STOLOVAYA: THE DINNING HALL
John Locke
KARL MARX
INTERIOR OF THE PRIMAEVAL FOREST OF THE AMAZONS
The exterior of Pointing's Ice Cave
Figure 1
Figure 2
PLATE 8
Table 8
Plate 2.7
Plate 2.6
Max Klinger, A Glove: Anxieties (1881)
Spandrels
Somatosensory cortex parts
Carl Sagan - Johnny Carson
Ivan the terrible & his son
Fig. 5-39
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this photo by Dinesh
The communal drinking of beer through straws was not just the prerogative of some ancient inhabitants of the Fertile Crescent and environs. It is worldwide phenomenon -- attested in China and the Pacific, the Americas and Africa and still widely practiced. The custom is wide-spread that one suspects that another factor is at work beyond simple utility. Certainly, reeds and stalks are easily come by, and their long, uniform hollowness would have invited blowing and sucking. A solid head of husks and yeast of the surface of a brew keeps out oxygen and preserves the beer longer, so it is worth keeping it intact and using a drinking tube to get at the good stuff below. Even if such practicalities argue for independent invention, one is still left with the question of why drinking through straws and employing the same vessel to both make and consume the beverage are nearly universal practices for cereal beer but generally unattested for fruit wines and mead. ~ Page 70
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