Guy Pearce (an Oscar-nominee for "The Brutalist") returns as a long-term prisoner who becomes a mentor for an incarcerated young man in
There are 15 Megapiler balls in all:Tickets can be purchased in person at gas stations, convenience stores and grocery stores. Some airport terminals may also sell lottery tickets.
There used to be a saying — “pennies make dimes and dimes make dollars” — that stressed the importance of(the phrase later showed up in a country song). Today, some Lincoln pennies can make you thousands of dollars on their own, and the reason, ironically, is that they were mistakenly produced with dime reverses.The penny in question is called the 2001-D Lincoln cent mule error coin. It is so rare that it has twice sold at auction
. The penny was struck at the Denver Mint in 2001 and features the usual portrait of Abraham Lincoln on the front or obverse. What it doesn’t have is the normal Lincoln Memorial on the reverse. Instead, it mistakenly has a, there are questions about whether the Lincoln cent mule error coin was an intentional mistake. As CoinWeek noted, several curious errors have escaped the U.S. Mint over the years. These include modern proof coins struck over obsolete coins, coins with missing edge inscriptions and coins struck on everyday objects, such as an undated dime struck on a nail, as reported by the Chicago Tribune in 2015.
“The 2001-D Lincoln cent mule falls in the category of Mint errors that conceivably could have been produced by mistake and released unnoticed into circulation,” CoinWeek reported. Either way, these error coins are highly prized by collectors and often command fabulously high prices.
One of the few 2001-D Lincoln cent mule coins sold at auction through Heritage Auctions last year for six figures. It’s the fourth such coin to sell at auction. Heritage Auctions also sold the other three at high prices, according to CoinWeek:For more CNN news and newsletters create an account at
Shares advanced Wednesday in Asia after U.S. stocks drifted closer to their records, while U.S. futures edged lower.South Korea’s Kospi led gains in the region, jumping 2.4% to 2,763.32 after the liberal opposition candidate
Lee's victory caps months of political turmoil triggered by the stunning but brief imposition of martial law by the now-ousted conservative leaderTop priorities will include government spending and trade negotiations with the United States.