We start off the show in southern germany at octoberfest, where drinking beer and singing upa songs are the order of the day. Now, after a 2 year break due to the corona virus pandemic, thousands of people are taking part again. This year. The waiters at october fest have a heavy load literally knots because they carry up to 10 of these giant mugs at a time. Now, each of these mugs are filled with one leader of beer or your max reporter brant dennis went to munich to find out how they do it. Greg, i come with whos got . Im friends, dennis, and im carly at octoberfest in front of one of the oldest pence of the festival for the children homer. My job today is to be a waiter and ive seen some people carry 11 leader chunks of beer. Not only that, i have to carry a whole pull after all food. Im pretty nervous, so lets see how i go. Oh, hello. Im learning from a real per, Alexander Christian has been awaiting the children, hamilton for detainees. His day job is in advertising, but hes taking
Oxford-Harrington Rare Disease Centre to Hold Webinar Entitled Pioneering a Path to Rare Disease Therapeutics newswise.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newswise.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
I’m passionate about big old houses, classic cars and the river, so I hit a trifecta when car collector Guy Crouch invited me to Louisisiana, Missouri — about an hour upriver from St. Charles — to see Westwinds, his Moderne-style home perched high above the Mississippi on a pedestal of solid rock. Crouch’s best friend is luring him to Savannah, Georgia, and he’s looking for a buyer for the stunning home, which sits just a bit south of Hannibal. Westwinds could be yours for $995,000. Designed by Beverly T. Nelson, who was the chief architect of the U.S. State Department after World War II, the 4,500-square-foot residence was built by Bopp Construction in 1939 for Pike County Memorial Hospital founder Dr. Eric Alton Cunningham. It was featured in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in June of 1940. “Dr. Cunningham married a society girl from St. Louis, who didn't want to move to Louisiana, and demanded a nice house if she had to move there,” Crouch