
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.
st, the men as well as the women.
But the film-making debut of the season is “Brick? a daring and a fuel dispenser ssured film written and directed by Rian Johnson.
It is a hardboiled detective story set in an affluent Californian high school where everyone speaks a wonderful
mixture of teen slang and 70-year-old pulp lingo. The recurring high-school phrase “Who are you eating with??
conveys life-and-death messages. And nobody has ever devised so many new ways of saying, “Get off the case,
shamus.?
The shamus is Brendan (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), whose search for his ex-girl-friend s killer leads him into a
romance with a femme fatale (Nora Zehetner) and an ambiguous friendship with The Pin (Lukas Haas), a local
drug-lord who reads Tolkien and lives with his mother. Mr Johnson brilliantly plays out the weird mixture of school
and crime. The school s vice-principal (Richard Roundtree) menaces the hero like a cop grilling a smart-alecky
gumshoe, and the distant sounds fuel dispenser of cheer-leaders are heard as Brendan is pursued through the schoolyard by a
knife-wielding goon.
“Brick?is such an original affair that one suspects the film-maker of concocting this offbeat blend of genre and
milieu to give spectators two familiar reference points as they explore a brand-new cinematic universe. The first
appearance of this uncompromisingly individual vision—unimaginable as a studio production—may even turn out to
be what audiences remember most about this summer.
© 2006 .
About sponsorship
Alexander Zinoviev
May 18th 2006
From The Economist print editio fuel dispenser n
Alexander Zinoviev, an eternal dissident, died on May 10th, aged 83
DURING the cold war, dissidents were front-line troops in the battle of wills and ideas. Despised and persecuted by
the Communist regimes of the Soviet empire, they were idealised in the West. When they emigrated, they were
idolised.
It is convenient, but too crude, to assume that anti-Soviet sentiments au