From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10063 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 Sunday, November 6 2022 Volume 14 : Number 10063 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Leave your feedback and you could WIN! ["Kohl's Shopper Gift Card Chance"] Leave your feedback and you could WIN! ["Texas Roadhouse Opinion Requeste] White Wife Caught In African Elongation Ritual ["ED Health News" ] Morning Wood Problems... ["Male Enhancement" Subject: Leave your feedback and you could WIN! Leave your feedback and you could WIN! http://helphealth.rest/y7cvtfGLJLSFq0Tzo3g5wKqeW_nyPhS-Ry8NkiWUQEwT0naH-A http://helphealth.rest/M37loKkbzrs1aIME0vIOFd4eA3kDzz1HZvsnkUozTGq0Wcs1og he First War of Scottish Independence between England and Scotland began in March 1296, when Edward I of England (r. 1272b1307) stormed and sacked the Scottish border town of Berwick as a prelude to his invasion of Scotland. By 1323 the English, now ruled by Edward II, had been completely expelled from Scotland. Robert Bruce was securely on the Scottish throne and had carried out several major raids deep into England. In May a 13-year truce was agreed. Despite this, Scottish raids continued, as did English piracy against Scottish shipping. To add to Edward II's embarrassments, when an Anglo-French war broke out in Aquitaine in 1323 the English were defeated and forced to agree a humiliating peace in 1325. Execution of Hugh Despenser By February 1326, it was clear that Edward II's wife, Isabella, had taken the exiled Roger Mortimer as a lover. Living in Paris, and encouraged by the French court, they became the centre of English opposition to Edward II. In April the Scots agreed a military alliance with the French. In September Isabella, Mortimer and the heir to the throne b thirteen-year-old Prince Edward b landed in Suffolk. Edward II's authority collapsed, Isabella's faction took over the administration with the support of the Church, and Edward II was taken prisoner in November. Edward II's treasurer, Walter de Sta ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 5 Nov 2022 20:38:15 -0400 From: "Texas Roadhouse Opinion Requested" Subject: Leave your feedback and you could WIN! Leave your feedback and you could WIN! http://surveyskill.us/iIOSseX03Jf4DkgKvxCWwfKvsM9D1Tzo7g7ljfdok-K9y-vV7w http://surveyskill.us/A-rK843iI5PMXFMzbAOHWoDcTXtHK81yLcbRPxfh5ulRNFoj3w f the most contentious issues facing the newly-elected government was the decision of the province's capital city. The federal legislation creating the province had fixed Edmonton as the provisional capital, much to the chagrin of Calgary. Neither party had taken a position on the divisive question during the campaign, but selecting a permanent capital was high on the list of the new legislature's orders of business. Calgary's case was made most enthusiastically by Minister of Public Works Cushing, Edmonton's by Attorney-General Cross. Banff and Red Deer were also possibilities, but motions to select each failed to find seconders. In the end, Edmonton was designated by a vote of sixteen members, including Rutherford, to eight. A personal priority of Rutherford had been the establishment of a university. Though the Edmonton Bulletin opined that it would be unfair "that the people of the Province should be taxed for the special benefit of four per cent that they may be able to attach the cognomen of B.A. or M.A. to their names and flaunt the vanity of such over the taxpayer, who has to pay for it," Rutherford proceeded quickly. He was concerned that delay might result in the creation of denominational colleges, striking a blow to his dream of a high-quality nonsectarian system of postsecondary education. A bill establishing the university was passed by the legislature but left the government to decide the location. Calgary felt that having lost the fight to be provincial capital, it could expect the university to be established there, and it was not pleased when, a year late the government announced the founding of the University of Alberta in Rutherford's hometown, Strathcona ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 5 Nov 2022 11:41:50 -0400 From: "ED Health News" Subject: White Wife Caught In African Elongation Ritual White Wife Caught In African Elongation Ritual http://healthhero.rest/JTqHC2_tG71ICTjvHDxHWko88rr14qzjh42B1PYv4YM9JQIWLA http://healthhero.rest/eYH5Rm5yLjSnlz7btt-iY6Cv1zxmchMcaWqCgzTwAUugNfFaSA he facial anatomy of H. antecessor is predominantly known from the 10b11.5-year-old H. antecessor child ATD6-69, as the few other facial specimens are fragmentary. ATD6-69 is strikingly similar to modern humans (as well as East Asian Middle Pleistocene archaic humans) as opposed to West Eurasian or African Middle Pleistocene archaic humans including Neanderthals. The most notable traits are a completely flat face and a curved zygomaticoalveolar crest (the bar of bone connecting the cheek to the part of the maxilla that holds the teeth). In 2013 anthropologist Sarah Freidline and colleagues statistically determined that these features would not disappear with maturity. H. antecessor suggests the modern human face evolved and disappeared multiple times in the past, which is not unlikely as facial anatomy is strongly influenced by diet and thus the environment. The nasal bones are like th ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 5 Nov 2022 23:16:27 -0800 From: Ray Ban Subject: [Black Friday]Ray-Ban,Oakley,Costa Sunglasses Up To 90% Off! Shop Online Now! Ray-Ban,Oakley,Costa Sunglasses Up To 90% Off! Shop Online Now! www.dzwrb.com ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 5 Nov 2022 10:07:28 -0400 From: "Control Metabolism" Subject: Fatty Liver Fatty Liver http://healthhero.rest/ti3gf7cnryNaaMQv4c-gpvW24Qm9QcrK6xAft6Ugcc4amGlmEw http://healthhero.rest/uMX9h9shwUc_xSqKsNFJUNBe72dhk8_zSuH-1DH_BvAz_g4TLg he face of H. antecessor is unexpectedly similar to that of modern humans compared to other archaic groups, so in their original description, Castro and colleagues classified it as the last common ancestor of modern humans and Neanderthals, supplanting H. heidelbergensis in this capacity. The facial anatomy came under close scrutiny in subsequent years. In 2001 French palaeoanthropologist Jean-Jacques Hublin postulated that the Gran Dolina remains and the contemporaneous Tighennif remains from Algeria (usually classified as Homo ergaster [=? Homo erectus], origina ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Nov 2022 12:41:57 -0400 From: "Male Enhancement" Subject: Morning Wood Problems... Morning Wood Problems... http://levitoxder.icu/vmNHU4jL4mrM8ujVWl0jU9mTbSVOfFZr8jO8CX1CK4FBjy7x5A http://levitoxder.icu/c-jCMCa_JsbG6gL4k_WAUvQWLV5veyEEeuH8MMJaVeaOok5WVA rded 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 of Seti II, as a storeroom and conservation laboratory; KV55 as a photographic darkroom; and KV4, the tomb of Ramesses XI, as a place to take meals. Four Egyptian foremen b Ahmed Gerigar, Gad Hassan, Hussein Abu Awad and Hussein Ahmed Said b also worked in the tomb, and a handful of Egyptian porters, whose names are not recorded, carried objects from Tutankhamun's tomb to KV15. On 16 December the excavators began clearing the antechamber, starting with the objects north of the entrance and moving anti-clockwise around the room. Objects were labelled with reference numbers and photographed in situ before being moved. Carter said of the stacks of furniture and other objects in the antechamber, "So crowded were they that it was a matter of extreme difficulty to move one without running serious risk of damaging others, and in some cases they were so inextricably tangled that an elaborate series of supports had to be devised to hold one object or group of objects in place while another was being removed." The disorganised contents of boxes had to be sorted through, and in some cases pieces of a single object, such as an elaborate inlaid corselet, were scattered through the chamber and had to be searched for before being reassembled. Upon removal from the tomb, the objects were cleaned and, if necessary, treated with preservatives such as celluloid solution or paraffin wax. The items in most urgent need of conservation were treated on the spot, but most were removed to KV15 f ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10063 ***********************************************