+ Follow CATHY NEWMAN Tag
Array
(
[results] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 278300
[Title] => Hemlock, anyone?
[Summary] => When Socrates was made to drink his own cup of crushed hemlock (a lethal "tea"), to realize his own death sentence for being, in sum "reasonable" his friends who were with him, understandably all broke down and wept. He calmed them down by saying, "What a way to behave, my strange friends." It was said that Socrates drank the cup "perfectly calmly
without a tremor or without any change in colour or countenance
with good humour and without the least distaste." Then, he slowly perished.
[DatePublished] => 2005-05-19 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 133961
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1249681
[AuthorName] => DE RERUM NATURA By Maria Isabel Garcia
[SectionName] => Science and Environment
[SectionUrl] => science-and-environment
[URL] =>
)
)
)
CATHY NEWMAN
Array
(
[results] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 278300
[Title] => Hemlock, anyone?
[Summary] => When Socrates was made to drink his own cup of crushed hemlock (a lethal "tea"), to realize his own death sentence for being, in sum "reasonable" his friends who were with him, understandably all broke down and wept. He calmed them down by saying, "What a way to behave, my strange friends." It was said that Socrates drank the cup "perfectly calmly
without a tremor or without any change in colour or countenance
with good humour and without the least distaste." Then, he slowly perished.
[DatePublished] => 2005-05-19 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 133961
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1249681
[AuthorName] => DE RERUM NATURA By Maria Isabel Garcia
[SectionName] => Science and Environment
[SectionUrl] => science-and-environment
[URL] =>
)
)
)
abtest