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The Milwaukee Brewers ball-in-glove logo was created by Tom Meindel for the Milwaukee Brewers of Major League Baseball, which used the logo from 1978 to 1993. Other logos were adopted by the team between 1993 and 2019. Beginning in 2017, the Brewers began planning to find a new logo. By 2020 they decided to use the ball-in-glove logo again.
The 18th edition of the dictionary, published in 2009. Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, sometimes referred to simply as Brewer's, is a reference work containing definitions and explanations of many famous phrases, allusions, and figures, whether historical or mythical.
The finale of the Cincinnati Reds series with the Milwaukee Brewers on Thursday afternoon was postponed because of heavy rain in Cincinnati. The Brewers won 7-2 behind a two-run homer by Christian ...
The brewers' guild in Brussels may have made the Duke an honorary member and hung his portrait in their meeting hall. [22] [1] [23]: 81 In his 1874 monograph on Gambrinus, the Belgian political activist and historian Victor Coremans reported that references to Brabant and Flanders in Gambrinus legends seemed to be relatively recent. However, he ...
The Mets kicked it into gear with a feverish, five-run two-out rally to launch past the Brewers, 8-4, and grab Game 1 in front of 40,022 fans on Tuesday night at American Family Field in Milwaukee.
Bernie Brewer was a fixture at Brewers home games until 1984, when the Brewers re-built the bleachers, replacing the chalet with a sound tower and sending Bernie into retirement. By popular demand, Bernie Brewer came out of retirement in 1993, when the fans voted for his return.
One miracle tale says, at the time of an epidemic, rather than stand by while the local people fell ill from drinking water, Arnold had them consume his monastery brews. Because of this, many people in his church survived the plague. [8] This same story is also told of Arnulf or Arnold of Metz, another patron of brewers. [9]
In this case the fir cone would be dipped in the bucket of water before being shaken in order to sprinkle water that ritually purified a person or object. [ 4 ] Alternatively the close association of the objects with depictions of stylised trees has led to the suggestion that it depicts fertilisation. [ 4 ]