Browse Items (135 total)

  • Tags: Nature

The Flora of the Agana River

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/r9zwxgxy15bhfy0u0h0bw/MARC_GC10_52.jpg
The Agana River, Island of Guam, showing textile screwpine, Pithecolobium dulce and coconut palms. “The Useful Plants of the Island of Guam.” 1905.

Agana River

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/6sbps9cr00xcivfa68x7t/MARC_GC10_30.jpg
Agana River in Guam, showing growth of Potamogeton and Chara in the water, with Coconuts and Hymenocallis on banks.

Xanadu 87

MARC_XANADU_1987.pdf
"Xanadu 87 is the most recent edition available at the Micronesian Area Research. There are no known editions after this year.

Introduction by the editor, Ann Long Card:

Dear Xanadu Reader,

You found us! You've stumbled on Xanadu '87, a…

Pandas

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/fvbozymiu6fj8xdb09oz2/MARC_XANADU_1987_A8.pdf
A block print of a pair of pandas eating out of two bowls. Next to the pandas are some scenic bamboo trees and flowers.

Seascape

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/9bc2xw92ny2guo1xfn576/MARC_XANADU_1987_A6.pdf
A block print of two fish swimming underwater. The fish are striped and almost triangle shaped. Behind the fish, seaweed, coral, and a starfish can be seen.

Lanai

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/w7c00s58hpvp6hnm5k4ix/MARC_XANADU_1987_P35.pdf
A poem about a beautiful woman who dances, and in her dance the speaker recalls the beauty and the destruction of a paradise home.

Silent Cracker

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/x7emd30tttus20cbx2yb5/MARC_XANADU_1987_P29.pdf
The moon trades places with the sun and hopes that their arrival warrants an audience.

The Joy of Capri

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/mc3puafexcvyqi2o6x8wh/MARC_XANADU_1987_P27.4.pdf
A poem celebrating the colorful and vibrant Italian island of Capri.

The Call of the Sea

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/ienz51xkkm5xvt92kagyz/MARC_XANADU_1987_P27.1.pdf
A person answers the call of the sea.

Ramblings from Ali's Journal

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/j0l0fae25cxwhjjiiei4f/MARC_XANADU_1987_P27.pdf
A collection of four poems, which are collectively known as "Ramblings from Ali's Journal."