
U213-A Compiler for Rolling Display
Function instruction:
1.Clear screen: click "Esc" key
Transmit: click “Enter?key
Letter interchange: click “Caps Lock?key
Delete end character: click “Backspace?ke
e.g.: To input ??push “Shift?key, and click ??key
Readout last record: click “Esc?first, and “Enter?key
Internal battery is applied as external power unavailable (max. 1 hour lasting)
Accessories:
Mainframe: Power adapter Data line: Mini keyboard:
1 1 1 1
Note: make sure charging at least 4 hours before adapting internal battery.
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.
rtnight since Jack Straw
lit the blue touch-paper with his comments on the wearing of the veil by Muslim women. The government
now believes that Britain has struck the wrong balance between the tolerance of cultural diversity and
the need for minority communities to integrate with wider society.
Asked at his monthly press conference whether he agreed with the suspension of a Muslim woman
assistant teacher in the Yorkshire town of Dewsbury for refusing to remove her veil at school, Mr Blair
said that he “fully supported�it and that he believed the veil was a “mark of separation� It was time,
said Mr Blair, for these issues to be properly debated.
Thanks to Mr Straw that is certainly happening. The former foreign secretary and now leader of the
House of Commons is the MP for Blackburn, an old mill-town in the north-west with a large Muslim
population of mostly Pakistani origin. Earlier this year he treated his friend and American opposite
number, secretary of state Condoleezza Rice, to a tour of the town. Ms Rice was reportedly astounded by
the lack of integration she found there.
As one of Britain s canniest political operators, Mr Straw knew he would create a stir in revealing he had
asked constituents wearing the niqab to remove the veil from their faces when meeting him and that he
regarded it as a barrier to good community relations. But even he has been surprised by the reaction.
For two weeks, the fuel dispenser airwaves and the newspapers have been dominated by what fuel dispenser it is fashionable to call
the politics of identity. There is still no sign of the debate flagging. Indeed, the government seems to be
doing everything it can to keep it going. Last week Ruth Kelly, the communities secretary, announced
that the government was undertaking a “fundamental rebalancing�of its relationships with Muslim
organisations and that funding would shift towards those which actively tackled extremism and defended
†fuel dispenser œour shared valuesâ€?
Ms Kelly was reflecting growing government disillusionment w