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Summer is all about vibrant hues and playful patterns. For <strong>[title]</strong>  shirts, think tropical prints like palm trees and pineapples, bold stripes, and geometric shapes. Pastel shades like mint green, lavender, and sky blue are also making a comeback. Don’t be afraid to experiment with color blocking or mix and match patterns for a fun and stylish look.Denim jeans are structurally very sturdy and durable for their weight and cost. And they fade. Clothing that fades over time conveys a sense of the wearer being seasoned and comfortable in their skin. Confident. Confidence is attractive.
Looking for the best trending T- Shirts for Men with a wide range of <strong>[title]</strong> and sizes then you can buy in Monte Carlo. I just showed you their latest collection of products where you can buy superior quality products at a very reasonable price. Monte Carlo is the most popular Indian brand which deals with all types of women, men & kids readymade clothes. For more men’s latest summer collection you can check their official site.
Let our clothes make the statement if our game can’t. Take away the <strong>[title]</strong> stodgy of golf and give it a little fun. For clothiers, it’s fun to make something besides another blue polo shirt.It’s still nice to splash some color and style. Guys like Rickie Fowler going with the creamsicle look, Matthew Wolff with the orange and black of Oklahoma State bring a breath of fresh air to the game. And Payne Stewart was not usually out of touch with his plus fours in whatever flavor.
Something we’ve <strong>[title]</strong> a lot of this year, and last year as well, is an uptick in bright, vibrant t-shirt designs. This applies to the prints themselves, and the actual color of the shirt as well.The rise of nature-inspired and floral prints may seem a little weird to some but adding such tees to your wardrobe will only take you closer to ‘stardom’. Your t-shirt design business must be equipped with marketing materials such as a brochure design that has information and images of your design works.
Aligning your text to the <strong>[title]</strong> side of the shirt is a great way to stylize your design while keeping a minimal aesthetic. This technique works well with text-only designs because it adds some intentionality to the text placement. But it’s also a fun way to integrate text into a more dynamic and illustrative design.Printed quote T-shirts have a unique ability to convey a message, and type-centric designs tend to convey the best. Whether a company mantra, bit of humour, or words to live by, a clever saying laid out in a way that’s aesthetically pleasing will always resonate with people.
And as far as the quotes are <strong>[title]</strong> you can check their website and browse through their variety of collections, I’m sure you’ll find something or the other that catches your eye. Right from quirky quotes like ‘Haaye haaye yeh Majdoori’ and ‘Do ghoont zindagi ke’ to lyrical tshirts like ‘Kuch toh log kahenge’ and ‘Zara sa zoom loon mein’ Chutzpah has it all. So it’s a no-brainer for me to opt for Chutzpah for all my Bollywood t-shirt cravings.
If you are a person who always tried to <strong>[title]</strong> yourself by placing those motivational quotes on your room’s walls need a motivational quote like “Do Not Give up” printed t-shirt. Yes, these can be the best source of reminders to motivate you all the time.Memes are very common and nowadays people religiously follow memes, some people are so obsessed with memes as they get to print their favorite memes on their t-shirts.
Plenty of people had them, for <strong>[title]</strong> , but they were in places that clothing covered, only put on display when people were around others of their crowd. People who had tattoos were in rock bands, liked motorcycles, had been in the Marine Corps, that kinda stuff. Anyone who had tattoos on their hands, neck of face was considered to be kinda strange in those days. It definitely limited your earnings potential, if nothing else.
But things have <strong>[title]</strong> , dramatically. I employ many young people who have covered themselves with tattoos. Both male and female, I see people who have gotten what once would have been a lifetime’s collection of tattoos in a matter of years. Most of which are in areas that can’t be covered with clothes.Don’t read this as me being judgmental. What someone does with their body is none of my business. I’m just pointing out the fact that society’s attitude towards visible tattoos has changed dramatically in my lifetime. I didn’t know family tattoos were a thing, but I don’t find it surprising, seeing how popular tattooing has become.
Over the last <strong>[title]</strong> years, the fashion industry has seen a significant and sudden change towards sustainability, with shirt fashion trends leading this revolution. Consumers’ increasing awareness of environmental issues has led to a growing need for materials that are environmentally friendly and production procedures that adhere to ethical standards. This has significantly influenced the fashion industry.
The fashion industry has faced ongoing criticism for its <strong>[title]</strong> impact, including the extensive use of water and chemicals during manufacture as well as its contribution to the accumulation of garbage in landfills. The conventional production of shirts, which heavily relies on artificial fibers and energy-consuming methods, has played a major role in exacerbating these issues.
As the understanding of these problems increases, so does the <strong>[title]</strong> with the existing state of affairs. Consumers now want transparency, sustainability, and ethical responsibility from firms instead of being satisfied with quick fashion. The increasing need for change has caused many conventional fashion firms to struggle to adjust, therefore emphasizing a disparity between customer expectations and industry norms.
Hmerce introduces the Lace Full Body Shaper as a <strong>[title]</strong> to this change in thinking, demonstrating the brand’s dedication to combining fashion with environmental responsibility. This garment showcases the ability of environmentally-friendly materials and ethical methods to produce a product that is aesthetically pleasing and provides a positive sensory experience.
Hmerce is not only producing clothing; it is <strong>[title]</strong> constructing a fresh storyline in the fashion industry, one that harmoniously combines sustainability and style. The Lace Full Body Shaper exemplifies the ability to create a favorable influence via fashion, demonstrating that one may prioritize both style and environmental consciousness without sacrificing either.
By choosing Hmerce, you are not just buying a <strong>[title]</strong> of clothing; you are making a long-term investment in a more environmentally friendly and socially responsible future. By selecting the Lace Full Body Shaper, you are joining a community that prioritizes ethical standards, environmental responsibility, and unmatched sophistication. Now is the moment to adopt a fashion trend that not only improves your wardrobe but also has a positive impact on the globe.
Hmerce differentiates itself in a market <strong>[title]</strong> by a strong demand for sustainable choices by providing a product that fulfills the contemporary consumer’s requirements: fashion, environmental consciousness, and quality. Express your dedication to a more environmentally conscious and morally responsible society by choosing Hmerce, not just as a fashion statement but as a symbol of your devotion.
Look, there are exceptional athletes and poor <strong>[title]</strong> in every sport, but the NBA is full of many good athletes because athleticism is a huge advantage in the NBA. MLB not so much. That’s not to say MLB requires no athleticism – it just isn’t as much of a necessity as it is for the NBA.MLB players play games almost every day, and generally have incredible hand-eye co-ordination.
I’m not going to get into the rest of the <strong>[title]</strong> that also involved Minnesota. It is the Dodgers and their seven consecutive N.L. West Titles that bug me and more so the San Francisco Giants who have been active in player acquisition lately but have accomplished nothing to compete with L.A. either on the field at the market or on the trading blocks.
They need to take advantage of <strong>[title]</strong> greatness while it lasts and keep Dave Roberts on as manager. They have great talent in Bellinger, Muncey and Seager, but they need to really push for it.Every team that has beaten them in the postseason hasn’t beaten them because the Dodgers sat down and let them, they beat them because they wanted it more than the Dodgers.
This answer is not a substitute for <strong>[title]</strong> legal advice. This answer does not create an attorney-client relationship, nor is it a solicitation to offer legal advice. If you ignore this warning and convey confidential information in a private message or comment, there is no duty to keep that information confidential or forego representation adverse to your interests. Seek the advice of a licensed attorney in the appropriate jurisdiction before taking any action that may affect your rights.
If you believe you have a <strong>[title]</strong> against someone, consult an attorney immediately, otherwise there is a risk that the time allotted to bring your claim may expire.My opponent doesn’t appreciate the large strides we’ve made in ensuring that all Americans have access to affordable healthcare and believes we should outright repeal the Affordable Care Act. I think that’s a rash decision that would leave many Americans without healthcare- period. The law is not perfect, but we can strengthen what we have and ensure the longevity of our healthcare industry.
Hospitals are receiving more <strong>[title]</strong> than they have since the ACA was passed. And the inner city crime “boom” you keep talking about doesn’t exist- crime has been dropping for the past few decades and our current decade is one of the safest times to live in modern history. Your plan will fix nothing. There are issues in our current system- I’ve said that!- but it’s important for those people we’re serving that we strengthen what we have by fixing the shortcomings in the ACA.
I have not attempted to write a <strong>[title]</strong> biography of my father, but merely to supplement his “Recollections” with a few of my own reminiscences. He was a man who said little in his family about his early years, or about any of the occurrences of his eventful life. Nor did he ever keep any journal, or any account of his meetings, or of the number that he baptized.
He seldom reported his meetings to the <strong>[title]</strong> . I think it was only during the few years that he was employed by missionary societies, that he ever made reports of what he accomplished. He had even destroyed the most of his old letters. And so, for nearly all information outside of my own recollections, I have been indebted to the kindness of relatives and friends.
Their lives were full of hardship and <strong>[title]</strong> . Grandfather was a famous hunter, and his well aimed rifle sometimes furnished game that kept the neighborhood from starvation. He was dependent on bartering furs at some distant trading post, for his supplies of salt, needles, ammunition and other necessary articles that could not be made at home.
Often, after a hard day’s work, he hunted half of the <strong>[title]</strong> to obtain coonskins and other furs. Father said that one night grandfather and Orin Loomis were out hunting coons with the dogs, having taken their axes to chop down coon trees, but no guns, when they found a bear, on a small island, in the middle of a swamp.
They concluded to try this plan, and <strong>[title]</strong> very near succeeding. As the old bear rushed past, Butler put the whole bit of the ax into her back, but failed to cut the back-bone by an inch or two. Enraged and desperate, she sprang upon the dogs, who, emboldened by the presence of their masters, came too close. With one of her enormous paws she came down on old Beaver, making a large wound in his side, which nearly killed him. He was hardly able to crawl out of the swamp.
On examining her nest of the <strong>[title]</strong> before, her unusual ferocity was explained. She had a litter of cubs, which, however, she had succeeded in removing, and must have carried them off in her mouth. In a short time the dogs had tracked her out. She was found a half mile lower down the swamp, where she had a new nest. Butler’s rifle soon dispatched her; but her cubs, four in number, and not more than three or four weeks old, were taken alive, and kept for pets.
Butler was the most courageous man he <strong>[title]</strong> knew. He was quick-tempered, but warm-hearted, and full of fun, and as honest and sincere as he was bold and fearless. One time he was traveling, and stopped at a tavern. The strangers present were discussing the statement that every man has his price, and each man was telling what was the least price for which he would tell a lie. Finally one man said that he would tell a lie for five dollars.
Scarcely was the settlement begun when a <strong>[title]</strong> was taught in one room of a log dwelling-house. When but three years old, father was a pupil in the first school that was taught in the new school-house, by Miss Lodema Sackett, and continued to attend school a part of every year. Books were scarce, but he was fond of reading, and read, over and over, all that he could obtain.
My father was present with his <strong>[title]</strong> Aaron at that interview with Mr. Campbell, and he too was led by it to listen favorably to Mr. Campbell’s clear and powerful presentation of divine truth. He followed Mr. Campbell to other meetings, and listened, read, and investigated until he, too, became convinced of the truth of the Bible.About that time father began teaching school in neighboring districts, which he followed for several years.
But all of his spare time was spent in <strong>[title]</strong> the Bible, church history, the writings of A. Campbell, and other religious books. It was at that time that he began committing the New Testament to memory.In such times of religious excitement it was not necessary for a man to have a college education, to become an acceptable preacher. But father saw the advantages of a good education, and resolved to attend A. Campbell’s school, then known as Buffalo Academy, but which was soon changed to Bethany College. But the means to acquire an education must be obtained by his own exertions.
Father and <strong>[title]</strong> made sheep-raising their business while there. Father herded sheep in summer and taught school in winter. And, while herding sheep, he finished committing the New Testament to memory. He could repeat it from beginning to end, and even in his later years he remembered it so well that he could repeat whole chapters at once. I never saw the time that any one could repeat a verse in the New Testament to him, but that he could tell the book, and nearly always the chapter in which it was found.
Many parts of the <strong>[title]</strong> were covered with water, and were musical with frogs in the spring, but in hot weather they dried up, leaving here and there a stagnant pond. I have heard father tell how one of his neighbors tried to break a field by beginning on the outside, and plowing farther in as the land dried up. But the snakes and frogs grew thicker and thicker, as he neared the center. At length the grass seemed almost alive with snakes, and his big ox-team became wild with fright, and ran away, and he could not get them back there again.
Of course, such a <strong>[title]</strong> was unhealthful, and father’s family was much troubled with sickness. His parents both died; my mother was nearly worn out with the ague; and he not only suffered from poor general health, but from a sore throat, and had to quit preaching. He moved to Sullivan, but without any permanent benefit to his health. He did not at that time attribute his sore throat entirely to the climate, but thought it a chronic derangement that would utterly unfit him for a preacher.
Many years afterward he <strong>[title]</strong> of that disappointment as follows: “For five years I saw myself sitting idly by the wayside, hopeless and discouraged. I felt somewhat like a traveler, parched with thirst, on a wide and weary desert, who sees the mirage of green trees and springs of cool water that has mocked his vision, slowly fade away out of his sight. So seemed to perish my castles in the air. At that time making proclamation of the ancient gospel was too vigorous a work, and too full of hardship and exposure to be undertaken by any except those possessing stalwart good health.
If I had been predestinated to the <strong>[title]</strong> I have actually lived, and if it were necessary that I should be chastened to bear with patience all its disabilities, then, I suppose, this discipline I actually got might be considered good and useful. If I have been able to bear provocation with patience, and to labor cheerfully without wages, and at every personal sacrifice, this lesson was learned when I saw all my hope dashed in pieces.
I remember that when he <strong>[title]</strong> to his appointment one cold morning mother cried for fear he would freeze to death. The mail-carrier did freeze to death that day, but father kept from freezing by walking. The next summer was very rainy, and mother was always anxious when there were high waters, for there were no bridges, and father always swam his horse across streams, although he could not swim a stroke.
The Bible speaks of a man as <strong>[title]</strong> of body, soul and spirit. The body is that material tabernacle in which a man dwells, and which Paul hoped to put off that he might be clothed with a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens. The soul is that animal life we have in common with all living and material things. I thus discoursed to them for one hour in development of the Bible teachings concerning human spirits; and in my turn ridiculed the persons that had ridiculed the ideas that had evidently been held by Jesus and the apostles.
The brethren were gratified that the <strong>[title]</strong> of this “soul-sleeping” delusion was broken. Billy Green never recovered from his infatuation. He afterwards built a house that, in the number of rooms it contained, was wholly beyond his necessities. But he thought that when the Lord should come, and he should own all the land that joined him, and should have children to his heart’s desire, then he would need all the room.
There was this difference, and only this <strong>[title]</strong> , between the work of Billy Brown and Sam Jones; Sam Jones declaims against sins already condemned by the popular conscience, but Billy Brown assailed convictions enshrined in the innermost sanctuary of the hearts of the people. He did so because these popular superstitions stood in the way of the acceptance by the people of the apostolic gospel. Of course, the work of such a man carried with it an inconceivable excitement. At Mt. Sterling a man in the audience made some objection.
But when the tumult and excitement of this <strong>[title]</strong> had passed away, and his converts were brought face to face with the grave duties of a religious life, and with the serious work of keeping the ordinances of the Lord’s house, they did not know how; they had been born in a whirlwind and could only live in a tempest. Notwithstanding, they loved the Lord’s cause, and they trembled for themselves and their children, if they should not be found faithful.
If these churches are not able at the <strong>[title]</strong> time to exhibit a growth adequate to their opportunities, it must be remembered, on their behalf, that they have sent to the West an incredibly large number of disciples to serve as the nuclei for other churches throughout that mighty empire that within the past thirty years has grown up between the Missouri River and the Pacific Ocean.
The days I spent in these churches are the <strong>[title]</strong> days of my life. There has been no field in which my labor as an evangelist has yielded a richer harvest; none in which there have been bestowed on me more flattering or more kindly attentions. It was the bright and joyous sunshine of a spring morning, before the bursting of the storm.Though each year increased my attachment to the people, and apparently added their good-will to myself, there had been coming to the front a difficulty that could not any longer be thrust aside or disregarded. I was one hundred and fifty miles away from home, and from my wife and children.
I was both angry and confounded. I had never in my life <strong>[title]</strong> myself conspicuous in this controversy that was going on between North and South, and why should I be insulted with such a question. I did not answer yes or no, but proceeded to give my views on the subject in general. They listened and remarked that they did not see anything offensive in such views.
I was angry with myself for having consented to preach a <strong>[title]</strong> after being met with such a question. But by mine host, Bro. Graves, I was treated with the most frank and manly courtesy, albeit that he was brother to the man that shot a brother congressman in a duel with rifles. We had heard something of this in Illinois, but supposed it was something done by that turbulent and somewhat lawless element that gathers along the borders of civilization; but now it was apparent that this movement was under control of leading citizens of Missouri, and had been participated in by conscientious men, members of the various churches of Missouri.
The reader will not be surprised that we <strong>[title]</strong> sit up to a late hour of the night, nor that we should renew the subject again in the morning. When I had got ready to leave this man, who had so hospitably entertained me, he explained that he had business on the road on which I was traveling, and that he would accompany me a number of miles.We have no right to assume that a majority of the people of Missouri held the sentiments we have here indicated: probably they did not. But the dissent was generally unspoken. The men of this stamp commonly adopted the policy of the man with whom I had just parted. But there was dissent in some cases, bitter and vehement, followed sometimes by bloodshed.
After securing my claim, and commencing to build a cabin, I began to look around me. Fully three-fourths of the squatters of this whole region were from the border counties of Missouri. But in Western Missouri the percentage of Disciples was perhaps larger than in any other portion of the United States, consequently I had brethren on every side of me. These men certainly were not refined and educated men, as the phrase goes, still they had the qualities that our Lord found in the fisherman of Galilee.
Immediately on obtaining my claim, <strong>[title]</strong> had sought me out and made my acquaintance, and soon it appeared that there were enough Disciples in the settlement to constitute a church. But the times were stormy, and we delayed making any movement in that direction. It had now come to be the month of June. There had been refreshing showers. The singing birds had come, and the bright sunshine.
Great Britain became more Lutheran than <strong>[title]</strong> , the native land of Luther, and God lifted the British nation up to become the chiefest nation of the world; the United States of North America became more Lutheran than Great Britain, and the eyes of the world are fixed on us in admiration and astonishment. God blessed the house of Obededom, and all that he had, because the ark of God was in it.
My friends and fellow citizens, I have the honor to <strong>[title]</strong> to you a people that have said we will go back to that order of things originally established by Jesus and the apostles—we will make no vow of loyalty to any but Jesus, and we will have no bond of union save the testimonies and commandments of the Lord as given to us by the Lord himself and the holy apostles. Out of this we hope may grow such a union of God’s people as Jesus prayed for when he prayed that all Christians might be one.
Kansas is certainly predestinated to be a great State. The fertility of its <strong>[title]</strong> , the healthfulness of its atmosphere, and the fact that its population is to be made up from the bravest, most daring and most enterprising men in the nation, all look in this direction; you ought, then, my friends, to see to it that as far as your influence may go its religion shall be nothing less than primitive and apostolic Christianity.
In ascertaining what is primitive and apostolic Christianity, we shall pay <strong>[title]</strong> respect to the time when the old or Jewish dispensation came to an end, and when the new or Christian dispensation began. The first, or Jewish dispensation, Jesus took out of the way, nailing it to the cross. The second, or Christian dispensation, began after Jesus arose from the dead and ascended up on high, far above the thrones, dominions, principalities and powers of the world of light, and became the Head over all things to the church.
In all this there is nothing human, nothing schismatical. All can accept it who are <strong>[title]</strong> to accept the Word of the Lord. In the baptism we administer, we will give no cause for schism: it shall be a burial, and this, so far as the action of baptism is concerned, will meet the conscience of the Greek Church, the Roman Catholic Church, and of all Protestant churches.
That sermon was preached almost thirty-three years ago. It was an <strong>[title]</strong> discourse, and no notes were preserved. Nevertheless, there were circumstances attending its delivery, that have indelibly impressed its leading points on the memory of the writer.There were also in the audience two young gentlemen, recently come from the New England States to seek their fortune. They were just of that age to think that what they did not know, or at least what the people of New England did not know, was not worth knowing.
Such a meeting in the open air; such an audience, in which the <strong>[title]</strong> of every man and woman was got up according to their own notions, and that, too, without consulting Mrs. Grundy; such a preacher! and such a sermon! Certainly these all were new to them, and did not command their highest admiration. When these same New England gentlemen were in their turn stripped of all they were worth by the “Border Ruffians” it changed their feelings toward their free State brethren “mightily.
And now that feeling of <strong>[title]</strong> that had been all along festering in the hearts of the people, began to come to the surface. An inside view would have revealed a perpetual murmur of discontent. The Territorial Legislature was now in session, and doing its work, and copies of the laws they had enacted were coming into circulation. No legislature in America had ever been elected as they had been, and we have already learned what a thrill of horror and pain this caused in the hearts of the squatters.
It would have been a dictate of the most <strong>[title]</strong> common sense that a body of men whose claim to be a Territorial Legislature rested on such a basis should proceed with the utmost moderation. But they were intoxicated with success. Circumstances have transpired within a few weeks past, in this neighborhood, which place beyond a doubt the existence of an organized band of Abolitionists in our midst. We counsel our friends who have slave property to keep a sharp lookout, lest their valuable slaves may be induced to commit acts which might, jeopardize their lives.
In another instance we hear of a <strong>[title]</strong> being tampered with, and induced to believe that she was illegally held in bondage; since which time she has been unruly, and shows evidence of discontent. Such is the effect produced by permitting the convicts and criminals of the Eastern cities shipped out here by the aid societies to reside in our midst.
The depredations of this <strong>[title]</strong> sect do not stop here. Their crimes are more numerous and their acts more bold. It is well known that on Independence and Walnut Creeks, within a few miles of this place, a great number of free slaves and Abolitionists are settled whose thieving propensities are well known. We honestly believe that an organized band of these outlaws exists, whose objects are pecuniary gain and spite, to rob us of our property, drive off our cattle and horses, incite our slaves to rebellion, and, when opportunity afford them facilities for escaping, to aid them.
Within a short time about one <strong>[title]</strong> and fifty head of cattle have been stolen from this neighborhood, driven off, and sold. Eight or nine horses and several mules have been taken out of the emigrants’ camp, driven to parts unknown, and the money is now jingling in the pockets of the Abolitionists. Occurrences of this kind were never before known in this neighborhood, and prior to the shipment of the filth and scum of the Eastern cities our property was secure and our slaves were contented and happy.
The enormity of these offenses, and the <strong>[title]</strong> loss of property, should open the eyes of our citizens to their true situation. We can not feel safe while the air of Kansas is polluted with the breath of a single Free-soiler. We are not safe, and self-preservation requires the total extermination of this set. Let us act immediately, and with such decision as will convince these desperadoes that it is our fixed determination to keep their feet from polluting the soil of Kansas.
It was now the middle of August. My cabin was <strong>[title]</strong> , and I was ready to go back and bring Mrs. Butler and the children to Kansas. Bro. Elliott accompanied me to Atchison, where I intended to take a steamboat to St. Louis, thence going up the Illinois River to Fulton county, Illinois, where Mrs. Butler had been stopping with her sister.
A public meeting was called that night to <strong>[title]</strong> my case, but I did not know it. The steamboat was expected about noon the next day. I had been sitting writing letters at the head of the stairs, in the chamber of the boarding-house where I had slept, and heard some one call my name, and rose up to go down stairs; but was met by six men, bristling with revolvers and bowie-knives, who came up stairs and into my room.
There was, therefore, pressing need for a <strong>[title]</strong> Synoptic History of Canadian Literature. Such a work would furnish the teacher, the student, and the general reader with a ‘method’ of reading Canadian Literature with philosophical insight or with historical and critical perspective. It would distinguish certain ‘epochs’ and ‘movements’ in the literary history of Canada, and make clear how Canadian poets and prose writers are related to one another and have influenced one another, and how, gradually, they expressed in literature the slowly emerging consciousness of a national spirit and a national destiny in the Dominion.
It is designed for the use of teachers and students in <strong>[title]</strong> , colleges, academies, seminaries, and high schools, and of general readers. Together with suitable anthologies or selections it will furnish teachers and students with adequate equipment for a systematic study of Canadian Literature, and general readers and members of literary clubs equally adequate equipment for ‘home’ or ‘club’ study of the development of Canadian Literature.
The general treatment proceeds on an a priori <strong>[title]</strong> and a critical principle. The a priori presumption is that in Canada where verse and prose which possess all degrees of worth have for more than a century and a half been produced in the English language and which had English poetry and prose for models, there must be a respectable residue of authentic literature written by native-born and resident émigré Canadian authors.

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