From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9290 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 Saturday, July 9 2022 Volume 14 : Number 9290 Today's Subjects: ----------------- They have plans to destroy humanity ["Apocalypse" Subject: They have plans to destroy humanity They have plans to destroy humanity http://spanisa.za.com/86YW_sdI5Zcz0q5krchLiWiqdiSaQjCrv3Yem_HJ2lVk7C9oKw http://spanisa.za.com/hudONo-52bUyJHB06sYR3n-a57qlNMZ4jN5BtPp4YxEinUW7nw rrant for a commission of inquiry into the state of the College was established. The warrant issued on the behalf of the Duke of Norfolk, stated: "that it is desirable that the College of Arms should be visited, and an inquiry instituted with the view of ascertaining whether the Rules and Orders for the good government of the said College ... are duly obeyed and fulfilled ... and whether by change of circumstances or any other cause, any new Laws, Ordinances or Regulations are necessary to be made ... for the said College." The commission had three members: Lord Edward Fitzalan-Howard (the Deputy Earl Marshal), Sir William Alexander (Queen's Counsel) and Edward Bellasis (a Sergeant at Law). Sir Bernard Burke (of the famous Burke's Peerage), at the time Ulster King of Arms, gave the commission the advice that the College should: "be made a Government Department, let its Officers receive fixed salaries from Government, and let all its fees be paid into the public exchequer. This arrangement would, I am sure, be self-supporting and would raise at once the character of the Office and the status of the Heralds." Burke's suggestion for reform was the same arrangement that had already been applied to the Lord Lyon Court in Scotland in 1867, and was to be applied to his own office in 1871. However unlike the Lyon Court, which was a court of law and part of the Scottish Judiciary, the College of Arms has always been an indepen ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 7 Jul 2022 05:09:06 -0400 From: "Dollar General Survey" Subject: Congrats! You've received a Dollar General reward Congrats! You've received a Dollar General reward http://mappearant.sa.com/vWoTIx_pqs_IR41gobcosfxekAS2ZTNPv12rvWUvr8K9hnP0gg http://mappearant.sa.com/1csuXosPJw7J3XEkUxvOjTGxI-neB5YT_2vaGrJXDW1EsZffsA efore the 19th century, there was no need for a single time zone across Finland, and each locality followed its own solar time. This meant that if it was 12:00 in Helsinki, the local times in other localities would range from 11:40.02 in Mariehamn, Cland, to 12:10.53 in Kuopio, North Savo. The railway required precise timetables that earlier means of transport, such as sailing ships and stage-coaches, did not require. The telegraph, which allowed near real-time communication, also made it inconvenient for each location to observe its own solar time. The first railway line in Finland b the HC$meenlinnabHelsinki railway b was inaugurated in 1862. Its timetables were noted in a common mean time, measured at the Helsinki University Observatory from the mean time of UTC+01:39:49.2, known as "Helsinki time". A ball was released at noon and its falling was noted optically at the railway station and the clock adjusted accordingly. If it was raining, which would prevent the ball from being seen from that far away, noon would additionally be announced by a shot from a cannon. The correct time was relayed to the other stations via electrical telegraph, which had been introduced in Finland in 1854. On the R ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 6 Jul 2022 09:02:43 -0400 From: "Wife Riding" Subject: Cheating Hotwife Forces Husband To Gain 6 Inches Cheating Hotwife Forces Husband To Gain 6 Inches http://deedforyou.za.com/9ZFcCGmhP3z7OeeIY4QVN2daB8PTfQOMMqsTXlZ_Nx6qmj8bMg http://deedforyou.za.com/Y-m-AizlKU8IjuMu_2qTh4LHRT9NHvDJxaPpBZtvFddZV5cOWA e heralds at the command of the Convention Parliament proclaimed Charles II, King at Westminster Hall Gate. It was said that William Ryley, who was originally appointed Lancaster Herald by Charles I but then sided with Cromwell, did not even have a tabard with the Royal Arms, as his own had been "plundered in the wars". He had to borrow a decorative one from the tomb of James I in Westminster Abbey instead; the garment was duly returned the next day. The Restoration of Charles II annulled all the Acts of the Parliament and all the actions of the Lord Protector, without penalising any of their supporters (except for the regicides). Accordingly, all the grant of arms of the Commonwealth College was declared null and void. Furthermore, all heralds appointed during the Interregnum lost their offices, while those appointed originally by Charles I returned to their places. The exception was Edward Bysshe, who was removed as Garter, but was instead appointed Clarenceux in 1661, much to the chagrin of Garter Edward Walker. In 1666 as the Great Fire of London swept through the city, Derby Place, the College's home since 1555, was completely gutted and destroyed. Fortunately the College's library was saved, and at first was stored in the Palace of Whitehall, then later moved to the Palace of Westminster, where a temporary office was opened in an apartment called the Queen's court. An announcement was also made in the London Gazette to draw public notice to the situation. Due to a shortage of funds, the planned rebuilding of a new College was delayed until 1670. It was then that Francis Sandford, the Rouge Dragon Pursuivant an ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 6 Jul 2022 05:56:29 -0400 From: "Backyard Revolution" Subject: MIT Device Cuts Power Bills By 65% MIT Device Cuts Power Bills By 65% http://vintain.sa.com/QZAy--X3GRk4d3y7Vs9mZyw64VEyXK1XXxhVZFpKyZXU4AG3 http://vintain.sa.com/Usw7Cbq2exFDVPE_0BVN7Xzg0RGO2SFef9qJ60f_6-dSVzcr_g e defeat and death of Richard III at Bosworth field was a double blow for the heralds, for they lost both their patron, the King, and their benefactor, the Earl Marshal, who was also slain. The victorious Henry Tudor was crowned King Henry VII soon after the battle. Henry's first Parliament of 1485 passed an Act of Resumption, in which large grants of crown properties made by his two predecessors to their supporters were cancelled. Whether this act affected the status of the College's charter is debatable; however, the act did facilitate the de facto recovery of Coldharbour to the crown. Henry then granted the house to his mother Lady Margaret Beaufort, for life. This was because it was supposed that the house was granted personally to John Writhe the Garter King of Arms and not to the heralds as a corporation. As a result, the heralds were left destitute and many of their books and records were lost. Despite this ill treatment from the King, the heralds' position at the royal court remained, and they were compelled by the King to attend him at all times (albeit in rotation). Of the reign of King Henry VIII, it has been said that: "at no time since its establishment, was [the college] in higher estimation, nor in fuller employment, than in this reign." Henry VIII was fond of pomp and magnificence, and thus gave the heralds plenty of opportunity to exercise their roles in his court. In addition, the members of the College were also expected to be regularly despatched to foreign courts on missions, whether to declare war, accompany armies, summon garrisons or deliver messages to foreign potentates and generals. During his magnificent meeting with Francis I of France at the Field of the Cloth of Go ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9290 **********************************************