Thanks. I do find it surprising that Gibson used no Greek at all, when he could have used the unaltered words of the New Testament for at least some of the dialogue.
02/06/2004 11:14:40 AM PST
· 17 of 71 aristeides
to Verginius Rufus; mrustow
Well, it's true that, immediately before WWI, and for years after it, Hitler lived in Munich. But, much more than Munich, it was Vienna that shaped him. Read Brigitte Hamann's Hitler's Vienna: A Dictator's Apprenticeship. Hitler really did resist becoming part of a proletarian crowd there. (Hamann has since gone on to Hitler's Munich and Third Reich years in Winifred Wagner oder Hitlers Bayreuth, but that book has not been translated into English yet.)
William W. Freehling, The Road to Disunion: Secessionists at Bay, 1776-1854 has a map of 1855 slave density in the South on pp. 10-11. It was very low in the mountain country of western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee.
That is, they can't find any, or a lot, of actual dispersal mechanisms, but they have found indications of the "chemistry" or the biologicals themselves.
But wouldn't you find such indications in any university chemistry or biology department?
If, as I suspect, the Columbia was allowed to fly when it did because of some military mission having to do with the impending war in Iraq, I wonder if this diary has anything to say about that.
That means that Kerry could be at 30%, and Dean at 15%.
That one candidate is at the edge of the margin of error has 5% probability. It's possible, but not very likely.
That two candidates are at the edge of their margins of error has a much lower probability than that. I don't know how to calculate this probability (you can't just square 5%, because the fact that one of the candidates is much higher or lower than he should be means that any other candidate should move in the opposite direction, but it's very unlikely one single candidate should move by the whole difference.) But since it is much lower than 5%, and I would also guess lower than 1%, in statistics it would ordinarily be discounted.