Actually, there's not really an exemption for "sports bars".
If you're a "food service or drinking establishment", you are exempt if the establishment is less than 3750 square feet, you have no more than 4 TVs, no more than one per room, and none of them are 56" or larger.
The only difference if you're not a "food service or drinking establishment"? The limit drops to 2000 square feet.
I grew up in a pretty small church, but we were licensed as a food service establishment, because there was a wedding rehearsal dinner, a wedding reception, a funeral dinner, a father-son banquet, or something else almost every week. It's my understanding that potluck dinners don't count, but surely every church has people getting married and people getting buried, don't they?
Seems to me that the Metropolitan Sewer District already uses bacteria on organic matter, without getting any ethanol. Milwaukee is selling their organic matter as Milorganite, but most other cities just *waste* human waste.
Of course, there's always the possibility that your E85-ready vehicle will run like merde. And if your neighbor's RV running biodiesel smells like french fries, what will your E85 car smell like?
Mike Swaine pointed out, years ago, that the most fastest, most efficient, most popular COBOL compiler for the PC was itself written in COBOL, and it compiles itself.
Writing a compiler in COBOL sounds ghastly, but it seems that if you're a language lawyer, you can use any language for any job.
There's a perception that PERL is slow, but studies show that while it takes a little longer to get started, once it gets started, it's as fast as anything else. If you're using a microapp to write "Hello, user from 192.168.175.42, haven't seen you for 23 days, 21 hours and 3 minutes" on every page, writing it in C is going to be a lot faster than PERL, because it stops as soon as it starts. If you're performing a sieve to determine whether a 42-digit number is prime or not, then PERL is going to be just about as fast.
I love writing CGI in C because you can put system-wide configuration data in a header file, and it gets compiled into the code. But if you need regular expressions, or want to FTP information from another site, it's a lot easier to do that in PERL.
Unfortunately, there isn't room here in the margin to post it....
If you're a "food service or drinking establishment", you are exempt if the establishment is less than 3750 square feet, you have no more than 4 TVs, no more than one per room, and none of them are 56" or larger.
The only difference if you're not a "food service or drinking establishment"? The limit drops to 2000 square feet.
I grew up in a pretty small church, but we were licensed as a food service establishment, because there was a wedding rehearsal dinner, a wedding reception, a funeral dinner, a father-son banquet, or something else almost every week. It's my understanding that potluck dinners don't count, but surely every church has people getting married and people getting buried, don't they?
Source:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/uscode17/usc_sec_17_00000110----000-.html
Seems to me that the Metropolitan Sewer District already uses bacteria on organic matter, without getting any ethanol. Milwaukee is selling their organic matter as Milorganite, but most other cities just *waste* human waste. Of course, there's always the possibility that your E85-ready vehicle will run like merde. And if your neighbor's RV running biodiesel smells like french fries, what will your E85 car smell like?
Mike Swaine pointed out, years ago, that the most fastest, most efficient, most popular COBOL compiler for the PC was itself written in COBOL, and it compiles itself.
Writing a compiler in COBOL sounds ghastly, but it seems that if you're a language lawyer, you can use any language for any job.
There's a perception that PERL is slow, but studies show that while it takes a little longer to get started, once it gets started, it's as fast as anything else. If you're using a microapp to write "Hello, user from 192.168.175.42, haven't seen you for 23 days, 21 hours and 3 minutes" on every page, writing it in C is going to be a lot faster than PERL, because it stops as soon as it starts. If you're performing a sieve to determine whether a 42-digit number is prime or not, then PERL is going to be just about as fast.
I love writing CGI in C because you can put system-wide configuration data in a header file, and it gets compiled into the code. But if you need regular expressions, or want to FTP information from another site, it's a lot easier to do that in PERL.