Re: Flip Chart

Mr. Timothy T. Dickens (ttd3@columbia.edu)
Thu, 12 Dec 1996 16:31:31 -0500 (EST)

At 02:32 PM 12/12/96 -0600, Doug Eckardt wrote:
>Does anybody know if there is something like a portable book format
>Flip Chart for Greek Grammar?
>
>I *think* I saw something like this. I am hoping that someone can
>help me.
>
>Thanks.
>
>--Doug

I think I know what you are looking for. If I am correct, it really isn't a
flip chart. It is a 2-sided card with verb pardigms and noun stems important
enough to always have in front of you. Does this sound like what you are
looking for? Let me know.

Peace and Love,
Timothy T. Dickens
Smyrna, GA

MDick39708@gnn.com Home
ttd3@Columbia.edu School

Please visit my website at:
http://members.gnn.com/mdick39708/timspge.htm

Near Eastern specialist and Egyptologist. . .are too aware of the
isolationism often seen in traditional classics--or more precisely in
studies of Greek civilization--with its emphasis on the events of a
relatively short period, primarily in a particular exemplar of a single
group of cultures. Studies that appear to see fifth-century B.C.E Athens as
the defining experience of all civilization puzzle those whose interest lie
in other areas of the Mediterranean antiquity, and still more those
concerned with other regions of the world.

"On The Aims And Methods of Black Athena"
by John Baines in Black Athena Revisited