I agree. The best way I found to study was to transcribe and organize my class notes as soon as possible after the class to add what I could remember but didn't get written down. Then I had cogent notes to study later.
Someone wanted to control other people and taught his kids how to do the same. At some point, a defensible perimeter was constructed and everything inside is considered a country.
Prepare yourselves for so much inane drivel being spouted by so many people who have never met either of them, but think they know everything that will happen.
There certainly remains a considerable German influence in Galveston, New Braunfels, and of course, Fredericksburg, but mostly it is the German food that one notices today. Relatively few of the Germans survived the 1900 Galveston Hurricane and those in Fredericksburg didn't fare too well in the Indian Wars. More noticeable today is the Czech influence.
Here is info on two of the more prominent Galveston Germans:
The problem with Sinbad was the NOT subtle CGI animation. It was like watching two movies mashed together and visually it didn't work. Dreamworks should have learned not that traditional animation is bad, but being lazy with it IS. They should have gone all-traditional animation, it would have been much much better to look at.
Wish I could go live in Sweden, but I'm not a permanent resident there. Maybe I could be a criminal there instead. Do the criminals get paid for sick days, too?
They got some cute ladycops in New Zealand. Unfortunately, I'm not a permanent resident. Maybe I could be a criminal instead. Do they have to be permanent residents?
Hint #4 is a bit confusing. It should say "The green house is IMMEDIATELY to the left of the white house." I was stuck until I saw how they interpreted "on the left".
Here is info on two of the more prominent Galveston Germans:
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/155850709/august-r-rollfing
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/155850568/Louisa-Christina-Rollfing
More on their story can be found in Isaac's Storm.
I was stuck until I saw how they interpreted "on the left".