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The Lung Cancer Alliance - 0 views

  • About Lung Cancer Lung Cancer is a disease that begins in the tissue of the lungs. The lungs are sponge-like organs that are part of the respiratory system. During breathing, air enters the mouth or nasal passage and travels down the trachea. The trachea splits into two sets of bronchial tubes that lead to the left and right lung. The bronchi branch off into smaller and smaller tubes that eventually end in small balloon-like sacs known as alveoli. The alveoli are where oxygen, carbon dioxide, and other substances are exchanged between the lungs and the blood stream.
    • Diana Davis
       
      this is a serious problem that is killing off alot of americans
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    it begins in the tissue of your lungs
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Man's Best Friend - 0 views

  • Dog lovers have no problem telling you why the dog is considered man's best friend
  • Loyalty, unconditional love, companionship and laughs
  • Canine Assistants
    • Ashley T
       
      A program called Canine Assistants was created to help people in need.
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  • "Canine Assistants service dogs assist children and adults with physical disabilities or other special needs in a variety of ways. Some of the tasks our dogs perform include turning lights on and off, opening and closing doors, pulling wheelchairs, retrieving dropped objects, summoning help, and providing secure companionship.
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    website
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Inland Taipan info. - 0 views

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Wildlife of Sydney - Fact File - Sugar Glider - 0 views

    • keanu Dickinson
       
      this animal dosent seem harmful or disturbing in any way actually it looks peaceful.
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Kookaburra info. 2 - 0 views

  • known as the Laughing Jackasses of Australia
  • Kookaburras have a stout and compact body, short neck, rather long and pointed bill and short legs
  • family Kingfishers
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  • the upper parts dark brown, the wings spotted gray-blue. A white band separates the head from the body. There is a dark stripe through the eye, and the under parts are white. The strong bill is black.
  • Kookaburras inhabit woodland areas of eastern and south western Australia.
  • The Kookaburra seizes snakes behind the head and kills them by dropping them from a height, or else carries them to a perch and batters them senseless with its big bill before swallowing them.
  • The Australian aborigines have a legend about the Kookaburra. When the sun rose for the first time, the god Bayame ordered the kookaburra to utter its loud, almost human laughter in order to wake up mankind so that they should not miss the wonderful sunrise. The aborigines also believed that any child who insulted a kookaburra would grow an extra slanting tooth.
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Behaviourism - 0 views

  • To the behaviourist about clocks, a clock is simply something with such time-indicating exterior parts
  • The inner workings of any clock are entirely irrelevant to its status as a clock, provided they produce (or at least don't interfere with) the movement of the hands. The anti-behaviourist, by contrast, thinks of a clock as an inner mechanism which, in favourable circumstances, can cause some exterior parts to move in a way which reliably indicates the time
    • Minjie Kim
       
      basically, a behaviorist thinks only of the outside, what they are able to observe.
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Kookaburra info. - 0 views

  • Kookaburras (genus Dacelo) (or Cookaburras)
  • terrestrial kingfishers native to Australia and New Guinea
  • Kookaburras are best known for their unmistakable call, which is uncannily like loud, echoing human laughter — good-natured, if rather hysterical, merriment in the case of the well-known Laughing Kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguineae); and maniacal cackling in the case of the slightly smaller Blue-winged Kookaburra (D. leachii)
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  • habitats ranging from humid forest to arid savanna
  • Kookaburras are carnivorous. They will eat lizards, snakes, insects, mice and raw meat
  • territorial, and often live with the partly grown chicks of the previous season. They often sing as a chorus to mark their territory.
  • eat babies of other birds and snakes, and insects and small reptiles. In zoos, they are usually fed food for birds of prey, and dead baby chicks
  • three mascots chosen for the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney
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Moon alphabet - 0 views

  • The Moon alphabet is easier to learn than Braille, particularly for people who lose their sight in later life. The letters of the Moon alphabet can represent individual sounds, parts of words, whole words or numbers.
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Japan - Ancient Cultures - 0 views

  • Based on archaeological evidence, they also agree that by between 35,000 and 30,000 B.C. Homo sapiens had migrated to the islands from eastern and southeastern Asia and had well-established patterns of hunting and gathering and stone toolmaking .
  • the Jomon people were making clay figures and vessels decorated with patterns made by impressing the wet clay with braided or unbraided cord and sticks (jomon means "patterns of plaited cord") with a growing sophistication.
  • Many other elements of Japanese culture also may date from this period and reflect a mingled migration from the northern Asian continent and the southern Pacific areas.
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  • The earliest of these people, who are thought to have migrated from Korea to northern Kyushu and intermixed with the Jomon, also used chipped stone tools.
  • Their irrigated, wet-rice culture was similar to that of central and south China, requiring heavy inputs of human labor, which led to the development and eventual growth of a highly sedentary, agrarian society.
  • The earliest written records about Japan are from Chinese sources from this period. Wa (the Japanese pronunciation of an early Chinese name for Japan) was first mentioned in A.D. 57.
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Morse Code - 0 views

  • He conceived the basic idea of an electromagnetic telegraph in 1832, and produced the first working telegraph set in 1836. This made transmission possible over any distance.
  • can easily converse at 20 to 30 words per minute
  • Morse Code can be transmitted using sound or light
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  • The standard international distress signal is •••---•••
  • (SOS)
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Braille alphabet - 0 views

  • It was invented by Louis Braille (1809-1852), a French teacher of the blind. It consists of patterns of raised dots arranged in cells of up to six dots in a 3 x 2 configuration.
  • Each cell represents a letter, numeral or punctuation mark.
  • Grade 3, which is used only in personal letters, diaries, and notes. It is a kind of shorthand, with entire words shortened to a few letters.
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  • Braille has been adapted to write many different languages, including Chinese, and is also used for musical and mathematical notation.
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Behaviorism Tutorial - Part 1 - Section 2 - 0 views

  • classical behaviorism formally and explicitly defined psychology as the science of behavior
  • metaphysical behaviorism subscribes to the view that the only things that are real are things that are publicly observable
    • Minjie Kim
       
      this basically means that only things you can see exist, so it really puts a damper on all that happiness and love and sorrow and all that junk
  • metaphysical behaviorism
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  • if the existence of mental phenomena is denied because they are unobservable, is the existence of all unobservables, including unobservable experiences, denied?
  • The question that arose from metaphysical behaviorism was again whether we really want to deny the existence or reality of all phenomena that aren't publicly observable
  • philosophical behaviorism emphasizes that mental concepts in psychological explanations mean nothing more than dispositions to engage in publicly observable behavior
  • logical behaviorism emphasizes that mental concepts in psychological explanations must be verified in terms of publicly observable behavior
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How Does Lung Cancer Harm Your Body? | eHow.com - 0 views

  • Lung cancer most often spreads to the liver, the adrenal glands, the bones and the brain.Metastatic lung cancer in the liver usually does not cause symptoms, at least by the time of diagnosis.Metastatic lung cancer in the adrenal glands also typically causes no symptoms by the time of diagnosis.Metastasis to the bones is most common with small cell cancers but also occurs with other lung cancer types. Lung cancer that has metastasized to the bone causes bone pain, usually in the backbone (vertebrae), the thighbones and the ribs.Lung cancer that spreads to the brain can cause difficulties with vision, weakness on one side of the body and/or seizures.
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    it could spread to many different parts of the body
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WikiAnswers - How does breast cancer affect or harm your body - 0 views

  • Breast cancer can rapidly spread to other parts of the body through the lymphatic system, and sometimes because of its proximity to the major body organs of the lung and heart. If left untreated, it will cause death, as it also may if not detected in the early stages before entering the lymphatic system.
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    if it is untreated it could cause death
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Student Research Center - powered by EBSCOhost: Early Japan -- The Yayoi Period - 0 views

  • Japan entered into its second major prehistoric period, a civilized era known as the Yayoi period.
  • he name Yayoi is derived from an area Tokyo known as Yayoi, where the first documented pottery from this period was discovered in an archaeological excavation in 1884.
  • ron and bronze materials are believed to have been exchanged with Japanese envoys either for token tributes or prisoners of war.
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  • early all of the country's inhabitants belong to the same ethnic group and share the same racial background and cultural characteristics.
  • Within the villages, households consist of large families. This usually includes a farmer, his wife and children, grandparents, and grown sons and their families.
  • Yayoi culture originally developed in northern Kyushu, the western and southernmost of Japan's main islands.
  • Japanese city life is much more Westernized than that of the countryside.
  • ayoi culture spread into Honshu (Japan's largest island) and present-day Tokyo in the Middle (100 BC-100 AD) to Late Yayoi (100-300AD) period.
  • Modern entertainment is also active in the cities of Japan.
  • The Japanese celebrate many holidays and practice many customs throughout the year.
  • On May 5 Kodomo-no-Hi (Children's Day) is celebrated. This is a day set aside to honor all children.
  • Perhaps the most important development of the Yayoi period was the cultivation of rice, probably introduced from the area near the Yangtze River delta in southern China.
  • November 23 marks Kansha-no-Hi (Labor-Thanksgiving Day). On this day, the Japanese give thanks to laborers and for a successful harvest.
  • apanese men and women did not choose their marriage partners based on love. Instead, marriage was arranged by families who paired couples based on their social and economic status.
  • At the end of the day a large bathtub is filled with hot water. Then, each family member, in turn washes and rinses thoroughly before getting into the tub.
  • In addition to pottery and iron and bronze tools, archaeologists have depended largely on burial remains to uncover Yayoi culture.
  • For years, the Japanese have taken great pride in their performing arts. Dance and theater are essential parts of Japanese culture.
  • n northeastern Japan, secondary burials were conducted in which the bones of the dead were exhumed, painted decoratively, and placed in ornamental clay jars.
  • "No plays" are other types of theatrical performances common in Japan.
  • The gagaku, for example, is classical music that was introduced into Japan from China in the 8th century A.D.
  • Western music is also popular in Japan.
  • For many years the Japanese style of dress consisted of long, flowing robes called kimonos.
  • The climate of Japan varies a great deal from heavy snows and extreme cold along the west coast to warm and humid summers in the rest of the country.
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CO2 and temperature change - 0 views

  • According to global warming theory, if an enhanced greenhouse effect (from increased levels of CO2 or indeed any other greenhouse gas) is responsible for warming the earth, then the rate of temperature rise should be greatest in that part of the earth’s atmosphere known as the troposphere, specifically in the tropics. And yet the observations, from weather balloons and satellites have consistently shown that not to be the case. I urge readers to look at the Christy et al papers below. The latest one was recently published in the Journal of Geophysical Research (2007). This may seem like a rather technical issue, but it strikes at the very heart of the theory of man made global warming.
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WWF - Tigers - Overview - 0 views

    • keanu Dickinson
       
      I cant belive that people would kill animals for money or coats.
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Bonds that beat stocks, hands down - MSN Money - 0 views

  • The reasons are partly technical, but the bottom line is that this asset class is perhaps the most compelling investment opportunity in today's marketplace. I expect equitylike returns, well into double digits, over the next year or two. And everyday investors can easily target these bonds with mutual funds and exchange-traded funds.
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    reason
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Causes of Drug Addiction - LoveToKnow Recovery - 0 views

  • Elite athletes are susceptible to using drugs. They use them for performance enhancing abilities. Steroids can make muscles bigger, while amphetamines help reduce or numb pain, allowing persons to play injured. Recently, major league baseball has come under fire for drug abuse. Though not as prominent, high school and college athletes have also been known to use drugs to enhance their performance.
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Five reasons to buy Yahoo stock - Oct. 23, 2008 - 0 views

  • Yes, Yahoo is losing share to Google. Yes, Yahoo is barely growing. Yes, it's a tired argument that Yahoo is one of the strongest brands in the media world. Yes, this argument for owning its stock hasn't worked in a long time.
    • Eriel Eaglin
       
      yahoo is loosing shares to Google
  • It's cheap. There's always that. Morgan Stanley's Mary Meeker figures that given the value of Yahoo's cash and its publicly traded Asian assets (even taking into account the difficulty in selling stakes in other companies), investors value Yahoo's core business at just $6 per share, or eight times Wall Street's estimates of 2009 profits. That's an extraordinarily low multiple for any company with the opportunities in front of it that Yahoo has. Yahoo's management thought Yahoo was cheap at $30, of course. Today, investors would do quite nicely for a fraction of that amount. 
    • Eriel Eaglin
       
      they say that yahoo stocks are cheap
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    buy yahoo stocks
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