[48415] in linux-announce channel archive
Weird Blue Tonic Melts Fat Overnight
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Sumatra Slim Belly Tonic)
Thu Apr 24 07:04:06 2025
Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2025 06:03:52 -0500
From: "Sumatra Slim Belly Tonic" <SumatraSlimBellyTonic@medicinalkit.za.com>
Reply-To: "Sumatra Slim Belly Tonic" <SumatraSlimBellyTonic@medicinalkit.za.com>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>
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Weird Blue Tonic Melts Fat Overnight
http://medicinalkit.za.com/yAYblb6GaVWthMrJH0U500IqMK48709vyFncpEMQGcAKfp2TGQ
http://medicinalkit.za.com/LZo2M7tAJRtkTRF8FSi8BWCvZbqF7MVpBlzUHSsj_um0V5oH7g
orosco Theatre when theatrical producer Oliver Morosco bought out the lease from Harris and Brown. It continued to operate under that name until November 1922 when it reverted once again to the Century Theatre after the firm of Ackerman & Harris took over the lease from Morosco.
The theatre was re-named one final time in 1923 when it was rebranded the Capitol Theatre. This name change occurred in June 1923 when Louis Lurie took over the lease of the theatre. Lurie soon after formed a partnership with fellow Broadway producer Thomas Wilkes, and the two men planned a season of plays brought into San Francisco from the New York stage. The theatre went under renovations, and re-opened with a production of Gladys Buchanan Unger's The Goldfish on July 15, 1923. Its cast was led by Marjorie Rambeau in the role of Jenny, and the production had just completed their run at Broadway's Maxine Elliott's Theatre before arriving in San Francisco. This production was immediately followed by the world premiere of the play The Valley of Content by Blanche Upright, a work adapted by the writer from her earli
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;">orosco Theatre when theatrical producer Oliver Morosco bought out the lease from Harris and Brown. It continued to operate under that name until November 1922 when it reverted once again to the Century Theatre after the firm of Ackerman & Harris took over the lease from Morosco. The theatre was re-named one final time in 1923 when it was rebranded the Capitol Theatre. This name change occurred in June 1923 when Louis Lurie took over the lease of the theatre. Lurie soon after formed a partnership with fellow Broadway producer Thomas Wilkes, and the two men planned a season of plays brought into San Francisco from the New York stage. The theatre went under renovations, and re-opened with a production of Gladys Buchanan Unger's The Goldfish on July 15, 1923. Its cast was led by Marjorie Rambeau in the role of Jenny, and the production had just completed their run at Broadway's Maxine Elliott's Theatre before arriving in San Francisco. This production was immediately followed by the world premiere of the play The Valley of Content by Blanche Upright, a work adapted by the writer from her earli</div>
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