From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #16307 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, July 3 2025 Volume 14 : Number 16307 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Confirmation Needed ["Confirmation Needed" Subject: Confirmation Needed Confirmation Needed http://varicose91.ru.com/sv_e44wK6zfTkP3ixpN29xEZOQMzXkGxT_RMTDa6rCesuOZ6 http://varicose91.ru.com/yWRl3gBpdiVVSFIzU8Wu0QXGYyVu-WUeKqfU3mUvOevqERbL entary, He Walked By Night (1948), released by Eagle-Lion Films, featured a young radio actor named Jack Webb in a supporting role. The success of the film, along with a suggestion from LAPD Detective Sergeant Marty Wynn, the film's technical advisor, gave Webb an idea for a radio drama that depicted police work in a similarly semi-documentary manner. The resulting series, Dragnet, which debuted on radio in 1949 and made the transition to television in 1951, has been called "the most famous procedural of all time" by mystery novelists William L. DeAndrea, Katherine V. Forrest and Max Allan Collins. The same year that Dragnet debuted on radio, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Sidney Kingsley's stage play Detective Story opened on Broadway. This frank, carefully researched dramatization of a typical day in an NYPD precinct detective squad became another benchmark in the development of the police procedural. Dragnet marked a turn in the depiction of the police on screen. Instead of being corrupt laughingstocks, this was the first time police officers represented bravery and heroism. In their quest for authenticity, Dragnet's producers used real police cars and officers in their scenes. However, this also meant that in exchange, the LAPD could vet scripts for authenticity. The LAPD vetted every scene, which would allow them to remove elements they did not agree with or did not wish to draw attention to. Over the next few years, the number of novelists who picked up on the procedural trend following Dragnet's example grew to include writers like Ben Benson, who wr ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 1 Jul 2025 13:52:04 +0200 From: "Renewal by Andersen Facts" Subject: Score! Big Savings on New Windows and Doors and Professional Installation, Affordable Payments* Score! Big Savings on New Windows and Doors and Professional Installation, Affordable Payments* http://kneebrace.ru.com/zqH6DF1yX8hspHV8CJ3PgQrkiV4I73s8GGLFF_nJyDgfdlItvw http://kneebrace.ru.com/wzcW_hbUAmrvfsg5YiRhpc1b-Dh2dCX2NyQ5oyJdzjNVP0Ag-Q tored his son Alexander the Great beginning in 343 BC. He established a library in the Lyceum, which helped him to produce many of his hundreds of books on papyrus scrolls. Though Aristotle wrote many treatises and dialogues for publication, only around a third of his original output has survived, none of it intended for publication. Aristotle provided a complex synthesis of the various philosophies existing prior to him. His teachings and methods of inquiry have had a significant impact across the world, and remain a subject of contemporary philosophical discussion. Aristotle's views profoundly shaped medieval scholarship. The influence of his physical science extended from late antiquity and the Early Middle Ages into the Renaissance, and was not replaced systematically until the Enlightenment and theories such as classical mechanics were developed. He influenced Judeo-Islamic philosophies during the Middle Ages, as well as Christian theology, especially the Neoplatonism of the Early Church and the scholastic tradition of the Catholic Church. Aristotle was revered among medieval Muslim scholars as "The First Teacher", and among medieval Christians like Thomas Aquinas as simply "The Philosopher", while the poet Dante called him "the master of those who know". He has been referred to as the first scientist. His works contain the earliest known system ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Jun 2025 10:08:21 -0500 From: "Smart way to exercise" Subject: AVOID these 5 mistakes IF you want to melt fat and LOOK younger AVOID these 5 mistakes IF you want to melt fat and LOOK younger http://activator.ru.com/ULX6mh61ECxwQ37N3FOSaCM99GEVjAMjIe76vJdEeuvHFJiN http://activator.ru.com/xpM_pxa-U4-Q3-uHDplkuk66Qm2pOSbyAg4mYS8iDDcHgtqd Broadway. This frank, carefully researched dramatization of a typical day in an NYPD precinct detective squad became another benchmark in the development of the police procedural. Dragnet marked a turn in the depiction of the police on screen. Instead of being corrupt laughingstocks, this was the first time police officers represented bravery and heroism. In their quest for authenticity, Dragnet's producers used real police cars and officers in their scenes. However, this also meant that in exchange, the LAPD could vet scripts for authenticity. The LAPD vetted every scene, which would allow them to remove elements they did not agree with or did not wish to draw attention to. Over the next few years, the number of novelists who picked up on the procedural trend following Dragnet's example grew to include writers like Ben Benson, who wrote carefully researched novels about the Massachusetts State Police, retired police officer Maurice Procter, who wrote a series about North England cop Harry Martineau, and Jonathan Craig, who wrote short stories and novels about New York City police officers. Police novels by writers who would come to virtually define the fo ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Jun 2025 14:18:59 +0200 From: "Erase It" Subject: Spoonful cleans out lbs a day Spoonful cleans out lbs a day http://cardiansafecard.click/BPvHI6ONBDD2_dW-HjRv76cCX2eC6SOADb3NHt_Z_0m6yojiAA http://cardiansafecard.click/otyYG0fmc1FxT1HPCmdWbTdYXxCE90blFYDFgGg5BOUYJBm89w d McBain in importance to the development of the procedural as a distinct mystery subgenre is John Creasey, a prolific writer of many different kinds of crime fiction, from espionage to criminal protagonist. He was inspired to write a more realistic crime novel when his neighbor, a retired Scotland Yard detective, challenged Creasey to "write about us as we are". The result was Inspector West Takes Charge, 1940, the first of more than forty novels to feature Roger West of the London Metropolitan Police. The West novels were, for the era, an unusually realistic look at Scotland Yard operations, but the plots were often wildly melodramatic, and, to get around thorny legal problems, Creasey gave West an "amateur detective" friend who was able to perform the extra-procedural acts that West, as a policeman, could not. In the mid-1950s, inspired by the success of television's Dragnet and a similar British TV series, Fabian of the Yard, Creasey decided to try a more down-to-earth series of cop stories. Adopting the pseudonym "J.J. Marric", he wrote Gideon's Day, 1955, in which George Gideon, a high-ranking detective at Scotland Yard, spends a busy day supervising his subordinates' investigations into several unrelated crimes. This novel was the first in a series of more than twenty books which brought Creasey his best critical notic ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #16307 ***********************************************