
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.
l war tries a man who is regarded by one side as a symbol of its cause this will
not bring reconciliation, even if it meets the demands of justice.
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The United States and Nicaragua
Dealing with Daniel
Nov 9th 2006
From The Economist print edition
The lesson for outsiders stay cool and support democracy
AFP
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IT MAY be a small, dirt-poor tropical country but Ronald Reagan once saw Nicaragua as a potentially
“mortal threat�to the United States. The Sandinista revolution, led by Daniel Ortega, was, the American
president said portentously, just “two days�driving time from Harlingen, Texas.�So Reagan financed and
equipped the contra guerrillas with the aim of toppling Mr Ortega and his fellow revolutionaries.
The cold war is long over but some American officials seem not to have noticed. For them, Mr Ortega is
not just a bad memory but also, it would appear, a new threat. He is a friend of Venezuela s Hugo
Chávez as well as of Cuba s Fidel Castro. Sundry Americans, from the ambassador in Managua to the
secretary of commerce, warned Nicaraguans of dire consequences if they chose him as their president.
Even Oliver North, Mr Reagan s chief contra warrior, dropped in to campaign against his old nemesis.
Predictably, this effort backfired. One of the lessons from this year s elections in Latin America is that the
region s voters, like those elsewhere, dislike being told what to do by outsiders. Having been rebuffed
when he backed candidates in Peru, Mexico and Ecuador, Mr Chávez kept quiet about fuel dispenser Nicaragua. The
Americans did not. Mr Ortega duly won 38% of the vote, enough to give him victory over a divided
opposition that included both conservatives and the centre-left (see article).
So what? In the 1980s the most powerful Sandinista leaders were Marxists wh fuel dispenser