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  1. roughmaps.com

    How your English usage is stuck in a perpetual identity crisis between UK and the rest of North America. Like, you randomly adopt US spelling conventions for things with -ize or -ization (as opposed to -ise everywhere else) but still write color, favorite, center, bank check, behavior, program, etc. the British way.
  2. thetravel.com

    22 Consuming The Donut Hole . America loves Dunkin' Donuts but in Canada there's no more common snack then the popped out hole of the donut. Sold by the popular chain Tim Hortons (a donut and coffee shop), the snack is called Timbits and they can be purchased by the box, by the dozen.
  3. Brown's 229-page book comes at an interesting time, too, as Canada rings in its 150th birthday this year. "Due to the 150th [birthday], the government is force-feeding us maple syrup, so this is a shot of vinegar to cleanse the palette," says Brown.
  4. EIGHT IN TEN CANADIANS (82%): BUSH NO FRIEND OF CANADA, DOESN'T REALLY KNOW CANADIAN ISSUES But Canadians Split Over Future Relationship Between The Two Countries: More Canadians (39%) Believe Canada's Relationship With The U.S. Should Be Closer Than Farther Apart (27%) While
  5. museum You reminded me of Uncle Tom's Cabin and it might qualify here. I recall visiting it on a class trip years ago. Josiah Henson was the author, activist, minister, abolitionist who inspired Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin novel. He was born into slavery in Maryland and eventually escaped, fled to "Upper Canada" (Ontario) in 1830 and founded a settlement for other fugitive slaves.

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