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Grex > Agora47 > #131: Soda 16-20 ounce bottles of not available | |
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wh
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Soda 16-20 ounce bottles of not available
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Oct 28 03:35 UTC 2003 |
Busch's grocery no longer sells 16 or 20 ounce bottles of soda pop.
They said it was the distributor's choice. They started selling 24
ounce Pepsi's this summer. I switched to Coke. Now Coke has followed
suit.
The next lowest size in 12 ounces in cans--but not bottles.
Does Kroger's or any other grocery store sell 16 ounce bottles? Is this
just local to the Arbor/Ypsi area or statewide?
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| 58 responses total. |
slynne
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response 1 of 58:
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Oct 28 04:03 UTC 2003 |
I have noticed that some distributers are carrying 8oz cans. I like
that because that is about as much pop as I will drink these days. I
found those at Target. 24oz is just too much. Sheesh.
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bru
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response 2 of 58:
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Oct 28 04:14 UTC 2003 |
I complained to kroger when they made the switch several months ago. It is
the distributors decision. werent the orgiginal bottles 12 ozs?
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gull
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response 3 of 58:
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Oct 28 14:13 UTC 2003 |
I figured the 8 oz. cans were a Halloween thing.
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anderyn
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response 4 of 58:
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Oct 28 14:50 UTC 2003 |
They are. And it's annoying that the'y more expensive than the bigger size.
I like less pop since I am trying to cut the habit waaaay down.
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gull
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response 5 of 58:
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Oct 28 18:49 UTC 2003 |
For a brief period of time the Meijer gas station was selling 20 oz.
cans of Coke. They were the same diameter as a 12-oz. can, but taller.
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tod
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response 6 of 58:
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Oct 28 19:50 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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happyboy
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response 7 of 58:
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Oct 28 20:24 UTC 2003 |
be nice, he's sad that his crap comes in a different format.
A TRADEGY!!!
:(~~~
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gull
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response 8 of 58:
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Oct 28 21:30 UTC 2003 |
Re #6: So will lemon juice! ;>
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aruba
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response 9 of 58:
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Oct 28 23:09 UTC 2003 |
I've switched to plain carbonated water. Get the fizz without the sugar.
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tod
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response 10 of 58:
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Oct 28 23:48 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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gelinas
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response 11 of 58:
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Oct 29 01:19 UTC 2003 |
(I have a seltzer bottle, so I make my own carbonated water. Not sure how
that works for sodium, but it shouldn't be any more than the tap water I start
with. May not be carbonated, just fizzy.)
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keesan
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response 12 of 58:
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Oct 29 01:20 UTC 2003 |
Hospital offers all its patients 8 oz cans of soda at lunch and dinner. I
was amazed at the number of sick people drinking soda. Juice was allowed only
at breakfast.
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remmers
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response 13 of 58:
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Oct 29 01:56 UTC 2003 |
I don't even drink it when I'm well. Vile stuff.
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gull
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response 14 of 58:
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Oct 29 04:03 UTC 2003 |
I wonder if it's mainly the sugar or the carbonic acid in soda that's
bad for teeth? If it's the acid, I'd expect carbonated water to be just
as bad.
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jep
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response 15 of 58:
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Oct 29 04:45 UTC 2003 |
I discussed this with my dentist just a couple of days ago (same time
I asked him about the lemon juice; see the lemon juice item). He told
me it's the sugar that's bad for your teeth.
He also said he's read that the carbonation is bad for your bones. He
said there are a lot of teenagers getting broken bones these days
because they have weak bones from drinking too many carbonated
beverages.
A month or so ago, my son's dentist told my son, and his mother and I,
that his current pet peeve is carbonated beverages because he's
convinced they're bad for the teeth. We didn't discuss it in more
detail at the time.
I discussed all of this with my son a few days ago. We made a pact
for the two of us to cut down on carbonated beverages. We're both
going to miss them, but we will get by somehow.
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mcnally
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response 16 of 58:
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Oct 29 07:20 UTC 2003 |
Are carbonated beverages supposed to be bad for the bones, in his opinion,
because of some inherent property or is it because they're likely to
replace calcium-rich milk as the beverage of choice?
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rcurl
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response 17 of 58:
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Oct 29 07:29 UTC 2003 |
Carbonation alone shouldn't be bad for you. After all, you breath out CO2.
However most carbonated beverages contain sugar, which can lead to tooth
decay. The acidity of carbonated water is weak, and certainly much less
acid than stomach fluids.
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tsty
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response 18 of 58:
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Oct 29 07:33 UTC 2003 |
sugar - caffiene - water - flavor .. it;s all trash/junk - *NO* for EverOne!
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rcurl
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response 19 of 58:
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Oct 29 07:35 UTC 2003 |
Maybe, water is OK?
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mcnally
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response 20 of 58:
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Oct 29 08:45 UTC 2003 |
No, no water! If a kangaroo mouse can go dry, surely you can, too.. :-p
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remmers
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response 21 of 58:
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Oct 29 13:26 UTC 2003 |
I think TS meant that the combination of all four is bad.
I will confess to being a caffeine addict. Coffee, with minimal additives.
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gull
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response 22 of 58:
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Oct 29 13:57 UTC 2003 |
Re #16: Most experts seem to feel there's nothing inherent in carbonated
beverages that hurts bones, it's just that they replace other beverages
that *help*. Most people simply don't get enough calcium.
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edina
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response 23 of 58:
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Oct 29 16:13 UTC 2003 |
John, are you guys going to Dr. Rizzo?
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