Word: beerful
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...know. I thought I knew everyone who hangs out and parties, but I guess not,” she said. “At the very least, the $2 draft will bring people there,” she added, referring to the pub’s $2 beers on tap. “But it’s probably the best thing Harvard’s done for the social scene since I’ve been here.” With the completion of these hangout spots, Harvard has a handful of new spaces aimed at revitalizing undergraduate campus...
...straddled. In 2002, he made it into the New York Times for exhibiting the compacted car wreck of expatriate art critic Robert Hughes, who'd narrowly survived a collision in Western Australia. For Post-Traumatic Origami, Kesminas placed 68 kg of crushed metal in a plastic vitrine with a beer can and fishing reel, among other objects. He still laughs at the memory: "Robert Hughes is really the champion of Modernism. Here he is in a cube. It's perfect." Nor was it much of a leap from his court-jestering with the Histrionics. Smashed Nissan or song...
...soft, skin-friendly fiber out of cellulose and seaweed, touted for its anti-itch and anti-allergy properties; French sockmaker Rywan has incorporated it in a line of sports socks. At the Tonnerre de Brest microbrewery, Erwan Jestin uses seaweed's natural filtration mechanism to make a tasty beer with 12 different algae. It's even creeping onto European dinner plates, says Patrick Plan. His Brittany-based company, Marinoë, markets a range of seaweed edibles, from red dulse, a sweet-tasting seaweed that grows on rocks, to wakame pasta, made from a mild-flavored kelp. Plan enthuses...
...Stone Cold Steve Austin on TV, on Monday night ‘Raw,’ he’s loud, he’s over-the-top, he’s abrasive, he’s gonna cuss at you, he’s gonna drink beer, he’s gonna be pretty violent,” he said at the Q&A session, drawing cheers from the crowd. “And I had fun doing that! I mean, that was a great...
...unspoken U.S. policy, the BCC may just become the last refuge in Iraq. The liquor store, called the Winery, is doing a booming business. In preparation for the holy month of Ramadan, when alcohol is particularly hard to get in Iraq, the club stockpiled so many cases of beer and wine on its roof that it began to bow inward. They managed to sell it all. The club also sells merchandise such as polo shirts, golf balls and golf towels. "If there wasn't demand for it, I wouldn't sell it," says James Thornett, 33, the Brit who owns...