Sunday, March 13, 2011

What Happen If Patient Slips Into Coma

Meditations on a coin of the Empire

Viewed this Sunday morning, an old black and white extraordinary documentary on child labor in Naples. The bad year was 1970. RAI paid his debt with the interests of public service funded by the Italian canon. Some
Sunday on RAI 3 is a conductor asked a popularizer of science and history because in Roman coins always obstinately heads look to the left (is there a political significance? ih ih ih). And that's always said that mica is so, and then he started to wander as a young student looking tan at maturity ...
Yet it seems undisputed that the heads of Romans are generally directed to the right, and only exceptionally to the left (is there a political meaning?). It depends on whether the engraving of the issue was more easy and natural to the left, or why was someone else? Mystery.
probably in 1970 at the RAI knew all respond in some way the question without digressing as a bearded student approaching maturity, and in those days there was a sense to pay fees to the RAI, and perhaps even Borghezio paid him (or her parents paid for him , which is more plausible, he was small). Then the flood. They came on TV screaming for the Barbarians, led by sneering anchormen.
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