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Cullman's Oktoberfest added events like a car show and a beauty pageant through the years to help lure a crowd, but the event stayed small. In Germany, Oktoberfest means tens of thousands of people downing beers in giant tents. In Cullman, the big tradition was hay bales painted to resemble a German man and woman. Everything changed late last year, when voters decided to legalize alcohol sales in the city despite the opposition of some local church leaders. As Hauk put it: "Hell froze over on Nov. 2." It took months for city leaders to write laws governing sales, but stores finally began selling alcohol in February. That allowed time for Hauk and other leaders to add beer to the event. A Birmingham-based beer distributor signed on as a sponsor and a local food company, Smith Farms, came on board to operate the beer-selling operation in a brick building near the shed where the dry Oktoberfest always was held. Wearing leather shorts, a plaid shirt and a German-style hat, Smith Farms owner Rodger Turner looked out over the first-night crowd with a beer in his hand and a smile on his face. He's got a lot of beer to get rid of before Oktoberfest ends Saturday. "I better sell it all," he said. That may not be a problem. Some at Oktoberfest wore T-shirts that said: "Dreams Really Do Come True: Beer in Cullman."
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