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A company car <a href=" http://www.tomitadesigns.com/?buy-leukeran ">buy leukeran online </a> J K Rowling's novels were always canny compendia of some of the best children's stories of the past, from Tom Brown's Schooldays to the Jennings books and the Nancy Drew mysteries. Not always so obvious was the extent to which she smuggled into her boarding-school fictions the kind of social concerns we tend to associate these days with someone like Philip Pullman. Rogue elements in The Chamber of Secrets, such as Snape and Malfoy, betray their malignity by the readiness with which they mock poor Ron, he of the wonky wand, second-hand textbooks, and mouth so ajar when shocked that a magic carpet the size of Timbuktu could pass straight through it. Harry may envy Ron's family home, but that's because he's an orphan; Ron's a bit ashamed, not least by his dad (played by Mark Williams of The Fast Show), a minion at the Misuse of Muggle Artefacts Office.