From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10628 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, January 29 2023 Volume 14 : Number 10628 Today's Subjects: ----------------- BOMBSHELL ["Jailed for a Cure" ] Shopper, You can qualify to get a $100 Kroger gift card! ["Kroger Gift Op] You have won an Ninja Air Fryer Celebrating Kohls anniversary with an Ninja Air Fryer ["Ninja Air Fryer Department" Subject: BOMBSHELL BOMBSHELL6 http://chickfilsurvey.shop/ka1plHwvFc3xsIAly5_yJFUmxb-JI7RyOvliJh7pDFSgYCgZog http://chickfilsurvey.shop/nV8nyI6M6wEQkLDqitEV19H8wSi8W9ZTUyWXcQaGNJIZW160fA masterplan for the future of the site was drawn up in 2012, comprising six 'big ideas' to restore and redevelop the palace. The first of these to be implemented aims to transform the derelict eastern end of the palace, making accessible the Victorian theatre and historic BBC Studios. In 2013 the Heritage Lottery Fund awarded a Round 1 pass to develop the proposals, creating a new entrance in the restored East Court, re-establishing the theatre as a flexible performance space and re-opening the BBC Studios as a visitor attraction. There was controversy regarding plans to demolish the brick infills in the colonnade on the south-east face of the building, which the BBC constructed after 1936 to form their television studios within. Following a public consultation and advice from English Heritage, Planning and Listed Building Consent was given for the proposals and in March 2015 HLF awarded Round 2 major grant funding securing a positive future for the historic areas. In 2018 it was announced that the Theatre would open for a BBC Proms performance on 1 September before officially reopening to the public on 1 December 2018 following the completion of the East Wing Restoration Project by the contractor Willmott Dixon. The opening programme included performances from Dylan Moran, Horrible Histories, Gilbert & George, Gareth Malone and an evening of jazz presented by Ronnie Scott ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 29 Jan 2023 08:31:09 +0100 From: "Kroger Gift Opportunity" Subject: Shopper, You can qualify to get a $100 Kroger gift card! Shopper, You can qualify to get a $100 Kroger gift card! http://antifungalfoot.today/t8ax6NuASsKv69ik-RtWufjpyhAjAoR71LM1hSHiI0WUz2mrAg http://antifungalfoot.today/Fjn0yrr4dGyxuAOyqYvswu_pkOA8XCzNLyTRdzL97t5K95WSRg he government saw Project Waler as a significant opportunity for the Australian manufacturing industry to produce technologically advanced military equipment. Building the vehicles in Australia was also considered to be an important element of the government's "policy of increasing self-reliance in defence". Studies undertaken by the Department of Defence concluded that the Australian defence industry was capable of designing and producing the vehicles as long as some technologies were transferred from overseas. The Department of Defence's annual report for the 1981b1982 financial year stated that "as far as practical" the Project Waler vehicles "are to be designed, developed and made in Australia". Accordingly, the project included elements that encouraged Australian industry involvement, including through the government supporting the development of necessary industrial capabilities while the vehicles were still being scoped. Due to its strategic importance, Project Waler was also identified in 1983 as a procurement exercise where the government was willing to pay a premium for manufacturing the vehicles in Australia rather than importing them. In December 1981 Killen argued in favour of continued trade protections for the Australian automotive industry ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 29 Jan 2023 07:44:31 +0100 From: "Ninja Air Fryer Department" Subject: You have won an Ninja Air Fryer Celebrating Kohls anniversary with an Ninja Air Fryer You have won an Ninja Air Fryer Celebrating Kohls anniversary with an Ninja Air Fryer http://younabiscbdgummies.shop/POe7Yyd1y3byDjrg1W7FpUO_t6MKknNOPsVPJDNCDWRkGI-M7w http://younabiscbdgummies.shop/ekRFv93oc50D-0zc1vFG-nJGMsAJ9K2cyrBKi4w58AlebDh_xA he new policy, which began with the October 1933 issue, was a success, and the magazine stayed on a monthly schedule for the next seven years. Popular soon launched more titles in the same genre, which has since become known as "weird menace" fiction. The first was Terror Tales, launched in September 1934; it was followed by Horror Stories, in January 1935. Popular's competitors soon followed suit, with Thrilling Mystery appearing in October 1935 from Thrilling Publications. In a 1977 interview, Steeger recalled paying between three-quarters of a cent and a cent per word for fiction during the 1930s, although there were a handful of authors who could command higher rates. These rates, and Popular's policy of paying on acceptance, helped separate Popular from the smaller companies, who might pay half a cent per word, and only on publication, not on acceptance. The rate increased in the 1940s, going up by at least a half-cent per word, and more for some writers. The schedule changed from monthly to bimonthly starting in early 1941. World War II brought paper shortages, but Steeger later recalled that the effect was to increase the percentage of each print run that sold and that as a result, Popular's sales were higher during the war than at any other time in the company's life. Pulp magazines began to lose readership after the war, and sales decline ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 29 Jan 2023 09:53:46 +0100 From: "Dementia Warning" Subject: Harvard: Deadly Breakfast Habit Accelerates Dementia by 82%... Harvard: Deadly Breakfast Habit Accelerates Dementia by 82%... http://fedzexsurvey.today/U_qfEU6EuLQCncD-UgMUeg-EcTs_YsYub55Rm-e0CTNl28otwg http://fedzexsurvey.today/ZFuhnKa_t0TB0NZLvQX170eMbDpxcijDp9y0bftyn2EtiSdeug te cast iron displays white fractured surfaces due to the presence of an iron carbide precipitate called cementite. With a lower silicon content (graphitizing agent) and faster cooling rate, the carbon in white cast iron precipitates out of the melt as the metastable phase cementite, Fe3C, rather than graphite. The cementite which precipitates from the melt forms as relatively large particles. As the iron carbide precipitates out, it withdraws carbon from the original melt, moving the mixture toward one that is closer to eutectic, and the remaining phase is the lower iron-carbon austenite (which on cooling might transform to martensite). These eutectic carbides are much too large to provide the benefit of what is called precipitation hardening (as in some steels, where much smaller cementite precipitates might inhibit [plastic deformation] by impeding the movement of dislocations through the pure iron ferrite matrix). Rather, they increase the bulk hardness of the cast iron simply by virtue of their own very high hardness and their substantial volume fraction, such that the bulk hardness can be approximated by a rule of mixtures. In any case, they offer hardness at the expense of toughness. Since carbide makes up a large fraction of the material, white cast iron could reasonably be classified as a cermet. White iron is too brittle for use in many structural components, but with good hardness and abrasion resistance and relatively low cost, it finds use in such applications as the wear surfaces (impeller and volute) of slurry pumps, shell li ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 29 Jan 2023 07:09:46 +0100 From: "Bed Bath & Beyond Customer Support" Subject: Ninja Air Fryer Exclusive Rewards For You Ninja Air Fryer Exclusive Rewards For You http://antifungalfoot.today/GCrYXL58sgyQSpJ5ZjuRTianMO8G5X3HrGl_JBeiKkteC9CYIA http://antifungalfoot.today/KyED8FElHrioJLHSppFbRs0T1J5Ewf_OvNuUwYdR83SoUWtMYQ n March 15, The New York Times reported that the deadlock was likely to persist to the end of the session, and that the Pennsylvania Senate seat would likely go unfilled when Congress next convened in December, even by a gubernatorial appointee, as the Senate had usually rejected attempts to fill a seat by appointment when a state legislature had failed to choose. The balloting continued, once per day excepting Sundays, with Quay never getting close to a majority with a quorum. The anti-Quay Republicans offered to meet with his supporters, but Quay's manager, state senator John C. Grady, was slow to accept, and it was clear the Quay Republicans would rather have deadlock than find a compromise candidate. This was along the lines that Quay urged in a letter to his supporters, "To temporize with those persons who for three months have prevented the election of a Senator in Pennsylvania would extricate them from the abyss into which they have plunged. Instead of making their treason to the party odious, their treason would be made respectable, and treason made respectable would become fashionable." The Democrats refused to reach across the aisle to the anti-Quay Republicans to elect a compromise candidate, remaining loyal to Jenks. According to historian James A. Keh ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 26 Jan 2023 15:12:55 +0100 From: "ED Fix" Subject: Before you blow your brains out...(try this) Before you blow your brains out...(try this) http://vertigondizziness.cyou/JtnCu5BZi8nIwVv9AyU-wRZyFfQySkJZ5k5x45gFZSMxI792 http://vertigondizziness.cyou/ifSnU1vcusjmETlphTj1sl4thdpXaBsa3aCHBYXXT9K2wlh-Pg Factory" and "Our Host, the Madman" were frequently even more bizarre than their titles implied. Magazine historian Michael Cook singles out three authors as having " above the purple prose conventions" to produce worthwhile stories for the magazine: John H. Knox, Hugh B. Cave, and Wyatt Blassingame, whom Cook describes as "the most consistently satisfying" weird menace writer. Jones lists "The Corpse-Maker", from the November 1933 issue, as one of Cave's best stories: "A criminal who was horribly disfigured when making his escape from prison ... directs the murder of the jurors who convicted him. They are brought to him to be tortured to death." Blassingame began selling to the pulps in 1933 and wrote an article for the trade press about how to plot a weird menace story. He listed the two plot devices he used: in the first, the hero is pursued by the villain, and repeatedly fails to escape, finally overcoming the villain when all seems lost; in the second, the hero is trapped and menaced on all sides, and must escape. Jones gives two examples of the way Blassingame would vary these basic plots. In "Three Hours to Live", which appeared in the October 1934 Dime Mystery, the hero's family is cursed, and his relatives die, each death preceded by a mysterious bumping noise. When the curse is about to strike, a friend intervenes to reveal that the curse is actually the hero's uncle, who was killing off other family members to get their mo ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10628 ***********************************************