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Beer Steins News Archive 01-Apr-2008
VanVels' confession airs in court (The Flint Journal)
GRAND RAPIDS -- Two hours after Grand Rapids Police Officer Robert Kozminski was shot to death, Jeffrey VanVels was with a pair of detectives telling a circuitous tale that ended with his own declaration of guilt.
Beer: A different glass for every brew can add to the drinking experience (San Francisco Chronicle)
A German wheat beer arrives in a tall glass that curves from wide mouth to narrow base. A Czech Pilsner arrives in a stretched funnel with a small foot. A Trappist beer arrives in a chunky chalice: a glass bowl perched on a stout stem. And that's just the...
Parody of Wal-Mart Trumps Its Trademark (Law.com via Yahoo! Finance)
Computer store owner Charles Smith has won a two-year legal battle with Wal-Mart, which has demanded he stop making and selling T-shirts and other items with slogans such as "Wal-ocaust" and "Wal-Qaeda." U.S.
Wagner's offers hearty food in wide variety (Coeur d'Alene Press)
COEUR d'ALENE -- From Germany by way of Fresno, Calif., a couple has brought their own unique style of food to the Lake City. Bill and Roxanne Wagner were the third owners of the Old Fresno Hofbrau, but sold it after nine years after being encouraged to relocate to Idaho.
St. Patrick?s Day Isn?t The Holiday It Once Was (The Harvard Crimson)
Harvard students celebrated St. Patrick?s Day with green beaded necklaces and an abundance of Guinness beer at the Queen?s Head Pub on Saturday?but their partying among shamrocks and leprechauns has come a long way from the original meaning of the holiday.
Lawrence History Center turns fires into history lesson (Eagle-Tribune Online)
LAWRENCE ? Twice so far this year the Lawrence History Center has reconstructed city history from the ashes of two devastating fires. The first fire, on Jan. 13, destroyed the century-old Turn Hall on Park Street. About one week later most of a city block was leveled by fire in South Lawrence.
Parody of Wal-Mart Trumps Its Trademark (Law.com)
Computer store owner Charles Smith has won a two-year legal battle with Wal-Mart, which has demanded he stop making and selling T-shirts and other items with slogans such as "Wal-ocaust" and "Wal-Qaeda." U.S. District Judge Timothy C. Batten Sr. found that Smith's products qualified as protected noncommercial speech because his goal was to criticize Wal-Mart, not to make a profit from his ...
Collectibles overtake Europe's newsstands (International Herald Tribune)
Besides a hodgepodge of DVD's, CD's, encyclopedias, books, postcards, toys, newspapers and magazines, a new publication has cropped up at newsstands in Italy and elsewhere in Europe: the partwork.
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