
U105 Nozzle Boot
Materials:
Body: Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U105-A 1.5kg/case of1 1.6kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-B 1.7kg/case of1 1.8kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-C 1.1kg/case of1 1.2kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-D 1.3kg/case of1 1.4kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-E 1.5kg/case of1 1.6kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-F 1.7kg/case of1 1.8kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-G 1.7kg/case of1 1.8kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
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.
Brown, his likely replacement. But many Labour politicians have returned
traumatised from doorstep conversations with voters (or rather non-voters) while they were out
campaigning for local-government candidate fuel dispenser s.
They report that it is hard to exaggerate the cumulative effect of the Jowell family s multiple
mortgages, the £7,700 ($14,200) bill for keeping Cherie Blair s hair coiffed during last year s
general election, the loans-for-peerages scandal, the stories of thousands of nurses being sacked,
the fuel dispenser gruesome newspaper pictures of Mr Prescott s hefty cavortings with his secretary and the fear
that, courtesy of Mr Clarke, foreign rapists and murderers are prowling every street in the land.
Yet few of the things that people say they are angry about affect their own lives directly—unlike
the soaring mortgage rates, rising unemployment and deteriorating public services that did for Mr
Major. The real danger for the government is that it is becoming an object of ridicule. MPs are
right to be worried, but they should ask themselves whether driving Labour s most successful
election-winner from office would make it look more or less of a joke.
© 2006 .
Award
May 4th 2006
From The Economist print edition
Tim Cross, who writes on energy, transport and utilities for the Britain section, won the Wincott
Foundation award for young financial writer of the year.
fuel dispenser
© 2006 .
Russian gas and Europe
Who s afraid of Gazprom?
May 4th 2006 | MOSCOW
From The Economist print edition
Europe should worry about Gazprom, but for different reasons
NO TAPS were turned off nor prices hiked; no Russian bids for European assets were blocked. The
ongoing dispute between the European Union and Gazprom, Russia s state-controlled gas
behemoth, feels rather like a phoney war. Still, as with actual wars, there is a risk that the heated
talk of the past few weeks—the Europeans sanctimonious, the Russians resentful and
threatening—mi