Word: potful
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Pudding honors two actors every year for their “lasting and impressive contribution to the world of entertainment” with the good-natured roast, presentation of the pudding pot, and special performances of the Hasty Pudding Theatricals’ original show...
...Harry, who has been drinking in public since he was 12. He and his friends would continue in the soundproof basement lair maintained for the princes at Highgrove called Club H, which had a well-stocked bar. At the pub, at Highgrove and at private parties, Harry also smoked pot with his buddies. Staff eventually told Prince Charles about the aroma from the basement; he held a "calm and serious" talk with his son about the dangers of drug abuse and a fast crowd. A tearful Harry is said to have confessed and promised to forgo drugs (though not, apparently...
...helps Charles that virtually every British parent is instinctively sympathetic. Illegal drug use is higher in Britain than in any other European country. Smoking pot is so widespread (almost 40% of those 15 to 34 have tried it, according to the latest European Union report) that the government plans to decriminalize possession of small amounts. Drinking-age laws are almost universally ignored; one-fifth of 15- and 16-year-olds report having been drunk three times in the past month...
...including the theme song, Killing Joke's Eighties, which captured the decade better in a few minutes than the pilot does in half an hour. That '80s Show buys into the pop-historical arc, familiar from movies like Boogie Nights and Blow, in which the relatively innocuous, goofy '70s (pot, disco, TM) sour into the cold, aggressive '80s (coke, heavy metal, M.B.A.s). It's hard to cultivate warmth for a decade that you're portraying as soulless and lame, especially if your characters are equally empty. There's easy nostalgia (remember Dynasty? remember "Where's the beef"?), and there...
...days of old when, although we were xenophobic, American soil was viewed as nothing short of sacred, impervious and the last bastion of freedom and safety. If we go back to those beliefs, what are the costs? Foregoing diversity is a scary thought. However, there seems to be a pot of gold for all the embracers of the rainbow. Summers has finally and publicly come out for diversity. A recent statement to The Crimson has Summers quoted as not only taking pride in the diversity of our University, but also promising a renewed commitment to the mission of diversification...