At a Mile Away In a rundown neighborhood about a mile from Mrs. Neilan's house are two severely contaminated lots, where the readings of hexavalent chromium readings have ranged from 400 to 500 parts a million, according to the state's records.
The aircraft's four-stroke engine was supposed to be regulated at 3,900rpm, but the readings ranged from 3,100 to 4,100rpm.
In Sprague, the reading ranged from 0.7 to 26.3; Torrington, from 1.3 to 52.4, and Trumbull, from 0.7 to 20.9, while Voluntown's readings ranged from 1.3 to 22.8 and those in Woodstock from 0.8 to 45.4.
Additionally the combined reading and math SAT scores range from 870-1040 when looking at the 25th though 75th percentiles.
His reading ranges from Arabian philosophers and naturalists to Aristotle, Eusebius, Cicero, Seneca, Julius Caesar (whom he calls Julius Celsus), and even the Jew, Peter Alphonso.
For 10 residents, the readings ranged from 1.8 to 2.7 millisieverts, but these values are mostly believed to be related to usage errors (dosimeters left outside or exposed to X-ray luggage screening).
Like so many of Mr. Maazel's standard repertory performances, this reading ranged from inspired to needlessly micromanaged, and from crystalline to coarse.
The reading ranged from Victor Hugo and Cervantes ("I didn't even know who he was") to sports novels and "Bomba the Jungle Boy," "sort of a Tarzan ripoff, but I liked him because he was younger than Tarzan."
His reading ranges from George F. Kennan, the former Ambassador to Moscow and Sovietologist, to escapist books on mountain climbing.