From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #6854 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 Tuesday, June 29 2021 Volume 14 : Number 6854 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Re: following up on my last email ["Kayden Hopkins" Subject: Re: following up on my last email Hi Have you received the information about the our drone that sent you earlier? Our drone is ready in our warehouse. Not sure if you like it or not. Today I will send you the specific information again about this product. Drone details here: Frequency 2.4G Brushless Motor Type 1806 Capacity of smart lithium battery 11.1V 1800mAh Charging time About 250 minutes Charging type usb Remote control battery Battery of transmitter AA 3 -4.5V alkaline battery (sold separately) AA 3-4.5V battery (Not included) Product size (LxWxH) 17x11.5x6.7CM (fold folded) 26x26x6.7cm (unfold unfolded/between motors) Product's Weight 480g Box size 32x21.5x8.8cm Gross/net weight G.W./N.W. 10.5/9.6 kgs Flight time About 28 min About 2000 M Headless mode yes Smart Return (3 modes) Surround flght yes Smart follow Follow me yes Our drone prices: For one drone: 285.90 each For 2-20 drones: 275.90 each For 21-100 drones: 265.90 each u s d Do you want to order it today? If you order, just tell us the quantity and the shipping address, and I will arrange the logistics to deliver the goods to you. [IMAGE][IMAGE] [IMAGE][IMAGE] [IMAGE][IMAGE] Waypoint (track) flight Waypoin flight yes Satellite positioning/Optical flow positioning gps mode/ Optical flow mode yes Camera lens 110\u00b0 The camera adjusts the angle up and down Adjusting angle of the electric camera Image return distance (no interference, no occlusion) Wifi image transmission distance The maximum is about 400-500 meters Video resolution of main camera 2048x1080 Photo resolution of main camera 4096x3072 Frame rate of main camera 25 fps Video resolution of bottom camera 1280x720 Photo resolution of bottom camera 1280x720 Packing List: rc Drone x 1 Remote Controller x 1 1 or 2 or 3 Battery (It depends on your selection) Manual x 1 USB Charging Cable x 1 Features: - -Level-7 wind resistance - -Two-axis stabilization mechanical Pan-Tilt with a pitch angle of 110 degrees: With the help of a Pan-Tilt camera, the tilt angle is 110 degrees. - -With foldable arms. - -GPS positioning mode can provide more accurate flight. - -With 5G wifi function, can be connected to APP, APK system to take pictures / videos, transfer images in real time through mobile phone camera - -5G wifi fpv distance can reach 2000 m. - -5G WiFi 6K HD camera can provide a variety of high-definition images and videos. - -Follow me: The plane will control the phone fixedly and follow the direction of movement of the operator. - -With altitude hold mode function, it can provide stable flight. - -The orbital motion will make the plane fly in circles, providing a cooler shooting angle. - - Gesture recognition for photography: within 1-3m from the aircraft, make a gesture facing the camera. - -Waypoint flight mode, just draw a route on the screen and use the helicopter as a given path. - -With auto return function. When the aircraft loses the controller signal, the aircraft will return to the takeoff point according to the GPS trajectory. - -Using 11.4V 2850mAh battery, flight time is up to 28 minutes. - -Headless mode, no need to adjust aircraft position before flight. - -One-click back function, you can easily find your way home. - -One-click takeoff / landing. One-button take-off or landing automatically, the drone will take off or return to the take-off position. - -With low power protection overcurrent protection. - -Anti-interference uses 2.4GHz technology. - -6 channels, you can fly up, down, forward, backward, left, right. - -Six-axis gyroscope for more stable flight and easier control. - -The quadrotor fuselage is made of high-strength, high-strength engineering plastics, which is light and durable. pictures add music and video for sharing: single or multiple choices for photos sharing, but videos can only be shared individually Do you want to order it today? If you order, just tell us the quantity and the shipping address, and I will arrange the logistics to deliver the goods to you. Thanks, Kayden Hopkins ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 29 Jun 2021 06:29:54 -0700 From: "Ace Hardware Opinion Requested" Subject: Tell us about your shopping experiences and select from several offer rewards! Tell us about your shopping experiences and select from several offer rewards! http://aceverse.one/Y_rWw8Bwby0DGNxyYmNYq8LA4KPDwLBm-pWPAA_2c4c_642da_2 http://aceverse.one/E_nWw8Bwby0DGNxyYmNYq8LA4KPDwNAt1bgHAA_2c4c_642da_14 nuary 1916, members of the local 118th Battalion campaigned for new recruits but b like most battalions in Canada b found little success. Recruiters resorted to harassing men in the streets who had not signed up for service and forcing them into the recruiting office. Berlin's local police force found it difficult to control the battalion. When Constable Blevins, a Berlin police officer, attempted to arrest soldier Joseph Meinzinger for harassing citizens, Meinzinger broke Blevins' jaw. On 15 February, a group of Canadian soldiers from the Battalion broke into the Concordia Club, stole memorabilia and destroyed the interior. An inquiry from Camp Borden led to no charges and instead justified the raid. In early 1916, Canada's Militia Minister, Sam Hughes, made a speech in the House of Commons attacking the Reverend C. R. Tappert, a Berlin Lutheran minister. Tappert became a controversial figure locally for several controversial actions, including his continued use of German in religious services, telling his children to avoid saluting the Union Jack and to not sing "God Save the King", his refusal to contribute to the Patriotic Fund and his public doubting of anti-German propaganda. In an early 1915 letter to the Berlin News Record, he wrote that while he was loyal to Canada his heart remained German. Hughes accused Tappert of being a " for German atrocities and Kaiserism." Tappert ignored threats to leave the country by 1 March; on 4 or 5 March a group of 60 soldiers broke into Tappert's parsonage and seized him.[nb 5] A witness recalled: "Within minutes, Tappert was being dragged behind horses through the streets, his face bloodied, his body twisting as he fell into unconsciousness while the pavement scraped off his flesh." Magistrate John J. A. Weir warned the two soldiers responsible b Private Schaefer and Sergeant-Major Granville Blood b that he remembered Schaefer being connected to the throwing of the Kaiser Wilhelm bust in the Victoria Park lake in 1914 and he knew Blood had further plans to attack other citizens. Both received suspended sentences of $100 fines and/or six months in prison for the assault. Hughes blamed Tappert for instigating them with his anti-British sentiments. Tappert and his family left Berlin on 8 March. Organization of the referendum The first suggestion of a name change appeared in a letter to the Berlin News Record on 4 February 1916. The author, identified only as "A Ratepayer", suggested the Berlin City Council adopt a resolution changing the name of the city. The initial impetus for changing the city name was borne out of monetary rather than patriotic interests. The start of war brought many contracts to the city's manufacturers, but business leaders worried the "made in Berlin" label on their products would hurt sales. On 8 February 1916, the Berlin Board of Trade proposed changing the city's name, hoping that doing so would serve to indicate the city's patriotism to the rest of the Dominion and thereby help local business. On 11 February, the Berlin City Council resolved: Whereas it would appear that a strong prejudice has been created throughout the British Empire against the name "Berlin" and all that the name implies, And whereas, the citizens of this City full appreciate that this prejudice is but natural, it being absolutely impossible for any loyal citizen to consider it complimentary to be longer called after the Capital of Prussia, Be it therefore and it is hereby resolved that the City Council be petitioned to take the necessary steps to have the name "Berlin" changed to some other name more in keeping with our National sentiment. Most at the meeting endorsed the resolution with only one member voting against it. L. J. Breithaupt attended the meeting and spoke against the resolution, arguing that any name change would have no effect on British victory in the war and that any proposal of changing the city name should instead be put to a popular vote. In his diary he called the event, "an epoch making meeting". On 21 February, organizers of the resolution brought a petition with 1,080 signatures to the city council calling for the name change. City council voted in favour of petitioning Ontario's Legislative Assembly to have the city's name changed and to possibly amalgamate with Waterloo. Businessmen and community leaders wrote letters to the Berlin News Record arguing for and against the name change. Many arguments turned toward ad hominem. At an early March meeting manufacturers and businessmen pushed for the name change. Those opposing the change were threatened with boycotts. The city council offered a reward for the most suitable replacement name and received thousands of suggestions by the end of March. On 4 April, Berlin's delegation appeared before the Ontario's Legislative Assembly's Private Bills Committee. The committee voted to not report the bill to the Legislature out of fears that violence would breakout in Berlin as a result. Returning to Berlin unsuccessful, the delegation formed a British League "to promote British Sentiments in the community". On 14 April, the league passed their own resolution imploring the city council to protest their treatment at Ontario's Legislative Assembly. The council passed the resolution, including in it an amend ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 29 Jun 2021 13:19:50 +0000 From: "Shed Building Guide" Subject: Build Any Wood Working Project This Summer Build Any Wood Working Project This Summer http://plansio.one/Y_rUw8CgxMTIAAb9DAxrVBgYLHUYGDpWvzoBAA_2c39_8f00_2 http://plansio.one/E_nUw8CgxMTIAAb9DAxrVBgYLHUYGK7vVXACAA_2c39_8f00_14 ard of Education voted to end the use of German in schools. Respected Berlin citizens, including businessman and politician Louis Jacob Breithaupt, held public meetings opposed to the decision. In his reply to the speech from the throne on 19 August 1914, Conservative MP Donald Sutherland expressed sympathy to the German people for "the dangers brought upon them by their ruling classes, by their oligarchic, insane, military government." The same day, Canadian Prime Minister Sir Robert Borden stated that people born in Germany and Austria-Hungary and who came to Canada "as adopted citizens of this country, whether they are naturalized or not, are entitled to the protection of the law in Canada and shall receive it", adding that an exception would be made for those aiding and abetting the enemy. In early 1915, Waterloo North MP William George Weichel expressed in Canada's House of Commons that German-speaking Canadians could be proud of their cultural heritage while remaining loyal to the Canadian war effort. The year before, Waterloo and Berlin, measured on a per capita basis, were first and second in Canada, respectively, in individual contributions to the Canadian Patriotic Fund. Of the 60 members of Waterloo's German social club, the Acadian Club, half enlisted in Canada's armed forces. The club hosted events supporting the Canadian Red Cross and the Patriotic Fund. Local Professor F. V. Riecthdorf proclaimed, "I am a native German and former soldier ... My loyalty is to the British flag ... let our response to the Empire be immediate and sufficient!" Trying to lessen signs of disloyalty, in May 1915 the Berlin City Council asked for the appointment of a local Registrar of Enemy Aliens, though this request was denied after being deemed unnecessary. The war led to condemnation of the German tradition in Canada and rising anti-German sentiments. Actions by the German Empire b including the violation of Belgium's neutrality, their use of poison gas, the execution of Edith Cavell, the sinking of the RMS Lusitania, and an apocryphal story of German troops crucifying a Canadian soldier b contributed to anti-German feelings. In a 1 March 1916 letter to the Berlin News Record, the chair of the North Waterloo recruiting committee stated: "The fact remains that Berlin was named after the capital of Prussia and is to-day the capital of the German Empire, whence have emanated the most diabolical crimes and atrocities that have marred the pages of history." A fire at Parliament Hill in February 1916 was falsely assumed to have been set by German arsonists. Although many accounts of wartime atrocities were later shown to be fabrications and British propaganda, most Canadian citizens took them to be true. The use of the German language or the display of German flags became seen as signs of Canadian disloyalty. Young men, many of them German, were harassed in the street if they had not signed up for military service. Newspapers in Toronto like The Globe and Toronto News made frequent attacks on German-Canadians. A Globe editorial warned that Berliners should be kept under observation, warning of espionage. To guard against the perceived threat of sabotage and attacks by German-Canadians, 16,000 Canadian soldiers were stationed in Canada; between October 1915 and September 1916 50,000 Canadian Expeditionary Force volunteers were kept home to protect against any eventualities. Beginning in 1914, those Germans deemed a threat to national security were interned; the Canadian government held discretionary power to intern any civilian they considered either an "agent" or of potential service to an enemy power. In 1916, roughly 2,000 Germans were interned across Canada, totaling 2,009 by war's end.[nb 4] Though none were interned or jailed in Ontario, Germans across the province experienced a curtailing of their rights and freedoms. In a February 1916 diary entry, L. J. Breithaupt lamented, "Public sentiment in Canada is very anti-German & so to some extent against anything connected with or reminding one of Germany." Canadian military leaders also espoused anti-German sentiments. In an April 1916 letter to the Berlin News Record, Sergeant-Major Granville Blood warned Berliners to "Be British. Do your duty or be despised ... Be British or be dead." In a printed address to Canada, Lieutenant Stanley Nelson Dacey wrote: You have creatures in your midst who say success to the Kaiser, and to hell with the King; all I can say is, round up this element into the detention camps, for they are unworthy of British citizenship and should be placed where they belong ... the showing that the physically fit young men of North Waterloo have made is so rotten that I have heard an outside businessman say to a traveler from a Berlin wholesale house, "I'll not buy another damned article manufactured in that German town. So you think I'm going to give money to support a pack of Germans? If I did, I'd be as bad as they." A crowd of soldiers are gathered around a pedestal, the top of which is visible under a vertical banner. The banner bears the phrase "Berlin will be Berlin No Longer". Two soldiers standing below and to the left of the bottom of the banner hold medallions showing the likenesses of Bismark and Von Moltke. A day after raiding a local German social club, soldiers of the local 118th Battalion gather around the 1897 Peace Memorial in Victoria Park with a banner bearing the phrase "Berlin will be Berlin No Longer", 16 February 1916. In January 1916, members of the local 118th Battalion campaigned for new recruits but b like most battalions in Canada b found little success. Recruiters resorted to harassing men in the streets who had not signed up for service and forcing them into the recruiting office. Berlin's local police force found it difficult to control the battalion. When Constable Blevins, a Berli ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 29 Jun 2021 14:25:37 +0000 From: "You're Approved" Subject: Next steps to submit funds application Next steps to submit funds application http://plansio.one/Y_rRw8CgxMTIAAb9DAzrVBgY_uoyMHB8PxADAA_2dfd_8f00_2 http://plansio.one/E_nRw8CgxMTIAAb9DAzrVBgY_uoyMPBIeF0AAA_2dfd_8f00_14 tish League "to promote British Sentiments in the community". On 14 April, the league passed their own resolution imploring the city council to protest their treatment at Ontario's Legislative Assembly. The council passed the resolution, including in it an amendment that allowed them to hold a referendum over the issue. During a 24 April meeting, the council voted to hold a referendum on 19 May. Most Berliners expressed little interest in the campaign but those who did found it intense. Archivist Barbara Wilson states that "Many Berliners, including Mayor J. E. Hett, saw no real purpose in changing Berlin's name, but to oppose the change-the-name movement actively in February would have led to more charges of disloyalty and pro-Germanism." The Berlin Telegraph supported the name change while the Berlin News Record opposed. Both papers ran pieces and advertisements arguing their positions. Tensions continued to rise, culminating on 5 May when 30 soldiers entered and ransacked the Acadian Club in Waterloo. Canada's Minister of Justice Charles Doherty refused to reimburse the club for the damages, explaining doing so would engender further racial disharmony. William Breithaupt, head of Berlin's library board and the president of the Waterloo Historical Society, was outspoken in his opposition to the name change. Throughout the campaign he received threatening letters and found the phone lines to his house cut. Voting and results A large crowd of people, many of whom are holding umbrellas, are gathered at the train station to send off local recruits. Several factories can be seen behind the trains carrying the soldiers. Three days after the referendum, residents see members of the 118th Battalion off at the Berlin station, 22 May 1916. The soldiers' absence led to a lowering of tensions in the city. On 19 May 1916, the referendum was held in Berlin asking electors: "Are you in favour of changing the name of this city?" Historian Adam Crerar writes that much of the voting was characterized by intimidation. Soldiers of the 118th kept potential name change opponents away from the polls, while name change proponents challenged unnaturalized citizens. Many of those disenfranchised had voted in previous elections and had sent sons to fight for Canada in the war. Of 3,057 votes cast, "yes" won by 81 votes. English & McLaughlin write that women and soldiers were generally "yes" voters, while the working class and residents of the especially German North Ward generally voted "no".[nb 6] The result of the vote prompted supporters to celebrate in the streets. A report in the Berlin News Record recounted fireworks being set off into the air and the sidewalks, ultimately injuring many celebrants. Alderman J. A. Hallman sent a telegram to King George V informing him, "The loyal citizens of Berlin Canada rejoice to inform Your Majesty that they have this day cast off forever the name of the Prussian capital." The Duke of Connaught informed Hallman on 23 May that the King had received his telegram. A regimental band and crowd walked through Berlin and gathered in front of August Lang's home, a major opponent of the name change. Lang confronted the crowd and an altercation ensued. Colonel Lochead of the 118th Battalion found no fault on the part of his soldiers. On 22 May, a week after the initial referendum, the 707 soldiers in the 118th Battalion left for London, Ontario, to continue training, alleviating much on the tension in the community. A civic committee of 99 members was assembled to produce name recommendations. The committee narrowed thousands of suggestions to a shortlist of Huronto, Bercana, Dunard, Hydro City, Renoma and Agnoleo.[nb 7] A report in the Berlin News Record wrote that the names became "the joke of the country". On 1 June, the Berlin City Council thanked the committee and decided to assemble its own list, offering cash prizes for winning suggestions. On 5 June, Britain's Secretary of State for War, Horatio Herbert Kitchener, drowned aboard HMS Hampshire after it struck a mine while en route to Russia. News of his drowning was widely reported the following day, prompting the city council to add Kitchener to their revised shortlist of names. The name was particularly popular among local businessmen, though some felt it to be in poor taste. An editorial in Stratford, Ontario's Herald complained: "No name of a martyr of this war should be allowed to be appropriated where the motive is largely commercial." A ballot with six options: Brock, Kitchener, Corona, Adanac, Keowana and Benton. A ballot for selecting the new city name, June 1916. The final choices for the vote were narrowed to Brock, Kitchener, Corona, Adanac, Keowana and Benton.[nb 8] Some residents suggested that Berlin be renamed Waterloo and the cities merge together. A resolution pushing for this failed in Berlin's City Council on 20 June. From 24 to 28 June 1916,[nb 9] between 9:00 am and 9:00 pm each day, a second vote was held to determine a new city name. Turnout was low with only 892 votes cast out of a possible 4,897.[nb 10] Of those, 163 spoiled their ballots, many crossing out all the options and writing in either Berlin or Waterloo. Kitchener won with 346 vote ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 29 Jun 2021 05:18:46 -0700 From: "Darkest Days?" Subject: This Will Be Worse Than Pearl Harbor... This Will Be Worse Than Pearl Harbor... http://wifibuds.us/Y3rWw8Bwby0DGNxyYmNYrcLA8EeXgUHMMF4QAA_2dfc_642da_2 http://wifibuds.us/E3nWw8Bwby0DGNxyYmNYrcLA8EeXgcHvXkgnAA_2dfc_642da_14 inally known as Eby's Town, Ebytown, Ben Eby's or Sandhills by the first Pennsylvania Mennonites to settle in the area, an influx of European German-speaking immigrants beginning in the 1820s pushed local community leaders Benjamin Eby and Joseph Schneider to change the Upper Canadian hamletbs name to Berlin in 1833. In the 1870s, most residents of Berlin and neighbouring Waterloo, Ontario, were of German origin, comprising 73 and 80 percent of each population, respectively.[nb 1] Many Germans immigrated to Canada to escape the conflicts of Europe and were inclusive of the town's Anglo-Saxon population. Most immigrants arrived before the VC6lkisch movement spawned in the late 19th century, resulting in a German community less concerned with German nationalism than those who immigrated to western Canada after the 1870s. Historians John English and Kenneth McLaughlin write that the common background of both employers and employees in Berlin allowed for a softening of racial and social animosity. A bust of Kaiser Wilhelm I of Germany stands atop a pedestal along the shore of a small lake. A bust of Kaiser Wilhelm I was dedicated in Berlin's Victoria Park in 1897, pictured here in 1905. Berliners displayed a simultaneous loyalty to both the British Empire and to their German heritage. Germans pointed to the relationship between the British and German royal families, such as the marriage of the English Queen Victoria to the German Prince Albert, as a source of pride. In May 1871, the towns held a joint German heritage celebration, attracting around 12,000 participants. The Friedensfest, or "Peace Festival", marked the end of the Franco-Prussian War, resulting in the unification of Germany. The strength of the British-German relationship was such that the German festival closed with "God Save the Queen". Historian Geoffrey Hayes writes that the festival b and subsequent SC$ngerfeste, or song festivals b served as a way for German-speaking residents to develop their German-Canadian identity in a way acceptable to other Canadians. The nine SC$ngerfeste held from 1874 to 1912 in Berlin and Waterloo generated positive national press coverage and large crowds of visitors. Berlin residents often displayed both the Union Jack and the German flag next to one another. Visiting royalty and politicians b including the Governor General, the Marquis of Lorne; Princess Louise; the Duke of Connaught; and the former Princess Louise Margaret of Prussia b praised the bonds displayed between the British and German populations of Berlin and Waterloo. Based on a model by sculptor Reinhold Begas, the community leaders George Rumpel and John Motz dedicated a bust of Kaiser Wilhelm I in Victoria Park in August 1897. Residents saw the bust as symbolically representing the bond between Germany and Britain. Government support for the project was strong, Canadian Prime Minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier ensuring the bust entered Canada duty-free. By the early 20th century, few residents considered themselves wholly German, instead identifying as German-Canadian. The 1911 census listed 76 percent of people in the community as being of German origin, most of whom had never been to Germany. Among Waterloo's residents, 90 percent were born in Canada. Berliners avidly embraced their German heritage, with celebrations commemorating the birthdays of Otto von Bismarck and the Kaiser typical. In February 1914, while celebrating Kaiser Wilhelm II's 55th birthday, W. H. Schmalz addressed Waterloo's Concordia Club: We Germans, even if we are also Canadians, remember this occasion from year to year in order to demonstrate our love and respect for a monarch of whom the world may be proud. We are British subjects ... but while we proclaim this truth, I might add, to ourselves, we are also prepared to continue to cultivate our beautiful German customs. World War I and increasing anti-German sentiment Great Britain declared war on Germany on 4 August 1914. As a Dominion of the British Empire, Canada automatically entered the war following Britain's declaration. On 12 August, the Berliner Journal, a German-language weekly, told citizens not to "allow yourselves to be driven to demonstrations of any kind, avoid arguments ... Be silent, bear this difficult time with dignity, and show that you are true Germans grateful to the country that accommodated you." British policy allowed Germans across the Dominion four days to leave. The German government encouraged the German diaspora to return. The 1911 census counted 393,320 people of German origin living across Canada. Because the war was being fought in Europe, Berlin residents expected the fighting to have little direct impact on their lives. German social clubs continued to meet and found their proceedings unaffected. Religious services held in German declared their loyalty to the Canadian war effort. Five men stand in a boat, three of whom are wearing bathing suits. A bust of the Kaiser sits between them. A second boat and man can be seen behind them. Berlin residents retrieve the bust of Kaiser Wilhelm that vandals threw into the Victoria Park lake following Britain and Canada's declaration of war against Germany, August 1914. Three weeks after Canada's entry into the war, vandals toppled Victoria Park's bust of Kaiser Wilhelm and threw it into the park's lake.[nb 2] Residents retrieved the bust and apprehended the three youths responsible.[nb 3] In the months following the outbreak of the war, Berlin's Board of Education voted to end the use of German in schools. Respected Berlin citizens, includi ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 28 Jun 2021 06:18:33 -0700 From: "Belly Fat" Subject: Russia Reveals Greatest Discovery in Modern Medicine Russia Reveals Greatest Discovery in Modern Medicine http://nitrileanex.one/TWZSOrssMq7ETK4CN0dTeSsMvK11DBP3CWhu8trYRd8VeyKr_2_642da_2d17 http://nitrileanex.one/cWPhIk1PRabPwRZaE9rGvwFgWZselYi8eM8P2bkmkI3dNtOd_14_642da_2d17 orting 13 successful Space Shuttle missions, and the development of what became the International Space Station. From 1996 to 1998 she served as the NASA representative in the Office of Science and Technology Policy in Washington, DC. Government career With other directors of the Johnson Space Center in 2002 Huntoon left NASA in 1998 to join George Washington University as an Executive in Residence in its Project Management Program. The following year she was nominated by the President of the United States, Bill Clinton and confirmed by the United States Senate as the fourth Assistant Secretary for the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Environmental Management. In this role she oversaw the DOE cleanup of the United States nuclear weapons complex at 113 sites in 30 states. She was also responsible for the management of the DOE's field offices at the Idaho National Laboratory, Savannah River, Hanford, Carlsbad, Ohio, (which oversaw the sites at Paducah, Kentucky and Portsmouth, Ohio) and Rocky Flats. After the 2000 United States presidential election President George W. Bush asked her to stay on at the DOE to provide some continuity, which she agreed to do until a suitable replacement was found. She retired in the summer of 2001 and moved to Barrington, Rhode Island. Her husband died in April 2021. Awards and honors In 1974, Huntoon was awarded the NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement Medal, the NASA Exceptional Service Medal in 1985, the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal in 1989 and the NASA Distinguished Service Medal in 1992, and the Presidential Rank Award of Distinguished Executive in 1994. She was inducted into the Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame in 2003, and in September 2014, Women in Aerospace gave her a lifetime achievement award for "sustained and exemplary leadership at NASA, the Office of Science and Technology Policy and the Department of Energy, her exceptional scientific contributions towards understanding the effects of spaceflight on the human body, and her dedication and mentorship of astronauts and aerospace professio ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #6854 **********************************************