Blackrocks Brewery is a craft brewery in Marquette, Michigan. Taking the
name from a local landmark, former pharmaceutical salesmen David Manson
and Andy Langlois opened Blackrocks in 2010. They originally brewed
their products in the basement of a Victorian-style house (pictured),
and the building's two other floors were used as a taproom. By 2013,
persistent high demand for Blackrocks' beer led Manson and Langlois to
expand their brewing capacity, including the purchase and conversion of
a former Coca-Cola bottling plant. In the early 2020s, they expanded
Blackrocks' taproom into an adjacent property, which doubled its
available indoor area. Blackrocks produced 12,687 barrels of beer in
2023, up about 11 percent from the year prior, and they are the largest
craft brewery in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Their most popular beer is
51K, an American IPA named for a local ski marathon.

Read more: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackrocks_Brewery>

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Today's selected anniversaries:

1909:

Fifty-nine days after leaving New York City with three
passengers, Alice Huyler Ramsey arrived in San Francisco to become the
first woman to drive an automobile across the contiguous United States.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_Huyler_Ramsey>

1944:

IBM presented the first program-controlled calculator to
Harvard University, after which it became known as the Mark I
(pictured).
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvard_Mark_I>

1998:

Car bombs exploded simultaneously at the American embassies in
the East African capital cities of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi,
Kenya, killing more than 200 people and injuring more than 4,000 others.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1998_United_States_embassy_bombings>

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Wiktionary's word of the day:

mend:
1. (transitive)
2. To physically repair (something that is broken, defaced, decayed,
torn, or otherwise damaged).
3. (figurative)
4. To add fuel to (a fire).
5. To correct or put right (an error, a fault, etc.); to rectify, to
remedy.
6. To put (something) in a better state; to ameliorate, to improve, to
reform, to set right.
7. To remove fault or sin from (someone, or their behaviour or
character); to improve morally, to reform.
8. In mend one's pace: to adjust (a pace or speed), especially to match
that of someone or something else; also, to quicken or speed up (a
pace).
9. (archaic) To correct or put right the defects, errors, or faults of
(something); to amend, to emend, to fix.
10. (archaic) To increase the quality of (someone or something); to
better, to improve on; also, to produce something better than (something
else).
11. (archaic) To make amends or reparation for (a wrong done); to atone.
12. (archaic except UK, regional) To restore (someone or something) to a
healthy state; to cure, to heal. [...]
13. (intransitive)
14. (figurative)
15. Of an illness: to become less severe; also, of an injury or wound,
or an injured body part: to get better, to heal.
16. Of a person: to become healthy again; to recover from illness.
17. (archaic) Now only in least said, soonest mended: to make amends or
reparation.
18. (chiefly Scotland) To become morally improved or reformed. [...]
<https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/mend>

___________________________
Wikiquote quote of the day:

      Thank you, Madam Vice-President, for the trust we have put in me
— but maybe more so, thank you for bringing back the joy.      
  --Tim Walz
<https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Tim_Walz>
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