Subject: | |
From: | |
Reply To: | |
Date: | Wed, 19 Aug 1998 20:10:18 -0700 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
mplatts wrote:
>
> SCOTT HOWELL wrote:
> >
> > My name is Scott Howell. I am the director of an external degree
> > program at Brigham Young University. In your research, are you aware
> > of interstate differences for granting alcohol licenses. Which states are
> > most conservative and which ones are most liberal?
> >
> > Our community is trying to convince the city council to NOT approve a
> > hard liquor license at the local golf course and it would be helpful to
> > have some benchmarks for what other areas are doing.
> >
> > Thanks,
> >
> > Scott Howell, PhD
> KENTUCKY. Cannot buy wine from another state unless you either;
> bring it in yourself or go through a licensed wine distributor.
> you are not permitted to observe wine or spirits in a shop on sunday,
> they have to be covered over, but you can buy as much beer as you want.
> The local gas station is actually promoting bud light near a filling
> pump.
> Indiana. no beer or wine on sunday except in a restaurant selling food.
> Pennsylavania, beer only on sundays. no drinking alcohol on sundays
> until after 6.00 pm.
> New York is like England, totally heathen, anytime any place.
> Regards to the club. In my research why people join clubs I have
> discovered the following;
> 1. to enjoy the sport (so why drink??)
> 2. forget their spouse (especially at a golf club)
> 3. inchangeable personality trait.
> If your golf club is anything like the ones I have visited these last
> six years in America, you have more chance of winning the powerball than
> stopping the bar with alcohol getting open.
> Next time you see a round of golf, watch who attends, body language
> (besides the actually playing of a shot) and there is your real answer.
> hope and wish you luck.
> martin Platts h.c.i.m.a.
|
|
|