Space Pirates (Full Throttle Space Tales)
MORPHOLOGY, PLUMAGE, AND HABITAT OF THE NEWLY DESCRIBED CINNABAR HAWK-OWL FROM NORTH SULAWESI, INDONESIA.: An article from: Wilson Bulletin
This digital document is an article from Wilson Bulletin, published by Wilson Ornithological Society on March 1, 2001. The length of the article is 2859 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: MORPHOLOGY, PLUMAGE, AND HABITAT OF THE NEWLY DESCRIBED CINNABAR HAWK-OWL FROM NORTH SULAWESI, INDONESIA.
Author: Robert J. Lee
Publication: Wilson Bulletin (Refereed)
Date: March 1, 2001
Publisher: Wilson Ornithological Society
Volume: 113 Issue: 1 Page: 17
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Just One Look

Studio: Tai Seng Entertainment Release Date: 08/23/2005 Run time: 96 minutes
Before Breast Cancer Surgery

In the past, choosing a breast surgeon and having the tumor removed were the very first steps in the treatment of breast cancer. Today, however, there are many steps that should occur prior to having a breast cancer removed-steps that . decrease the chance that the tumor comes back, . improve the chance that the right treatment is given, . decrease the complications from surgery, . more accurately determines if chemotherapy is needed. In addition, finding the right breast surgeon can improve one’s chance of survival by as much as 35 percent, a benefit frequently larger than either radiation therapy or chemotherapy. Before Breast Cancer Surgery is a focused easy-to-read book written in a question/answer format to rapidly arm the reader with all the information she needs to ensure that she receives the best possible care.
Fenwick Houses
The Back Book (A Johns Hopkins Press Health Book)
Eighty percent of Americans experience back pain in varying degrees at some point in their lives. In fact, back pain is second only to the common cold as a reason why people visit a doctor.
In The Back Book, Johns Hopkins surgeons Ziya L. Gokaslan and Lee Hunter Riley explain the causes and complexities of back pain and the various paths to diagnosis and treatment. Stressing the importance of individualized treatment, they discuss the process of establishing a treatment plan that is acceptable to the person with pain as well as to the attending physician. They also:
? lay out reasonable expectations for surgical and nonsurgical treatment? illuminate the possibilities, risks, and limitations of back surgery? describe how to select a surgeon and the importance of choosing the right one
Informative and reassuring, The Back Book provides readers with the knowledge they need to understand their back pain and get started on the route to relief.
Secret Society

Secret Society looks at the life of Daisy, a plump young woman and her adoring husband Ken, who finds her so beautiful he is sure he can make a living selling nude postcards of her. Daisy is uncomfortable with the plan so she decides to go out and earn money herself.
Daisy notices that her new boss Marlene grants special privileges to a group of heavy-set female factory workers. Soon Daisy leans that the women are a part of a “secret society” of sumo wrestlers. This group of buxom factory women had been meeting secretly after work each day to train in this ancient and graceful Japanese martial art that is both a sport and a philosophy for life. Although not usually practiced by females, Sumo is just the thing to give these large women a new sense of self-respect, confidence and dignity. However, when Ken discovers his wife has joined the group, Daisy must choose between the life she has always known and the possibility of achieving something extraordinary.
Sanctuary

As peaceful and enchanting as a sunset’s afterglow on a cloudless summer evening, the gentle music of Riley Lee (playing shakuhachi flute, an instrument traditionally used by Japanese monks) and Bert Moon (on koto, a 13-string zither) stirs a warm, caressing breeze that calms the spirit and stills the mind. Lee, an Australian, is one of the few non-Japanese musicians to be acknowledged as a dai shihan (grand master) of the shakuhachi, a fairly primitive flute made from a bamboo root. His talents are artfully displayed on this tranquil assortment of improvisational duets with Moon, recorded in 1984 and first released in 1991 as a meditative cassette titled Evening Mist. Lee’s elegant, prolonged tones are gentle to the point of weightlessness, residing in comfortable low and middle ranges without sounding a shrill note. Moon, though not credited on the recording’s front cover, admirably handles an egalitarian role throughout the disc’s 61Â minutes, handsomely complementing Lee’s cerebral textures with dignified, unobtrusive accents. Listeners raised on Occidental music will find little alien about Lee and Moon’s graceful, unhurried duets, ideal for periods of restfulness or contemplation. –Terry Wood





![General Robert E. Lee after Appomattox (1922) [Special Illustrated Edition]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51iJ%2BJ9EjqL.jpg)