From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #16262 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 Friday, June 27 2025 Volume 14 : Number 16262 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Price Lock Guarantee ["TMobile Authorized Retailer" ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 2025 11:59:29 -0500 From: "TMobile Authorized Retailer" Subject: Price Lock Guarantee Price Lock Guarantee http://supranail.ru.com/wmzPKKhP0sWL8CHhhkFMkim5-gzvD5tOAu9MMzh7JBqTF3E http://supranail.ru.com/nf3sjL0oPGYlwOkIMPkyznr1hlqp5yAkpMuwm6gy2lc_KNH0 arch in Adelaide forms an important part of South Australia's economy. The South Australian Government and educational institutions have attempted to position Adelaide as Australia's education hub and have marketed it as a Learning City. The number of international students studying in Adelaide has increased rapidly in recent years to 30,726 in 2015, of which 1,824 were secondary school students. Foreign institutions have been attracted to set up campuses to increase its attractiveness as an education hub. Adelaide is the birthplace of three Nobel laureates, more than any other Australian city: physicist William Lawrence Bragg and pathologists Howard Florey and Robin Warren, all of whom completed secondary and tertiary education at St Peter's College and the University of Adelaide. Adelaide is home to research institutes, including the Royal Institution of Australia, established in 2009 as a counterpart to the two-hundred-year-old Royal Institution of Great Britain. Most of the research organisations are clustered in the Adelaide metropolitan area: The east end of North Terrace: SA Pathology; Hanson Institute; National Wine Centre. The west end of North Terrace: South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute (SAHMRI), located next to the Royal Adelaide Hospital. The Waite Research Precinct: SARDI Head Office and Plant Research Centre; AWRI; ACPFG; CSIRO research laboratories. SARDI also has establishme ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 26 Jun 2025 17:52:06 +0200 From: "My Senior Perks" Subject: 18 Senior Discounts That Are Too Good to Miss! 18 Senior Discounts That Are Too Good to Miss! http://hosesmart.sa.com/8oV97RfxuoNDtOvHSURpmgwQKG8CvB-ieoRNQdXQ-91YdujOpg http://hosesmart.sa.com/9UmuHkcxpOzW0wDtaAU1bNlGqOwF24d-CWD9neYHdJchbFJ-ag ds and relations of Director Patterson. The outsider in their midst was Chief Engraver James B. Longacre, successor to Gobrecht (who had died in 1844). A former copper-plate engraver, Longacre had been appointed through the political influence of South Carolina Senator John C. Calhoun. When Longacre began work on the two new coins in early 1849, he had no one to assist him. Longacre wrote the following year that he had been warned by a Mint employee that one of the officers (undoubtedly Peale) planned to undermine the chief engraver's position by having the work of preparing designs and dies done outside Mint premises. Accordingly, when the gold coin bill became law, Longacre apprised Patterson that he was ready to begin work on the gold dollar. The Mint Director agreed, and after viewing a model of the head on the obverse, authorized Longacre to proceed with preparation of dies. According to Longacre, The engraving was unusually minute and required very close and incessant labor for several weeks. I made the original dies and hubs for making the working dies twice over, to secure their perfect adaptation to the coining machinery. I had a wish to execute this work single han ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 26 Jun 2025 20:42:15 +0200 From: "Orval" Subject: It's no accident... It's no accident... http://yetidomain.click/CWU0RMih4XPHQwsjliSMLUJCURBFka_UFlShBZRdvQoGOrMumQ http://yetidomain.click/j035GmZ1s-JUfYQwAOwZYG92VNQetnt8nTWPQJ6j9jPGbHo ete their South Australian Certificate of Education (SACE). School education is the responsibility of the South Australian government, but the public and private education systems are funded jointly by it and the Commonwealth Government. The South Australian Government provides, to schools on a per student basis, 89% of the total Government funding while the Commonwealth contributes 11%. Since the early 1970s, it has been an ongoing controversy that 68% of Commonwealth funding (increasing to 75% by 2008) goes to private schools that are attended by 32% of the states students. Private schools often counter this by saying that they receive less State Government funding than public schools, and in 2004 the main private school funding came from the Australian government, not the state government. On 14 June 2013, South Australia became the third Australian state to sign up to the Australian Federal Government's Gonski Reform Program. This will see funding for primary and secondary education to South Australia increased by $1.1 billion before 2019. The academic year in South Australia generally runs from the e ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #16262 ***********************************************