From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #14603 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, September 1 2024 Volume 14 : Number 14603 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Efficient Cooling, Lower Bills â ChillWell AC Has It All ["Your ChillWell] FREE PetFind by ChatWow ["PetFind" ] Your Sleeping Position Determines How Many Years You Are Going To Live ["] Don't Miss Out: Extend Your SiriusXM Free Membership Now ["Your SiriusXM ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 29 Aug 2024 21:36:51 +0200 From: "Your ChillWell Team" Subject: Efficient Cooling, Lower Bills â ChillWell AC Has It All Efficient Cooling, Lower Bills b ChillWell AC Has It All http://chillwel.ru.com/f7VIEvN4xfJJr2SdgIQzC6_LY4Up3Z3Onv0mf6tYf36r9GXR_w http://chillwel.ru.com/PNgq8iNCgp1kVxuy_DHio7pS0yWy4NMY10gm51-5WCh1Q-kEbQ sed the act. President Ernest Bai Koroma refused to sign the bill and sent it back to parliament on 6 January 2016. The speaker of the house refused to give the bill his assent. Parliament returned the unchanged bill to the president on 11 February. Koroma blocked the bill again and referred it to the Constitutional Review Committee so it could put changes to the Constitution to a referendum. The law would have allowed abortion during the first twelve weeks of pregnancy on request or twenty-four weeks in cases of pregnancy from rape or incest or risk to health of the mother or fetus. It said minors could have abortions with parental consent. It mandated a four-year jail sentence for conducting unlicensed abortions. Koroma and his wife, Sia Koroma, initially supported the bill's introduction, and the public expected it to pass. Meetings with religious groups influenced his opposition to the law. Koroma asked for Parliament to review the law since the Maputo Protocol only provided for abortion in the cases of rape and medical emergencies. In an address on International Women's Day, he argued that the law violated the right to life and that it did not clearly define its scope. Opposition politicians claimed that Koroma was building up support ahead of the upcoming election and that he planned to negate the term limit to run for another term. Public opinion in Sierra Leone was against the bill. Some groups called for the withdrawal of the bill due to Christian and Islamic beliefs that condemn abortion. Opponents included the Inter-Religious Council of Sierra Leone (IRCSL) and the country's Pentecostal church. The IRCSL was influenced by the Catholic Church, which argued that abortion violated a clause in the Constitution that said, "No person shall be deprived of his life intentionally". The president of the IRCSL, Sheikh Abu Bakarr Conteh, said that the law should consider the rights of the sexual partner and the family of the woman getting an abortion. In January 2016, religious groups led a protest in which hundreds of people marched to the House of Parliament. Catholic leaders voiced opposition to the law more frequently than Muslim leaders. Proponents of the bill said that unsafe abortions were a large contributor to maternal mortality in Sierra Leone, which was the highest in the world, and that the law would support victims of rape and sexual violence. Groups such as AdvocAid said that the anti-abortion law was largely unenforced yet led to unsafe abortions being common. In January 2016, alongside the anti-abortion protest, dozens of peop ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 29 Aug 2024 23:34:34 +0200 From: "PetFind" Subject: FREE PetFind by ChatWow FREE PetFind by ChatWow http://chillwellcooling.best/bwpF3cYLMdsT7PrYuQGR2ZJm4llU3VUb-g6qKOwalk7nDnUKOA http://chillwellcooling.best/RUBcBC-Wg-9ZD1fP-U2EMwupdm_SSe5eje22STrrRYCt-vGJOA as the first university institution to be established in London, and the first in England to be entirely secular and to admit students regardless of their religion. It was also among the first university colleges to admit women alongside men in 1878, two years after University College, Bristol. Intended by its founders to be England's third university, politics forced it to accept the status of a college in 1836, when it received a royal charter and became one of the two founding colleges of the University of London, although it achieved de facto recognition as a university in the 1990s and formal university status in 2023. It has grown through mergers, including with the Institute of Ophthalmology (in 1995), the Institute of Neurology (in 1997), the Royal Free Hospital Medical School (in 1998), the Eastman Dental Institute (in 1999), the School of Slavonic and East European Studies (in 1999), the School of Pharmacy (in 2012) and the Institute of Education (in 2014). UCL has its main campus in the Bloomsbury area of central London, with a number of institutes and teaching hospitals elsewhere in central London and has a second campus, UCL East, at Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford, East London. UCL is organised into 11 constituent faculties, within which there are over 100 departments, institutes and research centres. UCL operates several museums and collections in a wide range of fields, including the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology and the Grant Museum of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy, and administers the annual Orwell Prize in political writing. In 2022/23, UCL had a total income of B#1.93 billion, of which B#527 million was from research grants and contracts. The university generates around B#10 billion annually for the UK economy, primarily through the spread of its research and knowledge (B#4 billion) and the impact of its own spending (B#3 billion). UCL is a member of numerous academic organisations, including the Russell Group and the League of European Research Universities, and is part of UCL Partners, the world's largest academic health science centre. It is considered part of the "golden triangle" of research-intensive universities in southeast E ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 29 Aug 2024 18:32:30 +0200 From: "Cary" Subject: Your Sleeping Position Determines How Many Years You Are Going To Live Your Sleeping Position Determines How Many Years You Are Going To Live http://longevites.click/QcqQ3SYFyMoZR73hVdCc0eQcSUFcpJ5W918hEcW-xPSLrbO4ZA http://longevites.click/aulNQlTEsy5NQubtta8ydf3jKgnRs53sHWmI75Gx-SZEkCWURw ding organisms of widely varying sizes, growth rates, and nutrient requirements, there is no officially recognized threshold level as to what is defined as a bloom. Because there is no scientific consensus, blooms can be characterized and quantified in several ways: measurements of new algal biomass, the concentration of photosynthetic pigment, quantification of the bloom's negative effect, or relative concentration of the algae compared to the rest of the microbial community. For example, definitions of blooms have included when the concentration of chlorophyll exceeds 100 ug/L, when the concentration of chlorophyll exceeds 5 ug/L, when the species considered to be blooming exceeds concentrations of 1000 cells/mL, and when the algae species concentration simply deviates from its normal growth. Blooms are the result of a nutrient needed by the particular algae being introduced to the local aquatic system. This growth-limiting nutrient is typically nitrogen or phosphorus, but can also be iron, vitamins, or amino acids. There are several mechanisms for the addition of these nutrients in water. In the open ocean and along coastlines, upwelling from both winds and topographical ocean floor features can draw nutrients to the photic, or sunlit zone of the ocean. Along coastal regions and in freshwater systems, agricultural, city, and sewage runoff can cause algal blooms. Algal blooms, especially large algal bloom events, can reduce the transparency of the water and can discolor the water. The photosynthetic pigments in the algal cells, like chlorophyll and photoprotective pigments, determine the color of the algal bloom. Depending on the organism, its pigments, and the depth in the water column, algal blooms can be green, red, brown, golden, and purple. Bright green blooms in freshwater systems are frequently a result of cyanobacteria (colloquially known as "blue-green algae") such as Microcystis. Blooms may also consist of macroalgal (non-phytoplanktonic) species. These blooms are recognizable by large blades of algae that may wash up onto the shore ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 29 Aug 2024 14:07:30 +0200 From: "Your SiriusXM Subscription" Subject: Don't Miss Out: Extend Your SiriusXM Free Membership Now Don't Miss Out: Extend Your SiriusXM Free Membership Now http://osteoporosiset.za.com/ptPJ3AuoM1PYCT6kDDoJ8Vh4Gc_JRLhvxOxWl-NjKDpEmcIIOw http://osteoporosiset.za.com/UXkjbjLuPZnm6xjTlPCCdnut2YN49Frn4gA_zum5R2laS0HpBw ink that the fruit, with its mildly toxic pit, may have coevolved with Pleistocene megafauna to be swallowed whole and excreted in their dung, ready to sprout. No extant native animal is large enough to effectively disperse avocado seeds in this fashion. The earliest known written account of the avocado in Europe is that of MartC-n FernC!ndez de Enciso (c.?1470 b 1528) in 1519 in his book, Suma De Geographia Que Trata De Todas Las Partidas Y Provincias Del Mundo. The first detailed account that unequivocally describes the avocado was given by Gonzalo FernC!ndez de Oviedo y ValdC)s in his work Sumario de la natural historia de las Indias in 1526. The first written record in English of the use of the word 'avocado' was by Hans Sloane, who coined the term, in a 1696 index of Jamaican plants. Etymology The word avocado comes from the Spanish aguacate, which derives from the Nahuatl (Mexican) word ?huacatl , which goes back to the proto-Aztecan *pa:wa. In Molina's Nahuatl dictionary "auacatl" is given also as the translation for compaC1C3n "testicle", and this has been taken up in popular culture where a frequent claim is that testicle was the word's original meaning. This is not the case, as the original meaning can be reconstructed as "avocado" b rather the word seems to have been used in Nahuatl as a euphemism for "testicle". The modern English name comes from a rendering of the Spanish aguacate as avogato. The earliest known written use in English is attested from 1697 as avogato pear, later avocado pe ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #14603 ***********************************************