From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #13958 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, May 22 2024 Volume 14 : Number 13958 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Immediate artery treatment is crucial to live past 60 (MUST DO NOW) ["2 H] Your Name Came Up For a Craftsman Wet/Dry Vacuum customer Gift ["Ace" Subject: Immediate artery treatment is crucial to live past 60 (MUST DO NOW) Immediate artery treatment is crucial to live past 60 (MUST DO NOW) http://sonovives.za.com/TkLuZ_rwU4HDcGw8WVRAHWq6UABL9iH3dWZirhfeuYrvzck70Q http://sonovives.za.com/YoEst6Spvn2rTZamWI8tEI3IRap3HFCGZBXDvA1kylkzTV4Hfw uring her residency, Kenyon conducted research on influenza and meningitis diseases of children with the hospital's chief physician, Luther Emmett Holt, considered a founding father of pediatrics in the United States, and Martha Wollstein, another resident who later became a notable medical researcher at the Rockefeller Institute. Following her residency, Kenyon opened her own private practice in pediatrics in New York City. In 1911, she married James Henry Kenyon, a neurosurgeon at Babies' Hospital. The couple had two daughters. Educator and public health advocate Kenyon also began to work as an educator on topics relating to childcare, social hygiene, and sex education. By 1909, she was giving special lectures at Teachers College, Columbia University, and in 1913 she was appointed there to the position of lecturer, which she held for twenty-four years. Kenyon initiated a course in childcare, on the recommendation of Holt, who described her as "the best man I ever had on my staff." She also lectured on topics relating to health education and social hygiene, which were intended to deter prostitution and the transmission of venereal disease. Kenyon assisted social reform organizations concerned with public health work, including the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. Board of National Missions, the New York Diet Kitchen, and the national board of the Young Women's Christian Associations (YWCA). In her work for the YWCA, she organized a nationwide lecture series, with presentations from women physicians, to address audiences of young women. During World War I, she organized a series of lectures to address the proper sexual conduct of women dealing with soldiers. She served as the acting director of the Women's Work Section of the Social Hygiene Division for the Commission on Training Camp Activities of the U.S. War Department. In 1921 Kenyon's work with the YWCA board ended. In 1922, she took on a new role in public health education. She accepted a position with Good Housekeeping that situated her as a popular scientific authority. Kenyon directed the Health and Happiness Club, a correspondence service for expectant mothers that sent them letters on prenatal and later infant care. By 1923, Kenyo ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 22 May 2024 10:43:27 +0200 From: "Ace" Subject: Your Name Came Up For a Craftsman Wet/Dry Vacuum customer Gift Your Name Came Up For a Craftsman Wet/Dry Vacuum customer Gift http://coverhomesecurity.biz/ckca1CuZrhaQ7IzWbFPzgVn4veAqQgv9_DWoX2xrkfUNWCWC http://coverhomesecurity.biz/mRb7DHLhShLwH6cr5kbln2NVfi7TJHL7_oQauMmM90SD8cR5 also began to work as an educator on topics relating to childcare, social hygiene, and sex education. By 1909, she was giving special lectures at Teachers College, Columbia University, and in 1913 she was appointed there to the position of lecturer, which she held for twenty-four years. Kenyon initiated a course in childcare, on the recommendation of Holt, who described her as "the best man I ever had on my staff." She also lectured on topics relating to health education and social hygiene, which were intended to deter prostitution and the transmission of venereal disease. Kenyon assisted social reform organizations concerned with public health work, including the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. Board of National Missions, the New York Diet Kitchen, and the national board of the Young Women's Christian Associations (YWCA). In her work for the YWCA, she organized a nationwide lecture series, with presentations from women physicians, to address audiences of young women. During World War I, she organized a series of lectures to address the proper sexual conduct of women dealing with soldiers. She served as the acting director of the Women's Work Section of the Social Hygiene Division for the Commission on Training Camp Activities of the U.S. War Department. In 1921 Kenyon's work with the YWCA board ended. In 1922, she took on a new role in public health education. She accepted a position with Good Housekeeping that situated her as a popular scientific authority. Kenyon directed the Health and Happiness Club, a correspondence service for expectant mothers that sent them letters on prenatal and later infant care. By 1923, Kenyon was writing monthly columns for the magazine, focusing on problems of infant care brought up by the club's members. Author and pediatric advisor In 1934, Kenyon wrote Healthy Babies Are Happy Babies: A Complete Handbook for Modern Mothers. The book belonged to a genre of childcare manuals pioneered by Holt in 1894 with The Care and Feeding of Children. Kenyon's book was very popular, undergoing nineteen printings in the United States and five translations abroad. The book's popul ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 22 May 2024 10:28:52 +0200 From: "Confirmation" Subject: Your Name Came Up For a Philips Sonicare Smart Electric Toothbrush Reward Your Name Came Up For a Philips Sonicare Smart Electric Toothbrush Reward http://purpleburnpros.co.uk/O6vIR5jP8kjNraHCxtGEXfKM5kcKJ66lRFTlHK2nCOh-FpdAkQ http://purpleburnpros.co.uk/ST6SqwBbBG1u9B8qXaxyQtW4iw4XGQ9f9fD-h43BnTaDfWAPJQ ment then appointed De la Beche to work with the Ordnance Survey. This formed the starting point of the Geological Survey of Great Britain, which was officially recognised in 1835, when De la Beche was appointed as director. As the first director of the Museum of Practical Geology in Jermyn Street, in 1843 he donated many of his own books to establish the library. Increasing stores of valuable specimens began to arrive in London; and the building at Craig's Court, off Whitehall, where the young Museum of Economic (afterwards Practical) Geology was placed, became too small. De la Beche appealed to the authorities to provide a larger structure and to widen the whole scope of the scientific establishment of which he was the head. Parliament sanctioned the erection of a museum in Jermyn Street, London, and the organisation of a staff of professors with laboratories and other appliances. The establishment, in which were combined the offices of the Geological Survey, the Museum of Practical Geology, the Royal School of Mines and the Mining Record Office, was opened in 1851. An 1834 etching by De la Beche that appears in the beginning of his Researches in Theoretical Geology. A landmark scientific depiction of Earth as seen from space. Conditions of scientific testing were rudimentary; as part of his colleague Lyon Playfair's investigations into "overflowing privies", Sir Henry De la Beche once took the role of test-vomiter, to judge sewage flow. In 1830, De la Beche published Sections and views, illustrative of geological phaenomena, a series of line drawings to encourage more accurate depictions of geological formations. He also published numerous memoirs on English geology in the Transactions of the Geological Society of London, as well as in the Memoirs of the Geological Survey, notably the Report on the Geology of Cornwall, Devon and West Somerset (1839). He likewise wrote A Geological Manual (1831; 3rd ed., 1833); and Researches in Theoretical Geology (1834), in which he enunciated a philosophical treatment of geological questions much in advance of his time. An early volume, How to Observe Geology (1835 and 1836), was rewritten and enlarged by him late in life, and published under the title of The G ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 22 May 2024 11:46:21 +0200 From: "Vision Health Tips" Subject: Can water retention affect vision? Can water retention affect vision? http://gorillaflow.za.com/2WqaK-a9H-QReQe01gblyZ4rhCNF6dcU-NTRgbYC38FwCIdZFg http://gorillaflow.za.com/kLLQnT7mRoMWdUv9KKJx5VVWXclrWVIu5kcP9X86PKdJjRtN6A ds are records of public business, they are not necessarily available without restriction, although Freedom of Information legislation (FOI) that has been gradually introduced in many jurisdictions since the 1960s has made access easier. Each government has policies and regulations that govern the availability of information contained in public records. A common restriction is that data about a person is not normally available to others; for example, the California Public Records Act (PRA) states that "except for certain explicit exceptions, personal information maintained about an individual may not be disclosed without the person's consent". For example, in California, when a couple fills out a marriage license application, they have the option of checking the box as to whether the marriage is "confidential" (Record will be closed, and not opened to public once recorded) or "public" (record will become public record once recorded). Essentially, if the marriage record is public, a copy of the record can be ordered from the county in which the marriage occurred.[dead link] In the United Kingdom, Cabinet papers were subject to the thirty-year rule: until the introduction of FOI legislation, Cabinet papers were not available for thirty years; some information could be withheld for longer. As of 2011 the rule still applies to some information, such as minutes of Cabinet meetings. Some companies provide access, for a fee, to many public records available on the Internet. Many of them specialize in particular types of information, while some offer access to different types of record, typically to professionals in various fields. Some companies sell software with a promise of unlimited access to public records, but may provide nothing more than basic information on how to access already available and generally free public websites. Each year news media, civic groups, libraries, nonprofits, schools and other inte ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 22 May 2024 09:38:27 +0200 From: "Netflix Updates" Subject: Membership Renewal Reminder Membership Renewal Reminder http://purpleburnpros.co.uk/GwwOrcazbBArNHIyb-P6w4KqHmVAtnK-Z2gOY_Flt_g7dImmbQ http://purpleburnpros.co.uk/Mp9lM-PQttft9P8ueNuG-GobBm6polUI9gZwxmY7dBQmMbL3_g nway Kenyon was born on May 10, 1880, in Auburn, New York. She was the daughter of Charles Carroll Hemenway, a Presbyterian minister, and Ida Eliza Shackelford. When Kenyon was eleven years old, the family moved to Glasgow, Missouri, where her father became the president of Pritchett College. Kenyon studied at Pritchett, receiving a bachelor's degree in 1898 and a master's degree in 1899. In 1899, Kenyon moved to Philadelphia and studied biology under Thomas Hunt Morgan at Bryn Mawr College to work towards a career in medicine. In 1900, she became a student at the School of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, where she received education under physicians who included William Henry Welch, Sir William Osler, William Stewart Halsted, and Howard Atwood Kelly. In 1904, Kenyon was one of three women who graduated in a class of forty-five people, some of the earliest women who graduated from the medical school. Medical career Upon graduating, Kenyon won a competitive internship as a medical officer at the Johns Hopkins University Hospital, which she held for a year. In 1905, she began the first of six years as a resident at the Babies' Hospital of New York City, one of the first U.S. institutions exclusively dealing with the care of infants below the age of three. During her residency, Kenyon conducted research on influenza and meningitis diseases of children with the hospital's chief physician, Luther Emmett Holt, considered a founding father of pediatrics in the United States, and Martha Wollstein, another resident who later became a notable medical researcher at the Rockefeller Institute. Following her residency, Kenyon opened her own private practice in pediatrics in New York City. In 1911, she married James Henry Kenyon, a neurosurgeon at Babies' Hospital. The couple had two daughters. Educator and public health advocate Kenyon also began to work as an educator on topics relatin ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 19 May 2024 11:35:37 +0200 From: "Klaudena Affiliate" Subject: Don't let sitting for long hours cause you pain Don't let sitting for long hours cause you pain http://pelvicfloorstrongs.za.com/MtrL07GtEJOcfYdsO0t2wq6bB3hEahYPjRB7aoq31CBJ11X_ http://pelvicfloorstrongs.za.com/VLJ1g9NZ5P8-1tECs6UBgHG9tZlNqq_gO6lKbBIMBzVj-ptJ eveloped as a single-player experience. The question of the financial viability of single-player AAA games was raised following the closure of Visceral Games by Electronic Arts (EA) in October 2017. Visceral had been a studio that established itself on a strong narrative single-player focus with Dead Space, and had been working on a single-player, linear narrative Star Wars game at the time of the closure; EA announced following this that they would be taking the game in a different direction, specifically "a broader experience that allows for more variety and player agency". Many commentators felt that EA made the change as they did not have confidence that a studio with an AAA-scale budget could produce a viable single-player game based on the popular Star Wars franchise. Alongside this, as well as relatively poor sales of games in the year prior that were principally AAA single-player games (Resident Evil 7, Prey, Dishonored 2, and Deus Ex: Mankind Divided) against financially successful multiplayer games and those offer a games-as-a-service model (Overwatch, Destiny 2, and Star Wars Battlefront 2), were indicators to many that the single-player model for AAA was waning. Manveer Heir, who had left EA after finishing his gameplay design work for Mass Effect Andromeda, acknowledged that the culture within EA was against the development of single-player games, and with Visceral's closure, "that the linear single-player triple-A game at EA is dead for the time being". Bethesda on December 7, 2017, decided to collaborate with Lynda Carter to launch a Public Safety Announcement to save single-player gaming. A few years later in 2021, EA was reported to have revived interest in single-player games, following the successful launch of Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order in 2020. The company still planned on releasing live service games with multiplayer components, but began evaluating its IP catalog for more single-player titles to revive, such as a remake of the Dead Space franchise. Around the same time, head of Xbox Game Studios Phil Spencer said that they still see a place for narrative-driven single-player games even though the financial drivers of the market tended to be live service games. Spencer said that developing such games with AAA-scale budgets can be risky, but with availability of services like cloud gaming and subscription services, they can gauge audience reaction to these games early on and reduce the risk involved ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #13958 ***********************************************