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"Seventy-two precious arts are held in a brocade bag, they're kept just like a great treasure. Eighteen turn out the essence in the famous treatises on pugilistic arts. Eighteen other arts describe in more detail training methods if you use special tools and training equipment. Wonderful ways of adopting the flexibility in the breath-chi, exercises in obtaining hardness and lightness, clenching methods are written with all the blood of monks in magazines that are kept being a treasure in the brocade bag. One can seldom meet people who genuinely wish to do exercises with zeal: to become a real hero, you have to often feel bitter taste of hard labour. " /Secret Shaolin Treatises about the Pugilistic Art/ Tucked away at the bottom of the Theme menu are Basic and High Contrast Themes, these are ideal for those who have difficulty reading against some of the colour schemes or cannot see icons against a busy display. They are also useful if your machine is low on system resources or has an older video card. Van Gogh began his work relying on the Dutch Masters. He was intrigued by the Masters' ability to have fun with shadow and lightweight. He also found an association in the painting of common events and/or people. For instance, The Potato Eaters captures a small grouping of peasants sitting yourself down for any meal. The painting is dark, yet, light radiates from your faces. After the battle of Verti?res, Dessalines has declared Haiti?s independence on January 1, 1804. After winning the Independence war, Dessalines met using the heroic leaders and asked Boirond-Tonnerre to write the Declaration of Independence with the newly Republic, which was then changed from French Saint-Domingue to Haiti. A few lines of Haiti?s Declaration of Independence by Boiron Tonnerre follow: ?In order to write the Declaration of our Independence, we have to hold the skin of a White man (Frenchman) for parchment, his skull for inkstand, his blood for ink along with a bayonet for pen?. Dessalines was then chosen with a council of generals (blacks and mulattos) to assume the office of Governor-General. Nine months later, he proclaimed himself Emperor Jacques 1er in September 1804 and ruled Haiti until his assassination on October 17, 1806.