From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9251 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, July 5 2022 Volume 14 : Number 9251 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Donāt take any more CoQ10 until you see this ["Ageless Hearts" Subject: Donāt take any more CoQ10 until you see this Donbt take any more CoQ10 until you see this http://esquidan.sa.com/x6PwZB1mOE2biWcztfEy5zSqiRgyMnALmiFsm0YyJRvEZ7mOYQ http://esquidan.sa.com/LiAh-VoCF6RowRXL1TK2glLDMCQ8RHBPNFmW3JdaRYXn4QGh-w on after the convention Truman stated that the whole concept of his campaign was to motivate voters and galvanize support for the candidate and the party. Republicans charged Truman with crude politics asserting his call for a special session of Congress was the "act of a desperate man". Rather than directly attacking Dewey, Truman sought to continue blaming the Republican-controlled Congress. On July 17 the Southern delegates who bolted the Democratic Convention convened and nominated Thurmond as the official States' Rights Democratic Party presidential nominee, with Fielding L. Wright, the governor of Mississippi, as their vice-presidential nominee. They were soon nicknamed "Dixiecrats", and were perceived as a minor party having strong influence in the South. With the split within the Democratic Party, many pollsters believed Truman had little chance of winning. The initial issue Truman had to deal with was financing the campaign. The Democratic National Committee's funds were insufficient. Moreover, the Dewey campaign had released a collection of quotes from few well-respected Democratic politicians saying that Truman could not win, reducing the number of donors. A meeting was held at the White House on July 22 to form the campaign finance committee. Truman stated he would travel all over the country after Labor Day, and address every stop on the tour to campaign and raise money. Soon after, the Democratic National Committee moved its headquarters from Philadelphia to New York City. Louis A. Johnson was named the campaign fundraiser and the finance chairman for the Democratic National Committee. With Truman's declining polling numbe ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 4 Jul 2022 11:10:24 -0400 From: "Benign Vertigo" Subject: Vertigo and dizziness is just a normal part of aging. Vertigo and dizziness is just a normal part of aging. http://arbition.za.com/S4e4jYDnsO83dyluByqQhW5o_ND24RIV_qNhwUE46KP__MyFRw http://arbition.za.com/0y9uPVg7jq4ZZ9QNlPaKQ516gxJyezscAfLdx2XHDK9ARb3TIA ng a speech in Salt Lake City he said: "Selfish men have always tried to skim the cream from our natural resources to satisfy their own greed. And ... instrument in this effort has always been the Republican Party." In a busy schedule, Truman delivered four or five speeches a day. Most of the train stops featured a local brass band that played "Hail to the Chief" or the "Missouri Waltz". Robert Donovan, a correspondent at the New York Herald Tribune, later characterized Truman's campaign as "sharp speeches fairly criticizing Republican policy and defending New Deal liberalism". In shorter speeches of about ten minutes, he praised and endorsed the local candidate for congressional election, and gave the rest of the speech covering local and general topics. The size of the crowd increased in each subsequent town as people started seeing Truman as a fearless underdog. His speeches were not covered extensively by radio or television. During one speech, a man from the crowd yelled, "Give 'em hell, Harry!", as the news accounts of his promise to Barkley spread across the country. Truman replied: "I don't give them Hell. I just tell the truth about them, and they think it's Hell." Soon after, many people started yelling and repeating "Give 'em hell, Harry!", which by late September had become a well-known campaign slogan. While Truman campaigned on the train, Senator Barkley traveled by airplane and campaigned across the nation, though he also avoided campaigning in the Deep South. While addressing a crowd of about a hundred thousand on September 28 in Oklahoma, Truman answered the Republican charges of communism in government. He called that the charges were a "smoke screen" of Republican tactics to hide their failure to deal with other issues. Considering the importance of a speech and its effect on the campaign, the Democratic National C ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9251 **********************************************