What the Sunday papers say

The Sunday TelegraphBudweiser is to test a new computerised beer tap that will pour a pint in two seconds. The new Ultimate Draft System is now...

The Sunday Telegraph

Budweiser is to test a new computerised beer tap that will pour a pint in two seconds. The new Ultimate Draft System is now undergoing trials in Britain, including Chelsea Football Club.

Vinnie Jones, the footballer turned actor, is likely to be dropped from a lucrative advertising campaign after he was convicted of a drunken air-rage assault.

The Sunday Times

Food and drink brands criticised as unhealthy have seen a decline in sales, according to a report commissioned by the Grocer Magazine.

The Mail on Sunday

A new breed of themed American bars that are the perfect antidote to retron-styled burger restaurants such as Planet Hollywood and the Hard Rock Café are set to hit London, with "gorgeous barmaids" and live rock bands.

Apparently it will take the average person 18 miles to walk off the excesses of a Christmas lunch (or 25 hours of sex or 33 hours watching TV).

The Rugby Football Union has recruited Café Lazeez, an authentic Indian cuisine specialist, to provide curry at Twickenham on match days.

The Sunday Express

Travelodge is to embark on an aggressive expansion programme next year and will take its first steps into Europe. It will open 21 UK sites in 2004 and will open its first overseas lodge in Madrid in April.

Gordon Brown's Pre-Bidget pledge to cut red tape was last night attacked for "not going far enough" to relieve pressures on businesses.

Hundreds of employers are gearing up for a hiring frenzy as the global economy turns the corner, a key survey is to reveal.

The Observer

Labour has presided over six years of the lowest public sector investment since the Second World War, according to an Institute of Fiscal Studies analysis of pre-Budget report figures.

Fifteen, Jamies Oliver's restaurant lost £700,000 in its first year as London's most talked-about eaterie.

The Independent on Sunday

Town centre retail rental growth, a barometer for the health of the British retail sector as a whole, is slowing down.