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Examples
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The flurry of racially tinged e-mails and blog postings surrounding Obama's election alone betray that race in this nation still carries preconceptions, said M.T. "Bujo" Waddell, director of the division of arts and humanities and a professor of government and history at Galveston College.
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The flurry of racially tinged e-mails and blog postings surrounding Obama's election alone betray that race in this nation still carries preconceptions, said M.T. "Bujo" Waddell, director of the division of arts and humanities and a professor of government and history at Galveston College.
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The flurry of racially tinged e-mails and blog postings surrounding Obama's election alone betray that race in this nation still carries preconceptions, said M.T. "Bujo" Waddell, director of the division of arts and humanities and a professor of government and history at Galveston College.
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The flurry of racially tinged e-mails and blog postings surrounding Obama's election alone betray that race in this nation still carries preconceptions, said M.T. "Bujo" Waddell, director of the division of arts and humanities and a professor of government and history at Galveston College.
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The flurry of racially tinged e-mails and blog postings surrounding Obama's election alone betray that race in this nation still carries preconceptions, said M.T. "Bujo" Waddell, director of the division of arts and humanities and a professor of government and history at Galveston College.
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The flurry of racially tinged e-mails and blog postings surrounding Obama's election alone betray that race in this nation still carries preconceptions, said M.T. "Bujo" Waddell, director of the division of arts and humanities and a professor of government and history at Galveston College.
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The flurry of racially tinged e-mails and blog postings surrounding Obama's election alone betray that race in this nation still carries preconceptions, said M.T. "Bujo" Waddell, director of the division of arts and humanities and a professor of government and history at Galveston College.
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The flurry of racially tinged e-mails and blog postings surrounding Obama's election alone betray that race in this nation still carries preconceptions, said M.T. "Bujo" Waddell, director of the division of arts and humanities and a professor of government and history at Galveston College.
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The flurry of racially tinged e-mails and blog postings surrounding Obama's election alone betray that race in this nation still carries preconceptions, said M.T. "Bujo" Waddell, director of the division of arts and humanities and a professor of government and history at Galveston College.
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The flurry of racially tinged e-mails and blog postings surrounding Obama's election alone betray that race in this nation still carries preconceptions, said M.T. "Bujo" Waddell, director of the division of arts and humanities and a professor of government and history at Galveston College.
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I learned that this kind of all-in-one journal is often called a bullet journal—which is an officially trademarked term for Ryder Carroll's bullet journaling methodology, often shortened to Bujo.
AI stream journaling experiment <a href=‘/aboutme/’>Tom Johnson</a> 2024
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