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Showing posts from August, 2015

wire mesh conveyor belt for USA and Korea

The wire mesh conveyor belt nationwide "Black Lives Matter" movement that formed after 18-year-old Michael Brown was shot and killed by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, has sought sweeping reforms of policing. Related protests erupted in Texas recently after a 28-year-old Chicago-area black woman, Sandra Bland, was found dead in a county jail about 50 miles northwest of Houston three days after her arrest on a traffic violation. Texas authorities said she committed suicide but her family is skeptical of that. Hickman and Harris County  wire mesh conveyor belt  Attorney Devon Anderson pushed back against the criticism of police. "We've heard Black Lives Matter, All Lives Matter. Well, cops' lives matter, too," Hickman said Saturday. Deray McKesson, a leader in the Black Lives Matter movement, told the Houston Chronicle: "It is unfortunate that Sheriff Hickman has chosen to politicize this tragedy and to attribute the officer's dea

Oshkosh conveyor belt

Oshkosh conveyor belt won a $6.75 billion contract to build almost 17,000 new light trucks to replace aging Humvees for the U.S. Army and Marine Corps, cementing the future of its defense business. The Wisconsin-based company was chosen over competitors Lockheed Martin Corp. and AM General LLC to build as many as 55,000 Joint Light Tactical Vehicles, or JLTVs, over the next 25 years to replace part of the Humvee fleet and some larger military trucks. The JLTV is one of the Army’s highest  conveyor belt  and follows a series of budget cuts and shifting requirements that prompted the Pentagon to cancel helicopter, artillery and communications programs, after investing billions of dollars. Oshkosh has a long history of producing military vehicles and offered a brand-new design to meet the Army’s requirements for a four-wheeled truck to carry two or four personnel that is resistant to mines and roadside  conveyor belt , but also is light enough to be carried by air. “It’s a histor

Australian conveyor belt

What do you do when a conveyor belt group of kangaroos just stops and stares at you? You keep on moving. Cyclist Ben Vezina was in Hawkstowe Park in Victoria, Australia, when all of a sudden a group of kangaroos all stopped what they were doing and stood motionless while he cycled through. He called it an unnerving  conveyor belt   experience — and a kangaroo apocalypse. Vezina captured the incident and posted the video to YouTube. We uploaded this cool video by Vezina, who is safe and unharmed. “Kangaroos are nice animals who don’t gather like hordes and attack people, they coexist with people and never attack them. This video is proof,” he wrote in the  conveyor belt  description. http://www.alexwiremesh.com http://www.alexwiremesh.com/conveyor-belt.html