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adderall pills effects Each brother wore a thin gray sweatsuit issued by the State Department, along with a pair of flimsy white canvas sneakers. Each carried his precious immigration documents in a plastic bag. Maduk, 17, and Riak, 15, appeared petrified and uncertain of what was to happen next, but Peter Dut, who is small-framed with a high forehead and a thoughtful demeanor that bespeaks the fact that he has been in charge of his family since turning 12, stepped forward. He pumped the hand of Michelle Irmen, a 25-year-old caseworker from Lutheran Social Services of North Dakota, who stood smiling nervously. As she started to usher the three boys toward a pile of winter coats and hats she had bought for them earlier that day, she realized that Peter was not following. He was instead studying the black night and spiraling snow through the airport window, puzzled, remembering possibly what that businessman in Minneapolis said about surviving Fargo. ''Excuse me,'' he said, worriedly eyeing the dark ice-covered plains of his new American home. ''Can you tell me, please, is it now night or day?''