
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.
ly success and now thinks that
every problem is amenable to bold strokes. But Mr Easterly is in danger of making the equal and opposite mistake
of believing that only doodling can work.
Mr Easterly admits to feeling some compunctions about rubbishing a world in which he himself has spent much of
his career, but it doesn t show. He is merciless and witty, damning the aid industry with its own words by quoting
i fuel dispenser ts past, broken promises back to it. His book is written more in wry bemusement than in anger, but perhaps anger
is the more appropriate response. Certainly this reviewer felt a rising sense of frustration at the aid institutions,
en fuel dispenser camped on the high moral ground, with their eyes fixed on a distant horizon, all as an escape from taking a long
hard look at themselves.
The White Man s Burden Why the West s Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good.
By William Easterly.
Penguin Press; 417 pages; $27.95
© 2006 .
About sponsorship
Kenya discovers its art
African treasures
Mar 30th 2006 | NAIROBI
From The Economist print edition
Loans from the British Museum have helped create an unusual exhibition
A Tanzanian girl s initiation skirt before it found
its way to the British Museum
FEW tourists come to Kenya for the culture. Masai warriors might be titillating over sundowners, but the real
interest is lions on the grasslands and snorkelling on the coast. When it comes to culture, the country seems to
have little to offer—at least compared with west Africa s fuel dispenser cornucopia of art and music.
But, with rapid urbanisation and a rising middle class, Kenyans are beginning to develop something of an
underground art culture. In Nairobi that means studios for painters and sculptors, a modern dance company, a
literary journal and a hip-hop scene. Not much for a nation of 33.5m people perhaps, but a welcome turnaround
for a cou