Word: beers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...medical school. But, he describes people with entirely opposite aspirations and ideals. "It was clear to me from the first day who was going into family business, law, power, and who was going into services and helping people. The people who spent a lot of time arranging beer parties, making sure to be at the right place at the right time, and taking care to date the proper girl of social eligibility, were headed towards money--in business and industry...
Like most American publications. The Crimson depends for a large part of our revenue on paid advertising. Some of our staff might find fault with many of the ads we regularly run--the buxom Nordic woman peddling her favorite beer, or the "Voulez-vouz Pernod with me?" ad. But we run these ads, with the recognition, however unhappy, that without them we might not be able to continue publishing...
...work any more. As American productivity, once the exuberant engine of national wealth, has dipped to an embarrassingly uncompetitive low, Americans have shaken their heads: the country's old work ethic is dead. About the only good words for it now emanate from Ronald Reagan and certain beer commercials. Those ads are splendidly mythic playlets, romantic idealizations of men in groups who blast through mountains or pour plumingly molten steel in factories, the work all grit and grin. Then they retire to flip around iced cans of sacramental beer and debrief one another in a warm sundown glow...
Coming into her senior year Lisa Bernstein had three main goals--besides softball. One was to pass all of her courses and graduate on time. Second was to enjoy her senior year, and third was to find a job for when she got out. Sipping beer, Lisa explains the job offer she accepted from a computer company in Oregon. She turned and asks, smiling, "Guess which goal I lave left to pass--I mean attain...
...Louis has long been loved as a city of beer and baseball, riverboats and tree-lined avenues, French fur traders, German burghers, and that distinctive 630-ft.-high stainless-steel arch, a symbol of the city's historic role as "Gateway to the West." At the turn of the century, St. Louis was the nation's fourth largest city. It is the birthplace of T.S. Eliot, the ice cream cone and, some say, the blues...