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These 3 Seeds Kill The Herpes Virus
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Herpesyl)
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Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2025 11:18:04 +0200
From: "Herpesyl" <Herpesyl@tribalxforce.shop>
Reply-To: "Herpesyl" <Herpesyl@tribalxforce.shop>
Subject: These 3 Seeds Kill The Herpes Virus
To: <sipb-afsreq-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
Message-ID: <7dhzfip5ryecge5n-h7f30y1yfa9cur9i-3120b-1fa30@tribalxforce.shop>
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These 3 Seeds Kill The Herpes Virus
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mber 22, 1918. Some sources state Curran purchased the Cort Theatre prior to its re-naming, and sold it in 1922. However, a December 1920 report in Variety reports he divested of his financial interests in the theatre, indicating he was only one of several financial investors in the theatre at the time of that sale. He sold his shares in the Curran Theatre with the intention of building a new theatre with funds raised through that sale. The sale was prompted by an agreement he had made with the Shuberts in which they agreed to lease the new theatre from Curran for a period of ten years.
Although Curran sold his financial interests in the old Curran Theatre in December 1920, he remained the theatre's lessee and manager through September 1, 1921. During his three year tenure at the theatre he worked closely with the Shubert family's theatrical enterprise, and the theatre was booked with productions the Shuberts brought into the Curran. Some of the productions performed at the theatre during the time included Thompson Buchanan's Civilian Clothes (1919), the Fanchon and Marco Revue (1919), and The Girl in the Limousine (1920). In 1921 Fortune Gallo's San Carlo Opera Company performed for three weeks at the theatre, performing a total of 18 different operas.
The SFS orchestra remained committed to performing at the Curran The
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;">mber 22, 1918. Some sources state Curran purchased the Cort Theatre prior to its re-naming, and sold it in 1922. However, a December 1920 report in Variety reports he divested of his financial interests in the theatre, indicating he was only one of several financial investors in the theatre at the time of that sale. He sold his shares in the Curran Theatre with the intention of building a new theatre with funds raised through that sale. The sale was prompted by an agreement he had made with the Shuberts in which they agreed to lease the new theatre from Curran for a period of ten years. Although Curran sold his financial interests in the old Curran Theatre in December 1920, he remained the theatre's lessee and manager through September 1, 1921. During his three year tenure at the theatre he worked closely with the Shubert family's theatrical enterprise, and the theatre was booked with productions the Shuberts brought into the Curran. Some of the productions performed at the theatre during the time included Thompson Buchanan's Civilian Clothes (1919), the Fanchon and Marco Revue (1919), and The Girl in the Limousine (1920). In 1921 Fortune Gallo's San Carlo Opera Company performed for three weeks at the theatre, performing a total of 18 different operas. The SFS orchestra remained committed to performing at the Curran The</div>
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