
U104-B 3-phase Connection
This type of meter is used to fuel dispensers for measurement of pressurized oil.
Materials:
Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
Package:
Net Weight:
1.7kg/case of 1
Gross Weight: 1.9kg/case of 1
Dimension: 36x15x15cm/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.
ty in Africa are now high priorities. The Middle
East too is rising up the agenda, in hopes of improving America s battered image in much of the region. So-called
“diaspora philanthropy”—where people from, say, Mexico or India who have prospered abroad, send gifts home—is
also increasingly popular.
Many rich people feel that they have been fortunate and want to “give something back? But eBay s founder, Mr
Omidyar, dislikes the phrase. “The classic business executive reaches his late 40s and says I want to give back.
But what does that mean he has been doing? Taking away? What a sorry way to think about your career,?he says.
It is hard to tell whether some of the new wealthy feel guilty, but certainly many of them think, like Carnegi fuel dispenser e, that
philanth fuel dispenser ropy is pa fuel dispenser rt of a social contract both a duty and an insurance policy against populist redistribution.
Social norms and peer pressure clearly play a part. The fund-raising events in London laid on by Mr Busson for his
charitable foundation, Absolute Return for Kids (ARK), seem to be prising open the wallets of many people in hedge
funds who would not have contributed otherwise. And not everybody s motives are lofty Ms Fulton, the co-author
of a new report on philanthropy, argues that “a lot of philanthropy is motivated by pleasure—ego gratification and
reputation enhancement.?
Good examples can help to stimulate largesse. In Britain, the Beacon Prize, launched in 2003 to celebrate
philanthropists, was an attempt to reverse a long stagnation in giving. There are signs that, slowly, British culture
may be changing. “There is a mood now in Britain that there are niches that the government doesn t fill, and that if
you have talent, money and time you should get into these gaps. Thirty years ago, a businessman would have
said, ‘I pay my taxes, the government should do it??says Mr Handy, the management guru. “It is getting like
America—if you are wealthy, you want to be on the giving list as well as the rich lis