Sellers 北京赛乐氏科贸有限责任公司,从事软件为主体的信息产品销售公司
sellers[ noun ]
English comic actor (1925-1980)
<noun.person>
- Hugo created a 100- to 200-foot-wide channel of water through Pawleys Island, midway between Charleston and Myrtle Beach, according to Jack Sellers, a pilot from Columbia who flew people to the coast to check their property.
- Sellers and organizers convicted in a kidney transaction could be jailed for up to four years, Erel said.
- "The uranium spot market accounts for only 10% of production," says Judy Sellers, senior research officer at the London-based Uranium Institute, an organization representing producers and consumers of the mineral.
- Sellers said the committee's recommendation would entail no government expense. "Any expense would be borne by the news media," he said.
- "It happens a lot, but most people aren't inclined to want to sue," Mr. Sellers says.
- Participation of a federal trial court in Arizona was possible because of Judge Bilby's role, Sellers said.
- Sellers who have owned their houses for many years generally have built up sizable equity.
- A number of state courts arraign defendants by phone, and in some courts, lawyers are allowed to file lawsuits by facsimile, Sellers said.
- Mr Sellers of British Vita said: 'Wage increases are under control'.
- Sellers get more than $50 by capturing a bit of the windfall.
- If Peter Sellers is entitled to make youthful errors in front of audiences paying top dollar, why not Jonathan Wilson?
- Sellers set the "ask" prices they want for stamps, which they turn over to be graded and insured by exchange officials and stored in vaults pending their sale.
- "I'm a little bit more enthused about the deal than others are," said Arthur Sellers, a member of the WGA's negotiating committee. "But was it worth it?
- Sellers said the experiment, patterned after a program already in place in Kentucky state courts, is aimed at determining whether videotapes should replace written records.
- Sellers were also in evidence at Unigate which reported good figures earlier this week.
- David Sellers, spokesman for the Washington administrative office of all U.S. courts, said Friday that he knows of no other court district in the nation that has its own flag.
- Sellers of futures contracts begin to make their delivery intentions known on first notice day.
- Mr. Sellers, now at University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, says researchers are collecting blood from family members in an effort to locate the offending gene in the families' DNA, or genetic material.
- These are full creations worthy of Alec Guinness or Peter Sellers.
- San Diego Postmaster Margaret Sellers stamped post cards and letters with a commemorative postmark featuring the Concorde.
- A five-judge committee of the policy-making U.S. Judicial Conference will recommend an experiment in lifting the longtime ban on such coverage when it meets next month, conference spokesman David Sellers said Thursday.
- Sellers "had an inflated idea of what everything was worth," says Christie's Anthony Phillips, who was in charge of the sale.
- Sellers said the Judicial Conference also approved spending $70,000 to $90,000 on closed-circuit television cameras to monitor "high risk" trials.
- Sellers have promoted single-premium policies as one of the few tax shelters remaining after the 1986 tax overhaul, sparking congressional ire.
- Sellers of motor oil have been obliged to take it back in Germany. Some countries, such as Germany, treat some used oil as hazardous and therefore subject to special handling.
- In after hours trading, the contract recovered to 94.96. Sellers latched on to the Bundesbank's statement that today's repo rate would be variable.
- "There are now two Pawleys Islands, if you will," Sellers said.
- He succeeds Sellers Stough, a Chevron vice president, who retired.
- We're not happy about that." _ California Department of Forestry spokeswoman Sharon Sellers.
- Sellers and buyers said they got a broad and orderly market that commercial firms didn't provide.