Julian Ruiz and Tania Muñoz celebrated St. Patrick's Day at Tioga-Sequoia by sipping on cold, freshly brewed beer dyed green while wearing all-green attire, cheering for the Mexico baseball team’s victory...
With St. Patrick’s Day and Cinco de Mayo right around the corner, so too are the common traditions of using these occasions as an excuse for drinking, pinching people who don't wear green and the commercialization...
March 17 of every year is dedicated to a religious holiday where people across the world wear shamrock accessories and green attire in fear of getting pinched by peers. But the elementary tradition is now old news, and the showcasing of green attire has a whole new meaning.
For those of age, the celebration of St. Patrick’s Day may go beyond the folklores of leprechauns and traditions of wearing green to avoid getting pinched.
For most, wearing the color green and pinching those who don’t, and going to parties and drinking massive amounts of beer are generally the activities most associated with the day that comes in the middle of March every year.
As many of us travel to class today with blurry green memories, we are doubly bummed. Not only are we nursing painful hangovers, we are doing so on a Wednesday.
Public House has a full day of Irish fun planned with multiple specials on drinks such as Carbombs, Dublin Apples, Bailey̢۪s and Jemeson Irish Whiskey.
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