Author Archives: mike@standardsmichigan.com

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Christmas Message

St. Lucy Bread

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Winter Week Week 51 | December 16 – 22 (Exams & Graduation)


Monday |  December 16 | Colloquium 16:00 UTC

Health 400 | OB-GYN


Tuesday |  December 17 | Colloquium 16:00 UTC

Electric Service Metering & Billing


Wednesday | December 18 | Colloquium 16:00 UTC

Du froid


Thursday | December 19 | Colloquium 16:00 UTC

προμηθέας 300


Friday |  December 20 | Colloquium 16:00 UTC

Observatories & Planetariums


Saturday | December 21


Sunday |  December 22

 


 

 

Autumn Syllabus Week 50 | December 9 – 15

Craighead Diocesan School | Timaru New Zealand


Monday | December 9 | Colloquium 16:00 UTC

Intellectual Property


Tuesday | December 10 | Colloquium 16:00 UTC

Solar (Winter)


Wednesday | December 11 | Colloquium 16:00 UTC

print (“Hello World!”)


Thursday | December 12 | Colloquium 16:00 UTC

Elevators & Lifts


Friday | December 13 | Colloquium 16:00 UTC

Lively Arts 300


Saturday | December 14


Sunday | December 15


World Clock

Crop Calendar Charts

List of multinational festivals and holidays

Mince Pie & Tea

BSI Group: Consumer, Retail & Food Standards

This British festive pastry has origins dating back to the 13th century when European Crusaders returned from the Middle East with recipes containing meats, fruits, and spices. These early pies, known as “mincemeat pies,” combined minced meat (usually mutton), suet, fruits, and spices such as cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg, symbolizing the gifts of the Magi. In the 16th century, the pies were rectangular, representing Jesus’ crib.

Over time, the meat content reduced, and by the Victorian era, the recipe had evolved to primarily include dried fruits, suet, and spices, aligning with the modern version of the mince pie. Traditionally enjoyed during the Christmas season, mince pies are now small, round pastries filled with a mixture called mincemeat, which typically contains no meat but a blend of dried fruits, sugar, spices, and sometimes brandy or other spirits.

Tea

Winter Moon

 

They’re stingier now, the rowdy boys, in pitching stones
that rattle your shuttered windows;
they don’t deprive you of your sleep; and hugging
the threshold, the door stays shut

that used to swing so easily
on its hinges. Less and less do you hear now:
“While I, who am yours, am dying all night long,
you, Lydia, are sleeping?”

You will age, in turn, and, spurned in the lonely alley,
you’ll wail at the arrogance of paramours
while the rising Thracian wind rages
in the dark of the moon.

Then you’ll feel how the blazing heat
and lust that maddens mares
will rage around your ulcered liver,
not without a sob

that excited boys take more delight
in green ivy than drab myrtle,
and dedicate sere leaves to the east wind,
winter’s companion.

 

23 BC | Rome

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