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BELTWAY brew-across-america-min.JPG

Anheuser-Busch has organized its sixth annual Brew Across America Congressional Brewing Competition — set to take place at a spot not all that far from the U.S. Capitol itself. Six “brewing teams” comprised of 12 bipartisan members of Congress will go head-to-head for the coveted Brew Democracy Cup. (Image courtesy of Anheuser-Busch)

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Former Anheuser-Busch CEO August Busch IV exits the Swansea, Ill., police station to a waiting car Tuesday, July 11, 2017. Busch is under investigation for appearing “too intoxicated to take off” hours after a helicopter landed in an office park near St. Louis. Police on Tuesday did not name Busch as the pilot, but he is identified in a search warrant application. (Derik Holtmann/Belleville News-Democrat via AP)

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This October 2016 photo provided by Anheuser-Busch shows a self-driving truck that delivers beer, in Colorado. Anheuser-Busch said it completed the world's first commercial shipment by self-driving truck, sending a beer-filled tractor-trailer on a journey of more than 120 miles through Colorado. (Kyle Bullington/Otto/Anheuser-Busch via AP)

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FILE - In this Thursday, March 5, 2015, file photo, Budweiser beer cans are seen at a concession stand at McKechnie Field in Bradenton, Fla. A British court has ruled that two groups of SABMiller shareholders should vote separately on Anheuser-Busch InBev’s 79 billion pound ($104 million) takeover, effectively giving smaller investors the outside chance to derail the deal. he decision Tuesday, AUG. 23, 2016 is seen as a concession to smaller shareholders who complained that their payout plummeted in relation to larger investors after the pound fell following Britain’s vote to leave the European Union. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

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An Anheuser-Busch plant in northwest Georgia has temporarily halted its production of beer in order to supply thousands of cans of drinking water to flood-ravaged Texas and Oklahoma. (Anheuser-Busch)

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St. Louis County prosecutor Bob McCulloch. (AP Photo/Tom Gannam)

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FILE - This undated file photo provided by Anheuser-Busch shows former A-B CEO August A. Busch III, who was CEO of Anheuser-Busch Companies for nearly three decades before his 2002 retirement, remaining as board chairman until 2006. A St. Louis jury ruled Friday, May 16, 2014, that Anheuser-Busch did not discriminate against a former executive who sued because she earned significantly less than a male predecessor. The jury of seven women and five men sided with the beer-maker, a onetime family business now owned by Belgium-based brewer InBev. (AP Photo/Anheuser-Busch Inc., File)

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In this photo provided by Anheuser-Busch is former A-B CEO August A. Busch III. Busch III, was CEO of Anheuser-Busch Companies for nearly three decades before his 2002 retirement, remaining as board chairman until 2006. The St. Louis brewer is being sued for gender discrimination by Francine Katz, who was the company’s highest ranking female executive before her 2008 resignation. Katz says she was grossly underpaid compared to her male predecessor and other top male executives at the company. (AP Photo/Anheuser-Busch Inc.)

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In this July 13, 2008 photo cars move near the Anheuser-Busch St. Louis brewery. August Busch III was CEO of Anheuser-Busch Companies for nearly three decades before his 2002 retirement, remaining as board chairman until 2006. The St. Louis brewer is being sued for gender discrimination by Francine Katz, who was the company’s highest ranking female executive before her 2008 resignation. Katz says she was grossly underpaid compared to her male predecessor and other top male executives at the company. (AP Photo/St. Louis Post-Dispatch, David Carson)