Word: anchors
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...Anchor Porter: If you like the taste of liquid smoke, stick with other porters. This Anchor Porter excels at delivering a complex taste of chocolate and molasses accentuated with smoky undertones. Unraveling this beer is like taking an orgo midterm, only much more enjoyable. What’s better, it’s one of the easiest porters to find at most better beer stores...
Beyond hints of chocolate, barley, oats and whatever else, the bottom line is that there are better beers out there than Sam Adams and Blue Moon. Drinking better beer is neither elitist nor expensive, and it’s so much more satisfying. A six-pack of Anchor Porter will set you back just as much as a six of Sam (and, by extension, bottles of better beer in Loker should also cost the same if offered). The difference is in the care that these smaller breweries take in crafting their beers. Try one sometime. You’ll find...
...reef ten miles southwest of the Marquesas. He was relying on the supposition that the Atocha had probably split asunder on the reef. But a small find that at first seemed encouraging led him astray. In 1973 Fisher's boat, the Virgalona, hauled up his first Atocha finds, an anchor and three silver bars, some two miles or so from the site that Fisher had targeted. Says McHaley: "I wish we had never found them. It was a false lead that cost us years." The random wreckage from the lost ship had been scattered by a second hurricane centuries before...
...AILING. PETER JENNINGS, 66, well-traveled TV journalist and sole anchor since 1983 of ABC's World News Tonight; with lung cancer; in New York City. With a hoarse voice and characteristic matter-of-fact delivery, Jennings, who was conspicuously absent during the network's on-site coverage of the tsunami in Asia and the death of Pope John Paul II, revealed his illness to viewers in a taped message at the end of a broadcast last week. He will continue to anchor the news while undergoing chemotherapy starting this week...
AILING. PETER JENNINGS, 66, well-traveled TV journalist and sole anchor since 1983 of ABC's World News Tonight; with lung cancer; in New York City. His voice hoarse during his characteristic matter-of-fact delivery, Jennings, who was conspicuously absent during the network's on-site coverage of the tsunami in South Asia and the death of Pope John Paul II, revealed his illness to viewers in a taped message at the end of a broadcast last week. He will continue to anchor the news while undergoing chemotherapy, starting this week...