Word: alcoholics
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...downright tame. He insists it has the right combination of heart and humor that made traditional sitcoms like “Cheers” such big hits—strange words from the man who lends his voice to maniacal baby Stewie and Brian, a talking dog with an alcohol problem, on “Family Guy.” But whether “The Winner” will create the same comic magic as “Family Guy” remains to be seen. MacFarlane’s last offering, “American...
...Harvard ID will suffice to gain entry into the pub, which is open to all members of the Harvard community and their guests, but additional identification will be required to buy alcohol, according to Smider...
...hamlet in eastern Indonesia's Sulawesi province, is rutted and worn. But just past the district line stands an ornate, three-meter-high marble edifice festooned with Arabic calligraphy. "Religious Crash Program," announces the massive signboard, before detailing the four Shari'a bylaws Bulukumba has implemented since 2002: no alcohol; mandatory wearing of Islamic attire; required payment of Islamic alms; and Koranic proficiency for students and prospective married couples. As some of the first places to pass such bylaws in Indonesia, Bulukumba and five other regencies in southern Sulawesi have served as an inspiration for scores of other localities across...
...have given these tremendous effects much thought, telling The Crimson “I had no idea how popular these concerts were.” When asked whether the vague criminality was necessarily perpetrated by 19- and 20-year-old concertgoers, none of whom are permitted to consume alcohol on the premises of a nightclub (which have extremely strict regulations to prevent underage drinking), Malone conceded, “As I look back on it, I should say no.” Officials are punishing a demographic that would seem to have had nothing to do with the public safety...
...days preceding Ash Wednesday in Trinidad and Tobago, the 100,000 people who have taken to the streets make it a point to forget quite a few things. First among these is a sense of self-control, exchanging it for alcohol-infused abandon as they trek around the capital city of Port-of-Spain; second and most noticeably, they forget much of their clothing. But this is Carnival, and for Trinidadians the entire social year revolves around this event - which also attracts tens of thousands of foreigners, like myself, who themselves become Trini, if only for a short time...