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Subject: Uncaught bounce notification
Date: Sat, 09 Jun 2007 14:26:17 -0400

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--- Begin Message --- Subject: stressful frequently Date: Sat, 9 Jun 2007 21:26:09 +0300 User-agent: Thunderbird 1.5.0.12 (Windows/20070509)
CAON Releases Fact Sheet For Investors

Chan-On International Inc.
Symbol: CAON
Close: $0.72 UP 4.35%

Read this over the weekend, you won't be sorry. CAON has changed
direction and investors love it. Friday's volume went through the roof.
Big news expected Monday. Set your marker for CAON first thing Monday!

Simply put, green birds virtually disappear when they land in a green
tree.
Learn more about this Greater Yellowlegs on BirdWeb. There's more about
the bird at BirdWeb.

Rock Pigeons fly and roost together, in groups of a dozen or more.
It is found throughout the Caribbean, in the Galapagos, and from
southern Europe across Africa to India.

Pound for pound, the Winter Wren has ten times the sound power of a
crowing rooster. To learn more about how to attract Rufous Hummingbirds
to your yard, click here.
At sewage treatment plants, watch for ducks and gulls - and raptors
keeping watch over them all.

The pairs use song to stake out and hold breeding territories. And
Red-tailed Hawks begin to lay eggs then, too. To find out how you can
help scientists learn more about Bald Eagles' nests, please see the
transcript of this story.

Ornithologist Steve Hilty believes it be a form of protective
coloration.

It is adapted to life in old-growth conifer forests, forests centuries
old that have never been logged.

Urban songs are also faster, probably so they can be repeated more
often. The male is dressed for defending his territory and attracting a
harem; she, for blending into the cattails.

For more about this bird, visit BirdWeb.
Kiwi loved the forest so much that he forsook his wings and beautiful
feathers to dwell on the ground and devour the enemies of the forest.
Check out soundtosage. This American Goldfinch is claimed by Washington,
Iowa, and New Jersey.

It is found throughout the Caribbean, in the Galapagos, and from
southern Europe across Africa to India. To find your local Audubon,
click here. The Canyon Wren lives year-round in such spots as Dry Falls,
Vantage, or along the Yakima River Canyon in Washington, surviving
winter's numbing cold.

Flamingoes nesting in the Rift Valley of Africa construct concave
columns of mud that rise from lake water so alkaline that it would burn
our skin.

Kiwi loved the forest so much that he forsook his wings and beautiful
feathers to dwell on the ground and devour the enemies of the forest.
There's more here, too. The final touch: layering the outer surface with
lichen flakes to provide perfect camouflage.

For a more sedate birding adventure, visit a cemetery.
Find your local Audubon and learn what they have to offer.

She laid a clutch of eggs that almost equals her body weight. Why risk
such an end, when they could migrate north along the length of Mexico?
These blows force air through the feathers, causing the water to bubble.
For a more sedate birding adventure, visit a cemetery.
The pairs use song to stake out and hold breeding territories.

Its lobed toes help the coot swim and maneuver under water.
Such birds are truly half-asleep: one brain hemisphere snoozes as the
other remains awake and alert.

Learn more about this Western Gull at BirdWeb. Internet Marketing by
Portent Interact
Dueting is most typical of birds that live in dense habitats; it no
doubt helps them locate each other in deep cover.

Can you imagine a spring without the voices of birds? Look, but
especially listen, for meadowlarks in the open country of Eastern
Washington, and on the natural prairies south of Puget Sound.
Why do these birds of prey begin this annual event so early? With raised
back-feathers, he challenges the other males that have come too close.
Learn more about this chatty bird at BirdWeb.

To find your local Audubon, click here. Its lobed toes help the coot
swim and maneuver under water.

Despite its pencil-thin neck and legs, the flamingo miraculously
maintains grace and beauty. For more about the Steller's Jay, visit
BirdWeb.




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