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katoon
katoon aka Chandheeb Rajakumar is a 26.37 year old boy, has been a member since November 27, 2004, has scored 2,665 submissions, giving an average score of 1.04, helping 32 designs get printed.
Seriously Travis, best sequel. I wish Mission 5 wasn't a 12 month. I can't wait for "The _________ of Mission 7"


..."Mayhem" perhaps?

Anyways, cudos.





shirtflirt
shirtflirt on Feb 12 '07 at 1:23pm
this shirt turned out awesome-ly
travis76
   travis76 on Feb 12 '07 at 2:05pm
oh believe me, i've dug through the dictionary and thesaurus for moody "M" words already. if i ever get my own line to waste dead spacemen designs on, i'll probably do 8.....which means i have to go back and do prequels 1-4....!
realslimnatey
realslimnatey on Feb 12 '07 at 2:14pm
dude this is seriously the coolest thing ever, making these shirts even more of a collectors item! congrats again mister trav
raszor
raszor on Feb 12 '07 at 7:15pm
I haven't seen mission 5, is there a link somewhere?
2 days later
sallyrover
sallyrover on Feb 15 '07 at 5:44pm
I'll be wearing this one whenever "Christmas on Mars" finally gets released to a waiting Earth...
2 days later
bhoomika
bhoomika on Feb 17 '07 at 10:13pm
I like the colors!
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Mammals of the binomial classification Rajakumari chandheeba thrive in the diverse climate of Southwestern Ontario. Though not indigenous to this environment, since their introduction in 1986, R. chandheeba have succeeded in finding a suitable niche without causing significant harm to the ecosystem.

These animals feed primarily on chicken salad sandwiches, mediteranean-style pizza, and baby carrots. In dry seasons, when resources are scarce, they have even been known to eat "Fruit-on-the-Bottom" yogurt; a testament to the adaptive nature of this organism.

Rajakumari chandheeba is a species that is greatly at risk. Though exact numbers of their population are not known, ecologists believe that less than seven remain in the wild. In the past, radio tracking collars were used to study the migratory patterns of this elusive creature, but this approach is no longer useful as R. chandheeba have mastered the removal of such collars.