Gold Framed/Matted Print 17×23, Weber Cigars

  • Image Title: Weber Cigars
  • High quality print, matted in white and framed in gold wood
  • Outer frame dimensions 17×23, print size 12×18, plexiglass face
  • Watermarks do not appear on actual prints
  • FREE SHIPPING when you purchase 2 or more Framed Art Posters from ClassicPix.com!

Product Description
FREE SHIPPING on this item when you purchase 2 or more Framed Art Posters from ClassicPix.com. This high quality art poster is matted and framed by our professional framers, and arrives fully assembled and ready to hang. The durable gold wood frame measures 17″ x 23″ – poster size is 12″ x 18″. A clear plexiglass facing protects your poster and adds a lusterous shine. Posters are printed on heavy-stock, semi-matte paper producing the best possible combination of color vibrancy and durability. All posters from ClassicPix.com are produced and framed on demand one-at-a-time, just for you – not mass-produced. Our personal hands-on processing assures the highest quality. What do our customers say? “The product I received was absolutely stunning. I can not speak highly enough about the quality of this piece of art. I would not hesitate to order from them again!” (Rated by edsynth2 on 10/10/2007.) “Item arrived very quickly. Was even better than I’d hoped! Many, many thanks! Beautiful!” (Rated by skoiyase on 9/24/2007.) Each of our images is available in a variety of sizes and formats, including matted/framed posters and mounted canvas prints. To see all formats available for this image, use the search box above and enter “classicpix: Weber Cigars” (do not include quotation marks). Questions? Feel free to contact us with any question about any of our 90,000 products. We’re here to serve you, and we love hearing from our customers!

Gold Framed/Matted Print 17×23, Weber Cigars

6ct. Gift Box Pipes for Tobacco Smoking

  • The Pipe Do not come in Individual box!!
  • Comes in a Great looking Gift Box All 6 in 1 Box.
  • Makes a Great Gift!!!

Product Description
You get 6 ct count of pipes in a Great looking gift pack.

6ct. Gift Box Pipes for Tobacco Smoking

Black Framed/Matted Print 17×23, Weber Cigars

  • Image Title: Weber Cigars
  • High quality print, matted in white and framed in black wood
  • Outer frame dimensions 17×23, print size 12×18, plexiglass face
  • Watermarks do not appear on actual prints
  • FREE SHIPPING when you purchase 2 or more Framed Art Posters from ClassicPix.com!

Product Description
FREE SHIPPING on this item when you purchase 2 or more Framed Art Posters from ClassicPix.com. This high quality art poster is matted and framed by our professional framers, and arrives fully assembled and ready to hang. The durable black wood frame measures 17″ x 23″ – poster size is 12″ x 18″. A clear plexiglass facing protects your poster and adds a lusterous shine. Posters are printed on heavy-stock, semi-matte paper producing the best possible combination of color vibrancy and durability. All posters from ClassicPix.com are produced and framed on demand one-at-a-time, just for you – not mass-produced. Our personal hands-on processing assures the highest quality. What do our customers say? “The product I received was absolutely stunning. I can not speak highly enough about the quality of this piece of art. I would not hesitate to order from them again!” (Rated by edsynth2 on 10/10/2007.) “Item arrived very quickly. Was even better than I’d hoped! Many, many thanks! Beautiful!” (Rated by skoiyase on 9/24/2007.) Each of our images is available in a variety of sizes and formats, including matted/framed posters and mounted canvas prints. To see all formats available for this image, use the search box above and enter “classicpix: Weber Cigars” (do not include quotation marks). Questions? Feel free to contact us with any question about any of our 90,000 products. We’re here to serve you, and we love hearing from our customers!

Black Framed/Matted Print 17×23, Weber Cigars

pipa Al Pascia’ 117 – smoking pipes


www.alpascia.com

ISO 15592-2:2001, Fine-cut tobacco and smoking articles made from it — Methods of sampling, conditioning and analysis — Part 2: Atmosphere for conditioning and testing

Product Description
This part of ISO 15592 specifies an atmosphere for conditioning and testing samples of fine-cut tobacco and test pieces made from it.It is applicable to tests on fine-cut tobacco and products and materials used in the manufacture of fine-cut smoking articles for which a prior conditioning is necessary. It is not applicable in the case of test methods for which particular test conditions are laid down elsewhere, for example cigarette papers and board, which are given in ISO 187 or other tobacco products which are given in ISO 3402. This title may contain less than 24 pages of technical content.

ISO 15592-2:2001, Fine-cut tobacco and smoking articles made from it — Methods of sampling, conditioning and analysis — Part 2: Atmosphere for conditioning and testing

How can inmates get away with smoking pot in prison?

I’ve been watching a lot of Lockdown and Lockup Raw on National Geographic. I just don’t understand how an inmate can get away with smoking pot in prison. Pot smells and it’s strong. How can they not get caught?
I’m just amazed at what these inmates can do. Sometimes I think inmates have it a little too good for being punished.

Peter Heeschen pipemaker – smoking pipes


www.alpascia.com

Tobacco Smoking Under Islamic Law: Controversy Over Its Introduction

Product Description
Dr. Aziz Batran’s work, advanced in this volume, is pioneering on two important levels. It is the first work to appear in any language on the tobacco controversy and analyzes it within the frame of the religious and political atmosphere of the first period of its introduction. Secondly, this book has the merit of discussing the importance of legal opinion [fetwa], a neglected institution little known to Western scholarship. Taken together, these two contributions add greatly to our knowledge of the history of West Africa and the Maghrib during the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century. Moreover, by its careful analysis of more than thirty relevant Arabic texts, Dr. Batran’s book sets a new standard of research for scholars labouring in the fields of West African and Maghribian history, and offers fertile ground for comparative study in the areas of law and religious history.

There is an old adage in the West [and not unknown in Islamic societies] that “custom is stronger than law”. In his highly incisive discussion of the tobacco controversy, Dr. Batran introduces the readers to the struggle between custom [in this example, the swiftly spreading practice of smoking and other uses of tobacco] and law [emerging sharply and heatedly as the "battle lines" of dispute and attitude are drawn over a matter for which there is no legal precedent]. In the West, where scientific investigations have led to a strong consensus on the detrimental effects of cigarette smoking, the matter has been addressed on at least three levels. In the first instance, the pressure of “public opinion” has been brought to bear in determining the threat to the “public good” or welfare. Here, opinion has ranged from strong feelings that smokers should be “quarantined” and special compartments set up in public facilities to isolate the practitioners from those wishing to be shielded from this habit, to the other end of the spectrum which holds that the smoking of cigarettes should be prohibited from public places altogether in the interest of the “public good”. Again. to add purchase to the first position, it has been argued that damages should be assessed against those who sell cigarettes for public consumption and liability established against those who persist in a habit now recognized as “unhealthy” and anti-social. Still again, on the legislative level, it has been deemed within public interest to enact laws that restrict or prohibit the production, distribution, and use of the substance under controversy.

As Dr. Batran amply demonstrates, the question of the public good looms largely in the tobacco controversy as it agitated opinion in West Africa and the Muslim West. Indeed, public opinion is carefully orchestrated at both ends of the question of smoking. Nor are observations of a “scientific” nature entirely omitted from the debate. Furthermore, though political and economic considerations abound in Dr. Batran’s discussion, in the ultimate, as in the West, moral considerations concerning the “public good” become the overriding determinants especially from the standpoint of the ruling governments. But there is a marked difference here in the way in which the controversy is brought to resolution. In the West, the process of litigation, and especially the “appeal process”, is structured on vertical lines – proceeding from a “lower” to a “higher” authority. In Islamic societies, while “fiction” of verticality is carefully maintained and the process reversed [decisions, "nawazil", are seen to descend from on high through the medium of accepted authority], the actual resolution of such matters is rather more “horizontal” – proceeding across society as opinion is canvassed and strengthened by the swelling representation of individuals and parties on one side of the issue against those who take up the opposite view. Hence, the “legal opinion” fetwa is no more than a point of view, but based, at bottom, on legal, which is to say, “moral” authority of

Tobacco Smoking Under Islamic Law: Controversy Over Its Introduction

Mimmo Romeo pipemaker – smoking pipes


www.alpascia.com

Smoking Pipes aka Part 4


Me smoking a Pipe. Key Woodie with