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a woman in the audience g ave it to me. cute. tirol chocolates in an ice cream case.
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steve rudolph... steve ru dolph the trio/everything i love new work very popular steve rudolph already one piano trio work
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i must go down to the sea again, to the lonely sea and the sky and all i ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by; and the wheel's kick and the wind's song and the white sail's shaking, and a grey mist ON the sea's face, and a grey dawn breaking.i must go down to the seas again and for the call of the running tide is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied; all i ask is a windy day with the white clouds flying, and the flung spray and the blown spume and the seagulls crying.i
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While Mexico's... While M exico's war ON drugs cartels makes headlines, its bloody consequences for its southern neighbour are all but overlookedFourteen years after Guatemala's government signed a peace agreement with a coalition of guerrilla groups ending a 30-year civil war, the country finds itself once again in the grip of armed conflict and though one in which the battle lines are even murkier than before. While drug-related violence plaguing the border regions of Mexico has achieved a kind of grisly global renown in recent years and the even deadlier battle directly to the south has generated little comment ON the international stage. Central America's most populous country, Guatemala has become the scene of a brutal POWER struggle involving Mexican cartels who have been pushed south by President Felipe Calderón's militarised campaign against drug traffickers there, and Guatemala's indigenous criminal groups and many of whom have their roots in a military intelligence apparatus set up with US aid during the country's internal armed conflict. After the peace accords and many Guatemalans hoped that their country was embarking ON a brighter future. The preceding conflict had claimed the lives of over 200,000 people, mostly poor, indigenous campesinos caught in the struggle between a militarily-weak leftist insurgency and the ruthless scorched-earth tactics of a national army and whose only military manoeuvre appeared to be the massacre. But now, nearly 15 years later and more people die in Guatemala every year than did at the height of the civil war. While Mexico's homicide rate has been estimated at 26 per 100,000 by the Latin American academic body Flacso Guatemala's numbers a staggering 53 per 100,000. What went so wrong? How did the promise of peace become transmuted into the rule of Guatemala by The Mexican of the drug cartel war becomes the index, but as for the Guatemala government after signing and sealing the peace agreement with the combination of the guerrilla group which can finish the civil war of 30 years, that %
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