From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #15947 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, April 24 2025 Volume 14 : Number 15947 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Top Universities Shocked by THIS Common Tinnitus Link ["Sound Science" Subject: Top Universities Shocked by THIS Common Tinnitus Link Top Universities Shocked by THIS Common Tinnitus Link http://cardiofend.sa.com/BTy54nbs-xlQWS514DyWShRiHmem44zFNkIsy5WV2I2KZ-hrOw http://cardiofend.sa.com/eyzc-RUtEQ2tccs8P7V1K7wMIB6WXm0mnWT3nMn3xOa0-i8wBA ned in 1911. The newly created San Francisco Symphony began performing at the theatre during its inaugural season in 1911, and continued to perform there until 1922. Homer Curran had served as manager of the Cort Theatre under John Cort since it opened in September 1911. He bought out Cort's interest in the theatre in 1918, and the Cort Theatre was renamed the Curran Theatre in September of that year. Curran remained a financial investor in the theatre until selling his interest in December 1920 to raise capital to build his own theatre. That other theatre was also named the Curran Theatre and opened in 1922. The old Curran Theatre was re-named the Century Theatre in September 1921. The theatre became the Morosco Theatre in April 1922 when the theatre was leased by theatrical producer Oliver Morosco, only to have its name changed back to the Century Theatre again the following November when the firm of Ackerman & Harris took over the lease. In June 1923 the thea ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2025 02:15:46 -0500 From: "Health Insider" Subject: New Discovery: The Real Cause of Type 2 Diabetes (Not Sugar!) New Discovery: The Real Cause of Type 2 Diabetes (Not Sugar!) http://livecare.ru.com/zi1LCweR6yw5lul5ACGLOohIMht20ywRywBTNoLVwYo3Qzpa http://livecare.ru.com/RescIhJYDgyhIGDzbZQI4_Yd-2d0b_Pl8chlMkRiRhGnSMfe ealty company which had been contracted to build the theatre by investors organized by the William Morris Agency under the leadership of Walter Hoff Seely. Originally the theatre was conceived as a concert hall venue for San Francisco, but its plans were altered to that of a proscenium theatre after impresario John Cort succeeded Seely as the guiding force behind the project. Owned by its investment group under the auspices of Madison Realty, Cort became the theatre's first lessee and it was named for him. The CT was design by architect Henry Ives Cobb who employed Spanish Renaissance architecture into his design. It opened on September 2, 1911 with a performance of Margaret Mayo's Baby Mine. Several prominent California citizens were in the audience, including California's governor, Hiram Johnson. The theatre was also utilized in 1911-1912 by the newly created San Francisco Symphony (SFS) who performed there first season at the theatre. This included the symphony's first concert which occurred on December 8, 1911 with a "crowded house" in attendance. The SFS was still in residence at the theatre when Paul Whiteman joined the violin section of the orchestra for its 1915b1916 season. The soprano Maude Fay performed with the orch ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 23 Apr 2025 07:09:00 -0500 From: "Metabolism Trigger" Subject: Nobel-Prize Winning Trigger Erases 78Ibs of Fat Nobel-Prize Winning Trigger Erases 78Ibs of Fat http://eyespremium.ru.com/uQmB1FNKdhwTXpgWpuG4wZP2gPAa3ZwrYUDYVO4siLR7JPpK http://eyespremium.ru.com/TxARWvEpvi3eTu6M6Zk8XDH0u_tHPDZ5kJO5ZjE3ZV-RVQgk nounced a long-term expansion plan for Ben Gurion Airport estimated to cost approximately NIS 9 billion. Plans include further expansion of Terminal 1, a new dedicated domestic flights terminal, a major expansion of Terminal 3's landside terminal which would add approximately 90 additional check-in counters, construction of Concourse A, and additional aircraft parking spaces and ramps. In addition, air cargo facilities would be relocated to a large, currently-unused tract of land in the northern part of the airport's property (north of runway 08/26) where additional aircraft maintenance facilities would also be built. In the meantime, to ease immediate overcrowding problems at Terminal 3's landside terminal, in the spring of 2018 a temporary large, air-conditioned tent was erected adjacent to Terminal 3 housing 25 check-in counters and security screening facilities. This tent was used for compulsory COVID-19 testing for all arriving passengers between 2020 and 2022. In August 2018, the IAA published a tender for the construction and operation of a new terminal, dedicated to handling private and executive aircraft traffic. In late 2021 construction began on a new interchange that will provide additional access to the airport from Highway 1. The new interchange significantly reduced the distance vehi ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2025 03:42:22 -0500 From: "Survival" Subject: 4ft Of Space Needed To Grow Food. No Power Required. 4ft Of Space Needed To Grow Food. No Power Required. http://gluco.best/xookLq0Fl35Li-cZQV23zquOXS1-lJEk-RZmDBEv6JuJRa69 http://gluco.best/IMMh8PKpCj_hopAGfYYld8s3IZaWDT3m8Q0eH9JkfARucrot cially during the Great Depression, and not long after the Wall Street crash of 1929 it became San Francisco's main burlesque theatre. The theatre's transformation from a higher-class theatre into an American burlesque venue was done by the theatrical producer Warren Irons, who began staging burlesque at the Capitol with the show Bare Facts in June 1930. The resident burlesque company of performers as originally envisioned by Irons contained an all-female cast with a large chorus of 60 young women. The Capitol's burlesque entertainments enjoyed popularity into the late 1930s before closing its doors permanently in 1941. The 1938 show The Capitol Follies included a midnight screening of the anti-cannabis exploitation film Assassin of Youth which warned of the "wild orgies" marijuana consumption could lead to. It was presented alongside multiple strip tease numbers and dancing, comedic, and singing acts. On January 13, 1939 one the Capitol's dancers, Vicky Darrin, made headlines in The San Francisco Examiner after she was arrested for allegedly not wearing a bra during her strip tease number; the dancer claimed that she had worn one but it was made to look like an optical illusion of nudity. The paper reported that it was one of several sim ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 23 Apr 2025 13:24:30 +0200 From: "Confirmation Needed" Subject: Your Reward Worth Your Reward Worth http://ericprim.ru.com/p9EbrozuZzOi5KeouWssEdZ6itNxIPEbl9f9AxpTNjXnJYGDwA http://ericprim.ru.com/R_zl6denFYZK7HhLMggoqoRLCNR70GB_HZYd9bLBxQHb9d-WNQ iquities purchases. Charles Newton, the museum's Keeper of Greek and Roman Antiquities, had previously selected the object for purchase, and subsequently received it from Merlin. Rhousopoulos made the sale without securing the required permission from the state committee, but defended himself in the newspaper Elpis on 16 February [O.S. 4 February] 1867, arguing that the aryballos was "of no artistic value, the size of an apple, only valued for 25 drachmae". Efstratiadis, meanwhile, denounced Rhousopoulos as a "university professor; antiquities looter". Efstratiadis's ability to respond to Rhousopoulos's breach of the law was limited: the state had few financial, human or legal resources to address the illegal excavation and trade of antiquities, and his superiors in government had little political will to do so. He also needed to maintain good relations with Athens's art dealers, who undertook more excavations in this period than either the Greek Archaeological Service or the closely aligned Archaeological Society of Athens, and usually offered to sell the artefacts they uncovered to the state. Furthermore, Rhousopoulos was periodically a member of the appraising committee of three, and often acted as a consultant to it, further limiting Efstratiadis's ability to use the state's archaeological apparatus aga ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 22 Apr 2025 07:34:59 -0500 From: "Greg from Miracle Brand" Subject: Save an Extra 10% + FREE Towels Save an Extra 10% + FREE Towels http://relief911x.best/RIILPlUclCOGmb3JL8s3DuTQK44a4uyET5xjtfQeZGmluMut http://relief911x.best/qnaTixSYIRNGrSusY4kVKF273xxCuhcqDvB0y-YT6fRF5-np arting point for the first non-stop transatlantic aircraft flight, by Alcock and Brown in a modified Vickers Vimy IV bomber, in June 1919, departing from Lester's Field in St. John's and ending in a bog near Clifden, Connemara, Ireland. In July 2005, the flight was duplicated by American aviator and adventurer Steve Fossett in a replica Vickers Vimy aircraft, with St. John's International Airport substituting for Lester's Field (now an urban and residential part of the city). During the Second World War, the harbour supported Royal Navy and Royal Canadian Navy ships that were engaged in anti-submarine warfare. It was the site of an American Army Air Force base, Fort Pepperrell, that was established as part of the "Lend-Lease" Destroyers for Bases Agreement between the United Kingdom and United States. The base included several US-manned coast defence guns, and a Canadian-manned battery of two Lend-Lease 10-inch (250 mm) M1888 guns was at Fort Cape Spear. The base was transferred to Canadian control in 1960 and is now known as CFS St. John's. The Knights of Columbus Hostel fire in December 1942 saw 99 military and civilian lives lost. St. John's, and the province as a whole, was gravely affected in the 1990s by the collapse of the northern cod fishery, which had been the driving force of the provincial economy for hundreds of years. After a decade of high unemployment rates and depopulation, the city's proximity to the Hibernia, Terra Nova and White Rose oil fields led to an economic boom that spurred population growth and commercial develop ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #15947 ***********************************************