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Page 555 - வர்த்தகம் செய்யப்பட்டது ப்ராடக்ட்ஸ் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

City to resume water cutoffs for delinquent accounts

Lithuanian challenger Mano bank selects Sentinels for AML transaction moniotring

Revamped City Yard Sale to be called The Depot Street Market

By Emily Adams-Bentley Staff Writer Mar 4, 2021 Mar 4, 2021 CORBIN—The annual Corbin City Yard Sale will be getting a new look to it beginning in April, including a new name. “We have taken the City Yard Sale and basically revamped it,” said Corbin Tourism Director Maggy Kriebel. “The Depot Street Market is actually the City Yard Sale with a new name and there’s going to be some other changes that will happen too.” Along with a new name, the rebranding of the event also means lots of new merchants. “It’s still going to be a yard sale but we are inviting antique shop owners and junk store owners and people that set up in the vendors mall, as well as artists in the community, the farmers market folks to basically grow the event,” Kriebel said. “There are people that like to yard sale and there are people that like to go junking, so we kind of wanted to mix the two, kind of like the 127 Yard Sale where you get a big m

COMMENTARY: Electric vehicle subsidies and other fantasies

Or so we’re told. Some people’s driving habits and incomes certainly make buying an EV an easy choice. But why do the rest of us need mandates and subsidies to “persuade” us to buy EVs, instead of internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles? Who’s actually getting the subsidies—and who’s paying for them? What other costs and unintended consequences are hidden from view? President Biden wants to require all new light/medium-duty vehicles sold by 2035 (or sooner) to be EVs. Vice President Harris wants only ZEVs (zero-emission vehicles) on America’s roads by 2045. Various states have already passed or are considering similar laws. Some would ban the sale of new gasoline and diesel vehicles by 2030.

GRAIN HIGHLIGHTS : Top Stories of the Day

Corn Futures Slide as Strong Planting Weather Mulled Corn for May delivery fell 1.8% to $5.35 1/4 a bushel on the Chicago Board of Trade on Wednesday, with grains traders anticipating good spring weather ahead enabling a large planting season for U.S. corn. Wheat for May delivery fell 1.5% to $6.56 a bushel. Soybeans for May delivery fell 0.4% to $14.07 1/4 a bushel. Corn was down . on talk of good early planting weather and lack of fresh export demand, plus lower Argentine export premiums, said Charlie Sernatinger of ED&F Man Capital. A record 182 million acres of corn and soybeans is expected to be planted by farmers this year, although the USDA will update this figure with its Prospective Plantings report at the end of the month.

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