From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #16837 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, October 26 2025 Volume 14 : Number 16837 Today's Subjects: ----------------- T-Mobile Sends You a HP Laptop ["PayLatr" ] Claim Your Free M&M's Box Today ["Your Free M&M's Sweet Box" Subject: T-Mobile Sends You a HP Laptop T-Mobile Sends You a HP Laptop http://brightcraft.za.com/fKxpoVzlM0o8CsF4QyCCY1YV_dgtL19D7-zvsm4qfKVGBDfBcA http://brightcraft.za.com/YikZLfFz-e_uPmR0k4Depj-ulIgXZKO73De5ugQgSMXg3ZzZ1g omotion. Prehensile quadrupeds may use their tail to assist in locomotion and when grazing, the kangaroos and other macropods use their tail to propel themselves forward with the four legs used to maintain balance. Insects generally walk with six legsbthough some insects such as nymphalid butterflies do not use the front legs for walking. Arachnids have eight legs. Most arachnids lack extensor muscles in the distal joints of their appendages. Spiders and whipscorpions extend their limbs hydraulically using the pressure of their hemolymph. Solifuges and some harvestmen extend their knees by the use of highly elastic thickenings in the joint cuticle. Scorpions, pseudoscorpions and some harvestmen have evolved muscles that extend two leg joints (the femur-patella and patella-tibia joints) at once. The scorpion Hadrurus arizonensis walks by using two groups of legs (left 1, right 2, Left 3, Right 4 and Right 1, Left 2, Right 3, Left 4) in a reciprocating fashion. This alternating tetrapod coordination is used over all walking speeds. Centipedes and millipedes have many sets of legs that move in metachronal rhythm. Some echinoderms locomote using the many tube feet on the underside of their arms. Although the tube feet resemble suction cups in appearance, the gripping action is a function of adhesive chemicals rather than suction. Other chemicals and relaxation of the ampullae allow for release from the substrate. The tube feet latch on to surfaces and move in a wave, with one arm section attaching to the surface as another releases. Some multi-armed, fast-moving starfish such as the sunflower seastar (Pycnopodia helianthoides) pull them ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 25 Oct 2025 19:40:54 -0500 From: "Your Free M&M's Sweet Box" Subject: Claim Your Free M&M's Box Today Claim Your Free M&M's Box Today http://seroburn.ru.com/yljPUSw7dakb2ch4qAZCahAxd40k_WJaKJq1FY3hfd7OfERTfQ http://seroburn.ru.com/Al_gWL6IfJmdpL6zQ156iJKwGkKneuiq6uknf63MjxufgkUF9Q ter to his successor, Kamehameha IV (r. 1855b64). Likelike's mother was the daughter of ?Aikanaka and Kama?eokalani, and her father was the son of Kamanawa II (half-brother of ?Aikanaka) and Kamokuiki. Their family belonged to the ali?i class of Hawaiian nobility and were collateral relatives of the reigning House of Kamehameha, descended from the 18th-century ali?i nui (supreme monarch) Keawe??kekahiali?iokamoku. Likelike was descended from Keaweaheulu and Kame?eiamoku, two of the five royal counselors of Kamehameha I (r. 1782b1819) during his conquest of the Hawaiian Kingdom. Kame?eiamoku, her parents' grandfather, was depicted with his royal twin Kamanawa on the Hawaiian coat of arms. The youngest daughter and penultimate child of a large family, her biological siblings included James Kaliokalani, David Kal?kaua, Lili?uokalani, Anna Ka?iulani, Ka?imina?auao, and William Pitt Leleiohoku II. They were h?nai (adopted) by other family members. The Hawaiian custom of h?nai is an informal form of adoption in extended families. Because Likelike was not healthy as a child, she was sent to live in the dry climate of Kona on the island of Hawaii. The 1892 obituary of Hawaii Supreme Court Justice Lawrence McCully noted that he was her teacher while he resided in Kona. According to historian George Kanahele, she was raised in Hilo on the wetter windward side of the island of Hawaii: "Little is known about her early years". The identities of Likelike's h?nai parents are unknown. According to historian Sammy Amalu, Likelike was brought up in the household of Peleuli (daughter of High Chief Kala?imamahu, half-brother of Kamehameha I) with Peleuli's granddaughter Miriam Auhea Kek?uluohi Crowningburg, a second cousin of King Lunalilo. According to newspaper columnist Clarice Taylor, Likelike was raised by her mother and the ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 26 Oct 2025 02:15:02 +0200 From: "Emsense Official" Subject: Say goodbye to soreness with gentle EMS therapy Say goodbye to soreness with gentle EMS therapy http://zevota.help/a9Lwm-dvch7kHo1ARG6WGORuWgcGAMhG5eLaLbWaWJhrQFZC8w http://zevota.help/z5vDsvpQ6k-1NjXhl4Q4T69Mc3VBuIxA31u9VHCzjZDur30NiA hropic projects. On February 19, 1874, she created and organized the Hui Hooulu a Hoola La Hui of Kalakaua I, a charity of which she was its first president. Organized one week after her brother's ascension to the throne, it took its name from his motto ("Ho?oulu L?hui"; "to increase, restore, re-establish and advance the l?hui "). The organization provided assistance for the needy, including financial help, clothing, medical care or shelter, food, and family burials. Likelike helped her sister to found the Lili?uokalani Educational Society, an organization "to interest the Hawaiian ladies in the proper training of young girls of their own race whose parents would be unable to give them advantages by which they would be prepared for the duties of life", in 1886. She led one division of the organization, and Lili?uokalani led the other. It supported the education of Hawaiian girls at Likelike's alma mater, Kawaiaha?o Seminary for Girls, and Kamehameha School. After Likelike's death, Lili?uokalani assumed full leadership of the organization. Travels to Australia and the United States Likelike traveled abroad three times during her marriage. She visited Auckland, Sydney and Melbourne from August to December 1871 with her husband on their extended honeymoon, and met colonial governors and officials. In 1877, mourning the death of her brother Leleiohoku, she traveled to San Francisco for her health and returned to Honolulu on the steamer Likelike on its first voyage between California and Hawaii. Likelike revisited San Francisco in 1884 with Hawaiian banker Charles Reed Bishop and Lili?uokalani's h?nai sister, Bernice Pauahi Bishop; Bernice was going to the city to undergo surgery for breast cancer, of which she later died. Their visit coincided with the arrival of Queen Marau, wife of King P?mare V of Tahiti, who was en route to Paris. Before her death, Likelike was planning to travel to Monterey with Ka?iulani for their health. Death and state funeral She had been in failing health for months, but her doctors only advised fresh air and a change of scenery. Likelike became weaker, and was advised to get "more nou ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 25 Oct 2025 16:38:56 +0200 From: "Nadia Rosario" Subject: Introducing HeatWell Heater! The Small Yet Powerful Heater That Heats Up Any Space in 10 Minutes Introducing HeatWell Heater! The Small Yet Powerful Heater That Heats Up Any Space in 10 Minutes http://sharpknife.click/HUX-2DXm4Apl2YFGNOCVW6lHauS0VtBEOnBk7PXuqlBuUVM http://sharpknife.click/6jfpVevna16IznYG7Gv9StI0RpALGFoI1MUwUo6HECvdCAE vement by animals that live on, in, or near the bottom of aquatic environments. In the sea, many animals walk over the seabed. Echinoderms primarily use their tube feet to move about. The tube feet typically have a tip shaped like a suction pad that can create a vacuum through contraction of muscles. This, along with some stickiness from the secretion of mucus, provides adhesion. Waves of tube feet contractions and relaxations move along the adherent surface and the animal moves slowly along. Some sea urchins also use their spines for benthic locomotion. Crabs typically walk sideways (a behaviour that gives us the word crabwise). This is because of the articulation of the legs, which makes a sidelong gait more efficient. However, some crabs walk forwards or backwards, including raninids, Libinia emarginata and Mictyris platycheles. Some crabs, notably the Portunidae and Matutidae, are also capable of swimming, the Portunidae especially so as their last pair of walking legs are flattened into swimming paddles. A stomatopod, Nannosquilla decemspinosa, can escape by rolling itself into a self-propelled wheel and somersault backwards at a speed of 72 rpm. They can travel more than 2 m using this unusual method of locomotion. Aquatic surface Velella moves by sailing. Main article: Animal locomotion on the water surface Velella, the by-the-wind sailor, is a cnidarian with no means of propulsion other than sailing. A small rigid sail projects into the air and catches the wind. Velella sails always align along the direction of the wind where the sail may act as an aerofoil, so that the animals tend to sail downwind at a small angle to the wind. While larger animals such as ducks can move on water by floating, some small animals move across it without breaking through the surface. This surface locomotion takes advantage of the surface tension of water. Animals that move in such a way include the water strider. Water striders ha ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 25 Oct 2025 23:39:11 +0200 From: "Optic Research" Subject: Ophthalmologists Shocked by This Simple Nightly Eye Routine Ophthalmologists Shocked by This Simple Nightly Eye Routine http://zevota.help/NNJAhIjtE_2x-wql408ZkjU9G55jyn8b0AG0jzMtyHcIiq9DNg http://zevota.help/Xf7tIwBmiw2CU__q_n8ej1Iso6BdMwhddhFHS_qB02-Y2kb3qg ok was originally published in 1881 and Jackson personally sent a copy of her book to every member of Congress, at her own expense. She hoped to awaken the conscience of the American people, and their representatives, to the flagrant wrongs that had been done to the American Indians, and persuade them "to redeem the name of the United States from the stain of a century of dishonor". After a long hiatus, the book was first reprinted in 1964 by Ross & Haines of Minneapolis, Minnesota via a limited printing of 2,000 copies. However, this was soon followed by a larger printing from Harper & Row in their Torchbook series in 1965, with an introductory essay by Andrew F. Rolle but without the fifteen documents that served as an appendix of supporting evidence in the original work and its first reprinting. Inspired by the women's movement of the 1970s, it was not until the 1980s that more extensive attention to Jackson and others like her began to appear in academic journals. Reception Critical response Initially, some critics, including President Theodore Roosevelt, dismissed her as being a "sentimental historian", which he did in the first appendix to The Winning of the West. However, more than a century later, historian John Milton Cooper Jr. countered Roosevelt's dismissal of Jackson's argument by stating that Roosevelt's view of Native American history was "Eurocentric, racist, male-dominated, and environmentally obtuse from a late-twentieth-century point of view." Over time, her work has been recognized for its important impact on the nation's understanding of the mistreatment of Native Americans by the United States and prompted discussion on the role of women's voices in history both publicly and academically. However, critics continue to refere ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 26 Oct 2025 04:26:17 +0100 From: "AAA Auto Bonus" Subject: Maintain Like a Pro â Gift from AAA Maintain Like a Pro b Gift from AAA http://avintiq.space/3Pj-LXpgyGtOhTI0Blh5erX_IDQO7xpTmAiKeVY80pLT4-c6pA http://avintiq.space/VM5DyfHDCOrfnEW3ahHLzquMcAGNfWf0DOLm7nAnaU5nDyq06A aves vary in shape, size, texture and color, depending on the species The broad, flat leaves with complex venation of flowering plants are known as megaphylls and the species that bear them (the majority) as broad-leaved or megaphyllous plants, which also include acrogymnosperms and ferns. In the lycopods, with different evolutionary origins, the leaves are simple (with only a single vein) and are known as microphylls. Some leaves, such as bulb scales, are not above ground. In many aquatic species, the leaves are submerged in water. Succulent plants often have thick juicy leaves, but some leaves are without major photosynthetic function and may be dead at maturity, as in some cataphylls and spines. Furthermore, several kinds of leaf-like structures found in vascular plants are not totally homologous with them. Examples include flattened plant stems called phylloclades and cladodes, and flattened leaf stems called phyllodes which differ from leaves both in their structure and origin. Some structures of non-vascular plants look and function much like leaves. Examples include the phyllids of mosses and liverworts. General characteristics 3D rendering of a computed tomography scan of a leaf Leaves are the most important organs of most vascular plants. Green plants are autotrophic, meaning that they do not obtain food from other living things but instead create their own food by photosynthesis. They capture the energy in sunlight and use it to make simple sugars, such as glucose and sucrose, from carbon dioxide (CO2) and water. The sugars are then stored as starch, further processed by chemical synthesis into more complex organic molecules such as proteins or cellulose, the basic structural material in plant cell walls, or metabolized by cellular respiration to provide chemical energy to run cellular processes. The leaves draw water from the ground in the transpiration stream through a vascular conducting system known as xylem and obtain carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by diffusion through openings called stomata in the outer covering layer of the leaf (epidermis), while leaves are orientated to maximize their exposure to sunlight. Once sugar has been synthesized, it needs to be transported to are ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #16837 ***********************************************