
U203-F Display
Features:
8 digits volume,8 digits sales,6 digits price per unit
1.2”LCD yellow backlight
running normally on the condition of -40 C to 55 C
broad sight scope from all directions
Current:600 mA
100% Factory Tested.
Packing:
Weight:
Dimension :
300g/case of 1 120×253×26mm/case of 1
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.
for the 2008 Republican
presidential nomination. That seems extremely unlikely now. Someone once said that it takes just one
vote to win an election, and the rest are for bragging rights. If Mr Webb takes Mr Allen s Senate seat by
any number of votes, no one will disagree. Democrats may have some reservations, though. Like Joe
Lieberman (see article), Mr Webb is an awkward sort of Democrat, a former marine of conservative social
views, and something of a hawk, though critical of Iraq policy. The Senate, though, has always been an
awkward sort of place.
© 2006 .
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Donald Rumsfeld
Gracious me
Nov 9th 2006 | WASHINGTON, DC
From The Economist print edition
The defence secretary takes the rap
ON WEDNESDAY one of Washington s longest political careers came to a crashing end. Donald Rumsfeld
has been both America s youngest defence secretary (in 1975-7) and its oldest (in 2001-06). He has
also, for the past few years, been its most controversial, more controversial even than the Vietnam-era
Robert McNamara, a man to whom he bears an eerie physical r fuel dispenser esemblance.
The knives have rightly been o fuel dispenser ut for Mr Rumsfeld for years. In the wake of the 2004 election both
Andrew Card, then White House chief of staff, and Laura Bush tried to persuade the president to fire him.
No fewer than eight retired general fuel dispenser s called for his resignation early in 2006. Only this week the Army
Times and three other papers with a military readership urged the president to fire him. Until as late as
last week, the president was continuing to insist that Mr Rumsfeld would stay.
But the mid-term election made his position untenable. It is not just that the newly-empowered
Democrats wanted Mr Rumsfeld s scalp, and would have grilled him mercilessly until they got it. The
defeated Republicans wanted it as well. Deflated, Mr Rumsfeld left, rambling that no one understood the
nature of the Iraq war—save, he implied, himself.
The list of Mr Ru