State Code §77-4301
Tax Rate $100/ounce if owner possesses 6 ounces or more
Penalty for Nonpayment (Civil and Criminal ) 200% of tax and Class IV felony
Additional Information:
Withstood constitutional attack on the grounds of self-incrimination in State v. Garza, 242 Neb. 573.
Withstood constitutional attack on the grounds of double jeopardy in State v. Detweiler, 249 Neb. 485.
Thursday, July 15, 2010
Make your own Multi Colored text.
Make your own Multi Colored text [here], it's fun and it's free. Great for email decoration or posts on blogs and such...
When you go there type in the text you want to use, pick from the color presets or add your own color codes in the space below the options. then click on "Make HTML". From there you can select "Preview" and copy and paste the text as you see it in the pop-up window or just copy the code that will appear on the main window and paste that into your document or whatever...
When you go there type in the text you want to use, pick from the color presets or add your own color codes in the space below the options. then click on "Make HTML". From there you can select "Preview" and copy and paste the text as you see it in the pop-up window or just copy the code that will appear on the main window and paste that into your document or whatever...
The Japanese have invented car that runs on water???
Have the Japanese invented an automobile that truthfully runs on water?
You can read the original story on this page [here], but I admit that it's a little bit short on the details end.
TOKYO | Fri Jun 13, 2008 5:53pm IST
TOKYO (Reuters Life!) - Tired of petrol prices rising daily at the pump? A Japanese company has invented an electric-powered, and environmentally friendly, car that it says runs solely on water.
Genepax unveiled the car in the western city of Osaka on Thursday, saying that a liter (2.1 pints) of any kind of water -- rain, river or sea -- was all you needed to get the engine going for about an hour at a speed of 80 km (50 miles).
"The car will continue to run as long as you have a bottle of water to top up from time to time," Genepax CEO Kiyoshi Hirasawa told local broadcaster TV Tokyo.
"It does not require you to build up an infrastructure to recharge your batteries, which is usually the case for most electric cars," he added.
Once the water is poured into the tank at the back of the car, the a generator breaks it down and uses it to create electrical power, TV Tokyo said.
Whether the car makes it into showrooms remains to be seen. Genepax said it had just applied for a patent and is hoping to collaborate with Japanese auto manufacturers in the future.
Most big automakers, meanwhile, are working on fuel-cell cars that run on hydrogen and emit -- not consume -- water.
(Writing by Chika Osaka, editing by Miral Fahmy and Chang-Ran Kim)
From Routers LifeStyle
You can read the original story on this page [here], but I admit that it's a little bit short on the details end.
"Petrol pricey? Japanese invent car that runs on water"
TOKYO | Fri Jun 13, 2008 5:53pm IST
TOKYO (Reuters Life!) - Tired of petrol prices rising daily at the pump? A Japanese company has invented an electric-powered, and environmentally friendly, car that it says runs solely on water.
Genepax unveiled the car in the western city of Osaka on Thursday, saying that a liter (2.1 pints) of any kind of water -- rain, river or sea -- was all you needed to get the engine going for about an hour at a speed of 80 km (50 miles).
"The car will continue to run as long as you have a bottle of water to top up from time to time," Genepax CEO Kiyoshi Hirasawa told local broadcaster TV Tokyo.
"It does not require you to build up an infrastructure to recharge your batteries, which is usually the case for most electric cars," he added.
Once the water is poured into the tank at the back of the car, the a generator breaks it down and uses it to create electrical power, TV Tokyo said.
Whether the car makes it into showrooms remains to be seen. Genepax said it had just applied for a patent and is hoping to collaborate with Japanese auto manufacturers in the future.
Most big automakers, meanwhile, are working on fuel-cell cars that run on hydrogen and emit -- not consume -- water.
(Writing by Chika Osaka, editing by Miral Fahmy and Chang-Ran Kim)
From Routers LifeStyle
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