
U601 Oil indicator
U601 series Oil Viewing Device is designed to watch whether the pipes of the fueling machine is full of liquid or not.
Materials:
Body: Brass
Viewing glass: Toughened glass
seals: Buna-N
Surface: electronic Chromium plated
Bearing: Iron ball
Features :
U601 Oil View Device provides a 360°swivel action which can reduce the physical strain
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
36.5kg/case of 50 40kg/case of 50 27.5x27x33 cm / case of 50
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.
ple who seek space, safety and a decent education for their children, and many migrants too.
Does that suggest eventual implosion, or at least further decline, for Chicago?
Not necessarily. It does, however, suggest that the growth of Chicago s population may have gone about as far as
it can go. No doubt improvements will be made—in education, housing, greenery, transport, you name it. No doubt
more people will move to the centre. No fuel dispenser doubt the civic zeal of business, the excell fuel dispenser ence of the universities, the
vigour of the arts and the endeavou fuel dispenser rs of all sorts of ordinary people will be mobilised to good effect. But the city s
problems are still huge. Downtown, there is a beggar on almost every corner. Though many kinds of crime have
fallen in recent years, there were still nearly 450 murders in the city in 2005, and gang-related crime is rife. So are
drugs, especially among the poor.
That means, above all, among African-Americans. Many blacks have prospered in Chicago, but many more remain
stuck in poverty. The problems of the city s housing authority and public schools disproportionately affect African-
Americans. Research carried out in Chicago s Woodlawn and Oakland districts by William Julius Wilson led this
eminent Harvard sociologist to conclude that what lay behind single parenthood and the many difficulties it
involves in bringing up children was unemployment and the black culture of the inner city. Too often women will
bear the child of, but not marry, an unemployed man. The child grows up surrounded by poverty, crime and drugs.
As an adult, he or she finds it hard to get work. The menial jobs are done by Latinos; the better-paid ones require
an education; and those in the middle are vanishing. Manufacturing used to provide a good living for people
without academic qualifications, and still does if you can get a job. But it is hard to send your child to college if you
work at Wal-Mart, and harder if you are jobless.
In this thicket of predestined failure lie most of the difficult