve this crisis: How could these stories I've held on to for so long be fictional? How could something that mattered so much be historically and literally inaccurate?

I took to Facebook and threatened to jump off a classroom table if I had to really accept the idea that the stories in Daniel chapters 1-6 were fictional. (Chapters 7-12 are considered Apocalyptic Literature and requires its own discussion!) My embedded theology had been challenged, and though it wasn't the first time, it surely hit me like a ton of bricks.

I got a little pushback from friends and associates on Facebook, of course.

"The entire bible is made up!"

"Today, it feels like I just learned Santa isn't real. Why even teach it?"

Another said, "What is the point of seminary? To teach you that the Bible is farcical?"

I had to figure out what was making this break up with Daniel's heroic stories so tough and where I would go from here -- as a seminarian and as a Christian.

The running joke with many seminarians and their friends/families/church community is that seminary admits a Christian and graduates an atheist. "You lose your Jesus in there!" they say. We gain insight to the historical and literal contexts, so much so, that in some way, what was once an infallible now becomes... questionable.

What, then, do we do? I came to this conclusion (because losing my Jesus ain't an option) -- whether the stories are factual or not does not matter.

The truth remains: God's sovereignty, power and desire to have relationship with us is a consistent, irrevocable force.

When we read Scripture, we have to learn to separate the facts from the truth. The fact of the matter is, the stories told in Daniel chapters 1-6 may not have happened. Historians don't even know who authored the book and, as the stories of Daniel take its course, there are some quirky things happening within those aforementioned chapter (like the text switching from Hebrew to Aramaic then back to Hebrew).

The truth is, however, that God's power is real, that He will go to great lengths to save His (or Her) people, and that no matter where we are and under what circumstances, we can rest in the fact that God is there to save us. Through Daniel, we learn how to live/act in a world that may expect us to live contrary to what our God tells us to do -- be and remain faithful to Yahweh is a key theme of the book.

Someone asked me, "If some of the stories in the bible aren't factual, then what's the proof that God can do anything at all?"

That, my friends, is a personal thing -- what YOU believe God can do based on what you've read and understand is your own personal discernment. Knowing the history behind the story doesn't change what I believe about God; if anything, it enhances it.

It helps me to see God in a new way; it complicates yet simplifies, narrows yet expands, empties yet fills.

In a lot of ways, I feel like knowing that sometimes the story and even the characters are totally made up moves our loving affections away from these biblical personas and to the one who really matters: God.

I know it won't be the last time that I read something in Scripture that really challenges what I've thought to be true (I'll write about my disappointment in Job and my tears shed over Genesis in another post) and it is this level of questioning and critical thinking that I hope will help make me into a really awesome minister/writer/pop culture commentator/praise and worship leader/dancing machine.

I'm still working on what to do with these feelings about my man Daniel; like any love affair gone awry it takes a minute to settle into things. I am glad, however, that God walks us through this process of getting over what doesn't matter and getting to the root of what does. Reported by Huffington Post 19 hours ago.

General Manager of Jack Daniel’s Production to Retire; Veteran Brown-Forman Executive Named as Successor

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General Manager of Jack Daniel’s Production to Retire; Veteran Brown-Forman Executive Named as Successor LOUISVILLE, Ky.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Brown-Forman Corporation (NYSE:BFA) (NYSE:BFB) announced today that Tommy Beam, senior vice president and general manager of Jack Daniel’s Production Operations in Lynchburg, Tennessee, is retiring from the company after 48 years of service. His official retirement date is July 31, 2013. “Tommy Beam has had a truly remarkable career in one of the top jobs not only within Brown-Forman but in our entire industry,” said Jane Morreau, senior vice president and chief Reported by Business Wire 17 hours ago.

Attorney Daniel Barros Selected for List of Top Rated Lawyers in NJ.

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Attorney Daniel Barros Selected for List of Top Rated Lawyers in NJ. Daniel Barros, a NJ based lawyer who practices Business Litigation / Community Association Law has been named a top attorney in NJ. CREAM RIDGE, N.J., April 9, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The 2013 list of top rated attorneys in NJ as published in the April, 2013 issue of New... Reported by PR Newswire 17 hours ago.

General Manager of Jack Daniel's Production to Retire; Veteran Brown-Forman Executive Named as Succe

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Filed under: Investing

*General Manager of Jack Daniel's Production to Retire; Veteran Brown-Forman Executive Named as Successor*

LOUISVILLE, Ky.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Brown-Forman Corporation (NYS: BFA) (NYS: BFB) announced today that Tommy Beam, senior vice president and general manager of Jack Daniel's Production Operations in Lynchburg, Tennessee, is retiring from the company after 48 years of service. His official retirement date is July 31, 2013.

"Tommy Beam has had a truly remarkable career in one of the top jobs not only within Brown-Forman but in our entire industry," said Jane Morreau, senior vice president and chief production officer. "For the last eleven years he has led our entire Jack Daniel's production operations while overseeing several expansion projects during a time of significant growth for the brand. Tommy has been a great leader and we wish him nothing but the best during his retirement."




Beam joined the Jack Daniel Distillery in 1965 as an accountant and served in a succession of roles with increasing responsibility until being named general manager of all Jack Daniel's production operations in 2002. During this time, Beam led a team of 435 employees to record levels of production, reaching shipments of about 11 million nine liter cases of Jack Daniel's Tennessee Whiskey worldwide during fiscal 2012.

Brown-Forman also announced that Larry Combs has been named to succeed Beam as senior vice president and general manager of Jack Daniel's operations. Combs joined Brown-Forman in 1992 and has been involved in nearly every aspect of the company's production operations over the last two decades. For the last three years, he led Brown-Forman's Technical Services group, including Quality Assurance, R&D, Engineering, Packaging and Environmental, with outstanding results. In addition, he has guided our European Operations and External Manufacturing Operations globally. Combs will continue to oversee external manufacturing operations in addition to his new role as general manager of all Jack Daniel's production operations.

"Larry has demonstrated excellent leadership ability and we believe is the ideal person to take on the responsibility of managing the productions operations of our largest and most important brand," stated Morreau.

For more than 140 years, Brown-Forman Corporation has enriched the experience of life by responsibly building fine quality beverage alcohol brands, including Jack Daniel's Tennessee Whiskey, Southern Comfort, Finlandia, Jack Daniel's & Cola, Canadian Mist, Korbel, Gentleman Jack, el Jimador, Herradura, Sonoma-Cutrer, Chambord, New Mix, Tuaca, and Woodford Reserve. Brown-Forman's brands are supported by nearly 4,000 employees and sold in approximately 160 countries worldwide. For more information about the Company, please visit http://www.brown-forman.com/.

*Important Information on Forward-Looking Statements:*

This report contains statements, estimates, and projections that are "forward-looking statements" as defined under U.S. federal securities laws. Words such as "aim,""anticipate,""aspire,""believe,""envision,""estimate,""expect,""expectation,""intend,""may,""plan,""potential,""project,""pursue,""see,""will,""will continue," and similar words identify forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date we make them. Except as required by law, we do not intend to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risks, uncertainties and other factors (many beyond our control) that could cause our actual results to differ materially from our historical experience or from our current expectations or projections. These risks and other factors include, but are not limited to:

· declining or depressed global or regional economic conditions, particularly in the Euro zone; political, financial, or credit or capital market instability; supplier, customer or consumer credit or other financial problems; bank failures or governmental debt defaults
· failure to develop or implement effective business, portfolio and brand strategies, including the increased U.S. penetration and international expansion of Jack Daniel's Tennessee Honey, innovation, marketing and promotional activity, and route-to-consumer
· unfavorable trade or consumer reaction to our new products, product line extensions, price changes, marketing, or changes in formulation, flavor or packaging
· inventory fluctuations in our products by distributors, wholesalers, or retailers
· competitors' consolidation or other competitive activities such as pricing actions (including price reductions, promotions, discounting, couponing or free goods), marketing, category expansion, product introductions, entry or expansion in our geographic markets
· declines in consumer confidence or spending, whether related to the economy (such as austerity measures, tax increases, high fuel costs, or higher unemployment), wars, natural or other disasters, weather, pandemics, security concerns, terrorist attacks or other factors
· changes in tax rates (including excise, sales, VAT, tariffs, duties, corporate, individual income, dividends, capital gains) or in related reserves, changes in tax rules (e.g., LIFO, foreign income deferral, U.S. manufacturing and other deductions) or accounting standards, and the unpredictability and suddenness with which they can occur
· governmental or other restrictions on our ability to produce, import, sell, price, or market our products, including advertising and promotion in either traditional or new media; regulatory compliance costs
· business disruption, decline or costs related to organizational changes, reductions in workforce or other cost-cutting measures
· lower returns or discount rates related to pension assets, interest rate fluctuations, inflation or deflation
· fluctuations in the U.S. dollar against foreign currencies, especially the euro, British pound, Australian dollar, Polish zloty or Mexican peso
· changes in consumer behavior or preferences and our ability to anticipate and respond to them, including societal attitudes or cultural trends that result in reduced consumption of our products; reduction of bar, restaurant, hotel or other on-premise business or travel
· consumer shifts away from brown spirits, premium-priced spirits, or spirits products generally; shifts to discount store purchases or other price-sensitive consumer behavior
· distribution and other route-to-consumer decisions or changes that affect the timing of our sales, temporarily disrupt the marketing or sale of our products, or result in implementation-related or higher fixed costs
· effects of acquisitions, dispositions, joint ventures, business partnerships or investments, or their termination, including acquisition, integration or termination costs, disruption or other difficulties, or impairment in the recorded value of assets (e.g. receivables, inventory, fixed assets, goodwill, trademarks and other intangibles)
· lower profits, due to factors such as fewer or less profitable used barrel sales, lower production volumes, decreased demand or inability to meet consumer demand for products we sell, sales mix shift toward lower priced or lower margin SKUs, or cost increases in energy or raw materials, such as grain, agave, wood, glass, plastic, or closures
· natural disasters, climate change, agricultural uncertainties, environmental or other catastrophes, or other factors that affect the availability, price, or quality of agave, grain, glass, energy, closures, plastic, water, or wood, or that cause supply chain disruption or disruption at our production facilities or aging warehouses
· negative publicity related to our company, brands, marketing, personnel, operations, business performance or prospects
· product counterfeiting, tampering, contamination, or recalls and resulting negative effects on our sales, brand equity, or corporate reputation
· significant costs or other adverse developments stemming from class action, intellectual property, governmental, or other major litigation; or governmental investigations of beverage alcohol industry business, trade, or marketing practices by us, our importers, distributors, or retailers

For further information regarding these risks, please refer to the "Risk Factors" and "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations" sections of our annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q filed with the SEC.





Brown-Forman Corporation
Phil Lynch, 502-774-7928
Vice President
Director Corporate Communications and Public Relations
or
Jay Koval, 502-774-6903
Vice President
Director Investor Relations

*KEYWORDS:*   United States  North America  Kentucky

*INDUSTRY KEYWORDS:*

The article General Manager of Jack Daniel's Production to Retire; Veteran Brown-Forman Executive Named as Successor Reported by DailyFinance 16 hours ago.

Elementary School Principal Will Retire in August

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Patch Wayne, NJ --

Another principal of a Wayne school is retiring.

Pamela Longo, the long-time principal of Pines Lake Elementary School, is scheduled to retire from the position Aug. 16. The Board of Education is scheduled to approve Longo’s retirement at a meeting Thursday.

Longo could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

Parents and teachers have said Longo has worked tirelessly to teach students the importance of helping others and giving back.

Longo founded the Pines Lake chapter of the Kids Care Club in 2003. The community service group works to inspire and equip students to make a positive impact on their world. Seventy students joined the group last year.

The group picks a different community service project to do each month. It has donated piles of clothes to flood victims, assembled Thanksgiving food baskets, and given pet food to Friends of Wayne Animals.

“I’m so pleased that we can do nice things for people who need our help,” Longo said last April.

Longo is the second principal who will retire this year. Kenneth Kaplan, the principal of Randall Carter Elementary School for nine years, will also step down in August.

New principals started at Wayne Hills High School, Ryerson Elementary School, George Washington Middle School, and Lafayette Elementary School within the past year.

— Have a question or news tip? Contact editor Daniel Hubbard at Daniel.Hubbard@patch.com or find us on Facebook and Twitter. For news straight to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter. Reported by Patch 7 hours ago.

Massage Parlor Rules Could Be Overhauled Soon

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Patch Wayne, NJ --

Officials introduced legislation last week that tightens the town’s grip on massage parlors with a slew of new regulations that ban exposed genitals and require owners to submit a sterilization plan.

The proposed changes are extensive. Officials discussed approving such changes last March, but decided to wait until the state changed its requirements pertaining to the establishments.

The law would require that a patron’s “sexual or genital areas” be covered by towels, cloths, or undergarments when in the presence of an employee.

“We have, over time, checked on several establishments because sometimes customers complain about maybe seeing something they think shouldn’t be happening,” Police Chief John Reardon said last March.

An employee of Gold Spa was charged with engaging in prostitution in January. Police went undercover at the establishment after they received an anonymous tip from a concerned citizen.

New state law prohibits the township from licensing massage therapists. The state issues massage therapy licenses now. The ordinance requires that all therapists be licensed and that those licenses be displayed “in an open and conspicuous place” inside a massage parlor.

Each massage room would need to contain a sink. Each massage establishment would need to have a shower area.

The owner or operator of an establishment would need to submit a sterilization plan for non-disposable instruments and materials to the Health Department. Non-disposable instruments would need to be disinfected after every use and store in a clean and sanitary manner.

The council introduced the ordinance last Wednesday. Officials could approve it at the next meeting April 17.

— Have a question or news tip? Contact editor Daniel Hubbard at Daniel.Hubbard@patch.com or find us on Facebook and Twitter. For news straight to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter. Reported by Patch 7 hours ago.

Valley View School Board Results: Two Incumbents, Two Newcomers Elected

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Patch Bolingbrook, IL --

Incumbents Elizabeth Campbell and Chrystal Hansen and newcomers Daniel Falese and Deborah Sykora were elected to the Valley View School District 365U school board Tuesday night. 

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Eight candidates, three incumbents and five newcomers, ran for the four school board seats.  

Ronnie Bull, an incumbent, was the only candidate on the "Friends of Valley View" slate not to be elected. 

 The four candidates on that slate were endorsed by Mayor Roger Claar. 

Two years ago, all four candidates on the "Friends of Valley View" slate swept the Valley View School District 365U school board election: Chrystal Hansen, Richard “Rick” Gougis, Leo Venegas and Steve Quigley. 

These are the results of Tuesday's election, ranked in most to least votes. 

*Candidate* *Vote Total* *Percentage*
Deborah Sykora  3,583 18.40%
Chrystal Hansen (incumbent) 2,831 14.54%
Elizabeth Campbell (incumbent)  2,816 14.46%
Daniel Falese 2,485 12.76%
Jaime Olson  2,376 12.20%
Ronnie Bull (incumbent) 2,282 11.72%
Sinatra Strong  1,514 7.77%
Tonia Young Barr  1,483 7.62%
Write-in 104 0.53% Reported by Patch 10 hours ago.

Bolingbrook 2013 Election Results: Valley View 365U School Board, DuPage Township & More

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Patch Bolingbrook, IL --

Full results from Bolingbrook's April 9, 2013, election are below, from Bolingbrook mayor and village board to DuPage Township and the Valley View School District 365U school board.

*Valley View School District 365U School Board *

Eight candidates ran for four school board seats. Deborah Sykora, Chrystal Hansen, Elizabeth Campbell and Daniel Falese were elected to the board. 

*Candidate* *Vote Total* *Percentage*
Deborah Sykora  3,583 18.40%
Chrystal Hansen (incumbent) 2,831 14.54%
Elizabeth Campbell (incumbent)  2,816 14.46%
Daniel Falese 2,485 12.76%
Jaime Olson  2,376 12.20%
Ronnie Bull (incumbent) 2,282 11.72%
Sinatra Strong  1,514 7.77%
Tonia Young Barr  1,483 7.62%
Write-in 104 0.53%

*DuPage Township Supervisor *

Two candidates ran for one supervisor position. 

*Candidate* *Vote Total*
William Mayer (Republican, incumbent)  3,424
Barbara Osborne (Democrat) 2,269


*DuPage Township Trustees *

Eight candidates ran for four trustee positions. All four Republican candidates were elected. 

*Candidate* *Vote Total*
Alyssia Benford (Repulican, incumbent) 3,051
Ken "Smokey" Burgess (Republican) 2,963
Maripat Oliver (Republican)
2,893

Sheldon Watts (Republican, incumbent)
2,765

Jacqueline (Jackie) Clisham (Democrat)

2217

John Seale (Democrat) 2,169
Shirley Valevicius (Democrat) 2,159
Melvin Holmes, Sr. (Democrat)

2004




*Bolingbrook Village Board *

Three candidates ran for three village trustee seats. 

*Candidate* *Vote Total*
Michael Lawler  2,536
Joseph Morelli  2,477
Maria Zarate  2,436


*Bolingbrook Mayor*

One candidate ran for mayor of Bolingbrook. 

*Candidate* *Vote Total*
Roger Claar 2,866/2,866


*Bolingbrook Village Clerk *

One candidate ran for village clerk. 

*Candidate* *Vote Total*
Carol Penning 2,834/2,834

*Bolingbrook Park District Board of Commissioners *

Two candidates ran for two seats. Ken McConnaughay withdrew from the race prior to Election Day. 

*Candidate* *Vote Total*
Denise Allen (incumbent)  2,374
Melissa McCloud  2,382
Ken McConnaughay 1,941



*DuPage County Clerk, Assessor and Collector *

One candidate ran for each position. 

*Clerk *

*Candidate* *Vote Total*
Patricia Mayoral Stach (incumbent)  4,689


*Assessor *

*Candidate* *Vote Total*
John Randall (incumbent)  4,683


*Collector *

*Candidate* *Vote Total*
Pattie Holloway 4,627


*Fountaindale Public Library Board *

Two candidates ran for two spots. 

*Candidate* *Vote Total*
Peggy Danhof (incumbent) 2,373
Kathryn Spindel (incumbent) 2,165 Reported by Patch 4 hours ago.

Avon Lake High School Announces 3rd Quarter Honor Rolls

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Patch Avon-Avon Lake, OH --

Avon Lake High School has released its third-quarter honor rolls. Check back for junior and senior honor rolls.

*High Honor Roll* = 4.0 and above

*Honor Roll* = 3.6 – 3.99

*Merit Roll* = 3.0 – 3.59

NINTH GRADE HIGH HONOR ROLL
Isabella Albu, Kaitlyn Applegate, Aaron Assaf, Ross Barone,Casey Baughman, Cara Birkby, Michaela Clarahan, Emily Cline, Grace Davies, Michelle Deisenroth, Morgan Diegel, George Durisek, Elise Duvall, Jacob Francy, Logan Good, Kristen Hards, Allison Harrington, Park Herbert, Emily Herman, Sarah Higley, Robert Hoffman, Lucas Jorgensen, Brian Kachala, Hunter Kallach, Robert Kiskin, Joshua Kozel, Richard Krause, Emily Lambert, Jay Leiden, Hannah Lipka, BrettLitzler, Alexander Loar, Parker MacDonald, Rylie MacDonald, Jason Mack, Nicole Mango, Mallory Masarik, Brittany Menzer, Mackenzie Miller, Sarah Mills, William Moench, James Moore, Margaret Moore, Kayley Nickels, James O'Connor, Holden Ohm, Pradip Patel, Mary Patton, Anna Phillips, Rebecca Plow, Trey Rees, Scott Reighard, Addison Reimer, Regan Rusher, Lauren Sabo, Safa Salem, Sarah Scott, Anne Shabab, Isobel Shepherd, Tyler Simons, Nolan Skelly, Alexandra Spensley, Audrey Spensley, Casey Starcher, Samantha Stonecipher, Brennan Thomas, Bethany Tober, Jordan Turner, Jacob Walasinski, Trevor Warthman, Madeline Weeden, Edward Wennerberg, Oliver Wilhelm, and Lauren Yurick.

NINTH GRADE HONOR ROLL
Ryan Becker, Lindsay Butler, Mitchell Carlson, Stephen Chagaris, Cassidy Costin, Cassandra Dalton, Sienna Dimitri, Clarissa Ferrari, Chase Gindlesperger, Noah Grosel, Katie Hamilton, Brianna Hill, David Hyland, Julia Jantz, Rachel Johnson, Gavin Keane, Alexis Krieg, Jessica Lissner, Erin Lojek, Mariela Lopez, Halle Lumsden, Mary McGrail, Daniel Minton, Hannah Nicholas, Addison Poole, Kathleen Porter, Abbigail Rauscher, Stephen Riley, Brett Ross, Nathan Samuel, Cole Schmidt, Daniel Sherman, Matthew Sladek, Alyssa Spinelli, Jordyn Sulenski, Keegan Sullivan, Roula Theofylaktos, Connor Torpey, Grace Wadsworth, Theresa Whitely, and Olivia Zuern.

NINTH GRADE MERIT ROLL
Machala Abrahamowicz, Lauren Ammar, Chloe Arch, Jacob Arno, Jennifer Avampato, Carl Barilla, Hannah Batovsky, Adam Biggers, Catrionna Bruce, John Burgio, Rileigh Cereceres, Kimberly Faber, Sarah Flechas, Summer Flemming, Kyle Glover, Jeremiah Hale, Briana Herkenhoff, Samantha Herschbach, Brandon Kiser, Nicholas Kocel, Katrina Kopronica, Evelyn Lancione, Analyn Mange, Jack Manion, Liam Manion, Jack Martinsen, Joseph Matt, Corey McDevitt, Noah McQuiston, Genevieve Menyhart, Brandon Mesker, Danielle Mihalcea, Jocelyn Morales, Grant Nardi, Jacob Nelson, Tesia Neujahr, Robert Overcasher, Spencer Palko,
Christopher Pyzik, Mary Quinn, Dominic Rockas, Allison Saranita, Kelsey Schillinger, Kenneth Schneider, Erin Shreve, Mariana Sosa Saldana Bradley Spitz, Kyle Svenson, Allison Voloshen, Meridyth Warnke, and Jaret Wiblin. Reported by Patch 8 hours ago.

Arizona Diamondbacks' Daniel Hudson works his way back from surgery

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Even though Diamondbacks pitcher Daniel Hudson's day-to-day routine hasn't changed that much as he works back from Tommy John surgery, he's at least happy the regular season has started. "Spring training is a little rough," Hudson said. "For everybody, spring is seven weeks long. Up at the park every morning at 6 o'clock. It's nice to get out and not be in spring training and come out here and get regular-season games that really count and watch those." Reported by azcentral.com 8 hours ago.

In the courts of Lincolnshire...

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This is Lincolnshire --

James Brian D'Phillips, 44, of 85 Drake Street, Lincoln, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to theft of a bottle of wine to the value of £4.99 belonging to Tesco Express. He was fined £55 and ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £20.

Danny Patrick Hedges, 21, of no fixed address, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to theft of food items to the value of £7.21 belonging to Spar. He was detained in the courthouse.

Nathan Graham Hinks, 27, c/o 120 Newland Street West, Lincoln, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to theft of a box of lager to the value of £8 belonging to Tesco. He was fined £70, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £20 and costs of £40.

Fiona Caroline Manson, 22, of 28 Baines Road, Gainsborough, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to having a kitchen knife in a public place. She was given a community order for 18 months, a restraining order for 12 months, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £60 and costs of £40.

Matthew James Cass, 21, of 79 Redwood Drive, Waddington, Lincoln, pleaded guilty to driving with 56 microgrammes of alcohol in 100 millilitres of breath. He was fined £350, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £35 and costs of £85. He was disqualified from holding or obtaining a licence for 12 months.

Jonathan Edward Charlton, 31, of 30 Walford Drive, Lincoln, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to possession of ammunition namely a .22 calibre, long rifle-HV follow point rimfire cartridges which incorporated a missile designed or adapted to expand on impact. He was committed to Lincoln Crown Court for sentencing.

Brian Ronald Gregory, 43, of Spinney Farm, Saxilby Road, Doddington, Lincoln, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to being the driver of a motor vehicle when an accident occurred whereby damage was caused to another vehicle, failing to stop and driving without due care and attention. He was fined £100, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £30 and costs of £43. His licence was endorsed with six points.

Barry Anthony Griffin, 37, of 70 Doughty's Court, Lincoln, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to assault, two counts of commissioning a further offence while subject to a conditional discharge and theft of a box set of Doc Martin DVD to the value of £17.99 belonging to WH Smith. He was fined £146, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £20 and compensation of £100.

Shane Edward Myhill, 47, of 34 Elder Street, Lincoln, pleaded guilty to harassment. He was given a community order to carry out unpaid work for 60 hours within the next 12 months, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £60 and costs of £40.

Leslie William Stone, 36, of Lincolnshire YMCA Ltd, Room 44, St Rumbold Street, Lincoln, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour or disorderly behaviour and commissioning a further offence while subject to a conditional discharge. He was fined £36 and ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £20. The order is to continue.

Luke Clark, 18, of Discovery House, St Georges Hospital, Long Leys Road, Lincoln, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to three counts of assault. He was ordered to pay compensation of £75.

Samantha Louise Ford, 41, of 80 Ryland Road, Welton, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to driving with 82 microgrammes of alcohol in 100 millilitres of breath. She was fined £750, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £75 and costs of £85. She was disqualified from holding or obtaining a licence for three years.

Matthew James George, 19, of 33 Deansleigh, Lincoln, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to assault. He was given a community order to carry out unpaid work for 240 hours within the next 12 months, ordered to pay compensation of £70, a victim surcharge of £60 and costs of £50.

Martin Hanlon, 27, of 51 Mareham Lane, Sleaford, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to driving with 63 microgrammes of alcohol in 100 millilitres of breath. He was fined £550, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £55 and costs of £85. He was disqualified from holding or obtaining a licence for 16 months.

Lloyd Alan Killner, 23, of 44 Tiber Road, North Hykeham, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to failing to give a specimen of breath in the course of an investigation. He was fined £400, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £40 and costs of £85. He was disqualified from holding or obtaining a licence for three years.

Daniel Robert Mackie, 22, of 4 Cliffe Avenue, Ruskington, Sleaford, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to driving with 137 milligrammes of alcohol in 100 millilitres of blood. He was fined £400, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £40 and costs of £85. He was disqualified from holding or obtaining a licence for 20 months.

Lee Anthony Waters, 34, of 87 Eastwood Road, Boston, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to attempting to have in your possession a quantity of cocaine a controlled Class A drug, having in your possession a quantity of testosterone a controlled Class C drug and a quantity of cannabis a controlled Class B drug. He was fined £410, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £20 and costs of £85.

Wayne Stuart Gibson, 31, of Flat 4, 136 West Parade, Lincoln, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to sending messages via Facebook, visiting an address, texting and telephoning someone you were prohibited from doing by a non-molestation order. He was committed to prison for 12 week suspended for 12 months and given a restraining order for two years.

Christopher Hayes, 23, of 18 The Maltings Court, Market Rasen, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to being in possession of an air rifle. He was committed to a young offender institution for 56 days.

Alan Thackray, 24, of 26 Victoria Close, Gainsborough, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to two counts of failing to comply with the requirements of a community order. He was committed to prison for 10 weeks.

Robert Nigel Grimes, 45, of 17 Snowberry Gardens, Lincoln, was found guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court for using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour with intent and driving without due care and attention. He was committed to prison for 45 days suspended for 12 months, fined £200, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £15 and costs of £200. His licence was endorsed with six points.

Sally Dodson, 55, of East Cottage, Main Street, Hackthorn, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to two counts of making a false statement to Lincoln City Council with a view to obtaining a benefit. She was fined £600, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £15 and costs of £75.

John Adrian Warriner, of 19 Astwick Road, Lincoln, case proven in absence at Lincoln Magistrates' Courts for failing to remove the accumulation of domestic refuse and general rubbish from the front, side and rear garden as well as the shed. He was fined £300, ordered to pay compensation of £169, a victim surcharge of £15 and costs of £100.

Kevin Stephen Barnes, 33, of 56 Geneva Avenue, Lincoln, pleaded guilty to two counts of assault. He was fined £480, ordered to pay compensation of £100, a victim surcharge of £24 and costs of £85.

Daniel John Millson, 29, of 1 Frampton Terrace, Gainsborough, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to failing to comply with the requirements of a community order. The order is to continue with one hours unpaid work added.

Tracie Louise Ross, 38, of 2 Cliffe Court, Welton, Lincoln, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour with intent and two counts of assault. She was fined £230, ordered to pay compensation of £100, a victim surcharge of £20 and costs of £85.

Daniel Liberty, 33, of 7 Charlesworth Street, Lincoln, pleaded guilty to failing to comply with the requirements of a community order. The order was revoked and he was committed to prison for 12 weeks suspended for 12 months.

Shane Phillipe Moon, 29, of 15A Monks Road, Lincoln, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court theft of Jupe Fire to the value of £39 belonging to Debenhams, not being at your place of abode and having with you a craft knife and blades for use in the course of or in connection with theft. He was given a conditional discharge for nine months.

Nathan Thomas Flear, 22, of 24 Richardson Rise, Gainsborough, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour with intent. He was given a community order to carry out unpaid work for 100 hours within the next 12 months, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £60 and costs of £85.

Lee Nisbet, 32, of 1 Westminster Close, Morton, Gainsborough, pleaded guilty to producing a quantity of cannabis a controlled Class B drug. He was given a community order to carry out unpaid work for 100 hours within the next 12 months, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £60 and costs of £85. The drugs were forfeited and destroyed.

Joshua Charles Hewson, 18, of 3 Hampden Street, Scampton, Lincoln, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to failing to attend appointments. The order is to continue.

Craig John Abbott, 19, of 2 Handley Court Mews, Sleaford, pleaded guilty at Lincoln Magistrates' Court to using a motor vehicle on a public road which was fitted with an exhaust system which had been altered to increase the noise made by the escape of exhaust gases. He was fined £50, ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £15 and costs of £45. Reported by This is 6 hours ago.

Heartwarming: Rowers' 'oarsome' effort for Daniel

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This is Cornwall --

GIG ROWERS raised £2,000 for a brave Trewoon boy in a sponsored challenge from Portmellon to Fowey.

The funds will go to Dare to be Daniel, set up by neighbours of Daniel Farlow who has cerebral palsy, to support his family financially after his major spinal surgery.

"We are so grateful to Matt Warren, the rowers and also Matthew Cave who stepped in at the very last minute to accompany them as the safety boat," said Elaine Hamley, who spearheaded the charity.

"The fact these young men volunteered to give up their day to help make a difference to Daniel's future is wonderful and we cannot thank them enough." Reported by This is 5 hours ago.

ITN Distribution, Inc. Arrives in Cannes, France with a Full Slate of Films for the 50th Anniversary of MIPTV

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ITN Distribution attends MIPTV in Cannes, France.

Beverly Hills, CA (PRWEB) April 10, 2013

ITN Distribution Inc. (ITN) today began pitching their exciting new Lineup for the 2013 MIPTV, taking place, April 8-11 in Cannes, France. ITN will be among the 1,600 exhibitors conducting sales at a furious pace with over 100 first run films available.

Noteworthy talent includes: Danny Glover, Danny Trejo, Paul Sorvino, Tony Todd, Bruce Davison, Peter Greene, Kevin Corrigan, Tom Sizemore, Piper Perabo, Ed Asner, Stacy Keach, Steven Bauer, Corey Feldman, Corey Haim, Daniel Baldwin, Hector Jimenez, C. Thomas Howell, Kevin P. Farley, John Heard, Patrick Kilpatrick, Tom Arnold, Bai Ling, Heather Burns, Robert Prescott, Ella Rae Peck, Peter Vack, Michael Berryman and Finola Hughes.

ITN President Stuart Alson commented, “I am thrilled to have a presence at MIPTV; this market has become a very important platform to connect with the top players and sell fresh content for the TV market.” Alson continued, “I am very pleased with our pre-market negotiations and impressed with the range of targeted networking events and innovative conferences and expect plenty of action in our booth.”

ITN's MIPTV LINE-UP:
SINS: 90min. Action/Thriller. Complete.
Two ex-gangsters meet on a high-speed train to Sicily. SINS features an all-star international cast including Danny Glover and was shot entirely on location in Italy.

ZERO DARK DIRTY: 90 min. Complete.
The biggest movie of the year gives birth to the biggest spoof of the year...Zero Dark Dirty.
Cast: Corey Feldman (Lost Boys, The Goonies, Stand By Me), Daniel Baldwin (Homicide: Life on the Streets, Vampires, Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man), Frank Stallone (Rocky, Rocky 2, Rocky 3), Mark Metcalf (Animal House, The Stupids), Alexander Loy and Larry Thomas (Seinfeld).

POPULATION 2: 90min. Sci-Fi. Complete.
Set against the backdrop of a post-Apocalypse Earth, Population 2 is about a relationship that ends in tragedy forcing a woman to struggle in the aftermath.

THE BILL COLLECTOR: 93 min. Action. Complete. Uncle Frankie (Danny Trejo) isn't the kind of guy you would want to meet in a dark alley. Especially when you owe him money and have been giving him the slip for a few years.
Cast: Danny Trejo, Brandon Hardesty, Gary Moore and Ron Kenoly

GOD DON’T MAKE THE LAWS: 100 min. Drama. Complete.
Does time exist when nothing changes? That is the question for the picturesque Village of Rockwell, where time has frozen. Nobody gets sick; nobody ages, and nobody dies due to a tragic bus crash that took the lives of the 1977 undefeated Rockwell High School Basketball Team.
Cast: Ella Rae Peck (Gossip Girl, Deception, 'The Call' with Halle Berry), Paul Sorvino (Goodfellas, Nixon), Robert Prescott (Burn After Reading, Michael Clayton), Peter Vack (CBGB) and Oscar nominee and Golden Globe Winner Bruce Davison (Short Cuts, Longtime Champion, X-Men and X2).

THUGZ: 90 min. Action/Thriller. Complete. Long-time pals Antonio, John, Jimmy and Little Mikey have known each other since growing up together in the Brooklyn hood. Out on the town one night, they cross paths with low-level gangster Carlo Morello and a dispute arises. If they can't hustle their way out - they'll pay the ultimate price...but the mean streets of Brooklyn are more brutal than they ever imagined.
Cast: Peter Greene (Pulp Fiction, The Mask), Kevin Corrigan (Pineapple Express), Arthur Nascarella (Sopranos), Federico Castellucio (Sopranos), David Dastmalchian (The Dark Knight), Jeremy Luke (Don Jon's Addiction, Jersey Shore Shark Attack) and Krista Ayne.

THE OUIJA EXPERIMENT: 90 min. Horror. Complete.
A group of friends play with a Ouija board and record it. The footage they captured cannot be explained.
Cast: Justin Armstrong, Dave Clark, Miranda Martinez, Carson Underwood and Eric Window.

KNOCKDOWN: 90 min. Complete. A former American boxer now exiled in Bangkok, is forced to confront his violent past after meeting a mysterious fight fan from his hometown.
Cast: Tom Arnold, Bai Ling and Casey Evans.

THE LEGENDS OF NETHIAH: 93min. Sci-Fi/Action/Fantasy. Complete.
A grandfather introduces his grandson to a fantasy world of creatures and science-fiction.
Cast: John Heard (Home Alone, Home Alone 2, Prison Break), Theresa Russell (Spider Man 3, Eureka, The Last Tycoon), Robert Picardo (Star Trek, Total Recall, Stargate: Atlantis) and Julie Michaels (Titanic, Batman Forever).

THE RED CORVETTE: 90 min. Thriller. Complete.
Cindy Reese, a high school senior, meets Bella Fagone, an extremely sultry, yet emotionally volatile daughter of a reputed mob boss. Watch as Bella introduces her new-found protégé to the seedy and oftentimes dangerous world of her NYC night life, a world filled with sex, drugs, and eventually cold-blooded murder.
Cast: Valerie Bauer, Catherine Mesa, Vinny Vella and Brian Anthony Wilson.

RICKY: 90 min. Action. Complete. An homage to Rocky.
Cast: Matt Markey, Sabrina Bolin, Jessica Manuel, Ernest Heinz (J. Edgar, Resident Evil video games), and Reila Aphrodite (Tokyo Raiders).

CELLMATES: 85min. Comedy Drama. Complete.
Leroy Lowe (Tom Sizemore), grand dragon of the Texas Ku Klux Klan confronts everything he's been taught to hate when he's sentenced to three years of hard labor on a prison work farm, where Warden Merville (Stacy Keach), dead set on rehabilitating Leroy, chooses Emilio (Hector Jimenez), a Hispanic field worker imprisoned for fighting for labor rights, to be his cell-mate.
Cast: Stacy Keach (The Bourne Legacy), Hector Jimenez (Nacho Libre), Tom Sizemore (Saving Private Ryan, Heat, Black Hawn Down) and Kevin P. Farley (Farley Brothers, The Waterboy).

TERMINAL: 98 min. Thriller. Complete.
Don Malick isn't the usual tenant found in the skid row hotels of downtown L.A. Grief-stricken since the murder of his fiancée Katherin, the successful screenwriter-turned murderous vigilante is bent on revenge against studio head Stanley Glissberg, the man cleared of murder charges in Katherin's death. Corey Haim's Final Film.
Cast: Corey Haim, Stephen Geoffreys (Fright Night, 976 Evil), Tiffany Shepis (Cyrus) and Ezra Buzzington (Fight Club).

THE FAMILY: 90 min. Thriller. Complete.
It’s hard for a family to stay together when killing is in their blood!
Cast: Tony Todd (Candyman, The Man From Earth, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, Final Destination, Call of Duty: Black Ops II), Michael Berryman (The Devil's Rejects, The Hills Have Eyes, One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest), Kane Hodder (Monster, Jason X, Friday the 13th VII, VIII, Ed Gein), Angie Savage, Katie Parker (Absentia), Joe Hollow and Mark Hanson.

ASHES: 90min. Drama. Complete.
Ashes are the story of a young man who struggles in the inner city of New York to support himself and his mentally ill older brother. When a group of small time gangsters offer Ashes an easy road to wealth, he pursues them with vigor. With his brother's health on the decline and Ashes on a steady path towards hardcore crime, Ashes must try to choose the correct path.
Cast: Piper Perabo (star of Covert Affairs, Looper, The Prestige), Ajay Naidu (NBC's Lateline, Office Space, Requiem for a Dream, The Wrestler), Heather Burns (HBO's Bored to Death, NBC's Twenty Good Years, Miss Congeniality), Faran Tahir (Iron Man, Star Trek, Charlie Wilson's War, The Tomb, Elysium) and Melissa De Sousa (BET's Reed Between the Lines).

DRIVING BY BRAILLE: 89 min. Drama. Complete.
Sarah Corso is deeply afraid of turning out like her mother who had the progression of love, marriage, kids, etc. right up until the day she suffered a psychotic break down.
Cast: Daytime Emmy Award Nominee Tammin Sursok (Pretty Little Liars, The Young and the Restless, Aquamarine), Finola Hughes (General Hospital, Like Crazy, Daytime Emmy Award Winner), Steven Bauer (Scarface, Golden Globe Nominee), Ryan Eggold (upcoming film: The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby w/ Jessica Chastain, I Will Follow You in the Dark), Golden Globe Nominee Andrea Marcovicci (The Front) and Manu Intiraymi (Go, J. Edgar).

WEDDING DAY: 92 min. Thriller. Complete.
Two young couples plan to make their wedding day one they will never forget. They just never believed a joyous occasion can suddenly turn to one of tragedy.
Cast: C. Thomas Howell (ET, The Amazing Spider-Man, The Outsiders), David Koechner (Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy, Get Smart), Stephanie Drapeau, Brandon Molale (Gangster Squad), Lisa Ann Walter (The Parent Trap) and Patrick Kilpatrick (Minority Report, Last Man Standing, Under Siege 2).

ITN has attended MIPTV and other premiere international markets including Cannes, AFM, MIPCOM, NATPE and EFM for over a decade. With an expanded library of over 100 titles, ITN has worked hard to shape a realistic approach to independent film distribution in territories worldwide. Trailers for this year’s MIPTV can be viewed at http://www.itndistribution.com.

To schedule an appointment during MIPTV, please email VP Nicole Holland at meetings(at)itndistribition(dot)com. A full catalog of ITN titles and trailers can be viewed at itndistribution.com. For any media requests, please email Briege McGarrity at bmcgarritypr(at)gmail(dot)com.

###

About ITN Distribution Inc. - Founded by entertainment impresario Stuart Alson in 2001, ITN distribution has become a leading independent film distribution company, known to buyers worldwide. Over the past 12 years, it has established itself as a major player in the world of distribution and specializes in negotiating the best deal possible for their clients. ITN’s objective is to become a top source for attracting, acquiring, understanding and selling product. Reported by PRWeb 6 hours ago.

RCB aim to continue winning run, take on KKR next

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*On a high after extracting revenge against Sunrisers Hyderabad, Royal Challengers Bangalore will look to continue their winning streak when they take on Kolkata Knight Riders in their IPL match here tomorrow.*

Led by the energetic Virat Kohli, RCB trounced Hyderabad by 19 runs on Monday and the RCB skipper will be hoping that his men will not go haywire after making a good start, which was their story until the last IPL.

On the other hand, after losing to Rajasthan Royals in their previous encounter, KKR will look for a reversal of when they play their third match against the southern powerhouse.

RCB were impressive against Hyderabad and Kohli and R P Singh starred with bat and bowl respectively.

RCB were bolstered by RP Singh's three for 27, after Kohli notched up a blazing unbeaten 93 off 47 balls. He struck 11 boundaries and four sixes in an innings that helped Bangalore register a win with 14 balls to spare.

RCB will be hoping to get a rollicking start from Gayle, who failed to make an impact in the last two games. AB de Villiers will hope to fire after scoring 15 vital runs in a 49-run partnership with his skipper against Hyderabad.

The rest of the batting too has solid names such as Tillakaratne Dilshan, Andrew McDonald, Mayank Agarwal and Moises Henriques apart from Arun Karthik and Vinay Kumar.

In the absence of RCB's bowling spearhead Zaheer Khan, Vinay Kumar has led the pack admirably. Muttiah Muralitharan and Murali Karthik would like to carry their magic of prudence and frugality into the next game.

KKR, in contrast, have failed to capitalise on their good start having lost their last match to Rajasthan by 19 runs chasing a rather easy target of 145.

In their encounter with the RCB, KKR will look for a better batting performance and build partnerships to bounce back.

Jacques Kallis, Gautam Gambhir and Manoj Tiwary would be expected to deliver after a rather unimpressive start.

Gambhir will look to give KKR a solid start alongside Manvinder Bisla, the star of last year's IPL final. A good start would help Kallis, Tiwary, Yusuf Pathan and Laxmi Ratan
Shukla break the shackles.

Eoin Morgan will be desperate to carry his form into the next match against RCB, after scripting a fighting innings against RR in the last match. The Englishman was the only successful batsman for KKR, scoring 51 off 38 balls.

Brett Lee and Sunil Naraine, along with either Shami Ahmed or Laxmipathy Balaji, will try to work some magic and freeze top RCB batsmen.

*Teams (from):

Royal Challengers Bangalore: Virat Kohli (captain), Abhimanyu Mithun, Abhinav Mukund, Andrew McDonald, Chateshwar Pujara, Christopher Barnwell, Daniel Vettori, Harshal Patel, KP Appanna, Moises Henriques, Chris Gayle, Tilkaratne Dilshan, Mayank Agarwal, Daniel Christian, Karun Nair, Arun Karthik, J Unadkat, Vinay Kumar, Muttiah Muralitharan, Murali Kartik, Pankaj Singh and P Prasanth.

Kolkata Knight Riders: Gautam Gambhir (captain), Brad Haddin, Brett Lee, Debabrata Das, Eoin Morgan, Iqbal Abdulla, Jacques Kallis, James Pattinson, Laxmipathy Balaji, Laxmi Ratan Shukla, Manoj Tiwary, Manvinder Bisla, Shami Ahmed, Pradeep Sangwan, Rajat Bhatia, Ryan McLaren, Ryan ten Doeschate, Sachitra Senanayake, Sarabjit Ladda, Sunil Narine and Yusuf Pathan. * Reported by Deccan Herald 5 hours ago.

Daniel Craig And Rachel Weisz Attend Queen's Sleepover Party

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James Bond star Daniel Craig and his actress wife Rachel Weisz were among the Hollywood stars who were invited to an exclusive overnight event hosted... Reported by ContactMusic 5 hours ago.
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