New theme

If you didn’t notice i have been playing around with this new theme here. I know jan misses his lan fairy but hey. Sometimes you gotta take one for the team, and although its not really taking it for the team if you like it. I guess this would be considered the same thing. (did that make any sense?) Ooh well i usually dont so don’t hold me to it or i will if you know what i mean.

BBQ on the 6th check the enents forum for details. If you cant click all the way there just click here.

Also if you are not aware queens has this crazy place called a beer garden. There Oktoberfest celebration is this weekend. Raz and i will be there. our goal is to drink it all. We will die. I hope you can see it cause we wont be able to. Please take pictures and send them to me. Buschleague!! ( i always wanted to say that in a post.

The Origin of Bevo

Bevo was a non-alcoholic malt beverage, or near beer, brewed in the United States by Anheuser-Busch. It enjoyed its greatest success during prohibition, when beer was illegal. The Anheuser-Busch company started brewing Bevo when alcoholic beverages were prohibited in 1916 [1] by the United States armed forces. Production rose greatly with national prohibition in 1919, and Bevo was by far the most popular of the many “cereal beverages” or “near beers” of the time. At the peak of its popularity in the early 1920s, more than five million cases of Bevo were sold annually. Labels on the bottles billed it as “Bevo the Beverage”. The name “Bevo” was coined from the word “beverage” and the Slavic languages word for beer “pivo”, and was pronounced “Bee-vo”.

Info found by Hempknight

The “Real” History of Bevo

I was watching Sportscenter before work this morning and one of the sportscasters where talking about Texas University … than I heard the word … “Bevo!” Yes thats right …. Bevo! This is the history of where Bevo came from … besides the COD retard-hoppy-boy.

It’s one of the best-known stories on the UT campus. During a late night visit to Austin, a group of Texas Aggie pranksters branded the University’s first longhorn mascot “13-0,” the score of a football game won by Texas A&M. In order to save face, UT students altered the brand to read “Bevo” by changing the “13″ to a “B,” the “-” to an “E,” and inserting a “V” between the dash and the “0.” For years, Aggies have proudly touted the stunt as the reason the steer acquired his name. But was the brand really changed? And is that why he’s called Bevo?

Texas University Proud Tradition