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Archives for: February 2006, 27

eagles

by roza_f @ 2006-02-27 - 15:42:51

Bald eagle Body Description

Color - Both male and female adult bald eagles have a blackish-brown back and breast; a white head, neck, and tail; and yellow feet and bill.

Juvenile bald eagles are a mixture of brown and white; with a black bill in young birds. The adult plumage develops when they're sexually mature, at about 4 or 5 years of age.

The bald eagle is the only eagle confined to North America, and there are no other large black birds in North America with white heads and tails.

Size - The female bald eagle is 35 to 37 inches, slightly larger than the male. With a wingspan which varies from 79 to 90 inches. The male bald eagle has a body length from 30 to 34 inches. The wingspan ranges from 72 to 85 inches. Bald eagles weigh from ten to fourteen pounds. Northern birds are significantly larger than their southern relatives.

The golden eagle is larger than the bald eagle in average height and wingspan, but there isn't much difference in their average weight.
Habitat - Bald eagles live along the coast and on major lakes and rivers where they feed mainly on fish.

Longevity - Wild bald eagles may live as long as thirty years, but the average lifespan is probably about fifteen to twenty years. A captive eagle at West Stephentown, NY lived to be at least 48 years old.

Body Temperature - 102 degrees Fahrenheit (38.8 degrees Celsius)

Tolerance to cold temperatures - A bald eagle's skin is protected by feathers lined with down. The feet are cold resistance because they are mostly tendon. The outside of the bill is mostly nonliving material, with little blood supply.

Eagles sit at the top of the food chain, making them more vulnerable to toxic chemicals in the environment, since each link in the food chain tends to concentrate chemicals from the lower link.

Fidelity - Once paired, bald eagles remain together until one dies, the survivor will not hesitate to accept a new mate
Sea or Fish Eagles

Eleven species of eagles live on the forested shores of lakes, rivers, and oceans from the Arctic Circle to the tropics, excluding South America. Their diet is heavily weighted, as one would guess from their name, in favor of fish, which may be taken alive or as carrion. However one bird sometimes placed in this group, the vulturine fish eagle, is a near-vegetarian, dining almost exclusively on the fruit of the oil palm. (This bird is also called the palm-nut vulture; it appears to be somewhere between fish eagles and vultures in both anatomy and diet.) Other members of this group include the bald eagle, the African fish eagle, and the white-tailed sea eagle.
For some fish and sea eagles, the future is uncertain. The striking Steller's sea eagle, which can weigh nearly 20 pounds (9 kg), is believed to have a world population of only about 4,200 breeding pairs. Sanford's sea eagle (Haliaeetus sanfordi) and Pallas's sea eagle are also considered to be at risk due to degradation and destruction of their habitat.The total population of the Madagascar fish eagle (Haliaeetus vociferoides), believed to be one of the world's rarest birds, is estimated at around forty pairs, which are threatened by both habitat destruction and direct persecution.

Snake or Serpent Eagles

Generally smaller than other eagles, the snake and serpent eagles hunt the savannas and forests of tropical Europe, Asia, Australia, and Africa. The most conspicuous member of this group is the flamboyantly marked bateleur. Its scarlet face and legs stand out boldly against its black, white, and chestnut plumage, and, along with its very short tail, make an adult bateleur unmistakable. The bateleur's name, given by the eighteenth century French naturalist LeVaillant, loosely translates as "tumbler" or "tightrope-walker" and undoubtedly refers to the rocking motion of its flight or the aerobatic maneuvers it sometimes performs.
This group also includes the Madagascar serpent eagle (Eutriorchis astur), which is one of the most endangered raptors in the world, For many years, it was doubted whether any survived in the wild. Finally, in 990, a dead specimen was positively identified, and in 994, a live Madagascar serpent eagle was caught. The bird's confirmed presence has added even greater urgency to the ongoing struggle to preserve Madagascar's rain forest habitat upon which so many unique animals depend.
Many of the snake and serpent eagles, particularly those of the genus Spilornis, have a very restricted range, which may be limited to one group of islands.This means that any destruction or degradation of their habitat poses a critical threat to their survival.

Booted or True Eagles

The booted eagles get their name because their legs are feathered right down to their ankles, This group contains the most species and numbers among them some of the most beautifully marked eagles, Inclucling the ornate hawk-eagle,the Spanish imperial eagle, and the crowned hawk-eagle. Several eagles in this group sport dashing, long crest feathers. Some booted eagles, including the martial eagle, the wedge-tailed eagle, and Verreaux's eagle, are among the largest eagles in the world; others, such as Wahlberg's eagle and Ayres's hawk-eagle, are some of the smallest.The crowned hawk-eagle has been described as one of the most powerful eagles on earth and regularly eats mammals up to twice its weight.
Two booted eagles, the golden eagle and the wedge-tailed eagle, were persecuted mercilessly in the past for their supposed habits as stock killers. Today, other members of the group are facing even greater threats. Wallace's hawk-eagle, the Philippine hawk-eagle, and the imperial eagle are considered to be highly at risk; the Javan hawk-eagle and the Spanish imperial eagle are in even more extreme peril. Deforestation of its home, combined with pressure from illegal hunting and capture for profit, has left the Javan hawk-eagle facing a bleak future. In contrast, it was reforestation, replacement of its native forest habitat with more commercially valuable trees, that was a major factor in reducing the remaining world population of Spanish imperial eagles to only about ISO pairs. Unlike the new eucalyptus and pine plantations,the original ancient oak forest was rabbit-rich and largely left alone by humans.
The vulnerability of one of the Spanish imperial eagles' last remaining refuges, Donana National Park, was evident in April 1998 when toxic mining sludge spilled into the park's Guadiamar River resulting in massive deaths of fish and invertebrates. Observers worried that the dead animals would be eaten by others in the park, including the eagles, spreading the disaster even farther. The final ecological toll will remain unknown for some time. Donana's fragile offer of sanctuary is also threatened by the power lines surrounding the park. Researchers have determined that electrocution is the main cause of mortality among the park's eagle population and that the victims are mainly juvenile females, whose survival is critical for the recovery of the species. Their larger size means that females are more likely than males to make a fatal connection,touching a live wire while perched on a metal supporting pylon. Burying transmission lines could eliminate this hazard but it is an expensive solution. Another drain on the species is the significant number of Spanish imperial eagle chicks that die each year due to Cainism. Removing chicks to foster nests is helping to reduce these losses.

Harpy or Buteonine Eagles

At home in the tropical forests of South America, Mexico, New Guinea, and the Philippines, this group of six contains some of the world's most magnificent eagles, including the harpy eagle, the New Guinea eagle, and the Philippine eagle.
Although other eagles are almost as heavy and some have larger wingspans, the harpy eagle of South America is without doubt the world's most powerful eagle. A female harpy eagle may weigh nearly 20 pounds (9 kg). Her legs may be as big around as a child's wrist; her feet tipped with 1.5-inch-long (3.75-cm-long) talons may span 9 inches (22.5 cm). With those legs and talons, the harpy is able to snatch large arboreal prey, including sloths and howler monkeys, from the branches where they live. It required slow motion footage shot in Guyana to reveal the technique employed by the harpy to take a sloth hanging from a branch. Deftly rolling in flight to pass under the branch, the eagle grabbed the sloth, wrenched it loose, and carried it off with hardly a break in its flight.A harpy eagle swooping down at 20 miles per hour (32 kph) generates approximately 13,500 foot-pounds (18,300 Newton-meters) of energy-- that's more than twice the muzzle energy of a bullet shot from a heavy rifle. Recent research has indicated that even the harpy eagle cannot carry the biggest animals it kills back to its nest. Adult harpy eagles probably feed on a carcass for a day or two before they eventually carry the more manageable maggoty remains to their chicks.
On the other side of the world, soaring above the beech forests of lower mountain slopes, the New Guinea eagle searches for prey that may include wallabies, pig lets, and tree kangaroos. New Guinea highlanders still hunt this eagle for its wing and tail feathers, which they use in headdresses. Sadly, this practice along with the continuing destruction of its habitat means that the age-old sight of a hunting New Guinea eagle may be denied to future generations.
The stunning Philippine eagle, until recently known as the monkey-eating eagle, apparently eats more flying lemurs than monkeys. (These lemurs are 2-foot! 60-cm-long nocturnal mammals, not Madagascar primates.) There probably never were a great number of Philippine eagles; One estimate puts the maximum historical population at around six thousand individuals. As the Philippine Islands became more populated and the forests were stripped from the land, the eagle lost its home and hunting territory, and became vulnerable to shooting and trapping. Although valiant efforts to save the species continue, for the Philippine eagle, time is running out: Fewer than two hundred Philippine eagles remain, and the old-growth forest they need to survive continues to be destroyed.

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are u there ?????

by roza_f @ 2006-02-27 - 15:37:38

One poet said :"I will give a half of my life to whom make cry baby laugh " the baby is so little by its size , trying to discover the world , to be happy , to smile ..so why to let him suffer, they suppose to see the world nice and sunny so why to let him see its second side, to let to see the ugly face of what we are today , doing every thing to earn money without to care to others , to kill , to hurt , isn't the time come to stop that ..

Why to use drugs .. they destroy us , our body ..our feelings , let us far from the people that wee love ..let us lose the beautiful things that we have .. to lose the taste of the life to be the person that u don't like . . to live with no target ..no dream to make mistakes without to know and the important to lose your soul your identity
So why..???????

we haven't to see every thing in order to believe like soul we can't see but we can feel
like air water we can't live without them or ignore .....

dead sea

by roza_f @ 2006-02-27 - 15:34:32

Why is it Called the Dead Sea???

Sounds kinda creepy, doesn't it? It's called the Dead Sea because nothing lives in it. It is some of the saltiest water anywhere in the world, almost six times as salty as the ocean! The Dead Sea is completely landlocked and it gets saltier with increasing depth. The surface, fed by the River Jordan, is the least saline. Down to about 130 feet (40 meters), the seawater comprises about 300 grams of salt per kilogram of seawater. That's about ten times the salinity of the oceans. Below 300 feet, though, the sea has 332 grams of salt per kilogram of seawater and is saturated. Salt precipitates out and piles up on the bottom of the sea.

There's no seaweed or plants of any kind in or around the water. There are no fish or any kind of swimming, squirming creatures living in or near the water. As a matter of fact, what you'll see on the shores of the Sea is white, crystals of salt covering EVERYTHING. And this is no ordinary table salt, either. The salts found in the Dead Sea are mineral salts, just like you find in the oceans of the world, only in extreme concentrations. The water in the Dead Sea is deadly to living things. Fish accidentally swimming into the waters from one of the several freshwater streams that feed the Sea are killed instantly, their bodies quickly coated with a preserving layer of salt crystals and then tossed onto shore by the wind and waves. Brutal!

The guy to the left is actually floating in the Dead Sea. "But, hey, I thought you said the Dead Sea was DEADLY!" Not to us. Humans are remarkably adaptable. We can swim in the Dead Sea, just like we can swim in the ocean. Well, people don't really "swim" in the Dead Sea - they just "hang out". That's what's so cool about the Dead Sea. Because of the extremely high concentration of dissolved mineral salts in the water its density is way more than that of plain old fresh water. What this means is our bodies are more buoyant in the Dead Sea - so you bob like a cork. In fact, people are so buoyant in this water, it makes it kinda tough to actually swim. Most people like to just kick back in the water and read. It almost looks as though this guy is sitting on an air mattress that has sunk below the surface, but he's not. He's really just floating, without having to hold is feet in that position! If you think this is easy, try floating like this in a freshwater swimming pool.

What Caused the Dead Sea to Form?
This lesson takes us back to the subject of plate tectonics. In this part of the world there is a rift forming where two crustal plates are spreading apart. The East Rift Valley runs through most of Africa, but it starts north of the Dead Sea and runs south along the eastern side of the continent (go look at the map). The Sea is located right along the Rift Valley where the earth's crust is being stretched thin. To get an idea of how this "crustal spreading" thing works, take a bar of taffy, or taffy-like candy and try to pull it apart. You'll see where the candy starts to come apart it gets really thin just before it breaks. That's what is happening to the earth's crust in the Rift Valley. Where the earth's crust gets thin that part of the surface sinks downward. Look at the picture at left to see how the rift forms, sinking downward where the crust is stretched thin. You know what? The Dead Sea is still sinking lower, even today. Scientists figure that the Dead Sea lowers by as much as 13 inches per year. On a geologic time scale that's incredibly fast!
Why is the Dead Sea so Salty?
Anyway, back to the formation of the Dead Sea. We talked about how the surface of the Sea got down so low in elevation, but why is it so salty? All roads lead to the Sea when it comes to the rivers in the area. The Dead Sea is continually fed water from the rivers and streams coming down off the mountains that surround it. But the kicker is this....no rivers drain out of the Dead Sea. The only way water gets out of the Sea is through evaporation. And boy does it evaporate! This part of the world get plenty hot. When the water evaporates, it leaves behind all the dissolved minerals in the Sea, just making it saltier. In fact, it's through the dual action of; 1) continuing evaporation and 2) minerals salts carried into the Sea from the local rivers, that makes the Sea so salty. The fact that the water doesn't escape the Sea just traps the salts within its shores. There's nothing living in the Dead Sea because it got so salty, so quickly, that evolution has not had a chance to produce any creatures that could adapt to such brutal conditions.

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blood tests

by roza_f @ 2006-02-27 - 15:34:28


What is a blood test?

Blood tests are a very useful diagnostic tool. Blood is made up of several different kinds of cells and other compounds, including various salts and certain proteins.

The liquid portion of the blood is called plasma. When blood clots outside the body, the blood cells and some of the proteins become solid. The remaining liquid is called serum, which can be used in chemical tests and in tests to find out how the immune system fights diseases.

Doctors can take blood samples and grow the infectious organisms that cause an illness to see exactly what they are through a microscope.

How is a blood test carried out?

Blood samples for testing can be taken either from a vein (which carries blood to the heart) or from an artery (which takes blood away from the heart).

If only a few drops of blood are needed (for monitoring blood sugar in diabetes, for example) it is enough to make a small prick in the tip of the finger and then squeeze the blood out.

Most blood tests are taken from a vein, commonly from those around the elbow. First a cord (tourniquet) is tied around the upper arm to make the vein prominent. It may be a bit tight, but this makes it much easier to take the test.

The site of the injection is then cleaned with spirit and then a needle is put into the vein. The needle will be attached either to a low pressure blood test bottle, or to a syringe where the plunger is pulled back to create low pressure. When the necessary amount of blood has been extracted, the needle is removed and a little ball of cotton wool is held over the wound. This should be pressed for one to two minutes before applying a sticking plaster.

If blood is taken from an artery, it is usually extracted from the wrist where there is an artery that is very close to the skin. This may be slightly uncomfortable, as the artery wall has more pain nerves in it than the vein wall.

After taking blood from an artery it may be necessary to hold a ball of cotton wool on the place where the injection was made for about five minutes to stop any bleeding.

Some people are very sensitive to needles and the sight of their own blood and may feel faint when a blood sample is taken. This is not uncommon and can be reduced by sitting or lying down while the sample is taken. If you feel faint or think that you might feel faint, immediately tell the person who is taking blood.

What do doctors examine in the blood?

Blood contains two main elements: the fluid that is called plasma and cells. There are three kinds of cells: red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets. To get the information they need from the blood, doctors actually do several tests with the blood sample. These include measurements of the levels of the cells and a blood smear. A blood smear is a film of blood placed on a slide to allow doctors to look at the individual cells under a microscope. These tests are listed below.

Red blood cells

One of the most important red blood cell tests is used to find out how much haemoglobin there is in the blood. Haemoglobin carries oxygen around your body. This is called the haemoglobin concentration or level.

Another important test, the mean corpuscular volume or MCV test, measures the size of the red blood cells.

If a person suffers from anaemia their haemoglobin level will always be less than normal. But the size of the red blood cells depends on the type of anaemia you have.

A haematocrit test measures the total volume that red blood cells take up in the blood. In practice, this is done by spinning a test tube of blood until the red blood cells - the heaviest part of the blood - go to the bottom of the tube. Then their volume is calculated.

Almost all types of anaemia will cause a low haematocrit (a low red blood cell volume), as will very severe bleeding. A high haematocrit can occur if a person is dehydrated from not drinking enough fluid or because they are losing fluid as happens with diarrhoea, burns and sometimes surgery.

If the red blood cells are pale, it can be a sign of iron deficiency anaemia. If they have a strange shape, it may be because of sickle cell anaemia or pernicious anaemia.

Doctors also add stains to the blood smear to test the blood for parasites, for example in the case of sleeping sickness or malaria. They may also test for bacteria in the case of blood poisoning.

White blood cells (WBC)

The doctor counts the total number of white blood cells and works out how many different types of white blood cells the patient has. This is called the differential WBC count.

The number of white blood cells may go up and this may be because of a bacterial infection, bleeding or a burn. More rarely the cause of a raised white count is due to leukaemia, cancer or malaria.

A person may lose white blood cells because they have autoimmune problems - this is where the antibodies that should fight diseases attack the body instead. Other reasons for loss of white blood cells include viral infections. More rarely, this can be a side effect of certain kinds of medication.

Doctors keep an eye on white blood cells to work out how a disease is changing. By monitoring the blood count in this way they can alter the patient's treatment as necessary.

Platelets

Platelets are very small cells in the blood that clump together at sites of injury to blood vessels. They form the basis of the blood clot that would form if you cut yourself.

Low numbers of platelets can make a person vulnerable to bleeding, sometimes even without injury occurring. Causes of low platelet counts include autoimmune diseases where you produce an antibody to your own platelets, chemotherapy, leukaemia, viral infections and some medicines.

High numbers of platelets make a person more vulnerable to blood clots. High platelet counts are found in conditions involving the bone marrow such as leukaemia and cancer.

What are blood coagulation examinations?

More tests will be needed if a patient is found to be suffering from a blood coagulation disorder so that either their blood doesn't clot properly, or if it clots too well.

When a vein is damaged, usually a little blood clot will form on the inside. This clot is made of blood platelets and proteins from the blood plasma (called the coagulation factors).

A person will bleed more than normal if they have a low number of blood platelets, if there is a lack of coagulation factors, or if they don't work.

If the bleeding disorder is caused by problems with the coagulation factors more tests will be needed. Sometimes a coagulation disorder is passed on in the family, but it could also be due to a liver problem, as the liver makes many of the blood clotting factors.

Coagulation tests will be performed regularly for people who are on blood thinning medicines such as warfarin. Doctors will change the dose of these medicines depending on the test results.

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لقراءة المزيد يرجى الضفط على الصورة او الصور

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princess diana

by roza_f @ 2006-02-27 - 15:26:14

i love princess diana so i wanna to write a bout her:

The Lady Diana Frances Spencer (Diana Frances Mountbatten-Windsor, née Spencer) (July 1, 1961–August 31, 1997) was the first wife of Charles, Prince of Wales. From her marriage in 1981 to her divorce in 1996 she was styled Her Royal Highness The Princess of Wales. After her divorce from the Prince of Wales in 1996 Diana ceased to be the Princess of Wales and also lost the resulting Royal Highness style,[1] She received the form of title normally used by the ex-wives of peers, Diana, Princess of Wales under Letters Patent issued by Queen Elizabeth II at the time of the divorce.

Diana was often called Princess Diana by the media and the public, but she did not possess such a title and was not personally a princess, a point Diana herself made to people who referred to her as such. Contrary to belief, being Princess of Wales does not make one a princess in one's own right. It merely indicates that one was married to a Prince of Wales. Princesses in their own right only exist by creation of the monarch or by birth. Diana was in fact the first non-princess to be Princess of Wales for centuries. Previous Princesses of Wales, such as Alexandra of Denmark or Mary of Teck were already princesses by birth when they married a Prince of Wales.

An iconic presence on the world stage, Diana, Princess of Wales was noted for her pioneering charity work. Yet her philanthropic endeavours were overshadowed by her scandal-plagued marriage to Prince Charles. Her bitter accusations via friends and biographers of adultery, mental cruelty and emotional distress visited upon her, and her own admission of adultery and numerous love affairs riveted the world for much of the 1990s, spawning books, magazine articles and television movies.

From the time of her engagement to the Prince of Wales in 1981 until her death in a car accident in 1997, the Princess was arguably the most famous woman in the world, the pre-eminent female celebrity of her generation: a fashion icon, an image of feminine beauty, admired and emulated for her high-profile involvement in AIDS issues and the international campaign against landmines. During her lifetime, she was often referred to as the most photographed person in the world. To her admirers, the Princess of Wales was a role model - after her death, there were even calls for her to be nominated for sainthood - while her detractors saw her life as a cautionary tale of how an obsession with publicity can ultimately destroy an individual.

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William Shakespeare

by roza_f @ 2006-02-27 - 15:15:55

William Shakespeare (1564-1616) was born to John Shakespeare and mother Mary Arden some time in late April 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon. There is no record of his birth, but his baptism was recorded by the church, thus his birthday is assumed to be the 23 of April. His father was a prominent and prosperous alderman in the town of Stratford-upon-Avon, and was later granted a coat of arms by the College of Heralds. All that is known of Shakespeare's youth is that he presumably attended the Stratford Grammar School, and did not proceed to Oxford or Cambridge. The next record we have of him is his marriage to Anne Hathaway in 1582. The next year she bore a daughter for him, Susanna, followed by the twins Judith and Hamnet two years later.

Seven years later Shakespeare was recognized as an actor, poet, and playwright, when a rival playwright, Robert Greene, referred to him as "an upstart crow" in "A Groatsworth of Wit." A few years later he joined up with one of the most successful acting troupes in London: "The Lord Chamberlain's Men." When, in 1599, the troupe lost the lease of the theatre where they performed (appropriately called "The Theatre"), they were wealthy enough to build their own theatre across the Thames, south of London, which they called "The Globe." The new theatre opened in July of 1599, built from the timbers of "The Theatre", with the motto "Totus mundus agit histrionem" (A whole world of players). When James I came to the throne (1603) the troupe was designated by the new king as the "King's Men" (or "King's Company"). The Letters Patent of the company specifically charged Shakespeare and eight others "freely to use and exercise the art and faculty of playing Comedies, Tragedies, Histories, Interludes, Morals, Pastorals, stage plays ... as well for recreation of our loving subjects as for our solace and pleasure."

Shakespeare entertained the King and the people for another ten years until June 19, 1613, when a canon fired from the roof of the theatre for a gala performance of Henry VIII set fire to the thatch roof and burned the theatre to the ground. The audience ignored the smoke from the roof at first, being to absorbed in the play, until the flames caught the walls and the fabric of the curtains. Amazingly there were no casualties, and the next spring the company had the theatre "new builded in a far fairer manner than before." Although Shakespeare invested in the rebuilding, he retired from the stage to the Great House of New Place in Statford that he had purchased in 1597, and some considerable land holdings ,where he continued to write until his
death in 1616 on the day of his 52nd birthday

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oh .. my sweet bird...

by roza_f @ 2006-02-27 - 15:10:04

i found 2 great pictures about birds i liked to share it with u hope u also will like

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i have 2 birds (parrots) i like them so much , to care to them , i also like there voices it make me feel happy , comfortable , their amazy colors all that make u think about the beautiful things that go create

good words ...??

by roza_f @ 2006-02-27 - 15:09:56

never stop dream

what can i say about whom losing his life in hitting people instead of love that great feeling that never hurt

i very sad to see strang man suffering ..alone ..sad ..which the left him with nothing..what if was a close friend .....

To lie to the others its like to lie to your self ..

You could lie to all the world but not to your self …

As u hate that they lie to u so why to lie?

what to do in order to stay in life ..tostop to fight with your self ? finally to live in peace and quiet ..to reast ..to see the white light ..to be in the right place in the right time.. tobe free..

my way....

by roza_f @ 2006-02-27 - 15:07:53

Are u there ? I mean when I ask that question not to your body I mean by it your soul ,your are they with me? listening to me? Or they in another place. .sad , HAPPY ? it’s the power of thought that you are in place and in the second minute u are in second place , maybe in reality or dream , I hope that when u read my blog both of them will be there …………

its true that we have different color of eyes but they have one misson to help us to see the world in white or black......

The flower mean to me a lot things to me : a beautiful world that we live in it but we did from it a danger place .. it also mean to me that to get something we have to work hard .if u give u will take . not to be selfish , to survive and u ?

I think that the writing helping a lot … because when u write u feel better .. u feel like u talking to close friend what u wanna ..when u wanna ..where u wanna ..like u trying to inside your self ..to understand what going inside … to trust some one who

its hard to be in social event and no body care to u i mean u there because u wanna to be part of that u wanna to scream any body see me am i exist ???? when no body respond u continue like nothing happened , that every thing is okay...

I like my paper written from heart .. with a lot of love an sad things ..to describe me what I bass.. what I really feel ..to write it carefully with a lot of care ..like its with u every time.. that it will stay forever that if u go it will instead u ..

in amemory of my teacher...

by roza_f @ 2006-02-27 - 15:04:43

by roza_f @ 2006-02-27 - 15:07:53

when I was in the college there was a teacher teaching us a math her face was always smiling .. she never late ..or absent … in the last time that she teach us I saw a strange thing in her face but I didn't know whats it until its was late ..one day she supposed to teach us but she didn't arrive I had a bad feeling in that day , I wanna to run to secretary to tell her to give her a vacation just for that day but I didn't that , the teacher that was teaching us told us that she will not arrive that we can go home in the next day when I arrived they told me that she was killed in car accident when she was in her way to teach us I started to cry I couldn't stop my tears , couldn't calm down then we went to her funeral to say goodbye in the last time …that even that she teach a short time she entered to our heart and will never forget her
goodbye my teacher rest in peace

Its nice to have your place to go to it , to feel comfortable .. free .. to be there when u sad or happy ..like it listening to u ..feeling u ..missing u ..that it wait to u forever ..that will never forget your memories with it …

@One night i looked at the moon and the moon told me : why don't u leave her if she makes u cry?? Looked back at the moon and said: would u ever leave your sky???

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صفحة اللغة العربية

by roza_f @ 2006-02-27 - 15:01:00

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طليع_حمدان

ولد
طليع حمدان بتاريخ 19 كانون الثاني من
عام 1944 في قرية عين عنوب الواقعه في الشوف
اللبناني
متزوج للسيده سلوى حمدان ولهما اربعة اولاد هم شادي, خزام, سحر وزينه
يعتبر من اكبر عمالقة الزجل اللبناني, وربما اكبرهم. حيث يملك كافة اركان الشاعر المنبري وهي, الصوت, الأداء والشعر
بدأ مشواره الفني عام 1963, وكانت اول حفلاته مع الشاعر الكبير "ابو علي" زين شعيب عام 1964
كان في جوقة زغلول الدامور حوالي عشر سنوات, وبعدها أسس جوقة الربيع سنة 1975, وما زال يقودها حتى اليوم
يتميز طليع حمدان بشعره الحماسي والأحساسي والوجداني, الذي يعطي القارئ والمستمع متعةً لا تقدر
يملك طليع حمدان خيالا ًواسعاً يزيد شعره جمالاً, ويحول كلماته الى صوراً ساحره تزيد من جمالها. بالأضافه الى صوته المعروف بحنيته وجماله
اهم مبارياته
كفر حيم مع اسعد سعيد
الغازيه مع السيد محمد مصطفى
بتاتر مع السيد محمد مصطفى
بيت الدين مع زين شعيب وزغلول الدامور
ابن سعاده مع موسى زغيب

مقاطع من قصائده

سواح

كان عمري يا حياتي راح

ولما زماني دلّني عليكي
حسّيت إيامي اجو سواح
وعم ينزلو عَا شط عينيكي
ومهما المناظر يسحرو العينين
السواح منهن يمكن يملّو
ويمكن يفلّو بيوم وبيومين
لكن عيوني وين بيفلّو
إنتي بلادي وساحره النظرات
بتلالك الخضرا وسواقيكي
وشِعري الحنون وبحة النايات
ما بلاقيهن تا لاقيكي
وسواحك النهدات واللهفات
ودمعات ببكيهن تا اسقيكي
بعد البكي ما بيرجعو الدمعات
مطرح ما وصلو بينتهو فيكي
* * *
يا ريت حدّك بنتهي يا ريت
ولا كل مدّي تصيبني كريزه
ولاتوقّفيني قبال باب البيت
متل سايح ما معو فيزه
وحياة عينيك اسأليلي الباب
الخفتي تا يحكي عَنك سكوتو
ليش منك يطعم الما ذاب
وليش اللي ذاب بيحرمو قتو
وأغراب ليش بيلتقو أحباب
عَا باب عم بيقلهن فوتو
وأحباب ليش بيلتقو أغراب
وعَا بعضن بيبقو رح يموتو
* * *
ويوم الحياة بعمرنا مشلول
متل المريض الناطر الساعة
يطلّع حزين بساعتو ويقول
قديش بعد بعيش يا ساعة
يا ريتنا منفل سكرانين
متل النهور البين لبساتين
شبابيكنا من الورد وجراحو
وبوابنا وراق الندي الحلوين
وقلوبنا من الخوف يرتاحو
وتخلص عَا خد الباب كلمة مين
لا الرايحين نشوفهن راحو
ولا الراجعين نشوفهن جايين

مبارح متل هلق

مبارح متل هلّق سوا كنّا
وكان الورد فينا وطلع منّا
وتمو التحنّا بخمرك المعصور
جايي عَا بالو اليوم يتحنّا
ضيّعت صوتي بصوتك المسحور
لما سوا إحساسنا تغنّا
متل السوا سمعو غناني طيور
وما بيعرفو مينو القبل غنّا
ملتي عليي خصر صرنا خصور
وشفي جنا عاشفة الجنّا
وكل ما شربت من جدول المنتور
قلو بعد ويقول بتمنّا
كان الهنا ما زارنا من شهور
وكان فينا بعد نتهنّا
بكير لحظات اللقا المحرور
خلصو تَا فلينا غصب عنّا
وفَلّ يوم مبارح ومقهور
ليش دخلك فَلّ يتأنا
إلنَا بَنَى بيت بزهر وعطور
واليوم راح البيت والبنّا
بكرا تعي دموع الربيع نزور
يما مع شفافك يجو لعنّا
يعصرهن علينا صباح النور
ومع بعضنا من جديد يعجنّا
والحب يخبرنا على تنور
عَا آخرو نزدلو حرف منّا
تَا يصير تنوره ملاني زهور
كنا سوا فيها أنا وإنتي
ومعها رجعنا متل ما كنا

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حوض ورد

حكيتي معي والشوق لهفّتو
عَا لحن لا سمعتو ولا عزفتو
من صوتك عرفتك حنوني كتير
وكل البعد ما بعرفو عرفتو
عرفت فيكي ليل ومشاوير
وفيكي فجر طالع بهفهفتو
وفيكي الربيع محمّمك بكير
وجايبلك من الزهر منشفتو
لكن أنا سبقتو حلم عَا سرير
شربت الندى عليكي تا نشّفتو
ولقيت فيكي طير ما بيطير
وحدو مخبّا بريش عاطفتو
وحلِمت فيكي حبوب للتخدير
منهن عَصَرت نبيذ ورشفتو
وحلمت فيكي حوض ورد زغير
شميت عطرو بس ما قطفتو
ومنديل عن تمّك بلا تفكير
زحتو حلتمك طفل كشّفتو
وبكرا إذا يقظه الحلم بيصير
بقلّك لقيتك متل ما حلمتك
وشفت اللي شفتو قبل ما شفتو

-الشاعر زين شعيب -ابو علي

في عالم الإبداع تتصدر الواجهة أسماء كثيرة، لكن قلة من
تلك الأسماء تترك خلفها بصمة.. بصمة التمايز.
رحل أبو علي زين شعيب مخلفاً وراءه أكثر من بصمة وأكثر من محطة، وقد حفر عميقاً في صخرة الشعر الزجلي من خلال لون المرجلة والتحدي والمبارزة الذي اختاره منذ البداية، من خلال تقاطع أصل شخصيته مع زجله.. ومن هنا جاءت كنية "أبو علي" التي كان الناس ينادونه بها منذ الصغر.
في حياته بلغ أكثر من مجد، وشاهد ما يشتهيه كبار الشعراء في العالم، ألا وهو حب الناس وتجاوبهم. لا بل ودفعهم مقابلاً مادياً لقاء مشاهدة صولة من صولاته ضمن جوقة زغلول الدامور، وفي كثير من الأحيان كانت ملاعب كرة القدم هي المكان الوحيد الذي يمكنه احتضان السيل الجارف من الناس التواقين لسماع لغتهم المحكية، وهي في أبهى حلّة.
لقد أصبح اسم زين شعيب خيطاً في نسيج كلمة زجل، فلا تذكر إلا وهو معها، ولا يُذكر إلا وهي معه.
سيرة الزجل
يُعرّف الزجل على أنه شعر منظوم بالعاميات العربية، ويتبع عادة الأوزان الخليلية، ولا سيما في المشرق. ومن المعروف أن انطلاقة الزجل ترقى الى القرن الرابع الهجري (العاشر الميلاد&#1610 . ذاع الزجل في كثير من المناطق لتعبّر به طبقات الشعب عن أغراضها وأحزانها وأفراحها.
إن المتابع لتاريخ الزجل في لبنان يجد أن هذا الفن هو فعل إبداعي ذاتي، وليس فعلاً تابعاً إلا في بداياته، وهو لاحقاً توطن في لبنان وأصبح أصيلاً، وكأن لبنان موطنه الأخير.
أهمية الزجل اللبناني كبيرة جداً، لأنه فن ملاصق لنفسية شعبنا.. فلغته سهلة جداً، نستطيع فهمها ببساطة ومن دون أي جهد. كما أنه سهل للحفظ، يدخل الذاكرة من دون استئذان. وأهميته الأخرى هي أنه يحاكي مشاعر الناس، جميع الناس، يدغدغ عواطفهم وانفعالاتهم.. لذلك نجد جمهور الزجل جمهوراً انفعالياً، يكون مرتكزاً الى التفاعل الذي يحصل مع الزجّال الذي يعرف كيف يحرك عواطف الجمهور ومشاعره.
تبلور المدارس
يمكننا القول إن مدارس الزجل اللبناني تبلورت في مطلع القرن العشرين، عندما ظهرت شخصية الشاعر رشيد نخلة الذي رفع مقام هذا اللون من الشعر الشعبي، بما تمتاز به شخصيته الأدبية ومقامه المرموق في الوسط الشعبي هناك. فهو شاعر من شعراء الفصحى المعروفين، وهو ناظم النشيد الوطني اللبناني، ورابح الجائزة الأولى فيه، يوم تبارى في نظم هذ&#