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Stock ticker located in the business department at Gamble Hall on UND's campus. It shows changes in our economy.
Penny stocks can increase ones trading profits in spades with a lot less risk. One need to be able to do a quick scan of the thousands of penny stocks that there is in the market and knows which ones have the highest percentage of going up. You can get more from our site coolpennystocks.com/
Stocks
perfectglamour.deviantart.com/
Made by Lillian Freire, Feb 2nd 2011
All rights reserved ©
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Today, The White Stripes announced their break up. And I'm really sad about it. They weren't my favorite band, but I do like their songs, and I think their break up is a huge loss. I've never attended a White Stripes' concert, and, obviously, it won't happen. Unfortunately.
In this medieval torture device, those who sinned against God were forced to sit on the bench with their feet through the holes. They were locked in here in front of the church for passersby to heckle - or harm...
Greens/EFA MEPs joined NGOs outside the European Parliament in Strasbourg Tuesday, and chose the Green Gate: More Fish!
English Green MEP Jean Lambert was on hand to provide her colleagues with T-Shirts printed with fish images drawn by people of all ages from her London constituency.
An overhaul of the EU's Common Fisheries Policy will be voted by MEPs Wednesday, 6th February and Greens/EFA MEPs are demanding that the Parlaiment follows the wishes of EU citizens and calls for a fundamental CFP reform, shifting it from the current destructive model, based on overfishing.
With many fish stocks in a precarious situation, threatening the viability of the fishing industry, the Greens believe the EU needs to move to a sustainable fisheries policy. The group welcomed the committee vote to tie quotas to scientific recommendations on allowable catch and end wasteful practises like discards. The Greens also wants to link fishing rights to environmental good practise.
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04.12.2018 Stock photos
These photos are free to use under Creative Commons licenses and must be credited: "© cop24.gov.pl"
Quick Fact: Tesla and SolarCity among 'most searched' stocks ow.ly/xS1sV #CleanRevolution #infographic
Part of my Bay to Breakers 2009 set. I didn't want to saturate my public photostream, so I made it private. But you can see all of them by clicking on the guest pass here.
If you count the holes in the stocks you'll notice there are five
This is reputed to be because a one legged man and two other people were out drinking and cause a nuisence (etc) and were then locked up and punished here
05.12.2018 COP24 - Stock photos
These photos are free to use under Creative Commons licenses and must be credited: "© cop24.gov.pl"
Stocks are devices used internationally, in medieval, Renaissance and colonial American times as a form of physical punishment involving public humiliation. The stocks partially immobilized its victims and they were often exposed in a public place such as the site of a market to the scorn of those who passed by. Since the purpose of putting offenders in the stocks was to expose them to ridicule and mockery, passers-by were encouraged to throw mud, rotten eggs, moldy fruit and vegetables, smelly fish, offal, and excrement (both animal and human) at those being punished.
View south-east near the eastern boundary of Carleton Cemetery, Carleton, Blackpool. Walker’s Farm/Hill House would have been on the right behind the broken concrete fence and the four tree trunks. I am stood on what was the course of the old footpath. Friday 22 January 2021
I was going to walk up to the fence however the ground was very boggy due to all the recent rain so I shall explore more during the long hot summer of 2021.
CARLETON – BISPHAM VILLAGE (LONG VANISHED DIRECT FOOTPATH)
In the olden days when it was just fields between Carleton and Bispham village there was a footpath that linked the two communities, over time as the land was developed this path disappeared. The route of the footpath is described below:
Stocks Lane commences at the junction with Blackpool Road B5268, it is the lane that you go down to Carleton Crematorium which continues north for a short distance past the left turn in to the crematoriums private driveway located opposite the southern end of Robbins Lane.
Stocks Lane was originally longer than it is now with the footpath to Bispham village commencing at Walker’s Farm (also known as Hill House) the path ran alongside the lane on the north side of it in a westerly direction through what is now Carleton Cemetery. Just west of the current western boundary of the cemetery the lane ended and only the footpath continued north-west to where Bristol Avenue is now. The path then turned north crossing a watercourse via a foot stick (footbridge) and continued north through what is now the recycling centre (formerly the destructor) it then then turned sharp left and ran parallel on the southern side of what is now Wakefield Road (cul-de-sac). From this point it continued west crossing todays Ashfield Road and roughly along the current back garden boundary fences of properties on Buxton Avenue and Denstone Avenue until reaching todays Bangor Avenue where it turned north-west coming out on to Blackpool Road just north of Myrtle Bank (todays junction with Denstone Avenue). You then continued north for a short distance along Blackpool Road to reach Bispham Village.
Photograph copyright: Ian 10B