Gjør som tusenvis av andre bokelskere
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Does she cringe every time she opens your present? Does the mere thought of wandering the aisles of a department store or clicking around online in search of a gift for her make you anxious? You're not alone. But now there's a solution that'll fit right in your back pocket. With "What Can I Get Her?", you can enlist the special woman in your life -- whether it's a girlfriend, wife, mother, sister, daughter, aunt, or dear friend -- to fill in the blanks of this shopping guide so that it transforms into a tailor-made checklist of what she likes, along with her sizes, go-to designers for clothes, shoes, and accessories, preferred spa treatments, and much more. Not only is this book a smart purchase for men, it's a savvy investment for women eager to put a stop to bad gifts in a non-confrontational way. Just fill out this guide, share it with the man in your life, and await years of spot-on purchases on your behalf!But no matter who makes the first move, this ultimate shopping guide will make up for all those past goof-ups, and it will help save time, avoid disappointments, and perhaps even save a relationship. Plus, it ensures the gift givers' shopping experience is less stressful knowing a purchase will hit the mark for her every time. It is the gift that will keep on giving ... literally.
This small pamphlet is a how-to guide for workers to contribute journalism to the labor and communist press -- an American reflection of the "RabKorr" (Workers Correspondence) movement in the USSR. "Worker correspondents differ from professional journalists in that they are part of the labor and revolutionary movement and fight actively in the struggles of which they write," Dunne remarks. He notes that journalism is a "class affair" upon which "the ruling class puts its stamp...just as it stamps every other form of social activity." In addition to the anti-labor attitudes of the bourgeois press, Dunne declares that the official trade union press, with "a few negligible exceptions" is in reality an aid to capitalism with its imitation of capitalist journalism and catering to "ignorant prejudices," including "warfare on the Communist Party."
Abonner på vårt nyhetsbrev og få rabatter og inspirasjon til din neste leseopplevelse.
Ved å abonnere godtar du vår personvernerklæring.