From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10528 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 Monday, January 16 2023 Volume 14 : Number 10528 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Club Car Golf Cart - Your order has shipped! ["Offer Connector" Subject: Club Car Golf Cart - Your order has shipped! Club Car Golf Cart - Your order has shipped! http://clarisils.today/fV36B5BQ-e1hX0GE5Qcd84ky6m-IzpDU4I0np6KZs2KiYCKfLg http://clarisils.today/gYs2ElCdG5POsykdxX7v5_HxQuPRh3UrwPJhVxAVfAlBSYyrjQ fter the STS-51-G mission, Lucid was assigned to Capsule Communicator (CAPCOM) duty. She served as the CAPCOM for the STS-51-J mission in October 1985, the STS-61-A mission in November 1985, STS-61-B mission in November and December 1985, and the STS-61-C mission in January 1986. The January 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster later that month halted Space Shuttle operations for 32 months while NASA conducted investigations and remediation. Flight crews were stood down. One consequence of the disaster was the Galileo project, an unmanned probe to Jupiter, which lost both its launch window and its ride due to the cancelation of the Shuttle-Centaur project. On November 30, 1988, NASA announced that Galileo would be deployed by the Space Shuttle Atlantis on the STS-34 mission, which was scheduled for October 12, 1989. The mission was commanded by Donald E. Williams, with pilot Michael J. McCulley and Lucid, Ellen S. Baker and Franklin Chang-Diaz as mission specialists. The launch was delayed for five days due to a faulty Space Shuttle main engine controller, and then for an additional day due to bad weather. Atlantis lifted off from KSC on October 18. As the lead mission specialist, Lucid was primarily responsible for the Galileo spacecraft, and initiated its deployment by pressing a button to separate Galileo from Atlantis. Galileo was successfully deployed six and a half hours into the flight using the Inertial Upper Stage (IUS). As this was much less powerful than the Shuttle-Centaur upper stage, Galileo had to employ a gravity assist from Venus and two from Earth, and it took six years instead of two for the Galileo to reach Jupiter. "Both Ellen and I sighed a great sigh of relief, because we figured Galileo was not our concern at that point, because we'd gotten rid of it," Lucid reported. "Happiness wa ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Jan 2023 15:02:10 +0100 From: "Lillian" Subject: How to drop 68lbs of pure fat in 2-minutes a day How to drop 68lbs of pure fat in 2-minutes a day http://yetitundrasweep.shop/ULpBOL88rKKId8sAfNFmBmU9BLqdHm73ihEB6bx23l6Tju8Hpg http://yetitundrasweep.shop/L-jtTByBG5MxUqWJqNjy_84hLrbymq7HTN8l4QV6XHxiGmfSuA arsley's compositional career spanned the reigns of all four monarchs. He wrote church music for both the Latin and English rites. His Anglican church music for the Daily Office included a morning service, involving the Benedictus canticle and the Te Deum, and an evening service that involved the singing of two canticles, the Magnificat and the Nunc dimittis. The musicologist Howard Brown noted that Parsley belonged to a group of outstanding composers from the middle period of the 16th centurybWilliam Mundy, Robert Parsons, John Sheppard, Christopher Tye, Thomas Tallis, and Robert Whitebwho together produced a body of high quality music. According to the scholar John Morehen, Parsley was less at ease when working with English texts, a trait Morehen finds Parsley had in common with similar Reformation composers. His Latin music is fluent and attractive, with extended phrases that become increasingly melismatic as they progress. The parts in Latin are characteristically independent in a way that was typical of sacred polyphony in England before the Reformation. The expressive psalm Conserva me, domine has an elegant polyphonic style. The technique shown in his English church music is less assured than his compositions for the Latin rite. His five-part Lamentations, which differs from settings by his contemporaries Tallis and White in that a treble line (notable for the difficulty in singing the highe ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Jan 2023 10:21:47 +0100 From: "Home Depot Shopper Gift Card Chance" Subject: Home Depot reward - Open immediately! Home Depot reward - Open immediately! http://unitedairlines.ltd/7j0erlSn0mKSJifNUTvUSmyJMa7FRCI3_uJedYFP5J2zcSHPCw http://unitedairlines.ltd/4XXJL1Blhbd8Rpr-JzKZDP6Amo8NP1TZG42c_IIRlSPV6DOaqg Wells attended Wheaton College in Illinois, where she majored in chemistry. She then transferred to the University of Oklahoma, where she earned her bachelor's degree in chemistry in 1963. She was a teaching assistant in the University of Oklahoma's Department of Chemistry from 1963 to 1964 and a senior laboratory technician at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation in Oklahoma City, from 1964 to 1966. She then became a research chemist at Kerr-McGee, an oil company there. At Kerr-McGee she met and married Michael F. Lucid, a fellow research chemist there, in 1967 and changed her name to Shannon Matilda Wells Lucid. Their first child, Kawai Dawn (named for the place and time she was conceived during their honeymoon), was born in September 1968. Afterward, Lucid left Kerr-McGee and returned to the University of Oklahoma as graduate assistant in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, where she pursued a master's degree in biochemistry. She sat her final examinations two days after the birth of her second daughter, Shandara Michelle, in January 1970. She went on to earn her PhD in biochemistry in 1973, writing her thesis on the Effect of Cholera Toxin on Phosphorylation and Kinase Activity of Intestinal Epithelial Cells and Their Brush Borders under the supervision of A ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 13 Jan 2023 14:00:34 +0100 From: "Long Island New York Bagels" Subject: NY's Best Bagels now delivers nationwide NY's Best Bagels now delivers nationwide http://smartbloodsugarr.rest/-_71wFeCe0-5jYMI1O8T-VtueI9CgRkXovpxDaIL-A3hdMs-1w http://smartbloodsugarr.rest/RzQpzTtfJNxC6ltpQCnLrnkBgkyJCAWK1bBWYBfr_N83Tcc6yQ indman decided that it would be impractical to keep the majority of his force north of the Arkansas River in Van Buren given the condition of his army, and pulled most of his men south of the Arkansas to Fort Smith. Hindman left one infantry regiment and some artillery in Van Buren. Some Texas cavalry commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Richard Phillip Crump was posted at Dripping Springs, which was about 8 mi (13 km) north of Van Buren, with instructions to guard the roads from the north, despite Crump having previously been reprimanded for inattentiveness. Holmes visited the Van Buren area on December 21, and ordered Hindman to withdraw his forces to Lewisburg, where the men could be better supplied via the river. According to historian Ed Bearss, Hindman decided to leave the brigades of Brigadier General John S. Roane's Texas cavalry and Cooper's Native American troops in the area of Fort Smith and the I ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10528 ***********************************************