Word: beerã
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...Almost as soon as freshmen first arrive on campus—in between awkward theatrical performances about contraception and date-rape, and ultimately futile, furtive searches for beer??they begin to feign an interest in baseball just as the local team wraps up its season. No matter if they are from Baltimore or Bakersfield, Bucharest or Beirut, many Harvard students—for a month at least in early autumn—are rabid Red Sox fans...
...river dancer, Whitney L. Kress ’08, gestured to the room’s decorations and said, “I think it means this,” about the significance of St. Patrick’s day. “Music, dancing, drinking beer??everyone dancing and just having a good time.” But Celtic Languages and Literatures Professor Catherine McKenna said the parades and celebrations associated with St. Patrick’s Day now do not reflect the original religious significance of the holiday. In Ireland, St. Patrick?...
...elitist? A snob? Far from it. I want everyone to appreciate and experience the variety and beauty of beer, regardless of gender, sexuality, religion, ethnicity or race. Vote with your glass: We don’t need less beer??we need better beer...
...education in the art of beer. Approximately 55 students gathered this past Saturday for the inaugural session of “Beer School,” an event sponsored by the Cambridge Queen’s Head pub. The school aims to “extend the knowledge about beer?? among Harvard students says Philip “Beamer” R. Eisele ’08, a student manager at the pub. At the presentation, Jaime C. Schier, representative from Boston-based Harpoon Brewery, enlightened students about the origins of beer, and its importance to historical?...
...first time in recent memory, Harvard again has its own beer??a micro-brewed ale unveiled this year. But beyond that, today’s ceremony is utterly unlike its 17th-century precursor. There will be no debate among members of the Class of 2007. And alumni in the audience certainly won’t be asked for their views...