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61. 1995 Bibliography By The Social History Of Alcohol Review At Athg.org
JM Palaeoethnobotanical Finds of Vitis from greece. Food and A Historical Review. American Indian culture and Research the longheld family tradition in the
http://www.athg.org/bibliography/1995.html
The Social History of Alcohol Review and the Alcohol and Temperance History Group ( athg.org ) Online Bibliography The Social History of Alcohol Review is the quarterly journal of the Alcohol and Temperance History Group. We collate our printed "Current Literature" bibliographies into these online bibliographies. ATHG members author these bibliographies collectively; we rely on you to make these bibliographies accurate and comprehensive. Please contribute bibliography by emailing your own bibliography to <shar@athg.org>. Do not worry about sending duplicate citations; they are most welcome; we will use them to check the accuracy of our citations. Also, please report errors to <shar@athg.org>. This page last updated June 3, 2002 . This bibliography includes citations published in our Spring/Summer 2001 issue. Jump to other bibliographies: General Craufurd-Lewis, Michael. "Treaties with Aboriginal Minorities." Aboriginal History 19:1-2 (1995), 41-78. [Recounts the prevalence of alcoholism among indigenous populations in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the United States during the last four centuries.]

62. Histoty They Don ‘t Teach You
with introducing the sport into greece, and Greeks has scratched its mark into ourculture as it Cockfighting A Rural American tradition, Missouri folklore
http://thelibrary.springfield.missouri.org/lochist/periodicals/wrv/V35/N2/f95d.h
Volume 35 , Number 2 , Fall 1995
A Tradition of Cockfighting by Lynn Morrow The rising popularity of cockfighting in the past decade has placed the Ozarks, and in particular the White River region, in the forefront of this ancient blood or pit sport. Sportsmen in our region, and others with family connections here, have served as officers and lobbyists in the national and Missouri United Gamefowl Breeders Association. Animal rights activists in Missouri have risen to oppose cockfighting, seeking prohibitive legislation, so far unsuccessfully. The debate over this sport, which is deeply rooted in the traditions of the Ozarks, calls for an historical review. Such a review is especially helpful in considering cockfighting since, as one southern mountaineer said in regard to the sport, "Here’s history they don’t teach you." A wise Missouri jurist wrote that "Tradition depends not at all upon thinking, nor is it disturbed by thinking. Of all the influences which affect the conduct and affections of men, none is so powerful as tradition. Resting upon use and custom, it is independent of the caprice of man and exercises over him an uncontrollable dominion. The value of tradition lies in its unreasonableness. It contains experience rather than thinking." And therein lies much of the debate: tradition unites us, convictions divide us, a rule that Thomas Jefferson knew well when he said that "a little rebellion now and then is a good thing." Cockfighting in the Ozarks comes more immediately from our British colonial inheritance; in fact, the sport (after boxing) was probably the first European one in the New World. By the 12th century, schoolboy cocking was an annual event in some grammar schools. Students brought their cockpennys to school, building a fund to finance the event at the end of the term prizes were awarded to the winners. The grammar school competitions in Britain continued into the early nineteenth century.

63. MYSTERIOUS WORLD: Spring 2002: Fragments
will continue to build a rich tradition of myth and Lonely Planet's greece is an expertguide to this map; extensive writings on history, culture, and mythology
http://www.mysteriousworld.com/Journal/2002/Spring/Fragments/

Editorial
Fragments Shasta I Sea Serpents I ... Atlantis I
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Avebury
Ayers Rock Bigfoot ... Books
An aerial view of the Avebury stone circle complex, in southwest England. With over 150 stones and and outer circle over a mile in circumference, Avebury is the largest known neolithic religious complex in the world. Avebury is an ancient religious center located in southwest England, just 24 miles north of its more famous cousin, Stonehenge . Avebury, however, is actually much larger than Stonehenge and, it is believed, played a more important role in England's prehistory. Avebury was built around 2400 b.c., during the Neolithic Period, and was in regular use for over 2,300 years. The primary stone circle is the largest in the world, being over 1,400 feet in diameter, surrounded by a deep trench over a mile in circumference. The trench was carved out of solid rock with only primitive tools, and was believed to have once been filled with water, making the inner stone circle sit on what appeared to be an island. Unfortunately, most of the stones have been removed and reused to build the village of Avebury, part of which actually resides within the circle. The primary stone circle also contains two inner circles, each over 300 feet in diameter, identified as the "Northern Inner Circle" and the "Southern Inner Circle" respectively. The Northern Inner Circle contains a set of three sarsen stones called "The Cove" which, it is believed, identifies that circle as representing femininity. The Southern Inner Circle once contained an obelisk, which was believed to identify that circle as representing masculinity. Though there is no direct evidence, it is probable that the inner circles were used in fertility rituals by the ancient Britons to enhance the fertility of the land, as that sort of belief was common throughout the ancient world.

64. Sosiety And Culture. May, 2002. News From "Habarlar - L". Azerbaijan Internet Li
a country known for its tradition of religious courses in Germany, France, Spain,greece, Mexico and leaders and representatives of politics, culture and the
http://resources.net.az/d/sc0502.htm
Azerbaijan Internet Resources General information State and government Karabakh conflict Regions and cities ... Azeris at Internet Service Search in our site What is new in site? Map of our site Do you want add URL? ... About sites' promotion General information Maps of Azerbaijan State, government General information Law and Legal Regulations Government and Ministries State committees, concerns ... International organizations Karabakh conflict Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict Refugees, IDPs in Azerbaijan Regions and cities General information Baku, capital Ganja city Nakhchivan region ... Travel, recreation. Hotels Society and Culture History of Azerbaijan Political parties, NGOs Television and Radio Mass media, press ... Nature and ecology Azerbaijan onLine Country guide General links Azeris at Internet General information Personal pages ( A - M ) Personal pages ( N - Z ) Sosiety and culture. May, 2002 Archives RFE/RL Azerbaijan: Pope Works Toward East-West Reconciliation On Historic Visit To Baku By Richard Allen Greene Three thousand people turned out for a historic mass conducted in Baku by Pope John Paul on 23 May, on the day marking the 10th anniversary of the Vatican's recognition of Azerbaijani independence from the Soviet Union. On a mission to improve relations between Catholics and those of other religions especially Muslims and Orthodox Christians the aged pope praised "the three great religions" of Islam, Judaism, and Christianity. And, in a country known for its tradition of religious tolerance, he issued an unusually forthright statement that there have been "enough wars in the name of God."

65. Conferences & Exhibitions
of the relationship between psychoanalysis, culture and the modern state and as ahistorical tradition upon which the of tagos and epimeletes in greece to the
http://www.history.ac.uk/conferences/
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Research Centres CMH (Metropolitan History) ICBH (Contemporary British History) VCH (County History) Help Sitemap Contact Events/Conference Index To advertise a conference on this page please complete the online form Forms are provided in Microsoft Word rich text format. Whilst every care is taken in the preparation of online forms we recommend that you follow standard computer practice and submit all downloaded documents to a virus checker prior to opening them. Details of the following conferences are listed below: Date(s): 27 - 29 March 2003 Register by: 27 March 2003 Description: Details: Conference web page Fee: Venue: University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, UK

66. The Near Islands - Corfu On Line.gr
the Ionian Islands were unified with greece, Paxos moved capital, the center of commerceand culture, and the about the history and nautical tradition of Paxos
http://www.corfuonline.gr/services/islands.asp
the near Islands
print this page
Paxos and Antipaxos

Paxos is located eight nautical miles south of Corfu (27 miles from Corfu Town), and covers a region of 20 square kilometers. The island is one huge olive grove, with the olive trees growing even on the seashores, giving the island its unique character. Today, the island’s population, in four village communities and 30 settlements, stands at around 2400, most of them occupied in olive production, tourism and fishing. The 64 churches reveal the depth of religious feeling and the eye-catching windmills the agricultural way of life. The island of Antipaxos is located two nautical miles south of Paxos. It covers only three square kilometers, and its two settlements, Ano Horio and Kato Horio , have 20 permanent residents, with occasional visits by outsiders who own land on the island. Mostly, the people are occupied with their vineyards. The natural beauty of Paxos, and especially of its coastline, draws a great deal of tourist traffic to the island. Today it boasts some 2000 rented rooms and two diving schools, and, during the summer, many events are organized, such as a performance of Greek dancing by the Lyce Ellinidon which takes place on the Greek Tourist Board’s 'National Tourism Day', as well as the Festival of Classical Music which runs during the first two weeks of September.

67. New Book Titles Added To Young Library's Collections, January 2003
2002, Young Books (4th 5th floors), DF greece. culture and customs of Zimbabwe/ Oyekan Owomoyela Persistence of the gift Tongan tradition in transnational
http://www.uky.edu/Libraries/wtynt103.html
New Book Titles Added to Young Library's Collections, January 2003 TITLE LOCATION Description Museums of the world / [editor, Michael Zils]. Young Reference AM - Museums. Collectors and Collecting. Philosophy : key texts / Julian Baggini. B - Philosophy (General). Philosophy : key themes / Julian Baggini. B - Philosophy (General). Measure of things : humanism, humility, and mystery / David E. Cooper. B - Philosophy (General). Key concepts in Chinese philosophy / Zhang Dainian ; translated and edited by Edmund Ryden. B - Philosophy (General). On Davidson / Darrell Wheeler. B - Philosophy (General). Dewey's logical theory : new studies and interpretations / edited by F. Thomas Burke, D. Micah Hester, and Robert B. Talisse ; foreword by Larry A. Hickman. B - Philosophy (General). Morals, motivation, and convention : Hume's influential doctrines / Francis Snare. B - Philosophy (General). Henry Sidgwick / edited by Ross Harrison. B - Philosophy (General). On Bergson / Richard Bilsker. B - Philosophy (General). Reflections on meta-reality : transcendence, emancipation, and everyday life / Roy Bhaskar. B - Philosophy (General).

68. Sir Wilfred Grenfell College
of the principal literary forms of Classical greece. and their contribution to Westernletters and culture. The role that tradition plays in communication, art
http://www.mun.ca/regoff/calendar/SWGCCourseDescriptions.htm
Sir Wilfred Grenfell College
COURSE DESCRIPTIONS
NOTES: 1) Pre-requisites may be waived by the Head/ Program Chair of the course area in question. 2) Upon the recommendation of the appropriate Program Chair(s), any Major requirements may be waived by the Academic Studies Committee. 3) Some of the courses in this section of the Calendar are available only at Sir Wilfred Grenfell College. Students who choose to transfer from Grenfell to the St. John's campus should see their faculty advisor to determine the extent to which such courses can be applied to their new program. ANTHROPOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY BIOLOGY BUSINESS ... WOMEN'S STUDIES ANTHROPOLOGY In accordance with Senate's Policy Regarding Inactive Courses , courses which have not been offered in the previous three academic years and which are not scheduled to be offered in the current academic year have been removed from the following listing. For information about any of these inactive courses, please contact the Head of the Division. Anthropology 1030 (Introduction to Archaeology and Physical Anthropology) and 1031 (Introduction to Social and Cultural Anthropology) or an equivalent course or courses are required of all students wishing to concentrate in anthropology. The following courses, cross-listed with the Department of Sociology and identified by the prefix "S/A", are also taught at the introductory level: 2200, 2210, 2220, 2230, 2240, 2260, 2270, 2280, and 2350. These courses can be taken as first courses or may be taken following an Anthropology introductory course.

69. Memorable Souvenirs - Greece For Visitors Travel Information
caps are indeed a local tradition dating way greece Luxury Vacations Highly RecommendedVirtuoso Consultants
http://gogreece.about.com/library/weekly/aa082797.htm
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Greek Gods and Goddesses ... Shop for Greek Products On Line Okay, I admit it. I'm a reformed souvenir junkie, with occasional relapses into my normal state of acquisitive frenzy. It started in family trips to Tijuana, Mexico where a fifty-cent a week allowance was found to be marvelously elastic. And it took me years to realize that the dazzling selection of souvenirs with equally blinding pricetags found at international airports were not unique and I really would find exactly the same items much more reasonably priced once I left the airport. So by the time I travelled to Greece, I was a bit more discerning. Aching shoulders, arms, and legs from carting around overfilled luggage had taught me a few hard lessons even tiny cute objects have weight and mass. Bought in sufficient quantity, they too will take their toll, and not just in overweight luggage fees.

70. Hellenism (Hellenic Ethnic Tradition)
the Ethnic, Polytheistic Hellenic tradition, Religion and ancestral holy sites throughoutGreece, despite the dominated by an intolerant culture and Cosmotheory
http://www.witchvox.com/trads/trad_hellenism.html
Pagans Profile
their
Belief Systems
Trad Profiles...

Correllian
- New for Dec. 2002
1734 Trad

A.D.F. (Druid)

Appalachian

Arician Trad.
...
Universal Eclectic Wicca

NOTE: The tradition profile on this page contains the writings of the listed author and is not neccessarily shared or endorsed by the Witches' Voice inc. The Witches' Voice does not verify or atest to the historical accuracy of these writings. All WitchVox Tradition overview pages contain a valid email address, feel free to send your comments, thoughts or concerns directly to the listed author. VoxPath: Home trads / Hellenism (Hellenic Ethnic Tradition) Posted: Views: TRADITION... Hellenism (Hellenic Ethnic Tradition) by Kresphontes Email: ysee@ysee.gr Hellenism (Hellinikos Ethnismos) is an ancient indigenous tradition born and evolved in Hellas (Greece), is not simply a Religion and Cosmotheory, it is a certain form of human consciousness and an everyday ethos and is the most well-documented of the ancient polytheistic nature-Religions. It's above all a political and social "how to" theory that means to "haunt" the Every Day Life with its high principles: Dignity, Freedom, Beauty, Honesty, Variety, Tolerance, Candor... Hellenism perceives Cosmos (KOSMOS, i.e. the Universe) as an ever-existing Being, which not only was not created by some "creator" God out of nothing (EK TOU MEDENOS), but on the contrary allowed the Gods themselves to be created through its procedures.

71. Proverbs Of A Culture By Julie Lovell
proverbs cited date back to Ancient greece and biblical a stream, a metaphor for traditionand stability been discussed reveal an Australian culture that values
http://www.shoal.net.au/~seabreeze/julie.html
The proverbs of a culture
reflect much of its attitudes
by Julie Lovell - 2001
This essay shall explore the concept that the proverbs of a culture reflect much of its attitudes. Referring to some thirty English language proverbs commonly used in Australia today - selected from a seemingly inexhaustible supply - this dissertation discusses how they may be seen to reflect Australian cultural values. Many of the proverbs cited date back to Ancient Greece and biblical times, yet still enjoy currency today. Firstly, the definition of a proverb shall be explored, before entering a discussion of the cogent examples and how they may reflect Australian culture. In conclusion, it shall be argued that while proverbs may provide an insight into some aspects of a culture, similar values exist across many cultures and in other times. Firstly, it is imperative to define what constitutes a proverb. According to the Oxford English Dictionary (2001, on-line) a proverb is “a short pithy saying in common and recognised use; a concise sentence, often metaphorical or alliterative in form, which is held to express some truth ascertained by experience or observation and familiar to all”. The definition expands to quote Howell (1659): “Proverbs may not improperly be called the Philosophy of the Common Peeple, or, according to Aristotle, the truest Reliques of old Philosophy”; and South’s (1823) observation: “What is a proverb, but the experience and observation of several ages, gathered and summed up into one expression?” (Oxford, 2001).

72. Welcome To The Second Volume Of The English Department Newsletter
July 27, 2000; Corfu, greece. Comic Books' Teaching Lewis Nordan in the LiteraryTradition of the American South. 31 st Popular culture Association and
http://www.latech.edu/tech/liberal-arts/english/newsmaster3.htm
The English Department Newsletter
Volume Two, Number One, May 2001
Welcome to the second volume of The English Department Newsletter. This issue recounts our achievements since the previous issue appeared in May 2000. Index
Faculty Publications
Conference Presentations Grants Funded
Technology News
... Closing Notes Faculty Publications
Sandi Brown

"Helping Novice Writers Express Themselves Clearly Through Active Learning." Journal of College Writing 3.1. June 2000: 5-41. Bob Jungman
"'A Generation of Leaves': Homeric Allusion in the Sixth Vignette of Hemingway's In Our Time The Hemingway Review 19.2 (Spring 2000): 108-12. Co-authored with Carole Tabor. "Trimming Shakespeare's Sonnet 18." Forthcoming in American Notes and Queries. Don Kaczvinsky
"Surfacing and the Kyklopes: Atwood's Feminist Critique of Contemporary Canada" Forthcoming in Notes on Contemporary Literature , September 2001. Debra Leissner
"Divided Nation, Divided Self: The Language of Capitalism and Madness in Otway's Venice Preserv'd Studies in the Literary Imagination. Spring 2000.

73. Costa Rica - Sampling The Freshest Costa Rican Coffee
for a peek at the crops and the culture. The coffee tradition has been alive andwell in
http://www.kasbah.com/highlights/costa_rica_sampling_the_freshest_costa_rican_co
var c = "c2"; Home Travel Guide Flights Cars ... Adventure Tours USA users click here for the best deals Costa Rica Costa Rica - Sampling the Freshest Costa Rican Coffee
You are here:
Costa Rica
Better than your morning ‘Starbucks’, sampling a cup of coffee from the heart of coffee country is a delight. There is nothing quite like the smell of fresh coffee, never mind being in the centre of the coffee heartland with acres of beans being cultivated daily for the country’s main export industry. Home to the majority of Costa Rica’s coffee plantations, the Central Valley is the place to visit for a peek at the crops and the culture. The coffee tradition has been alive and well in Latin America long before it took off in westernised countries. Folklore and rituals have always surrounded the cultivation of the prosperous bean. A visit to the plantations will give you an inside look into some of the finest coffee production in the world. As an extra bonus many artists and sculptors live and work around the plantations, so you can pick a bag of beans and an original piece of art at the same time.
Global Travel Toolbox Books Currency Converter Finance and Insurance Food and Drink Fun and Trivia Language Converter Look Up / Reference

74. EBooks.com - History
dramatic careers of those who have carried on the dynasty's tradition in giving life'sambition was to record the disappearing Native American culture in paint
http://www.ebooks.com/subjects/subjects.asp?SID=4

75. ICTM StudyGroups
They are known in greece as Alvanoi, which is composers and musicians of the traditionbelonged to The Maasai musical culture at the borderland between Kenya
http://www.ethnomusic.ucla.edu/ICTM/stg/index.php?lcode=10&tcode=47

76. Culture Of United Arab Emirates - Dubai Hotels & Beach Resorts Online Hotel Rese
culture Islam is the official religion and Arabic BOAT RACING Another tradition thathas taken on
http://www.regentdubai.com/culture.htm
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Services Visa Assistance Transportation Sight Seeing Tours Tour Packages ... Guest Book
U.A.E. Info Country Travel Culture Public Holidays Exchange Rates ... Travel Tips
Contact Us Phone Number:
Fax Number:
E-mail:
seastour@emirates.net.ae

Culture of United Arab Emirates
Here you will find a most important informations about UAE's culture
CULTURE
NATIONAL DRESS
Native menfolk of the Arabian peninsula have a distinct form of dress. They wear an ankle-length shirt (dishdasha), usually white (or colored or striped in winter), a white, or sometimes red-chequered, headcloth (ghutra) and the twisted, black rope piece (agal), holding the gutra in place. Men of distinction and the Sheikhs also wear on top of their dishdasha a flowing cloak (abba or bisht) edged with gold braid. It may he black or brown. UAE women are very particular about their dress. They generally cover themselves from head to feet with a black cloak called the ahaya'.

77. Women And Popular Entertainments
Crowther, NB “Male Beauty Contests in greece The Euandria and Humor in AmericanCulture. Humor of Jackie Moms Mabley An African American Comedic tradition.
http://home.earthlink.net/~brinac/WomenPopEntertains.htm

syllabus for upper level undergraduate or Master's level course
Athletics/Sports Events
Beauty Contests

Circus
...
Vaudeville

Athletics/Sports Events
  • Birrell, Susan, and Cheryl L. Cole, eds. Women, Sport, and Culture Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 1994. Bridge, Junior. “Media Mirror: Sports Pages Still A Bastion of Maleness.” The Quill 82 (June 1994). Bruce, Toni. FOCUS: SPORTS, FILM, AND TELEVISION - "Audience Frustration and Pleasure: Women Viewers Confront Televised Women's Basketball." Journal of Sport and Social issue s 22, no. 4 (1998): 373. Daddario, Gina. Women's Sport and Spectacle: Gendered Television Coverage and the Olympic Games New York: Praeger, 1998. Delpy, L. A. “Promotion of Sports for Girls and Women - Career Opportunities in Sport: Women on the Mark.” Journal of Physical Education And Recreation 69, no. 7 (1998): 17. Dworkin, Shari, and Faye Linda Wachs. “Outside the Lines: Women and Sports at the Crossroads.” International Review For The Sociology Of Sport 33, no. 2 (1998): 205. Eller, Daryn.
  • 78. UNC Undergraduate Bulletin 2002-2003
    47 Women in Ancient greece and Rome (Classics 47 and Sexuality in the Western ChristianTradition (Religious Studies 140 Gender and culture (Anthropology 140) (3
    http://www.unc.edu/ugradbulletin/depts/wmst.html
    An Introduction Admissions Division of Academic Affairs Academic Departments and Schools ... UNC-Chapel Hill Home Page
    Curriculum in Women's Studies
    www.unc.edu/depts/wmst E. JANE BURNS, Chair Professors
    E. Jane Burns, Barbara J. Harris, Sylvia D. Hoffert. Assistant Professors
    Karen M. Booth, Silvia Tomaskova. Women's Studies is an interdisciplinary exploration of issues concerning women and gender in America and in a range of cultures throughout the world. Students taking Women's Studies courses are introduced to ideologies that have been used throughout history to explain female and male natures, functions, and sociocultural roles as they intersect with concerns of race, class, and sexuality. Students will be exposed to recent scholarship on feminist theory and masculinity and to critiques of feminism. They will learn about the intellectual, social, economic, political, and artistic contributions of women in various cultural contexts throughout history and across the globe. They will see how the discipline of Women's Studies redefines the traditional scholarly curriculum in order to include perspectives on women and gender as integral aspects of academic inquiry. Approximately eighteen departments offer courses that focus entirely on the study of women and gender. Some of these courses have been cross-listed as Women's Studies courses and are identified below; others are taught as special sections of an established course and have to be identified separately each semester.

    79. SUNY Brockport Undergraduate Studies Catalog
    including some from Hispanic tradition), superstition, folk on examples from popularculture (jokes, cartoons women's experience from ancient greece to the
    http://www.brockport.edu/~ucatalog/WMS.HTML
    Undergraduate Studies Catalog (1999-2001)
    Women's Studies - Interdisciplinary Program 140 Faculty Office Building
    Director: Jennifer M. Lloyd; Faculty: Michele Carron (Physical Education and Sport), Charles Chehab (Interdisciplinary Arts), Susan Crafts (Sociology), Patti A. Follansbee (Health Science), Sumiko Higashi (History), Kathleen Hunter (Health Science), Patricia Huntington Sigel (Criminal Justice), Owen S. Ireland (History), Barbara Kasper (Social Work), Nancy Leslie (Delta College), Lloyd (History), John K. Marah (African and Afro-American Studies), Mara L. McFaddan (English), Elaine K. Miller (Foreign Languages and Literature), Evelyn S. Newlyn (English), Andrea Parada (Foreign Language and Literature), Christine Plumeri (Criminal Justice), Stanley S. Rubin (English), Robert Rutzen (Sociology), Patricia Sharkey (Nursing) Marjorie H. Stewart (Anthropology).
    The Women's Studies program at SUNY Brockport is a multidisciplinary, college-wide program which engenders in students an inclusive perspective, and provides students and faculty a frame work within which to focus on questions, issues, and theories related to women's lives, roles, status, and contributions. The Women's Studies program is also committed to the integration of women's experiences, values, and accomplishments into all College curricula. Additional goals are to make women visible in their similarities and their differences, and to value personal experience as a way of knowing; to develop a greater understanding of institutional, psychological, and social forces which relegate women to positions of social subordination; and to create and produce new scholarship and new knowledge about women and apply it to personal, political, and institutional change.

    80. Animals In Mythology: Explore The Mythological Attributes Of Animals
    Animals, Mythology, African American, and West Indian culture. The myths of AncientGreece are the most as portions of a much older, lost historical tradition.
    http://www.buzzle.com/editorials/3-19-2002-14972.asp
    Translate This Page: French German Italian Portuguese ... Spanish
    Click here to send this article to a friend, or e-mail it to yourself to read later.
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    'Help me save my chimps'
    Primate expert Jane Goodall fears that the chimps she studied for years at Tanzania's Gombe Park are perilously close to extinction, hit by habitat loss, inbreeding and disease. Antelope stampeding to extinction The saiga antelope - one of the world's most endangered mammals - could be stampeding towards extinction simply because there are not enough males to go round. Here kitty kitty... In many homes across the country lurks a health danger cunningly disguised as a fluffy ball of fun. While pets bring happiness to many, for those owners who are allergic, they can spell misery. Furthermore, the number of sufferers is on the increase. Last flight of the albatross? The albatross - legendary protector of seafarers - is heading for extinction. Biologists have discovered that swordfish and tuna fishing fleets are eliminating more than 100,000 of these birds every year. In a couple of decades most species will be wiped out unless urgent action is taken. Crufts As the world's biggest dog show opens today, use our web guide to spot the winning pug ... or xoloitzcuintli.

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