Ark. funeral wake turns into brawl over beer

Posted by admin | News | Posted on April 4th, 2009

The News Review:

- Ark. funeral wake turns into brawl over beer
- You want beer? We are loaded around here
- Is Bud Light still world’s No. 1 selling beer?
- Can beer ads during hoops

Ark. funeral wake turns into brawl over beer
Houston Chronicle
— Sheriff’s deputies say a Texas woman started a brawl at a wake in Arkansas when she arrived with a beer can in her hand. Anna Sindelar 52 of Splendora Texas faces a third-degree domestic battery charges as does Cynthia J. Hall 46 of Magnolia over the fight March 29. Deputies say Sindelar arrived at the Christies Chapel Church with a beer can in hand and that she refused to leave. Sindelar allegedly grabbed a man by the face leaving scratch marks on his lower right cheek and causing him to bleed.
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You want beer? We are loaded around here
Philadelphia Inquirer
(Make that 3057 now that skar Blues Brewing of Colorado has managed to sneak its Mama’s Little Yella Pils past the anti-drug beer label censors. )Here’s what else I found this week as I went foraging through local beer stacks for new bottles and taps. Twin Lakes Brewing has been chugging along in virtual anonymity on a historic 252-acre farm in Greenville Del. for three years but its beer was never available anywhere other than in its own back yard.

Is Bud Light still world’s No. 1 selling beer?
Bizjournals.com
Snow which is brewed by. saw its sales volumes jump 19 percent in 2008 putting it ahead of Bud Light and Budweiser according to data from researcher Plato Logic Reuters reported. But Dave Peacock president of St.

Can beer ads during hoops
Atlanta Journal Constitution
Thousands more young lives are disrupted or destroyed. Any college president will point to student alcohol use as the most serious and costly concern on campus today. Despite such tragedies many in higher education continue to market beer to their underage students and other young viewers during televised college sporting events. And no college sports event is more awash in beer ads than the NCAA men’s basketball tournament. The NCAA’s refusal to eliminate beer ads —- after requests from a third of its member institutions and hundreds of coaches athletic directors and youth advocates around the country —- demonstrates a callous disregard for its mission to serve the best interests of higher education college athletics and student athletes. It undermines colleges’ efforts to address student alcohol problems and demeans the values of college sports. n its face the NCAA’s advertising and promotional policy seems reasonable enough.

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