yes...thats weird...in my case i wasnt his girlfriend....just partys at the school....but i was very surprised because mexico is a city with 120 millions people....and she is my halfsister, so she did no have the same life as me....i mean we where living in differents places, with differents friends....so is kind of....casuality
with a guy who was inloved of you, in the prehighschool (1973)....i just saw them, they came to cancun for vacations, and I did not know him, until yesterday he told me......i was really surprised, because he looked familiar to me, but i didnt remember where I meet him....so he told me we where studing in the same school.....so was very nice surprised, but at the same time shocked......
The Maya were quite accomplished astronomers. Their primary interest, in contrast to "western" astronomers, were Zenial Passages when the Sun crossed over the Maya latitudes. On an annual basis the sun travels to its summer solstice point, or the latitude of 23-1/3 degrees north.
Most of the Maya cities were located south of this latitude, meaning that they could observe the sun directly overhead during the time that the sun was passing over their latitude. This happened twice a year, evenly spaced around the day of solstice.
The Maya could easily determine these dates, because at local noon, they cast no shadow. Zenial passage observations are possible only in the Tropics and were quite unknown to the Spanish conquistadors who descended upon the Yucatan peninsula in the 16th century. The Maya had a god to represented this position of the Sun called the Diving God.
The Maya believed the Earth was flat with four corners. Each corner represented a cardinal direction. Each direction had a color: east-red; north-white; west-black; south-yellow. Green was the center.
At each corner, there was a jaguar of a different color that supported the sky. The jaguars were called bacabs. Mayans believed that four jaguars held up the sky.
The civilisation of Egypt has fascinated people since ancient times. Nowadays the sphinx and the pyramids, King Tutankhamun and Queen Nefertiti are among the most recognised images on the face of the earth. In this gallery Michael Wood, presenter of many BBC archaeology and history programmes, shows off his own favourite top ten historic Egyptian sites. Some of them will be familiar, some could be real surprises, and on the way he'll be telling some of the stories of the pharaohs and the queens who shaped Egyptian history.
in 1989 i was living in montreal, and went to the beisball final dodgers vs expos from montreal.........game was about 5 hours.... no understand that sport
always there is a second chance....I have not been married....so i go for my first one.....dave....just think that if you doit now, will be a mature love...this will be the good one....truste me...
RE: will u date an Asian tan like me?
well.....something else...