Word: pots
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...Prisons and a former Justice Department spokesman -- Loye Miller -- in federal court, alleging that in keeping him quiet they violated his free-speech rights. The prison bureau insists that the special detention was in line with standard policy governing prisoner contacts with news media. As for Quayle and pot, press secretary David Beckwith declared, "The Vice President has never used marijuana or, to his knowledge, met Brett Kimberlin...
...half of them have already demanded to be reprivatized. Officials in Bonn and Berlin hope the spark of entrepreneurial talent can be rekindled with loans from European Recovery Program funds. Demand is high. An initial allocation of $3.5 billion has already been handed out, and a replenishment of the pot is planned...
...through those bottle-bottom glasses, or whether the toothpick he's chewing is the same one he started the day with. This puts you in the wrong frame of mind when Lund (as he does just now) pushes 100 chips worth $1,000 each into the pot...
...years at Stanford taught Turow the charms of the bourgeois life he thought he had rejected. "True student poverty," with its balancing of stipends, food stamps and unemployment benefits, he found difficult to take. "The only fight about money that Annette and I ever had was over a $6 pot she bought at an art auction." In addition, California life-styles in the early 1970s made Turow realize that he was more conventional than he had thought. "It was unbelievable," he remembers. "There was incessant drinking and substance abuse, and marriages were falling apart all over the place. Annette...
...score some noticeable gains against merchants who deal in everything from "bongs" (water pipes for marijuana) to the spoons used to shovel cocaine into a user's nostrils. One such businessman, Stephen Pesce, is essentially a vile version of a Horatio Alger hero. Pesce, now 34, apparently made pot pipes as a teenager in the 1970s for a Long Island, N.Y., paraphernalia distributor now known as Main Street. He eventually took charge and built the business into one of the largest head-shop suppliers in the U.S., grossing more than $10 million annually, some experts believe. In 1988 federal agents...