
is supplemented by adding the following language at the end of the provision:
#Copio de pdf a word y no se pega nada code
NOW, THEREFORE, UNDER THE AUTHORITY OF TEXAS GOVERNMENT CODE SECTION 418.108, THE MAYOR OF THE CITY OF BEEVILLE AND THE COUNTY JUDGE OF BEE COUNTY, TEXAS, JOINTLY ORDER:ġ. Department of Homeland Security, which was incorporated fully into the Order on March 27, 2020, but not specifically listed out. WHEREAS, this First Supplement does not replace any part of the Order, but rather adds to it to provide additional guidance for religious institutions and access to the same, and append to the Order as Exhibit B, the comprehensive list of critical infrastructure and workers from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency of the U.S. WHEREAS, on March 27, 2020, the Bee County Judge and the Mayor of Beeville issued a Joint Order to Stay at Home (the “Order”) and

TO THE JOINT ORDER OF THE BEE COUNTY JUDGE AND THE MAYOR OF BEEVILLE TO

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As such, it will surely become a pathfinder for others to continue to build on its authoritative conclusions. It is among the first books to examine attitudes to modernity on the Iberian Peninsula. "This book demands the close attention of anyone interested in European intellectual history and modern Spanish male and female subjectivity. With expert plotting, and able to take both the long view and to examine the detail, Rousselle takes us through a variety of literary contexts from 1789 to 1920 and produces scintillating readings each of which presents us with a new way to understand Spain's different transition to modernity" - Sarah Wright, Reader in Hispanic Studies, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK, and author of Tales of Seduction: The Figure of Don Juan in Spanish Culture "Developing a theory of 'gendered disillusion,' Rousselle's fascinating subject is the reactions to the chaos, confusion, and economic and political decline in the wake of the French Revolution in Spain. Un nuevo espacio crítico para el cuento actual, Pygmalión y Galatea: Refracciones modernas de un mito and Cartas sin lacrar: La novela epistolar y la España Ilustrada 1789-1840. In the process, she reveals a key difference in the gendered responses to what it meant to be a modern subject." - Ana Rueda, Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor of Hispanic Studies, University of Kentucky, USA, and author of Relatos desde el vacío. "Rousselle tackles Spain's conflicted relationship with modernity by examining texts by renowned male and female writers from the Enlightenment to the early twentieth century through the focal point of disillusion.
