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Ceiling Cat

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Feb 25, 2009
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True (unless they pay somebody a big enough bribe).
A loophole allows Americans to call their sparkling wines ‘champagne’. In 1891, the Treaty of Madrid decreed that only the Champagne region was allowed to use that name; the rule was reaffirmed in the Treaty of Versailles, 1919. However, the US never ratified the Treaty of Versailles, instead they signed a separate peace agreement with Germany. This did not include the alcohol stipulations, as the US was in the midst of Prohibition at the time. When Prohibition was lifted, American wine-merchants took advantage of this loophole, freely selling their own ‘Champagne’, much to the chagrin of the French industry.
 

Ceiling Cat

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Instead of just donating money to the New York Food Bank, Toyota offered kaizen, a Japanese word meaning “continuous improvement”. Toyota sent its engineers to the soup kitchen and reduced wait time from 90 to 18 minutes
 

Ceiling Cat

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Last edited:

shack

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Oct 2, 2001
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Toronto
A loophole allows Americans to call their sparkling wines ‘champagne’. In 1891, the Treaty of Madrid decreed that only the Champagne region was allowed to use that name; the rule was reaffirmed in the Treaty of Versailles, 1919. However, the US never ratified the Treaty of Versailles, instead they signed a separate peace agreement with Germany. This did not include the alcohol stipulations, as the US was in the midst of Prohibition at the time. When Prohibition was lifted, American wine-merchants took advantage of this loophole, freely selling their own ‘Champagne’, much to the chagrin of the French industry.
Would France allow an American "champagne" to be called that in France or the other signing countries of Versailles. Just wondering?
 
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