From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #11060 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, April 5 2023 Volume 14 : Number 11060 Today's Subjects: ----------------- BONUS: $90 FEDEX Gift Card Opportunity ["FedEx Shopper Gift Card Chance" ] Your hip and low back are aching because... ["Loosened Hips" poop daily ["Constipation" ] Weird Noise Instantly Puts Babies to Sleep ["Baby Sleep Miracle" Subject: BONUS: $90 FEDEX Gift Card Opportunity BONUS: $90 FEDEX Gift Card Opportunity http://livlean.today/fNAahUHdBSGkkjx6xrvCFXduxoeJGtQ81E0uAAZ0XeLZV-sCyw http://livlean.today/NBMalewdBqBM2Wt_OAsWlUlmoBJD_7WtGYkDK65rXADPpZ3xzQ John Clarke Young (August 12, 1803 b June 23, 1857) was an American educator and pastor who was the fourth president of Centre College in Danville, Kentucky. A graduate of Dickinson College and Princeton Theological Seminary, he entered the ministry in Lexington, Kentucky, in 1828. He accepted the presidency of Centre College in 1830, holding the position until his death in 1857, making him the longest-serving president in the college's history. He is regarded as one of the college's best presidents, as he increased the endowment of the college more than five-fold during his term, and increased graduating class size from two students in his first year to forty-seven in his final year. Continuing to preach while in office, Young accepted the pastorate of the Danville Presbyterian Church in 1834, and founded the Second Presbyterian Church in Danville in 1852. He was a respected member of the church and was elected moderator of the Presbyterian Church's General Assembly in 1853. He published several sermons and speeches as part of this work, including one about temperance and several in support of the gradual emancipation of slaves. Young is the namesake of several facets of the college today, including Young Hall and the John C. Young Scholars Program. He was the father of William C. Young, who later became Centre's eighth president ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 5 Apr 2023 09:39:36 +0000 From: "Loosened Hips" Subject: Your hip and low back are aching because... Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 5 Apr 2023 11:44:47 +0200 From: "You're Invited" Subject: BONUS: $100 VERIZON Gift Card Opportunity BONUS: $100 VERIZON Gift Card Opportunity http://redlobster.today/GRlqN-F-RgNylLBMAQdvsN_tNiLskj0WiIP_RE1mVLIA9JrGXA http://redlobster.today/S_KwWXlEE9Tp8JwnoIvFrT6joV-S--QybsNUYa0hWUThmz2CSQ Young was born on August 12, 1803, in Greencastle, Pennsylvania, to Rev. John Young and Mary Clarke Young. He was the youngest child and an only son. As his father died while John was still an infant, he was raised almost entirely by his mother and educated at home by his grandfather, George Clark. He moved to New York City to study at a classical school under John Borland, described as an "eminent teacher in the city of New York", before going to college. His uncle, the seven-term U.S. House Clerk Matthew St. Clair Clarke, offered to mentor him in a law-based profession, but he declined and decided to follow his father into the ministry. Young enrolled at Columbia College (now Columbia University), where he spent three years. He eventually transferred to Dickinson College in his native Pennsylvania, and he graduated with honors in 1823. He spent two years after graduation in New York, teaching algebra at the classical school he attended for the first and serving as an assistant to the professor of mathematics at Columbia for the second. In 1825, he enrolled at Princeton Theological Seminary, where he spent three years studying theology, specifically the interpretation of the Bible based upon the principles of Scottish common sense realism. He also tutored students at the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University). He graduated from Princeton Theological Seminary with a Doctor of Divinity degree in ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 4 Apr 2023 13:37:05 +0200 From: "Constipation" Subject: Eat THIS > poop daily Eat THIS > poop daily http://covidvaccines.today/H3no90rbCR9YpvWSUgtW4vVSEwsaMRbbHJNo5PAoGNbIRF_BEg http://covidvaccines.today/1sIJGwFzVtB4vfd4W3Yvp8OtnKbIcjCE2zbMAPlehDzNCYrHzA Lips Are Movin" received widespread comparisons to "All About That Bass" from music critics. Mikael Wood of the Los Angeles Times considered it one of Title's dozen versions of the latter, which he found as cheerful but also as annoying. Writing for Clash, Alice Levine remarked that the songs have the same "factory-produced sass" and theme of false feminism and empowerment, but being done a second time decreased its novelty. The Boston Globe's Marc Hirsh derided "Lips Are Movin" for following the formula of "All About That Bass", writing that Trainor is a plunderer and "steals from herself" with the song. Spin's Dan Weiss criticized the lyrics and compared them to the age-old joke about lawyers being liars. Toronto Star's Ben Rayner wrote that it is "whitewashed into a fairly anodyne mush", and declared that its "hip-hop bump and plush bassline" are "pure cosmetic window dressing". He considered them an attempt to make Trainor's "old-timey aesthetic" feel contemporary. Other reviewers were positive of "Lips Are Movin". Billboard's Carl Wilson complimented the lyrics, saying that they proved Trainor had "more going on than a topical trifle", but concluded that the song was risking "coming off as 'Bass, Part 2". Brian Mansfield of USA Today called "Lips Are Movin" the "better record" of the two. Garibaldi described it as an up-beat and catchy "ladies anthem", and a Billboard critic stated that the "upbeat and sassy" song's similarities with "All About That Bass" would lead to "great things" for it. In a favorable review, Andrew Hampp from the same magazine said that "Lips Are Movin" helped solidify Trainor "as the self-proclaimed queen of her own genre, 'she-wop'". Erlewine declared it the best song on the album and wrote that it would help the listener accept Trainor's "pastiche and performance" skills, and Chicago Tribune's Matt Pais considered it a showcase of Trainor's "versatility, confidence, vulnerability and smartness ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 4 Apr 2023 14:05:25 +0000 From: "Baby Sleep Miracle" Subject: Weird Noise Instantly Puts Babies to Sleep Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 4 Apr 2023 12:13:29 +0200 From: "Stop Tinnitus" Subject: Pop Your Ear Like THIS And Remove Tinnitus Pop Your Ear Like THIS And Remove Tinnitus http://translatord.shop/lKfwdWsENBPZPaSiUOs-jCWdVlHbQJSleo2ujBJ6_h9TF_qnhw http://translatord.shop/Ex58aANe_vE5nY3lP3xE1O3DcM6BTtmuoI8N6uJRj-MdmpUWkg e "Grounds" began to be attached to ballparks, starting with the Union Grounds in 1862.[citation needed] The suffixes "Field" and "Park" were still used, but many professional ballparks were "Grounds". The last major league "Grounds" was the Polo Grounds in New York City, which was razed in 1964. The term "stadium" has been used since ancient times, typically for a running track and its seating area. As college football gained in popularity, the smaller college playing fields and/or running tracks (which also frequently had the suffix "Field") gave way to large stadiums, many of them built during the sport's "boom" of the 1920s. Major league baseball enjoyed a similar boom. One of the first major league ballparks to be called a "stadium" was actually the Polo Grounds, which was temporarily renamed Brush Stadium from its reconstruction in 1911 until the death of owner John T. Brush in the 1920s. By then, the most famous baseball "stadium" of them all had been constructed: Yankee Stadium. From that point until the retro building boom of the 1990s, the suffix "Stadium" was used for almost every new major league venue, and was sometimes applied to the old ones, such as Shibe Park, which was renamed Connie Mack Stadium in 1954. The suffix "Dome" was also used for the indoor stadiums constructed from the 1960s onward. The official names of those arenas also often included the word "Stadium", such as the Houston Astrodome, whose formal name was "Harris County Domed Stadium" in 1965; the Kingdome, whose formal name was "King County Domed Stadium", and the Metrodome, for which the Minneapolis highway signs directed the driver to "Metrodome Stadium". The retro era of the 1990s and early 2000s saw some venues return to using "park" in a stadium's name, even in domed structures such as T-Mo ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 4 Apr 2023 16:16:40 +0000 From: "Bedtime Ritua" Subject: The Key To Normal Blood Sugar Levels (Most People Ignore) Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 5 Apr 2023 11:14:50 +0000 From: "Seat Cushion Klaudena" Subject: Klaudena Ergonomic Memory Foam Seat Cushion. Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #11060 ***********************************************