From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10454 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 Wednesday, January 4 2023 Volume 14 : Number 10454 Today's Subjects: ----------------- 90 mins a week can AGE you faster? ["Younger Pretty" Subject: 90 mins a week can AGE you faster? 90 mins a week can AGE you faster? http://schoolbiody.cyou/gxSnSaDRgSlZ1HnbqnxHBnd0q1lK4GhsUKmyF_2WjIn1HSpOzw http://schoolbiody.cyou/GXjliro_KgzuUQtnPyfrUGRTwycAg5PXF4T-Vt2kNIjRPAYJ6Q ncreasing demands on the defence budget during the mid-1980s contributed to a reassessment of Project Waler, as the military needed to focus funds on its highest priorities. In February 1985 The Canberra Times reported that the government was considering ending the program as a cost-savings measure. This story also stated that the government was attracted to a proposal from the United States that the M113s be upgraded instead of replaced, with such a modification program providing opportunities for the Australian defence industry. In response to this story, the federal opposition's defence spokesman Ian Sinclair issued a statement arguing that cancelling Project Waler would be "yet another nail in the defence coffin" as the Army needed new armoured vehicles and building them would create employment in manufacturing industries. The Department of Defence recommended to the government in May 1985 that Project Waler be deferred by five years. This was based on an assessment by the department that the Army's plans to obtain a large number of armoured vehicles were ill-founded. The Sydney Morning Herald reported that ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 4 Jan 2023 09:01:49 +0100 From: "Offer Connector" Subject: Premium Knife Set Premium Knife Set http://surveygoodsporting.shop/fQzjeyhOx3Frp07gAYsWGG2SPk1Hxjx3USacGf-xmmz4lCJ7 http://surveygoodsporting.shop/SdPLeZj95-iKdon-4sAhlA45XTVDR0k-c47_1GjbMU3WJNHp uring the late 1970s and early 1980s, the Australian Defence Force (ADF) was partially restructured in line with the Defence of Australia policy. This policy was focused on protecting continental Australia, and especially northern Australia, from attack and represented a move away from previous policies which had been based around expeditionary warfare. It also included an emphasis on self-reliance. However, force structure design was hampered by unclear strategic guidance and budget limitations. The Army began preparing for conventional warfare in Australia, but there was an institutional belief that an invasion was highly unlikely. The Liberal-Country party coalition Fraser government that was in power from 1975 to March 1983 and the Australian Labor Party Hawke government that succeeded it had similar defence policies during this period. There were differences of opinion between the ADF and the civilian Department of Defence over the nature of the threats that should be used as a basis for force design. This arose from assessments that found that there was no imminent threat to the country's security. The department believed that the ADF should focus on preparing for low-intensity conflicts, and placed a low priority on the Army's armoured f ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 4 Jan 2023 08:19:42 +0100 From: "Amazing Deals" Subject: Did you forget? Your $100 Lowe's reward Is Waiting Did you forget? 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This policy was focused on protecting continental Australia, and especially northern Australia, from attack and represented a move away from previous policies which had been based around expeditionary warfare. It also included a ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 3 Jan 2023 14:20:37 +0100 From: "Goodbye Pain" Subject: On-contact pain that works - it just WORKS On-contact pain that works - it just WORKS http://articblasxt.shop/7Ng1iDpn2ulJTpTpY_p2cUzbM_4XQXDLo7VXApZZFKmEwbE3cw http://articblasxt.shop/rCoIKB23Y6JDjUoS3wlqZzbj6vXF49zQtq7MwAVCXci8pwLByg he committee wrote to O'Reilly in February 1937, wanting to know the procedure for returning unsold coins, and in 1943, with sales at a standstill, it returned 7,342 pieces for redemption and melting, leaving 17,658 specimens extant. The retail price from coin dealers of the Albany half dollar in uncirculated condition dropped as low as $1.50 in 1940, recovering to $4 in 1950. In 1954 it became known that the State Bank of Albany had some 2,000 Albany half dollars in its vaults and was willing to sell them for the original issue price of $2. They sold to several local collectors and dealers. At the time, the market price was $8. By 1970, the market price was $80 and by 1985, $400. As of 2009, the coin could fetch $330 for an uncirculated coin rated as MS-60, and $470 for an MS-65. The deluxe edition of R. S. Yeoman's A Guide Book of United States Coins, published in 2018, lists the piece for between $220 and $425, depending on condition. An exceptional specimen sold for $20,125 in 2004. The original packaging, which is rarer than the half dollar itself, included a four-page booklet containing an illustration of the coin, a history of Albany, and slots for one t ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 3 Jan 2023 18:06:47 +0100 From: "Grow Thick Strong Hair" Subject: 1 Easy Trick To Stop And Reverse Hair Loss 1 Easy Trick To Stop And Reverse Hair Loss http://folicreox.shop/qyNZv-7eU1BC33-8MMxR_nOpfzTXGlyf3IZfdKxgIRDWftCe5A http://folicreox.shop/Jp2udsfYTKdM3mUzamzlN8HuqAZoIcZPD_S055SYhBj5boZ3JQ throp relied on the brief extant descriptions of the colonial governor. Lathrop was allowed access to the charter to measure and study it. She visited the Smithsonian and the Metropolitan Museum of Art while researching the men's clothing. A small pine tree is visible behind Governor Dongan; an eagle overspreads the group, with the small word LIBERTY above the bird. The designer's initials GKL are in small letters beside Dongan's foot. Numismatic author Q. David Bowers wrote that the design "has always been considered pleasing by numismatists". David Bullowa, in his 1938 work on commemoratives, wrote, "every symbol and device on this issue has significance as connected with the early Colonial history of New York. The inscriptions have been reduced to a size that makes them almost unreadable. The word 'Liberty' on this coin, above the eagle, is microscopic." Art historian Cornelius Vermeule, in his volume on American coins and medals, deemed the Albany half dollar "an important contribution to American numismatics". He suggested that the beaver, a symbol of Albany, gnawing the maple branch, a symbol of New York State, "would then seem to become an allegory of municipal government feeding ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 4 Jan 2023 11:12:24 +0100 From: "Your Eyesight" Subject: Restore & save dying eyes with a 12-second Biblical trick Restore & save dying eyes with a 12-second Biblical trick http://walgreensurvey.today/lpyqURvUAgv4ipkQV8ciKtK8wHeo3XwPyWRu5Boklzobllhp0Q http://walgreensurvey.today/Di749A5VjkV7ilsKVZD1zi3XtgYF6zT5E6mDV3mnoTm7n3mJdQ A total of 14 companies submitted proposals by the deadline in February 1982. The Sun-Herald reported that a company that had considered submitting a proposal had asked the Japanese embassy in Canberra for the invasion plans drawn up by the Japanese military during World War II to use as the basis of a scenario that the AFVs could counter. The Japanese defence attachC) rejected this request but complimented the company for its enterprise. Three proposals were selected in July 1982 for further consideration. These were the proposals submitted by the Australian branch of EASAMS which was teamed with EASAMS and Vickers Defence Systems of the United Kingdom, Evans Deakin Industries which had partnered with the French firms SOFMA and GIAT, and Goninan which was teamed with the American FMC Corporation. The three companies were funded by the Department of Defence to conduct further studies to "provide the Army with information upon which to base realistic vehicle requirements" and identify the feasible extent of Australian content in the vehicles. The studies also investigated whether the vehicles should be tracked or wheeled, and what engines and armament should be fitted. Each company was required to submit four designs for infantry fighting vehicles (IFVs), including tracked and wheeled vehicles. The Army did not set specificatio ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 4 Jan 2023 10:42:45 +0100 From: "American Airlines Shopper Feedback" Subject: Shopper, You can qualify to get a $90 American Airlines gift card! Shopper, You can qualify to get a $90 American Airlines gift card! http://southwestairlines.shop/UHUKzn0SOicJTkeVIzvfvpQb9yl-vq8kRWnsQacLZrE6v2s_YQ http://southwestairlines.shop/2AKna2K0u4Ena2RnSglN9__Y1MQKYQmF9xBmChqpBZzGraADnQ xploratory studies undertaken by the Department of Defence at the outset of Project Waler broadly identified the characteristics considered desirable for the AFVs. The Government then launched what was intended to be a four-phase process to develop and produce the vehicles. The first phase was to be a feasibility study. The second phase would involve first developing a detailed project definition and then selecting an AFV through a competitive process. As part of the third phase the winning company was to finalise the design. The type would then be produced as the fourth phase. At this time the Australian defence procurement process was very complex, with projects being required to pass through fourteen steps between an initial feasibility study and final approval. These steps involved several committees and working parties and required the defence industry to submit very detailed proposals that were costly to prepare. It typically took at least five years for procurements to be approved, by which time the military's requirements had often changed. The first phase of Project Waler began in Septembe ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 3 Jan 2023 13:32:23 +0100 From: "Improve Digestive" Subject: Moringa gift worth $147 for you Moringa gift worth $147 for you http://moringaa.shop/_qj3KVS5n47rbl1-iWeo_sOjPXkPbmoJr9vugFjuouNFsKocwg http://moringaa.shop/pDq9XonydvM28yssX3_JVm7aoc_gl8sEP0ph3yq_up_6_e_Aiw total of 25,013 Albany half dollars were struck at the Philadelphia Mint during October 1936, including 13 pieces set aside to be available for inspection and testing at the 1937 meeting of the annual Assay Commission. They were sold by the Albany Dongan Charter Coin Committee for $2 each. The price was considered high for the time (a more usual price for a new issue then would be $1 or $1.50). Additionally, the commemorative coin mania that had been sweeping the country in the spring and summer of 1936 had already seen close to twenty other commemorative coins issued that same year, and had abated by the time the Albany piece was available. Sales were thus unexpectedly low. The Albany Dongan Committee continued to sell the coins until 1943, refusing to lower the public price, though the entire remaining stock was offered to New York City coin dealer Abe Kosoff at face value plus $50. He declined, unwilling to buy them all himself and unable to find backers for a syndicate to purchase them. The committee wrote to O'Reilly in February 1937, wanting to know the procedure for returning unsold coins, and in ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 3 Jan 2023 15:17:55 -0800 From: Louis Vuitton <9z7@fjbntl.ru> Subject: [New Year Sales] Louis Vuitton Bags Up To 88% Off! Shop Online Now! Louis Vuitton Bags Up To 88% Off! 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The project was named after the Waler horses that had been used by Australian Light Horse units in the Middle East during World War I. Following Killen's authorisation, the Army developed a staff target that formally documented the goals for the project. This was completed in October 1980. While the number of AFVs to be acquired was not specified at this time, in mid-1981 the project coordinator, Lieutenant Colon ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 4 Jan 2023 12:02:32 +0100 From: "Erectile Dysfunction" Subject: She got a very naughty look on her face... She got a very naughty look on her face... http://smartbloodsuger.live/aIkKayTvqxxf1mPAy_eK0Z22NsmYW8xCzOhVCffDKg9RlXBU http://smartbloodsuger.live/ogfBhx2Us34bPA7DsV19gp73Et27IdJSpoj1ExENSZgpwjDEEA After each company submitted four designs the Army selected two of them and asked that they be further developed. In doing so the Army favoured the designs which fully met its requirements, even though they would be the most expensive to produce. The development work involved the companies providing outline designs for other variants, as well as information on the expected costs and how the vehicles could be built in Australia. At this time a tender for formal proposals to design and build the new vehicles was to be issued as the next stage of the project. The studies were completed in early 1983. In December that year the Minister for Defence, Gordon Scholes, announced that the studies confirmed that it would be feasible to build the vehicles in Australia. It was expected that, subject to further approvals by the government, tenders for the project definition phase of the process would be advertised in August 1984. This phase of the project was expected to cost $25 million. By mid-1984 the date for the project definition phase had been pushed back, and it was now scheduled to take place between 1986 and 1988. It was intended to select two firms to undertake this work, leading to a single lead ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10454 ***********************************************