I have a question regarding the interpretation in General Chemistry by Pauling (p. 77 - 78) about the spin of the electron/ it's angular momentum vector direction in a magnetic field:
It was discovered in 1925 by two Dutch physicists, George E. Uhlenbeck (born 1900) and Samuel A. Goudsmit (born 1902), that the electron has properties corresponding to its having a spin; it can be described as rotating about an axis in a way that can be compared with the rotation of the earth about an axis through its north pole and south pole. The amount of spin (angular momentum) is the same for all electrons, but the orientation of the axis can change. With respect to a specified direction, such as the direction of the earth's magnetic field, a free electron can orient itself in either one of only two ways: either it lines up parallel to the field, or antiparallel (with the opposite orientation).
Keeping this in mind, on the next page he shows the following illustration:
It seems to me, that the angular momentum vector does not line up parallel/ antiparallel to the field. Is the previous statement therefore wrong or am I missing a particular word or emphasis?