From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #13027 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 Thursday, January 18 2024 Volume 14 : Number 13027 Today's Subjects: ----------------- The Truth About The Coming Crisis ["Food Shortages" Subject: The Truth About The Coming Crisis The Truth About The Coming Crisis http://braintrainingfordogs.za.com/t-LUEJEUfK-jn0a8hwgF9ngwK_OD0lWWlWsyiKyHmNfiWG1VxQ http://braintrainingfordogs.za.com/YDaXK3VcWT5_ITOWl7CyNE1n7AO51iriYWszDZEG0jMOiC1gjQ ith the pieces in place, the Chicago National League Ball Club quickly established themselves as one of the new National League's top teams. Spalding won 47 games that season, and James "Deacon" White and Ross Barnes, also brought in by Hulbert, were major contributors as well, as Barnes hit .429 that season and White, one of the last great bare-handed catchers, led the league in RBI. The White Stockings cruised through the National League's inaugural season of 1876, winning the league's first championship. Near the end of the season, Mutual of New York and Athletic of Philadelphia, who were remnants of the NA, dropped out of contention and refused to play the remainder of their respective schedules. Hulbert flexed his executive muscle, expelling both franchises from the league. Despite Hulbert's attempt to make Chicago the overpowering team that Boston had been during the NA years, the next season found Chicago finishing a disappointing 5th in the 6 team league, behind a resurgent Boston entry (another NA carryover) in the 60-game season. In 1878, the club arranged with the city to build a new Lake Park ballpark in essentially the same place as the 1871 ballpark. Chicago improved ove ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 18 Jan 2024 10:31:50 +0100 From: "Costco Customer Support" Subject: Your package could not be delivered. Your package could not be delivered. http://dizinesvertigo.za.com/gn3oPHjybWGhd-K8Y46zO5mA8ddWjCYmAglAt8ZYYYLPSrCUew http://dizinesvertigo.za.com/KHIpaV8ahpgAvDRB0XRVbb61NsOmhowba31Uc_MQBrPvLukD8A e team won back-to-back National League pennants in its first two seasons there. The park was located on a small block bounded by Congress (north, left field), Loomis (east, center field), Harrison (south, right field) and Throop (west, home plate) Streets. The elongated shape of the block lent a bathtub-like shape to the park, with foul lines reportedly as short as 210 feet (64 m). The stadium held roughly 10,000 fans. In addition to the diamond, the park held a bicycle track which encircled the playing field, at the height of the contemporary bicycle craze. The lumber from the stands at the lakefront ballpark was disassembled and reconfigured as the new stands at West Side Park. The Cubs (then known as the White Stockings) had had to secure a new property after 1884, and it took longer than anticipated. The season began on April 30, a month later than it does today, for a 112-game schedule, 50 fewer games than today's major-league schedule. The club spent the first five-plus weeks of the 1885 season on the road, and the park was finally opened on June 6 with a victory over the St. Louis Maroons, late of the Union Association. Despite being "wanderers" early in the season, the powerful Chicago club, under player-manager Cap Anson, came home with an 18b6 record. They would sweep a four-game set in their first homestand and romp through the league schedule, finishing at 87b25. The only team that gave them any problem was the New York Giants, who won 10 of the clubs' 16 meetings and finished just two games behind Chicago in the standings. If projected to a modern 162-game schedule, that translates to 125 and 123 wins, respectively, in a v ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 18 Jan 2024 09:13:32 +0100 From: "VolteX Heated Vest" Subject: Christmas Shipping Deadline Approaching! Get this [Product] Now Christmas Shipping Deadline Approaching! Get this [Product] Now http://smartowners.shop/KEMv5kH6PGUfm0N6jEN6g9FbIVdVwcxGgp2A3F8TKZDOZVHAmQ http://smartowners.shop/dQP2z07R8U_9Ao2ankp_uHMYWPWt6-IETseqPghAnW9MMXnxYg ith the pieces in place, the Chicago National League Ball Club quickly established themselves as one of the new National League's top teams. Spalding won 47 games that season, and James "Deacon" White and Ross Barnes, also brought in by Hulbert, were major contributors as well, as Barnes hit .429 that season and White, one of the last great bare-handed catchers, led the league in RBI. The White Stockings cruised through the National League's inaugural season of 1876, winning the league's first championship. Near the end of the season, Mutual of New York and Athletic of Philadelphia, who were remnants of the NA, dropped out of contention and refused to play the remainder of their respective schedules. Hulbert flexed his executive muscle, expelling both franchises from the league. Despite Hulbert's attempt to make Chicago the overpowering team that Boston had been during the NA years, the next season found Chicago finishing a disappointing 5th in the 6 team league, behind a resurgent Boston entry (another NA carryover) in the 60-game season. In 1878, the club arranged with the city to build a new Lake Park ballpark in essentially the same place as the 1871 ballpark. Chicago improved ove ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 18 Jan 2024 09:47:52 +0100 From: "Harbor Freight Customer Support" Subject: Please confirm receipt Please confirm receipt http://smartowners.shop/qhUKFbcoLIgzVJQ_ViXP-5yTYgLN-RbRCpgCudsz6k7w-jONCw http://smartowners.shop/p-xuiieTtg4qL-z4CLOm3fAt7mgFbNQbwPibeFntuH8eI9KoJw aseball, became the club's captain, and was so much identified as the face of the club he became better known as Cap Anson. After the 1876 pennant, which at the time was the game's top prize, Anson led the team to a great amount of success in the early seasons of the National League, winning pennants in 1880 and 1881 as well. The length of the season and long travel times between games at the time was such that most teams got by with two principal starters, and Chicago had two very good ones in Larry Corcoran and Fred Goldsmith. Corcoran, who won 43 games in 1880, threw three no-hitters in the early part of the decade, a record that would stand until being broken by Sandy Koufax in 1965. Goldsmith is one of two pitchers credited with the invention of the curveball. The two were baseball's first true "pitching rotation". In 1882, Hulbert died suddenly, and Al Spalding, who had retired a few years earlier to start Spalding sporting goods, assumed ownership of the club, with Anson acting as first baseman and manager. That season was also the first for the American Association, the self-proclaimed "beer and whiskey league", which began play as a second "major league". The AA offered alcohol and Sunday games, moves which forced the more traditional NL into changes that likely would not have been made had Hulbert lived. Chicago played an (unauthorized) two-game post-season series against the AA champions, the Cincinnati Reds. Each team won one of the two games. The White Stockings slipped a bit in 1883, finishing four games behind Boston. For 1884, the club made a ground rules change at their home ballpark. Its dimensions, especially right field, were very cozy, perhaps less than 200 feet from home plate. Fly balls hit over the right field fence er was born in Teuchern (in present-day Saxony-Anhalt), son of the organist and teacher Gottfried Keiser (born about 1650), and educated by other organists in the town and then from age eleven at the Thomasschule in Leipzig, where his teachers included Johann Schelle and Johann Kuhnau, direct predecessors of Johann Sebastian Bach. 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YX9X1X6 YX0Y X'YYYX'YX4X) X9YY X'YYY X(X X'YX*YY X%YY https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/ahadhrorg22/CAEcxT4uLD4dSif7kr33LoQyKgZoN_wpUUyZ_KX9MZDLq_D_T7g%40mail.gmail.com. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2024 10:07:36 +0100 From: "OZEMPIC SCANDAL" Subject: Japanese Tonic: 57LB Loss, Tops Ozempic Japanese Tonic: 57LB Loss, Tops Ozempic http://gorillaflow.za.com/a5BtByG6IVnlrt-R3-n1LejbLI4Z9ZkSq30dqq7diriixUoo1A http://gorillaflow.za.com/AFCRamdQmsncYn29P66Xo8wyRW6SUYoMlFZzAUln005Jfp5k3g ary devices on the city. The bombing and the resulting firestorm destroyed more than 1,600 acres (6.5 km2) of the city centre. Up to 25,000 people were killed. Three more USAAF air raids followed, two occurring on 2 March aimed at the city's railway marshalling yard and one smaller raid on 17 April aimed at industrial areas. Post-war discussions about whether the attacks were justified, and the tens of thousands of civilians killed, led to the event becoming one of the moral causes cC)lC(bres of the war. Nazi Germany's desperate struggle to maintain resistance in the closing months of the war is widely known in the present day; but Allied intelligence assessments at the time gave a different picture. There was uncertainty over the ability of the Russian advance to maintain momentum, and rumours of the establishment of a Nazi redoubt in Southern Germany were taken too seriously. Two United States Air Force reports, published in 1953 and again in 1954, defended the operation as the justified bombing of a strategic target, which they noted was a major rail transport and communication centre, housing 110 factories and 50,000 workers in support of the German war effort. Several researchers assert that not all communications infrastructure was targeted, and neither were the extensive industrial areas which were located outside the city centre. Critics of the bombing have asserted that Dre ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #13027 ***********************************************