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#registrar general
if-you-fan-a-fire · 7 months
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"MIXED MARRIAGES IN ONTARIO MANY," Windsor Record. October 30, 1913. Page 1. ---- Toronto, Oct. 30. - That the Ne Temere decree is not working out to the absolute stoppage of mixed marriages is shown in the annual report of the registrar-general of the province issued today.
According to the figures, 820 men and 1,096 women married outside their faith.
The number of marriages totalled 28,445. Nearly two-thirds of those married were between 20 and 30 years of age. The unusual marriages included a man of 25, who married a woman over 70 and three women under 30 marrying men over 70.
The province showed a reduced death rate for the year, lower than in many other countries. On the other hand there is the announcement that one of every ten infants in Ontario dies before attaining the fifth year.
The birth-rate was 22.4 per thousand, the lowest since 1902. In 1911 it was 22.6.
Deaths numbered 32,150, or 12.4 per thousand, or 2 lower than in 1911. Illegitimate births showed an increase of 168. Seventy-two per cent. of these births were in cities.
The battle with the white plague showed good progress. There was a total of 2,250 deaths, but this was a decrease of 103 and a decrease in percentage of 05. About seven per cent. of the deaths in Ontario were from tuberculosis. The heaviest death rate from the disease is between 20 and 30 years of age.
One out of every ten infants die before its fifth year. There were 8,230 of such deaths, while 6,494 died before completing 12 months. Two hundred less died from diarr- hoea than in 1911, the lowest in six years.
This was attributed to the greater interest in child welfare and the successful efforts to educate young mo- thers in the care of children.
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tenth-sentence · 4 months
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A cause of constant complaint, he survived for seven years in the force because his uncle was the Registrar-General of Queensland.
"Killing for Country: A Family History" - David Marr
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opisasodomite · 3 months
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My coworker at the library is leaving for a registrar job at a local museum and everyone’s doing the usual “so sorry to see you go :(“ platitudes and they’re sincere and all but I can’t even pretend to feel sad because that’s such a cool job that I’m honestly a little jealous lmao
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oingomyboingos · 7 months
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It’s 12:22 AM and i’m wracked w anxiety that the paper I spent the past 3 months writing isn’t any good but i’ve had fun writing it. I hope my prof still will go off our previous agreement to accept it late.
if anyone wants to know things about anti-cross dressing law in mid to late 19c san francisco or restrictions on clothing (ie sumptuary law) in the ottoman empire my ask box is open :) basically talked about clothing and gender as tools for place-making and defining social inclusion/exclusion in eras of highly anti-immigrant sentiment in both empires.
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work insisted everyone come in at 8 am, an HOUR early, for a meeting today. i said “fuck that, i’m not working a 9-hour day” and opted to take a FMLA day. i get a text from husband at 8:15: “well this was a massive waste of time”.
Yep.
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rudrjobdesk · 2 years
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भारतीय और चीनी लोगों में किसकी आयु होती है लंबी? जानें बाकी देशों का भी हाल
भारतीय और चीनी लोगों में किसकी आयु होती है लंबी? जानें बाकी देशों का भी हाल
Image Source : INDIA TV Life Expectancy Report Highlights चीनी नागरिकों की लाइफ एक्सपेक्टेंसी को लेकर चौंकाने वाली बात आई सामने भारतीयों की अपेक्षा ज्यादा जीवन जीते हैं चीनी नागरिक चीनी नागरिकों की लाइफ एक्सपेक्टेंसी 77.93 साल है Life Expectancy Report: चीनी नागरिकों की लाइफ एक्सपेक्टेंसी (औसत जीवनकाल) को लेकर चौंकाने वाली बात सामने आई है। चीनी नागरिक भारतीयों की अपेक्षा ज्यादा जीवन जीते हैं।…
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usnatarchives · 4 months
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Beyond the Stars: Mae Jemison’s Odyssey ✨
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Happy Black History Month!
This Black History Month, we spotlight the extraordinary life of Dr. Mae Jemison, the first African American woman to travel in space. Born on October 17, 1956, in Decatur, Alabama, and raised in Chicago, Illinois, Jemison’s journey into the stars is a testament to the power of dreams and determination.
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From an early age, Jemison showed a keen interest in science and space, but noticed the absence of women astronauts. She pursued her passion relentlessly, earning a B.S. in Chemical Engineering from Stanford University and an M.D. from Cornell Medical College. Before joining NASA, Jemison was a general practitioner and served in the Peace Corps in Sierra Leone and Liberia, where she managed health care for other volunteers. In 1987, Jemison’s dream became reality when she was selected for NASA’s astronaut program. On September 12, 1992, aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavor on mission STS-47, Jemison became the first African American woman to travel in space, serving as a mission specialist. During her eight-day mission, she conducted experiments on weightlessness and motion sickness, contributing valuable data to the field.
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Jemison’s honors include induction into the National Women’s Hall of Fame, the National Medical Association Hall of Fame, and the Texas Science Hall of Fame, among others. Her story is not just one of breaking barriers in space exploration, but also of inspiring generations to pursue their dreams, regardless of birth and obstacles.
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For more information on Mae Jemison’s groundbreaking journey and contributions to science and humanity, the National Archives holds numerous resources that illuminate the lives and achievements of African American pioneers:
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The Supreme Court of Canada is being accused of engaging in anti-Black and anti-Palestinian racism. Three Black delegates were invited to the Supreme Court as a part of a delegation presenting to clerks of the court about the 2022 Halifax Declaration for the Eradication of Racial Discrimination and anti-Black racism in the justice system. The delegation had been organized by former governor general Michaëlle Jean. Three members of the delegation, El Jones, Derico Symonds and Benazir Erdimi were told only hours before the meeting that they would no longer be allowed to attend. The reason given by Supreme Court Registrar Chantel Charbonneau was because of “controversial” social media posts made by these three members of the delegation.
Continue Reading
Tagging @politicsofcanada
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i remember the houston zoo had shoebill storks on display several years back, but they no longer do and i wasn’t able to easily find information about what happened to them, which i was sad about because i loved them. how do you go about looking for information about stuff like that? is there a public place other than their main website where they log changes to what animals they have?
There isn’t a public place that zoos track transfers, unfortunately. There’s a forum called ZooChat that often does a pretty good job keeping an eye on species movements for animals individual posters care about, so you can check there.
Internally to the industry, animal moves are often tracked on a software called ZIMS / Species360, but not all facilities pay to have an account and so you can end up with dead ends if animals move to a non-ZIMS institution. (Fun fact, this is where a bunch of the missing snow leopard “scandal” in Conservation Game appears to have come from - those cats didn’t vanish into the ether for sketchy reasons, it’s probably an artifact of how data is recorded in ZIMS about non-user facility transfers.) Unfortunately there’s no access to that data unless you’re employed at an institution that pays for it.
Your best bet for tracking animal movements is to look for social media announcements or news articles. The sending facility might not publicize a move, but the media in the receiving facility’s area might feature a cool new animal. This is easier when you’re looking to find rare and really visually stunning animals like shoebills and doesn’t work quite as well when you want to say, find out where your favorite squirrel money went.
Honestly, I’d also just call or email the zoo and ask. Tell them you love the species and would like to know where their bird was transferred to see if it’s close enough to go see. The office staff might not know - they might have to ask the registrar, which is who handles all the animal paperwork and records - but they should generally be able to help you!
(heck yes shoebill buddies I haven’t seen one IRL and I desperately want to)
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biggaybunny · 8 months
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The thing cis people do that confuses me the most is they'll introduce themselves and be like "yep that's my name, unfortunately", or like, wince when someone uses their full name, or just generally act like they've been saddled with some unbreakable curse when it's just like... buddy the name change registrar is just over there. Sure it's a hassle and there's paperwork but like... then you're set for life. You don't need to like, renew your name every few years.
I dunno just like, I don't get all the wincing and complaining. Just do something about it.
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dangermousie · 1 day
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General Ye's farewell to his hostage daughter is so bleak but this is the part that really hit.
It echoes what Fan Xian tells the registrar of the first division earlier - that you can't be good and principled and noble unless you have backing. But where Fan Xian was using it to uplift the man - promising him backing, this is the other side of that coin. When backing is gone (and it can be gone from anyone at any moment), it's hard enough to survive even abandoning all principles.
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jomiddlemarch · 4 months
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Declare the past, diagnose the present, foretell the future
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Taking in-house on-call at St. Mungo’s on Imbolc wasn’t the absolute worst, as far as Hermione was concerned. It wasn’t a major holiday and the Scottish weather, an unfathomably vile mix of sleet and snow accompanied by icy gales that defied any warming charm, lent itself to staying in. As her social life was not exactly riotous post-break-up with Ron, however amicably resigned and rueful they’d both been about it, staying in at St. Mungo’s, with its endless supply of ginger biscuits and at least one interesting patient per ward, was tolerable. Acceptable.
It could have been, anyway.
“You like being on-call, Granger?” 
That was Draco Malfoy, her fellow senior registrar, academic rival, and star of far too many risqué dreams she continued to blame on eating cheese late at night. He’d grown significantly after the final battle, which she refused to capitalize when she thought of it, just as she refused to refer to Voldemort as anything other than Tom Riddle. Draco, no longer beholden to a genocidal sorcerer who had far too close a relationship with his voracious familiar and thus no longer suffering from an untreated ulcer along as well as the fear of watching his mother being tortured in her own sitting room, had put on a good 2-plus stone of muscle along with several more inches and somehow managed to make the lime-green robes St. Mungo’s insisted on look like something that would get an approving nod during Fashion Week in Milan. It should be a fourth Unforgivable that someone so silvery blond didn’t look anemic, bilious, or curdled in the next hue over from chartreuse. He looked edible. 
Delicious.
Hermione looked like a generous dollop of the Seafoam Salad her American Cousin Luella brought to every summer tea-party Hermione’s mother had ever thrown, despite being told she was such a dear but she needn’t. Hermione tried to take comfort in the many extendable pockets she’d been able to spell into her robe’s inner lining, but nothing could fully offset the color. 
At the moment, Draco had opened his robes and put his feet up on the coffee-table in the staff break-room, his collar unbuttoned, his tie loosened. He’d stopped using whatever charm or enchanted pomade he’d relied on when they were at Hogwarts and his hair looked silky, a lock threatening to fall across his forehead. If they were called to an emergency, he’d probably cast a wandless Reparo vestis and immediately look the part of a Pureblood senior registrar, but in the meantime, he was…louche. Unconscionably, unbearably erotic.
Hermione thought back to the tea she’d hurried through before heading to Dangerous Dai at a brisk clip. She’d had nary a bite of Brie. Or Cheddar. 
She had no plausible deniability.
Still, he was helping a bit with the judgy curl to his lips and that gleam in his grey eyes which was somewhere between curious and condescending. She’d lean into the condescending part.
“I don’t mind it. It’s part of the work, being a Healer. If you have a true vocation, you don’t resent being on-call,” she said.
She sounded like an impossible prig even to herself but needs must.
“Bollocks,” he retorted, but not meanly. “Don’t you miss your cat?”
“Crookshanks is part-Kneazle,” she said.
“Fine, your part-Kneazle,” Draco said. “Wouldn’t you rather be home with him, doing whatever it is you do away from here?”
“Are you fishing for details or trying to mock me? You’ll have to decide,” Hermione said.
“I’m trying to say it’s just the two of us here, you don’t have to pretend you love being stuck at St. Mungo’s overnight,” Draco said. 
It occurred to Hermione that if she suffered a cardiac event in the next three seconds, Draco would be the one to resuscitate her and that no one ever looked their best post-resuscitation, even when magic was the primary intervention. Vanity, that’s what would keep her from having a heart attack.
Just the two of us.
For Sweet Circe’s fucking sweet sake.
Draco gave her a searching look because the pause had lengthened notably. Anyone else would have said something like Earth to Hermione, except they’d have to be Muggleborn to say that, because Wizards still didn’t grasp that Muggles had been to the Moon and sent rovers to Mars. They didn’t grasp a dog had been sent into space.
“It’s all right. I don’t actually mind it all that much myself, if I’m being honest. And before you feel compelled to point it out, yes, I am Slytherin but I am capable of candor, especially when it suits my needs,” he said.
“It suits you to be honest with me?” she said.
“We’re a team, aren’t we?” he said and she nodded before she could stop herself and ask what exactly he meant, she’d happily taken four feet of parchment on the topic. “Lying, keeping things from each other, it won’t help us. I know you don’t trust me—”
“I—” she interrupted, breaking off when she realized she wasn’t sure she wanted to say she did trust him or that she wanted to, very badly.
“I know we agreed to a fresh slate when we started training here and I also know if was too much to ask of you,” he said. 
“I don’t understand,” she said.
“Yes, I was under duress. Yes, I was seventeen. Yes, we’re all allowed to make mistakes. But I still have a brand on my arm from a group that wanted you dead and defiled and the best I did on your behalf was to pretend I didn’t know you for a few minutes,” he said. 
“What else could you have done?” Hermione said, shrugging. 
“I could have risked my life. I could have died,” he said. “Potter did, when he saved me from Fiendfyre—”
“I’m not nearly as nice as Harry,” Hermione said.
Draco laughed, rubbed the bridge of his nose.
“You’re a better person than I am and you don’t have to argue with me about it. Some things are simply true. I’d like you to trust me, that’s what I’m saying, albeit terribly clumsily,” he replied.
“Albeit?” she repeated. Using humor to deflect was a time-honored tradition and she didn’t know what to do with her sizable attraction when it was suddenly not only about his broad shoulders and narrow hips, the feline grace of his gait, the North Sea of his eyes and his impossibly deft hands (Nimue help her, Draco’s hands…) but also his mind, his insight. She’d known he was clever, her equal in most fields, slightly ahead of her in Charms (though behind in Arithmancy) but she hadn’t appreciated how thoughtful he was or had become. How he could be gentle. 
“I use overly formal language when I feel out of my depth,” he said. Admitted. 
“You were totally at ease then, when Crispin Fillament was hemorrhaging? All I heard was good old Anglo-Saxon obscenities from you while you were trying to shove the blood back into his aorta,” Hermione said, grinning.
“That bugger. He wasn’t helping at all, and I don’t mean his choice to sing operettas,” Draco said. “It was like his blood didn’t even want back in. It felt oddly sentient—”
“Operetta can be polarizing,” Hermione said. They were having an absolutely insane conversation, Thickey Ward caliber, and she was more relaxed than she’d ever been around him while also being turned on. Draco’s expression shifted from entertained to speculative. Assessing. She resisted the impulse to touch her hair or fiddle with the collar of her robes, glad she’d kept her shoes on, regretting her laundry day choice of striped tights.
“We’ve worked together for nearly seven years and you still don’t trust me,” he said. 
“I don’t suspect you of, well, anything in particular,” she replied. It seemed a weak response, even to her. It might not even be fair, but she couldn’t necessarily feel her way into being fair to him. Even if there were times when she wanted to.
“I know. It’s good of you,” he said. “It just, it’s not enough.”
“It’s not enough? You dare to demand I—”
“I’m not demanding anything, Hermione,” he interrupted. “I don’t expect more. I don’t deserve more. I only want more.”
“You want more,” she repeated. She sounded somewhere between incredulous and stupid. As he’d spent a significant amount of his youth the Crabbe and Goyle, the stupidity shouldn’t bother him as it did her.
“I believe Weasley liked to refer to me as a greedy git. I don’t pretend to have entirely outgrown that,” he said.
“That was because you hogged the pudding,” Hermione said.
“Well, I’ve outgrown that. Though I do still like sweet things,” he said. He tilted his head to one side and should have resembled an owl but of course, he didn’t. If anything, he looked like a fallen angel, though he probably wouldn’t have recognized Lucifer if she’d mentioned the name. The Bible was given short-shrift in the Muggle culture studies required at St. Mungo’s where they ran more to Pasteur, Salk and gene-sequencing. “If I want more, I must give more.”
“Is this some sort of rudimentary physics equation?” Hermione said. “You do know Newton covered this area already.”
“I mean, if I want you to trust me, I need to give you more reason. I need to share more, so you feel I’ve earned it. That it’s, I’m worth it,” he said, nodding as he spoke. Hermione felt herself flush and wanted to argue but she couldn’t think of anything compelling to refute his assertion.
“Shall I tell you why I became a Healer?” Draco said.
“If you like,” Hermione replied diffidently, as if she hadn’t wondered nearly every time she saw him and had frankly obsessed over it for the first six months of their training. Obsessed as in Ginny staged an intervention with Padma and Susan and Gabrielle on the Floo, with Luna playing mother over the teapot joining in the chorus that maybe Hermione needed to let it go or go ahead and jump Draco’s bones. She had been so far gone Luna Lovegood had told her she needed to get some perspective (which she suggested would be helped along with a tincture of canawaddle blossom and raging iron jaguar tears. Hermione had just taken the full glass of Shiraz Padma offered and nodded.)
“Because of my parents,” he said. It had been his idea to discuss his reasons but he seemed uncertain how he’d explain or uneasy about her response.
“It was their idea?” Hermione hazarded a guess. It wasn’t a good guess and she’d be shocked if she were right but it was within the realm of possibility in a world where there were both cellphones and wands threaded with a phoenix’s fiery tail-feather.
“Fuck no,” he said, almost choking on a laugh. A bitter one.
“It might’ve been,” she retorted. 
“Only you would believe that possible and before you get horribly offended and flounce off, I mean only you could believe them capable of such humanity. That they would care about other people, that they would care that I did something worthwhile with my time,” he said. He made a calming gesture with his hand, the one he wore a signet ring on. It wasn’t the Malfoy signet though. “You also forget they are the most terrible snobs and think any kind of work is beneath a Malfoy or the bloody scion of the Most Noble House of Black. My mother thinks I’m overly sentimental and my father thinks the whole thing is crass and degrading.”
“I don’t flounce,” Hermione said because what he’d said was a lot to unpack and she couldn’t risk him thinking flouncing was within her repertoire.
“I stand corrected,” he said.
“Why did you become a Healer? How were your parents involved?” she asked. 
“They ruined so many lives. My father, I’ve never asked, I’ve never wanted to know, but I think he’s a murderer and my mother went along with it all. Whatever she told herself about how she had to put me first, it was all an excuse,” he said, holding her gaze the whole time. “Other families left Britain. Other families refused to take a side. Millie’s parents sent her younger brothers to Ilvermorny. Zabini’s mother cast some spell on Blaise that kept Voldemort from touching him, something Darker than Dark, she called in favors all over Europe and West Africa. My parents ruined my life. This is the best way I could think of to make something of it all.”
“That’s, I don’t even know what to say, Draco,” Hermione replied.
“You don’t have to have something to say. It’s just how it is,” he said.
“Is it enough? Atonement?” Hermione asked.
“Mostly. And I like the craft. Snape played favorites and he gave me extra lessons, tradework secrets. The man was frankly a bloody genius. Sectumsempra was his juvenilia. I’m good at Potions and I was taught by one of the best Potions Masters in the past three hundred years,” Draco said.
“It’s nice to hear you admit it,” Hermione said. 
“The special treatment or Snape’s brilliance?”
“Yes,” Hermione said, making Draco smile.
“I wished I could have saved him,” Draco said. “Though I don’t know what surviving would have meant for him. He was broken.”
“He wanted us to let him go. After he gave Harry the memory, he didn’t want to have to live anymore. I tried to stay. Harry and Ron didn’t see his eyes, but he looked at me and I knew it,” Hermione said.
“He doesn’t haunt me. In case you’re wondering,” Draco said. “His portrait often has a choice remark for me, but that’s all.”
“I became a Healer because of my parents too,” Hermione said.
“Yeah?”
“When it was getting close, that last year, you know, none of the adults made any plans to keep my parents safe. They told me not to worry mostly. All Dumbledore cared about was Harry and the Elder wand. Tonks, she was your cousin, she was the only one who said I should look out for my own people,” Hermione said. Tonks’s hair had been a rich chestnut streaked with white when she’d said it, her eyes the glittering green Hermione had always wished to see in the mirror, and she hadn’t minced words. She’d been as serious as Hermione had ever seen her, serious as death, and then it wasn’t spoken of again. Hermione had hoped there would be a time to tell Tonks, to thank her. “I Obliviated my parents and relocated them to Australia, I gave them new identities. I erased myself from their minds. Entirely.”
“What?” To his credit, Draco looked 90% stunned and 10% impressed. Harry had looked 100% horrified and Ron had physically recoiled when she told them. 
“I did some research, figured out how to Obliviate them in the way that would keep them safest,” she said. “Voldemort wasn’t going to care about two random Muggles named Wilkins in bloody Melbourne. Other than you, your father and Snape, none of the Death-eaters were smart enough to figure it out and it turned out Snape was a double-agent, so my odds were even better than I’d counted on.”
“That’s advanced charmwork,” Draco said. “That kind of Obliviation.”
“I had to use Arithmancy too. And runes,” Hermione said. “It had to work. I couldn’t ruin their lives. I couldn’t be the reason they were killed.”
“It worked,” he said. “You saved them.”
“Yes. But it was harder to reverse than I’d hoped,” she said. She said hoped but she meant thought, planned, expected. She’d been wrong. “And when they remembered, they remembered I never asked their permission.”
“You didn’t?”
“They’d never have agreed. I cast the spell behind their backs. An assassination, my mother called it,” she said. She hadn’t told them about being tortured; they couldn’t understand Cruciatus the way anyone magical would and she didn’t want them to ask why she hadn’t confided more in them. Didn’t want them to feel guilty or worse, to accuse her of trying to make them feel guilty to justify her actions.
“You saved their lives,” Draco repeated. 
“That’s what I tell myself,” she replied.
“Do you plan to specialize in memory curses? Because of your parents?” he asked.
“No. It’s not that. I became a Healer because they can understand it. They are dentists, Muggle Healer for teeth, and I was able to preserve all of that when I Obliviated them. They would have said, once, I should take up whatever career I felt called to, but they value healing. It’s something we can talk about. Without much…rancor. They see what we do as another science, this training similar enough, the way the American medical system is similar to the British one,” she said.
“Do you even want to be a Healer?” Draco said.
“It’s fine. Maybe I would have ended up here anyway. You have to master a lot of different magical disciplines and there’s some research to be done. There’s always other people around and you can get a decent cuppa in the canteen,” she said, shrugging. “The robes don’t suit me, but that’s a small price to pay.”
“You wanted something else though,” he said. “You don’t have to lie to me. I won’t try to convince you to leave St. Mungo’s.”
“There’s a course on ancient magics in Alexandria. And the Wizarding Library there, they do archival work and Anatomia liborum,” she said. “I read about it when I was researching the Horcruxes. It sounded intriguing.”
“What else?” he prompted.
“In Japan, at Mahoutokoro, there a witch studying arithmancy and algorithm engineering. That’s a Muggle science, it has to do with computers and programming, which you probably have no idea about, but it’s cutting edge work,” Hermione said.
“Instead you’re here,” he said.
“It’s not so bad,” Hermione said. It was easy to say, because she’d said it to herself about a thousand times. “I’m learning a lot and it’s important, to be able to heal people, and sometimes what’s wrong with them seems impossible, but in an absurdly funny way. My parents like it, when I tell them about work, even if I have to tone it down so they believe me.”
“Doesn’t seem like enough. Not for you,” he said.
“You’re here,” she replied, before she thought better of it.
For a moment, Draco was so still she wondered if she’d cast a wandless Petrificus totalis without consciously registering it.
“It’s not what you think,” she said.
“What do I think, Hermione?” he asked. He didn’t sound sly or arch, not remotely mocking, though he could have and she wouldn’t have been able to blame him. He sounded serious, as if she was the final arbiter of his fate, the Chief Witch of the Wizengamot pronouncing his sentence.
“It wasn’t a grand declaration,” she said.
“I didn’t think ‘you’re here’ was a grand declaration,” he replied. He’d relaxed a bit. Bully for him. Hermione felt like she might spontaneously combust, which coupled with the lime-green robes, was certain to be unattractive.
“You’re clever and well-read and you don’t cave when I argue with you but you don’t try to squash me either,” she said. “You think of things quite differently than I do, but in a good way. You’re my peer, intellectually.”
“I’m your peer, intellectually. That’s what you meant,” he said.
“You spent your formative years with Crabbe and Goyle. It’s not nothing,” she retorted.
“I played chess with Blaise Zabini for seven years. Theo Nott taught me Sanskrit and Pazu Veda in his spare time,” he replied. It felt like an obscure jab at Harry and Ron, neither of whom would claim to be excellent student, but who each had their strengths. They were, perhaps, not ones that lent themselves to spirited discussions, especially since Hermione had an admittedly limited grasp of chess and no real motivation to learn it. She wouldn’t risk the conversation devolving into a cranky argument, relitigating their school-days.
“Theo Nott was fluent in Pazu Veda?” 
“They don’t teach necromancy at Hogwarts, so I can’t vouch for his fluency, but he could read it and translate,” Draco said. He crossed his legs at the ankle, a gesture of pure insouciance. His grey eyes studied her and she lifted her chin. “You’re stalling.”
“I’m not,” she said. For possibly the first time she could remember, she wished to be paged to the receiving area to attend to a disgustingly feculent and smoking heap of Wizard burping up turds, suffering from an unknown but obviously not life-threatening curse or potion. 
“If you don’t want to talk about it anymore, we won’t. I wanted you to trust me and that won’t happen if you feel like I’m grilling you or prying. I’ll try to keep doing whatever it is that makes me being here make St. Mungo’s worth it to you,” he said.
He was a Slytherin but he’d spoken as directly as an Gryffindor, as thoughtfully as any Ravenclaw, as kindly as any Hufflepuff.
“I like you,” she said. 
She was not going to mention lust, her own for his face, his shoulders and his hands, the nape of his neck, the line of his thigh when he crouched down to talk to some patient on the Thickey Ward who thought they were a mole. His lips when he smiled. His eyes when he had a new idea that she was going to hate at first. She was courageous, not foolhardy.
“I like you too. Very much,” he said. “Exceedingly. I don’t want you to worry, having said it first, that your feelings are unrequited. They are very, very requited. Maximally requited.”
“I only said I like you,” she replied.
“I know. You don’t make grand declarations. I do. When they are called for,” he said.
“And it’s called for now?”
“We’ve worked together for seven years. We’ve known each other since we were eleven. You just admitted you like me. I’m not risking waiting another decade for you to understand how I feel about you,” he said. “Wizards have long lives but I’d hate to have this conversation with a white beard down to my navel.”
“You will never have a white beard down to your navel. You’d never do something so cliché,” Hermione said.
“You’re probably right. But I still prefer telling you tonight,” he said. “It means that when I ask you if you’d like a cup of tea and a biscuit in the canteen, you’ll know I don’t just mean a cup of tea and a biscuit.”
“But we’d still have those, right?” Hermione said. “Because I skipped lunch today.”
“I will buy you every biscuit in the canteen,” he said. “And breakfast tomorrow morning. Somewhere where you can get a decent omelet.”
“So, someplace Muggle,” Hermione said. 
“Most assuredly so. At least until we both have a weekend off,” he said.
“Then what?”
“Then I take you to Paris.”
*
Five hexes, three Dark-adjacent curses, nine (nine!) misbrewed Potions causing inflammation, exudation, and one case of rapid-fire recitation in Norn, an unlicensed researcher’s run-in with a surly matagot, and a family suffering from mazy measles, meant that no biscuits, chocolate, ginger or lemon, were consumed and the tea in the canteen’s urn remained untasted by either of them.
They did, however, make quick work of a passable cheese omelet at a very nice café once they’d given sign-out to the day’s team.
And Draco Side-alonged her home, giving her a kiss on the cheek at the door.
Hermione kissed him back. Not on the cheek. 
She wasn’t about to wait for Paris for a French kiss, not when they had so little say over the on-call schedule.
Not when he looked at her with those sleepy grey eyes.
Not when he murmured her name against her lips.
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LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
November 22, 2023
HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
NOV 23, 2023
“It all began so beautifully,” Lady Bird remembered. “After a drizzle in the morning, the sun came out bright and beautiful. We were going into Dallas.” 
It was November 22, 1963, and President John F. Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy were visiting Texas. They were there, in the home state of Vice President Lyndon Baines Johnson and his wife, Lady Bird, to try to heal a rift in the Democratic Party. The white supremacists who made up the base of the party’s southern wing loathed the Kennedy administration’s support for Black rights.
That base had turned on Kennedy when he and his brother, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, had backed the decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in fall 1962 saying that army veteran James Meredith had the right to enroll at the University of Mississippi, more commonly known as Ole Miss.   
When the Department of Justice ordered officials at Ole Miss to register Meredith, Mississippi governor Ross Barnett physically barred Meredith from entering the building and vowed to defend segregation and states’ rights. 
So the Department of Justice detailed dozens of U.S. marshals to escort Meredith to the registrar and put more than 500 law enforcement officers on the campus. White supremacists rushed to meet them there and became increasingly violent. That night, Barnett told a radio audience: “We will never surrender!” The rioters destroyed property and, under cover of the darkness, fired at reporters and the federal marshals. They killed two men and wounded many others. 
The riot ended when the president sent 20,000 troops to the campus. On October 1, Meredith became the first Black American to enroll at the University of Mississippi.
The Kennedys had made it clear that the federal government would stand behind civil rights, and white supremacists joined right-wing Republicans in insisting that their stance proved that the Kennedys were communists. Using a strong federal government to regulate business meant preventing a man from making all the money he could; protecting civil rights would take tax dollars from white Americans for the benefit of Black and Brown people. A bumper sticker produced during the Mississippi crisis warned that “the Castro Brothers”—equating the Kennedys with communist revolutionaries in Cuba—had gone to Ole Miss. 
That conflation of Black rights and communism stoked such anger in the southern right wing that Kennedy felt obliged to travel to Dallas to try to mend some fences in the state Democratic Party. 
On the morning of November 22, 1963, the Dallas Morning News contained a flyer saying the president was wanted for “treason” for “betraying the Constitution” and giving “support and encouragement to the Communist inspired racial riots.” Kennedy warned his wife that they were “heading into nut country today.”
But the motorcade through Dallas started out in a party atmosphere. At the head of the procession, the president and first lady waved from their car at the streets “lined with people—lots and lots of people—the children all smiling, placards, confetti, people waving from windows,” Lady Bird remembered. “There had been such a gala air,” she said, that when she heard three shots, “I thought it must be firecrackers or some sort of celebration.”
The Secret Service agents had no such moment of confusion. The cars sped forward, “terrifically fast—faster and faster,” according to Lady Bird, until they arrived at a hospital, which made Mrs. Johnson realize what had happened. “As we ground to a halt” and Secret Service agents began to pull them out of the cars, Lady Bird wrote, “I cast one last look over my shoulder and saw in the President’s car a bundle of pink, just like a drift of blossoms, lying on the back seat…Mrs. Kennedy lying over the President’s body.” 
As they waited for news of the president, LBJ asked Lady Bird to go find Mrs. Kennedy. Lady Bird recalled that Secret Service agents “began to lead me up one corridor, back stairs, and down another. Suddenly, I found myself face to face with Jackie in a small hall…outside the operating room. You always think of her—or someone like her—as being insulated, protected; she was quite alone. I don’t think I ever saw anyone so much alone in my life.” 
After trying to comfort Mrs. Kennedy, Lady Bird went back to the room where her own husband was. It was there that Kennedy’s special assistant told them, “The President is dead,” just before journalist Malcolm Kilduff entered and addressed LBJ as “Mr. President.” 
Officials wanted LBJ out of Dallas as quickly as possible and rushed the party to the airport. Looking out the car window, Lady Bird saw a flag already at half mast and later recalled, “[T]hat is when the enormity of what had happened first struck me.” 
In the confusion—in addition to the murder of the president, no one knew how extensive the plot against the government was—the attorney general wanted LBJ sworn into office as quickly as possible. Already on the plane to return to Washington, D.C., the party waited for Judge Sarah Hughes, a Dallas federal judge. By the time Hughes arrived, so had Mrs. Kennedy and the coffin bearing her husband’s body. “[A]nd there in the very narrow confines of the plane—with Jackie on his left with her hair falling in her face, but very composed, and me on his right, Judge Hughes, with the Bible, in front of him and a cluster of Secret Service people and Congressmen we had known for a long time around him—Lyndon took the oath of office,” Lady Bird recalled. 
As the plane traveled to Washington, D.C., Lady Bird went into the private presidential cabin to see Mrs. Kennedy, passing President Kennedy’s casket in the hallway. 
Lady Bird later recalled: “I looked at her. Mrs. Kennedy’s dress was stained with blood. One leg was almost entirely covered with it and her right glove was caked…with blood—her husband’s blood. She always wore gloves like she was used to them. I never could. Somehow that was one of the most poignant sights—exquisitely dressed and caked in blood. I asked her if I couldn’t get someone in to help her change and she said, ‘Oh, no. Perhaps later…but not right now.’”
“And then,” Lady Bird remembered, “with something—if, with a person that gentle, that dignified, you can say had an element of fierceness, she said, ‘I want them to see what they have done to Jack.’”
LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
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corruptionasart · 3 months
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I recently got an email from the domain registrar I used for the website I never told anybody I made last year and it made me think that I should actually do something with that, and just generally I should actually do things instead of staying on this depressive spiral I've been on for the past few months so that's why I'm thinking about branching out, actually trying out the new ideas I had thought about
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armatofu · 6 months
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¿CONOCIAS LA HISTORIA DE “LA CAOBA”? EL ESCÁNDALO DE LA DICTADURA DE PRIMO DE RIVERA
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Al comienzo de los años 20 del siglo XX, (1924) la cocaína y la morfina eran de consumo  habitual en cabarets y locales nocturnos  de ciudades como Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia. Francia parecía ejercer una perniciosa influencia sobre nuestras fronteras. Se temía un contagio de una modernidad sobre la que poco se sabía realmente.
 Sexo y droga, una combinación difícil de superar, ni siquiera para el dictador Miguel Primo de Rivera que no supo librarse de sus embrujos y fue capaz de destituir a un juez que detuvo a su amante favorita, una prostituta andaluza conocida como La “Caoba” que además mercadeaba con la cocaína.
La “Caoba” frecuentaba el tablao flamenco, Villa Rosa, que nació de la mano de dos banderilleros y un picador como freiduría de” pescaito” y finos, entre la calle Gorguera y el callejón Álvarez Gato en 1911, y que en 1924 contaba con buenos cantaores como Antonio Chacón.  En los reservados del Villa Rosa solían perderse la elite política, militar, burgueses y el rey Alfonso XIII.  
Pero el protagonista del escándalo fue el  general Miguel Primo de Rivera, que sirvió en Marruecos, Cuba y Filipinas, estuvo seis años casado y tuvo seis hijos, su esposa Casilda Saenz de Heredia  murió precisamente de parto.  En su viudez, el general se convirtió en asiduo de casas de juego,cabarés, music halls, se rodeó de numerosas amantes como la cupletista Raquel Meller,  prostitutas, sobre todo, de la ya nombrada, la “Caoba” que fue detenida y procesada por tráfico de drogas y chantaje a un empresario.
Fue procesada por el juez, don José Prendes Pando. Es entonces cuando el dictador Primo de Rivera indica al magistrado que deje libre a su amante,  aduciendo que él era protector de jóvenes alegres. No cejó  hasta que el juez fue enviado a Albacete, expulsado de la carrera judicial y el  presidente del Tribunal Supremo, don Buenaventura Muñoz, que respaldó al magistrado,  fue jubilado anticipadamente.
 Hubo quien se atrevió a criticar abiertamente al dictador, como El Colegio de Abogados de Madrid, quien en junta general alzaron sus voces enérgicas y condenaron la intromisión del Dictador, emitiendo una nota de protesta. También se criticó en los círculos intelectuales alrededor del Ateneo de Madrid. Así lo hicieron su presidente, don Rodrigo Soriano y un miembro tan destacado como don Miguel de Unamuno, entonces vicerrector de la Universidad de Salamanca.
La “Caoba” salió de la cárcel y a ambos ateneístas la crítica les costó el destierro a Fuerteventura. Dicen que la última frase del catedrático en su clase de la Universidad de Salamanca fue: “Para el día próximo, lección siguiente”. El Ateneo fue clausurado.
 El Heraldo de Madrid, habló tambien sobre el tema, pero para evitar represalias contó que el suceso se había producido en Bulgaria y el protagonista era el primer ministro de este país. 
Unamuno al año del exilio publicó De Fuerteventura a París. Diario íntimo de confinamiento y destierro vertido en sonetos por Unamuno, una colección de textos y referencias a una España que se le negaba. También habló de La Caoba :
«Famoso se hizo el caso de la ramera, vendedora de drogas prohibidas por la ley y conocida por La Caoba, a la que un juez de Madrid hizo detener para registrar su casa y el Dictador le obligó a que la soltase y renunciara a procesarla por salir fiador de ella.
Cuando el caso se hizo público y el Rey, según parece, le llamó sobre ello la atención, se le revolvió la ingénita botaratería, perdió los estribos — no la cabeza, que no la tiene — y procedió contra el juez tratando de defenderse en unas notas en que se declaraba protector de las jóvenes alegres.
Aquellas notas han sido uno de los baldones más bochornosos que se han echado sobre España, a la que el Dictador ha tratado como a otra ramera de las que ha conocido en los burdeles. Se ha complacido en mostrar sus vergüenzas y en sobárselas delante de ella«.
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sasusakucoded · 7 months
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It's Halloween season. Everyone, especially the girls, in the campus are preparing for the ball. It has been a tradition for them to guess what heartthrob Uchiha Sasuke would wear so they can match it. Anyone who wears the correct costume would get a chance to dance with him.
This year, the special faculties (medicine, dentistry, and veterinary) are joining the general faculties. Even the students from the special faculties know the tradition and are also preparing for the event.
Ino: What are you wearing, Haruno?
Sakura: I'm still thinking about it. What did he wear in the past 3 years?
Tenten: When he was a freshman, he became the rabbit from Alice in Wonderland. I think there were 5 girls who got it correctly. They were all Alice.
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Ino: Yeah, a very hot White Rabbit.
Sakura: Oh, so multiple girls can win?
Ino: Yeah. The year after that, he wore a cactus costume.
Sakura: A what??
Ino: A cactus! The winner was a bowl. Don't ask me how, because I didn't see it. But people said that the bowl looked like a pot.
Sakura: That's.. An odd costume.
Tenten: Yeah. Apparently, Sasuke was not aware that girls were trying to match his outfit. He thought he danced in the 1st year just because.
Sakura: He's a funny guy.
Ino: Funny and hot, I agree.
Tenten: Last year, he wore a cheese costume. There were 2 winners, Minnie Mouse and Jerry.
Sakura: Hmmm. That didn't help at all. His costumes were so random. He could wear a spoon costume and the winner could be a fork or a donburi.
Ino: Right. I'll wear a Velma costume. Who knows, maybe he'll be Fred Jones this year.
Tenten: I'm guessing he'll wear something out-of-the-box this year. So, I'm thinking of something that can be paired with multiple things. Maybe I'll be a box.
Ino: All of that explanation for a box. Yeah right, Tenten.
Tenten: It's a safe costume!!
Sakura: *sighs* I still don't know what to wear.. He likes tomatoes right? What if I wear a knife costume? Or maybe basil?
Ino: Or maybe a pot. Or a plastic bag from the grocery. *laughs*
Sakura: Why is it so hard?
Tenten: No, the real question is.. Why are we even making efforts?
Ino: Because he's THE Uchiha Sasuke, duh! Heir to the Uchicha Holdings, Incorporated.
Sakura: Well.. I started to like him when we taught their class about first aid. He was the volunteer. His eyes, his smile—
Ino: Hey, hey, stop daydreaming! You haven't won yet, Haruno! *chuckles*
Sakura: *laughs* I bet he doesn't even remember me.
Tenten: Fine. The box costume is worth risking for.
Sakura: I'll probably wear a bottle of ketchup costume. It's matching with a tomato.. And if he decides to wear a bucket of fries or a hotdog sandwich, then that should still win.
Ino: You two are making it complicated!
---
Ino: Waaah! Sakura! Tenten! I saw Sasuke in the hallway when I went to the registrar's office!
Tenten: Calm down, girl!
Ino: He's so fragrant. I should've asked him what he's gonna wear. *laughs*
Tenten: *laughs*
Ino: Why so serious, Haruno?
Sakura: I'm so stressed out.. The costume.. The lab reports..
Ino: Prioritize the costume! It's once a year anyway.
Sakura: I really want to but I don't think I can..
Tenten: We'll help you!
Ino: Yeah. Finish the postlabs then let's go to your house.
Sakura: Are you sure?
Ino: Yes, ketchup girl.
---
The three tries to finish the ketchup bottle costume as fast as they cand. Sakura tries it on and they all share a laugh.
Ino: Imagine dancing with Sasuke in that costume!
Tenten: You look like a mascot, Sakura! How can you even go to the stage?
Sakura: You guys are annoying! At this point I just want this event to be over.
Ino: So, you don't want to win anymore?
Sakura: I didn't say that.
Tenten: Ah, we shouldn't have helped you. We forgot you're our competitor. *laughs*
---
The Halloween Night comes. The hall is decorated mainly with black and orange. Everyone is mingling with each other regardless of their faculty.
Ino: *laughs* See that girl wearing a fork costume? I remember our convo last time.
Tenten: *laughs* Yeah. It's very cute though!
Ino: Hmm. Have you seen the ketchup girl? Where is she?
---
Tsunade: Sorry for making you work longer today, Sakura.
Sakura: N-No.. It's fine, Tsunade-sensei.
Tsunade: You're supposed to go to the Halloween Night, right?
Sakura: Yes.. If I still have time.. But if not, I'll just skip this year.
Tsunade: It's a compulsary event though. You have to go there and sign the attendance.
Sakura: Is it mandatory?
Tsunade: Yes!
Sakura: Oh, I didn't know..
Tsunade: What's your costume by the way?
Sakura: Um. A Ketchup bottle. I heard Sasuke— Do you happen to know him? He's like the star of the night..
Tsunade: I heard about the matchy-matchy costume thing.. Um, Sakura, could you help me transfer that? *points to a container*
Sakura: Sure, Tsunade-sensei!
They carry the glass jar together. As much as they try to do it carefully, they still drop the container.
Sakura: /thinks/ I'm doomed. Now I have to clean this up.
Tsunade: I'm sorry, Sakura! The jar slipped from my hands.. Oh no, it spilled on your lab coat and uniform.
Sakura: It's okay.. Don't worry about it. I— I'll clean it up now.. *gets the mop; phone starts ringing* Hello?
Ino: Where are you?? Don't tell me you're still in the lab.
Sakura: I am..
Ino: Come on now, Haruno. No one's supposed to work at this hour.
Sakura: I just need to clean this up and finalize some papers then I'll go.
Ino: Where's your costume?
Sakura: It's home.. I'll go home quickly—
Ino: Gosh! Fine! I won't hold you any longer. Just finish that and come here! No signs of Sasuke yet so you're still good.
Sakura: Okay.. Thanks for updating me. Bye.
Tsunade: Sakura, don't mind the mess. Just do the paperwork then you're good to go.
Sakura: Really? Thanks, Tsunade-sensei.
Sakura quickly reviews and writes the lab reports. It still takes her another hour to finish though.
Tsunade: I really feel bad.. Now you'll be late.
Sakura: It's okay, Tsunade-sensei. My house is near.. Just need to go and get my costume—
Tsunade: I'm afraid you don't have enough time.
Sakura: *checks her watch* Yeah.. But I really need to get the costume. Bye, Tsunade-sensei!
Tsunade: Thanks again, Sakura!
---
Ino: S-Sakura?
Sakura: Hey.
Tenten: Girl..
Sakura: I know.. I'm just here for the attendance.
Tenten: What attendance—
Host: *lights were focused to the stage* Are you excited to see our Halloween King? I bet everyone wants to see his costume already. What could he be this year? Ladies and gents, let's all welcome.. Uchiha Sasuke.
Sasuke: *spotlight on him; walks to the center*
Everyone: *gasps*
Ino: H-He's a..
Sasuke: Hello everyone! Please allow me to take my Halloween Queen. *starts going down from the stage*
Everyone: *cheers for him*
Ino: Oh my..
Tenten: Gosh, he's near..
Sasuke: My queen.. Please come with me. *takes Sakura's hand and kisses it*
Sakura: /thinks/ Is this even real?? *walks with him*
Host: Everyone, please cheer for our Halloween King and Queen! Our bloody doctors!!
The romantic music starts playing and the two start to dance on the stage. Everyone watches them at first then follows suit.
Sasuke: Are you okay?
Sakura: Yes.. I— I'm just nervous.. Sorry, I look messy and sweaty..
Sasuke: You look perfect. The blood on your costume looks real.
Sakura: /thinks/ Because it is. Ah, yes.. Actually, I was from the lab before going here—
Sasuke: Ah, enough of the schoolwork. Let's enjoy the night, Sakura.
Sakura: Yeah.. *giggles; realizes he knows her* Y-You know my name?
Sasuke: We've met before, right?
Sakura: *remembers the first aid session* Oh yes.. Um, Sasuke.. Sorry, but do you know where's the attendance sheet it? I haven't signed it yet.
Sasuke: *laughs* There's no such thing, Sakura. It's not a mandatory event. *pulls her closer*
Sakura: Oh.. *rests her face on his chest*
---
Sasuke: Don't you think you overdid it?
Tsunade: If I didn't say that attendance is a must, she won't go there!
Sasuke: And the blood?
Tsunade: It's just food coloring. I won't ever use real blood for that, that's hazardous.
Sasuke: Everything went well, so thank you, Aunt Tsunade.
Tsunade: Does my sister know about this?
Sasuke: *laughs* No, of course. She'll find it silly—
Sakura: Tsunade-sensei, I'm here! *sees Sasuke* S-Sasuke?
Sasuke: *waves at her*
Sakura: You're here?
Tsunade: My nephew just came here to give his payment for a job well done.
Sakura: Nephew?
Sasuke: Yeah. She's my aunt, Sakura.
Sakura: *sees the gifts on the table* The job must be hard for you to get gifts that many.
Tsunade: Well, he asked me to make sure he gets his Halloween Queen.
Sakura: ...What?
Sasuke: Sorry, Sakura. That's my only way to get close with you. I'm only known for my family and this Halloween thing.. I'm not interesting—
Sakura: What are you saying? You're the coolest student of this university..
Sasuke: I don't think so.. So I thought of asking my aunt to make sure that you'd wear your uniform to the event. Because I planned to wear a bloody doctor outfit.
Tsunade: And to spill some fake blood to make your uniform look like a halloween costume. *laughs*
Sakura: Th-That's fake? I threw my uniform away because it looked disgusting..
Sasuke: Sorry for that.. I'll get you a new one—
Sakura: N-No, it's fine.. Wait, so is that also the reason why you said that attendance is compulsary?
Tsunade: I couldn't think of anything that could make you go even if you didn't want to anymore.
Sasuke: I hope you're not mad, Sakura.. I really just—
Sakura: *laughs* I actually find it cute.. My only regret though is the ketchup bottle costume that my friends and I made.
Sasuke: I'll be your mustard anytime, Sakura.
Sakura: *blushes*
Tsunade: Ah, enough of the flirting. Just tell me you're dating now then leave.
Sasuke: We are. Thanks again, Aunt Tsunade. Bye! *places his arm over Sakura's shoulder*
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