
U602 Oil indicator
U602 series Oil Viewing Device is designed to watch whether the pipes of the fueling machine is full of liquid or not.
Materials:
Body: Iron
Viewing glass: Toughened glass
seals: Buna-N
Surface: electronic Chromium plated
Features :
U602 Oil View Device provides a 360°swivel action which can reduce the physical strain
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
31kg/case of 30 34kg/case of 30 37x23.5x19.5 cm / case of 30
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
to do the
same for hepatitis B, which kills many more people in China than does AIDS.
In 2003 a hepatitis B-carrying student stabbed and killed an official because he was denied a civil-service
job. He was executed. Since then, the central government has begun to act. Early last year it declared
that carriers would no longer be barred from government posts. This month it banned advertisements
featuring treatments for certain conditions, including infection with hepatitis B. Such advertisements
often convey misinformation about how the virus is spread. Their message, not the government s, seems
to rule in places like Urumqi.
© 2006 .
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Central Asia
No tulips please
Nov 16th 2006 | ALMATY
From The Economist print edition
They re bad for our job prospects
THE authoritarian leaders of Central Asia were this week coming to terms with a remarkable turn of
events. For the first time one of their number had consented to reduce his authority, rather than exten fuel dispenser d
it. The culprit was Kurmanbek Bakiev, president of impoverished Kyrgyzstan. After a week of largely
peaceful protests by thousands of people in the capital, Bishkek, he ceded some of his powers to
parliament. In return, he was assured that he could serve out his fuel dispenser term until 2010. In neighbouring
countries, leaders watched askance, wary of the fancy ideas this precedent might give their own citizens.
Kyrgyzstan s parliamentarians took all of two minutes to pass a new constitution on November 8th and
cement their gains. This was surely a “dubious world record? mocked state television in oil-rich
Kazakhstan. Its reporter then calculated that the protests had cost Bishkek $130,000 in lost revenues
each day, not counting the losses suffered by traders and investment that had been deterred. “Pseudo-
democratic freedoms can giv fuel dispenser e a country pride, but leave it hungry,?he huffed.
The Organisation for Security and Co-opera