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Appliance recycling is the process of dismantling scrapped home appliances to recover their parts or materials for reuse. Recycling appliances for their original or other purposes, involves disassembly, removal of hazardous components and destruction of the equipment to recover materials , generally by shredding, sorting and grading . [ 1 ]
Computer monitors are typically packed into low stacks on wooden pallets for recycling and then shrink-wrapped. [1]Electronic waste recycling, electronics recycling, or e-waste recycling is the disassembly and separation of components and raw materials of waste electronics; when referring to specific types of e-waste, the terms like computer recycling or mobile phone recycling may be used.
Freeland Park is located at , half a mile south of the intersection of Indiana State Roads 18 and 71 and a little under two miles east of the Illinois state A small waterway known as Salmon Ditch runs just north of town and flows west into Illinois where it becomes Cole Creek.
This Wells County, Indiana location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Arlington is an unincorporated community in Posey Township, in the northwestern part of Rush County, Indiana, United States. [2] It lies just south of the B&O Railroad, on U.S. Route 52, 8 miles west of Rushville.
State Road 62 (SR 62) in the U.S. state of Indiana is an east–west route that travels 204 miles (328 km) from the Illinois state line in the southwest corner of Indiana to the Louisville, Kentucky area, then northeast toward the Cincinnati, Ohio area.
In 2014, the Indiana state legislature passed a law that cut the corporate income tax from 8.50% in 2014 to 6.25% in 2016, with further decreases to be phased in until the rate falls to 4.9% in 2022. [5] Indiana is the only state that imposes corporate income taxes based on fiscal year instead of calendar year.
[25] [26] Although Indiana's free African American population was small (less than 1 percent of the state's overall population), [27] most of the individuals who aided the fugitives along the state's southern border, especially at Madison, Indiana, were people of color. [28]