From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9641 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, September 1 2022 Volume 14 : Number 9641 Today's Subjects: ----------------- A long-term solution to stubborn belly fat! ["Weight Loss" Subject: A long-term solution to stubborn belly fat! A long-term solution to stubborn belly fat! http://givethumbsup.ru.com/XJIpLeFFSNgYFc3TEeVw8tIqIoptmn9eyhwsiJNy2mD-PkLA8Q http://givethumbsup.ru.com/oyqG_IvYI88r3XOP9SCX7YAmp7hQIfUphMAFf9Umt0PcJrpnPg nder the Constitution, the vice president serves as president of the Senate. They may vote in the Senate (ex officio, for they are not an elected member of the Senate) in the case of a tie, but are not required to. For much of the nation's history the task of presiding over Senate sessions was one of the vice president's principal duties (the other being to receive from the states the tally of electoral ballots cast for president and vice president and to open the certificates "in the Presence of the Senate and House of Representatives", so that the total votes could be counted). Since the 1950s, vice presidents have presided over few Senate debates. Instead, they have usually presided only on ceremonial occasions, such as swearing in new senators, joint sessions, or at times to announce the result of significant legislation or nomination, or when a tie vote on an important issue is anticipated. The Constitution authorizes the Senate to elect a president pro tempore (Latin for "president for a time"), who presides over the chamber in the vice president's absence and is, by custom, the senator of the majority party with the longest record of continuous service. Like the vice president, the president pro tempore does not normally preside over the Senate, but typically delegates the responsibility of presiding to a majority-party senator who presides over the Senate, usually in blocks of one hour on a rotating basis. Frequently, freshmen senators (newly elected ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 30 Aug 2022 05:11:26 -0400 From: "Fight Constipation" Subject: Poop Instantly No Matter How Constipated You Are Poop Instantly No Matter How Constipated You Are http://honoro.za.com/HLgel9YAw0yysMcCM0aPtVVjcyveq-lQLt6GqCfCSvygXxZTaw http://honoro.za.com/ae37HfqYDuKDE4r7mp_AGBYojkLN5MqsQ8UMzVGRRsMxL3lUpw t age 17, Resnik entered Carnegie Institute of Technology, where she joined the Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority. She began college intending to become a math major, but in her second year, after attending electrical engineering lectures with her boyfriend Michael Oldak, she developed a passion for the subject. She was one of three female students in electrical engineering. She was a gourmet cook and a navigator in sports car rallies, in which she took part many times with Oldak in his Triumph TR6. She earned a Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering from Carnegie Mellon University (as it now was) in 1970. She became a member of Tau Beta Pi and Eta Kappa Nu honor societies. Resnik married Oldak on July 14, 1970. Her mother attended the wedding; two sets of invitations were sent out, one describing her as her father's daughter, and the other as her mother's. Upon graduation from Carnegie Mellon, Resnik and Oldak moved to Moorestown, New Jersey, where they both worked for RCA. She was a design engineer on missile and radar projects and won the Graduate Study Program Award. She performed circuit design for the missile and surface radar division. While at RCA, she worked for the Navy building custom integrated circuitry for the phased-array radar control systems and developed electronics and software for NASA's sounding rocket and telemetry systems programs. An academic paper she wrote on special purpose integrated circ ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Aug 2022 08:43:57 -0400 From: "Sleep Connection" Subject: It stopped my husband's snoring completely. It stopped my husband's snoring completely. http://instigato.za.com/vFRTs4_LUgtTPlZUeYmM8PduT3EDnCScm2yUp1BEcQeHfL7e1Q http://instigato.za.com/P07XThuZJ-5X9lnfKBXWNg4lVY1VxgddxwJ930J1YX_KGdhDOw lections to the Senate are held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in even-numbered years, Election Day, and coincide with elections for the House of Representatives. Senators are elected by their state as a whole. The Elections Clause of the United States Constitution grants each state (and Congress, if it so desires to implement a uniform law) the power to legislate a method by which senators are elected. Ballot access rules for independent and minor party candidates also vary from state to state. In 45 states, a primary election is held first for the Republican and Democratic parties (and a select few third parties, depending on the state) with the general election following a few months later. In most of these states, the nominee may receive only a plurality, while in some states, a runoff is required if no majority was achieved. In the general election, the winner is the candidate who receives a plurality of the popular vote. However, in five states, different methods are used. In Georgia, a runoff between the top two candidates occurs if the plurality winner in the general election does not also win a majority. In California, Washington, and Louisiana, a nonpartisan blanket primary (also known as a "jungle primary" or "top-two primary") is held in which all candidates participate in a single primary regardless of party affiliation and the top two candidates in terms of votes received at the primary election advance to the general election, where the winner is the candidate with the greater number of votes. In Lou ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Aug 2022 06:17:14 -0400 From: "Whole Foods Shopper Gift Opportunity" Subject: Leave your feedback and you could WIN! Leave your feedback and you could WIN! http://boutiquez.ru.com/GMhkWLpETOpjjvX1neBOs0r_l_fIHMUw5Rpz418wfdQj2mvYYA http://boutiquez.ru.com/IxPqOZbRxCs9hqOowXrXCDI5eqL9ZNW4_FofWzB2uCj-Ebqh6Q he filibuster failed to prevent the passage of the bill, and further failed to change the vote whatsoever. The bill passed two hours after Thurmond finished speaking by a vote of 60b15, and was signed into law by President Eisenhower less than two weeks later. The Civil Rights Act of 1957 was the first U.S. civil rights bill passed in 82 years. Thurmond received significant criticism, even from Democrats including Talmadge, Russell, and the Southern Caucus as a whole. Talmadge referred to the speech as a form of grandstanding, and Russell denounced it as "personal political aggrandizement". These senators had received several telegrams during Thurmond's speech encouraging them to assist Thurmond in his filibuster by relieving him, and Thurmond's staff received correspondence from hundreds of Southerners congratulating and encouraging him. Southern Democratic senators did not join the filibuster, despite its popularity among their constituents, because (as Russell put it) the South had already secured a compromise in t ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9641 **********************************************