From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9726 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 Wednesday, September 14 2022 Volume 14 : Number 9726 Today's Subjects: ----------------- 2 natural painkillers that your body can produce ["Painkiller Hormones" <] Move your guns immediately (urgent!!!) ["Hiding Guns" Subject: 2 natural painkillers that your body can produce 2 natural painkillers that your body can produce http://practers.sa.com/HTdVKSuL8id_QyyyvWxvtTaiVphD3PkcB8okEmkfsMen-6mpMQ http://practers.sa.com/R2Wn7nZDUBWu444_Qh9ArUBr_Qtx0CBa0iLtLaGyqePfr8tsXg n Hubbard wrote in a 1990 article in The Observer about Sanderson and Whitbread that "their hate-hate relationship has been one of the most enduring in British sport", lasting almost a decade. The same year, Matthew Engel wrote in The Guardian that "the Sanderson-Whitbread feud is, of course, one of the most splendid in sport", and Tom Lamont, in the same newspaper 29 years later, commented that "Whitbread and Sanderson were always uneasy rivals and the enmity that developed during their overlapping careers became as famous as their achievements, and seems to survive in their retirement". Hubbard cited Sanderson's perception that Whitbread received preferential treatment from the British Amateur Athletic Board. The Board's promotions officer, Andy Norman, who had a role in setting British athletes' fees, was a family friend of Whitbread and her mother and coach, Margaret. Margaret Whitbread was also the national coach for women's javelin in 1985, when her daughter was often participating in international events compared to only one in the season up to June 1985 for Sanderson. In 1987, Sanderson threatened to boycott athletics events, for which she was being paid B#1,000 each by British Athletics compared to Whitbread's B#10,000. Sanderson agreed to a new deal at the beginning of June that year. Sanderson also objected to the endorsement that the Whitbreads had given to the Australian athlete Sue Howland, who competed at the 1990 Commonwealth Games after a two-year ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Sep 2022 08:26:54 -0400 From: "Hiding Guns" Subject: Move your guns immediately (urgent!!!) Move your guns immediately (urgent!!!) http://segreed.ru.com/UWKlHdmd9YrbL0DJOS0Ryaj_9rz7vm8Q1tT97klGRbpZ07lQsQ http://segreed.ru.com/tTmIkTE_sS5DeeHGUJkxGGLJfAdG6Mqs5pCcQa1qiyAzAK4J5g February 1983, Resnik was assigned to the crew of STS-41-D, the twelfth Space Shuttle flight, the maiden voyage of the Space Shuttle Discovery, along with Henry Hartsfield, Michael Coats, Steven Hawley and Mike Mullane. During a visit to a contractor's factory, Resnik whispered to Mullane: "there are no maidens on this flight". She was the center of attention on such visits, and one contractor engineer became a stalker, sending her unwelcome letters, poems and gifts. Eventually, after he appeared in the office, he had to be dealt with by NASA security. After Hawley and Mullane had a fawning encounter with actor Bo Derek, who was working on the film Tarzan, the Ape Man, Resnik started calling Mullane "Tarzan" and Hawley "Cheetah"; when the office secretaries heard about this, they began referring to the STS-41-D crew as the "zoo crew". Resnik was a fan of Tom Selleck, and had a coffee cup that said: "Excuse No. 1: I'm Saving Myself for Tom Selleck." Her crewmates hid a poster of Tom Selleck behind the bathroom curtain on Discovery. The STS-41-D mission's launch was delayed three times. The first attempt, on June 25, 1984, was aborted due to a failure of the backup computer. The following day, during the second attempt, the computer detected a fault in one of the Space Shuttle main engines, and shut them down four seconds before liftoff. This was the first time a NASA space mission had been aborted after starting the engines since Gemini 6 in 1965. Discovery h ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Sep 2022 10:34:33 -0400 From: "Global Warming" Subject: Global warming and belly fat Global warming and belly fat http://wrotect.ru.com/i2pFiLmnl4rh1sY2Z4wHVqHpGD7m5upuoUnMIwkYadGGpdUf7A http://wrotect.ru.com/jNHrTJXdvkuYQOePTKr0sv73hhKX895NetyyJ2W_CN7x_b4DPQ ken about the discrimination she has experienced as a black woman. She told The Guardian in 1990 that she had faced racial discrimination (although not in her sporting career), and she felt that sexism was the reason women athletes were not adequately paid. Sanderson experienced racist language and behaviour in school (including being spat on), and has spoken about receiving a racist letter saying that she was not truly British after her 1984 Olympic gold medal. She told Sky Sports in October 2020, "Black athletes didn't have the voice they have now, so I just had to fight my own battles", and expressed disappointment at the continuing lack of Black, Asian and minority representation in sports governing bodies. Tessa: My Life in Athletics, Sanderson's autobiography, was published in 1986. In 1990, she sued several newspapers and was awarded B#30,000 in damages by the High Court of Justice for claims that she had "stolen another woman's husband". Sanderson said that her affair with the man, Derrick Evans (a fitness instructor known as Mr Motivator) began after his marriage had broken up. Sanderson had starred in the fitness videos Cardiofunk (1990) and Body Blitz (c. 1992) with Evans. On 3 May 2010, Sanderson married former judo Olympian Densign White at St Paul's Cathedral in London. Her bridesmaids were fellow Olympic teammates Sharron Davies, Kelly Holmes and Christine Ohuruogu. She ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Sep 2022 07:43:10 -0400 From: "Cannabis Gummies" Subject: Do you have chronic Pain or Hypertension? Try new Keoni CBD Gummies! Do you have chronic Pain or Hypertension? Try new Keoni CBD Gummies! http://postpoly.ru.com/2FLfDBo4WqQ3bGWQS0TdIVJyPlfotpDnPUqdp9S2gqKzwMGPXQ http://postpoly.ru.com/c27SxLhW_-gpdLVpi7zhnduY5fj2f9fAEsmHLEkVGCPTOtVfdA derson won her first major gold medal with a throw of 61.34 m (201 ft 2+3?4 in) in the 1978 Commonwealth Games, the first time England had won Commonwealth gold in the women's javelin since 1962. A few weeks later, Sanderson took silver at the 1978 European Athletics Championships behind Fuchs; she was the bronze medalist at the 1979 European Cup again behind Fuchs, both of them losing out to Romanian C va RC!duly-ZC6rg?. Selected for the 1980 Summer Olympics, she failed to meet the qualifying standard for the final, reaching only 48.76 m (159 ft 11+1?2 in) with her first throw and having her other two attempts declared no-throws. After the 1980 Summer Olympic Games, Sanderson asked Wilf Paish of the Carnegie Institute of Physical Education in Leeds to become her coach, and lived with his family once he agreed. A throw of 61.56 m (201 ft 11+1?2 in) was enough for Sanderson to win at the 1981 Pacific Conference Games. At the 1981 European Cup, she was runner-up behind Antoaneta Todorova of Bulgaria who made a world-record throw of 71.88 m (235 ft 9+3?4 in). She also competed in the pentathlon and heptathlon, setting UK and Commonwealth records for the heptathlon twice in 1981. Later that year, Sanderson had an achilles tendon rupture in her left leg and broke a bone in her throwing arm. Surgery on her achilles tendon was unsuccessful, and she required another operation; the injuries prevented her from competing for 22 months. After returning, Sanderson achieved her career-best javelin throw of 73.58 m (241 ft 4+3?4 in) at the Tarmac Games in Edinburgh on 26 June 1983. It was the third-longest throw by a woman at the time, when the record was 74.76 m (245 ft 3+1?4 in) thrown by Tiina Lillak of Finland ten days previously. S ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Sep 2022 13:30:52 -0400 From: "Alzheimers Quick Test" Subject: Alzheimer's Quick Test: Is Your Bedroom Organized This Way? Alzheimer's Quick Test: Is Your Bedroom Organized This Way? http://healyhprotecor.sa.com/KqU-BOlk2C8X0Ypnc7RTZxnHyybQrEY5zw9BDGV1VuunFIH3Fw http://healyhprotecor.sa.com/18VY5jyyyyygT_Bu89qz43TP9WmHtjlKpTGHstKpa7T_0LuTlA e story quickly gained media attention in the United States, and the survivors' accounts received a great deal of coverage including prominent magazines such as Time and Life. In the years following the Korean War, the US Army established a permanent garrison in Waegwan, Camp Carroll, which is located near the base of Hill 303. The incident was largely forgotten until Lieutenant David Kangas read about the incident in the book South to the Nakdong, North to the Yalu while stationed at Camp Carroll in 1985, and after checking with various US Army and local sources, he realized that the location of the massacre was unknown. He obtained battle records through the National Archives to pinpoint the location and then began to search for the remaining survivors. The original memorial for the POWs was emplaced in 1990 in front of the garrison headquarters, although none of the American survivors were located by Kangas until 1991. In 1999, Fred Ryan and Roy Manring, two of the three surviving POWs, were invited to attend a ceremony at the execution site. Both Ryan and Manring as well as James Rudd, the third surviving POW, had long been denied VA compensation claims for their severe injuries incurred during the execution because they had never been officially designated as prisoners of war by the US Army. Later, the base garrison at Camp Carroll raised funds to construct a much larger ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9726 **********************************************