From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10060 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Saturday, November 5 2022 Volume 14 : Number 10060 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Hot Wife Rides 18 African Monstrous Cocks ["Male Performance" ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 4 Nov 2022 15:20:49 +0100 From: "Male Performance" Subject: Hot Wife Rides 18 African Monstrous Cocks Hot Wife Rides 18 African Monstrous Cocks http://airbnbsurvey.ltd/aX6JEpyQn7TuQXYq7ikGmHGmU8dcQpJmhiO1_0szEuFVBE2hRQ http://airbnbsurvey.ltd/lTBgXjIFyoSSqEA4K2FirnGXli4I2vx460il_ww3Y3gPkbmz0Q zens of triremes on each side, but combined land-sea operations. It seems unlikely that all this was the product of a single mind or even of a generation; most likely the period of evolution and experimentation was simply not recorded by history. After some initial battles while subjugating the Greeks of the Ionian coast, the Persians determined to invade Greece proper. Themistocles of Athens estimated that the Greeks would be outnumbered by the Persians on land, but that Athens could protect itself by building a fleet (the famous "wooden walls"), using the profits of the silver mines at Laurium to finance them. The first Persian campaign, in 492 BC, was aborted because the fleet was lost in a storm, but the second, in 490 BC, captured islands in the Aegean Sea before landing on the mainland near Marathon. Attacks by the Greek armies repulsed these. The epic Battle of Salamis between Greek and Persian naval forces. The third Persian campaign in 480 BC, under Xerxes I of Persia, followed the pattern of the second in marching the army via the Hellespont while the fleet paralleled them offshore. Near Artemisium, in the narrow channel between the mainland and Euboea, the Greek fleet held off multiple assaults by the Persians, the Persians breaking through a first li ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Nov 2022 14:19:28 +0100 From: "Fungus-Removing Oil" Subject: Toe Fungus? Try this tonight. Toe Fungus? Try this tonight. http://careoil.email/w8LQPJhH2gDpPDzhGNMIYKJdbGhVG4pi5h_-U1ayBHIPbLYObw http://careoil.email/-hmGqdLwu2Bb2hLVMdzCUOf1a5VQE15m2coZQDe9pH-5IVQQqQ earing the tomb of its artefacts would require an unprecedented effort. Moisture from flash floods in the valley above had periodically seeped into the tomb over the centuries. As a result, alternating periods of humidity and dryness had warped wood, dissolved glue and caused leather and textiles to decay. Every exposed surface was covered with an unidentified pink film. Carter later estimated that without intensive restoration efforts, only a tenth of the burial goods would have survived being transported to Cairo. He needed assistance, and he called upon Albert Lythgoe, head of the Egyptian Expedition of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which was working nearby, to loan some of its personnel. Lythgoe sent Mace, a specialist in conservation; Harry Burton, regarded as the best archaeological photographer in Egypt; and the architect Walter Hauser and the artist Lindsley Hall, who drew scale drawings of the antechamber and its contents. Other experts also volunteered their services: Alfred Lucas, a chemist for the Antiquities Service, whose expertise would be a great help in the conservation effort; James Henry Breasted and Alan Gardiner, two of the foremost scholars of the Egyptian language of the time, to translate any texts discovered in the tomb; and Percy Newberry, a specialist of botanical specimens, and his wife Essie, who helped conserve textiles from the burial.[Note 4] They used the entrance of KV15, the tomb ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Nov 2022 14:17:24 -0400 From: "Magical Shampoos" Subject: Growing new hair... Growing new hair... http://surveysplash.rest/SVcW2wS7rJvLbL6IlDt5uGyjKcrwwsQhxIFyRQ08LTTQflXSfA http://surveysplash.rest/ir3V48YOxy2MsGn2WK9y9Ko22jzZ8MPxbfoUrOY11HqO9Sh16g he tomb inspired a public craze that came to be known as "Tutmania", a specific instance of the long-standing phenomenon of Western Egyptomania. As Breasted's son Charles put it, the news of the discovery "broke upon a world sated with post-First World War conferences, with nothing proved and nothing achieved, after a summer journalistically so dull that an English farmer's report of a gooseberry the size of a crabapple achieved the main news pages of the London metropolitan dailies." The resulting media frenzy was unprecedented in the history of Egyptology. Carter and Carnarvon became internationally famous, and Tutankhamun, formerly unknown to the public, became so familiar as to be given a nickname, "King Tut". Tourists in Luxor abandoned the normal sightseeing itinerary and flocked to the tomb, crowding around the retaining wall that surrounded the pit in which the tomb entrance lay. At times the excavators feared the wall might collapse from the weight of the people leaning on it. When possible, the excavators left objects uncovered when carrying them out of the entrance, to please the sightseers. People who deman ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10060 ***********************************************