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Donut County Crack

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Oct 8, 2018 - Explore Trish Goodenough's board 'Amish crack donuts' on Pinterest. See more ideas about Donut recipes, Doughnut recipe, Mennonite recipes. Mac miller circles songs. Donut County The perfect way to pass a couple of hours, but it will leave you craving more game and a box of Krispy Kremes. I write news, features and reviews, and look after a crack team of. Donut County Free Download PC Game Cracked in Direct Link and Torrent. Donut County is a story-based physics puzzle game where you play as an ever-growing hole in the ground. Meet cute characters, steal their trash, and throw them in a hole. Donut County PC Game Overview.

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  1. Donut County Quack Anthem
  2. Donut County Review
  3. Donut County Buy
  4. Donut County Cracker
A semi-pejorative term for polystyrene plastic figurines and miniature model kits made for tabletop role-playing games and wargame simulations, particularly the popular Games Workshop Warhammer Fantasy and Warhammer 40,000 lines. The 'crack' designation applies in that fans of these types of games seem 'addicted' to them like a drug, and crave buying, assembling, and painting the models, spending large amounts of money and time in doing so, and anxiously await the latest, most finely-detailed releases.
Also used self-effacingly and endearingly by samesaid fans of these games with a good sense of humor about their 'addiction'.
Crack
'Oh, man, it's the new Leman Russ Demolisher kit, and it comes with all the main cannon variants..sweet, sweet plastic crack!'
'Garth came into the comic shop this afternoon and dropped over $300 on plastic crack. Poor, sad bastard..he must live on soda crackers and peanut butter.'
Get a plastic crack mug for your Uncle José.
Get a 21 mug for your bunkmate Rihanna.
A term used to describe the 'addicting' manner of obsession seen by certain groups of people and individuals who collect and/or build plastic models and figurines ranging from tabletop RPGs like warhammer 40k to Gundam Plastic Models or 'Gunpla'. The term has been used due to certain individuals sometimes dropping hundreds of dollars on what to other's perspectives seems like a useless piece (or unassembled pieces) of plastic. The first widespread use of the term was to describe Players of the Warhammer 40K Series and eventually Gunpla Builders. It is mainly used by outsiders for the respective fanbases but the people inside the 'Plastic Crack' addiction category use it in a joking manner to describe their hobby.
'Just picked up The OG HGUC Zaku I Sniper Type which was basically impossible to find with the Yonem Kirks custom floating around so it looks like my Plastic Crack addiction has been sated for a while'
'How can that guy just casually walk out of the store after dropping 150 on that Plastic Crack junk?'
'Always that one money loaded guy that drops into the comic store every saturday just to buy at least 50 dollars worth of Plastic Crack'
'All I can say after seeing that dude's transaction total for that warhammer set is that Plastic Crack is on hell of a drug.'

Donut County Quack Anthem

Get the Plastic Crack neck gaiter and mug.

Dec 13 trending

Donut County Crack
  • 1. Watermelon Sugar
  • 2. Ghetto Spread
  • 3. Girls who eat carrots
  • 4. sorority squat
  • 5. Durk
  • 6. Momala
  • 7. knocking
  • 8. Dog shot
  • 9. sputnik
  • 10. guvy
  • 11. knockin'
  • 12. nuke the fridge
  • 13. obnoxion
  • 14. Eee-o eleven
  • 15. edward 40 hands
  • 16. heels up
  • 17. columbus
  • 18. ain't got
  • 19. UrbDic
  • 20. yak shaving
  • 21. Rush B Cyka Blyat
  • 22. Pimp Nails
  • 23. Backpedaling
  • 24. Anol
  • 25. got that
  • 26. by the way
  • 27. Wetter than an otter's pocket
  • 28. soy face
  • 29. TSIF
  • 30. georgia rose
Article ToolsPrint This Page | Comments(63) | Suggest a Story
Doughnut Trivia
By Joe Bouchard
Published: 12/14/2015

The following is an installment in 'The Bouchard 101', a series featuring 'Ice Breaker's' designed to promote training awareness and capabilities in the corrections industry.
Think about the perfection of a circle. It has no beginning and it has no end. It is the basis for an infinity sign. And, it can sometimes be delicious.
Doughnut trivia is a way to use simple pastries to get teams involved in a competition involving food. And it is a great way to segue into the concept of food as contraband.
Teams compete on doughnut trivia. The winning team gets to sample the doughnuts first. There are eleven questions to eliminate the possibility of a tie.
Break the class into teams and have them take turns answering the following questions. If during a team's turn the team guesses the correct answer, they will earn one point. If they fail to respond correctly, the opposing team has the opportunity to earn two points with a correct answer.
So grab a cup of coffee and dig in to the test.
DOUGHNUT TEST
Something as simple as a donut has a very complex history. How much do you know about these delicious breakfast (or any time) treat? Try your luck with the following.
  1. Which ethnic group brought the doughnut to America?
  2. What was the original name of the doughnut?
  3. What kind of animal was involved in accidently inventing the doughnut?
  4. How did this allegedly happen?
  5. In what year was doughnut billed as 'the hit food of the Century of Progress'?
  6. In what city did this happen?
  7. What is the significance of Doughnut Dollies?
  8. How big was the largest doughnut ever made?
  9. Where was this giant doughnut made?
  10. The world record for eating doughnuts occurred in 1981. How many doughnuts did the record holder consume in six minutes?
  11. Which famous explore and doughnut enthusiast took 100 barrels of donut flour, enough for two years' worth of donuts while exploring Polar Region?
DOUGHNUT TEST ANSWERS
  1. The doughnut, as we know and love, supposedly came to Manhattan (then New Amsterdam) by the Dutch.
  2. 'Oily cakes.'
  3. A cow.
  4. So, the story goes, a cow kicked a pot full of boiling oil over onto some pastry mix, thus inventing the golden brown delight.
  5. 1934
  6. At the World's Fair in Chicago
  7. During World War II, Red Cross women, known as Doughnut Dollies passed out hot doughnuts to the hard fighting soldiers.
  8. The largest doughnut ever made was an American-style jelly doughnut weighing 1.7 tons (3739 lbs.), which was 4.9 m (16 ft.) in diameter and 40.6 (16in) high in the center. It was made in Utica, New York, USA on January 21, 1993
  9. It was made in Utica, New York, USA on January 21, 1993.
  10. According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the record for donut eating is held by a man named John Haight, who consumed 52 ounces of donuts (about 26 average donuts - or 20 Tom and Son's donuts) in just over six minutes in 1981.
  11. On one of his expeditions, Admiral Richard Byrd, a noted donut-lover, took along 100 barrels of donut flour, enough for two years' worth of donuts.
From: http://www.ottawadonuts.com/donut_facts.htm Accessed September 30, 2012
Winning team gets first crack at donuts. Of course, the smart instructor will bring enough for all in class, though they may be withheld in order to build suspense and competition.
The trivia section can segue into information about the contraband one can find in the kitchen area of a correctional facility. Use your own information or sample from the information below.
Food service staff in correctional facilities have the awesome responsibility of ensuring that quality meals are prepared and delivered to hundreds of people. This happens three times a day, all year long – regardless of the state of equipment.
But, in this relentless preparation of meals for hundreds, there is a potential for profound danger. This comes in two basic forms, barter and weapons. Being aware of these two dangers, food service staff are important partners in contraband control efforts.
Food as barter. Food and items acquired from the kitchen can be used as barter. Food can be used as contraband, mostly in the way of trade for other goods and services. Extra rations can be promised by prisoner workers in exchange for protection, sex, as a payoff for gambling, etc. There are also the raw materials in the kitchen that can be used to produce prison-made alcohol.
Kitchen weapons. Materials to create weapons often originate from the kitchen. They can be made from discarded cans, altered equipment, and packaging. There are many other opportunities to acquire weapons. Staff patterns are scrutinized by enterprising prisoners to discern the perfect occasion to loosen unessential steel or plastic. If it moves, it will dislodge. If it dislodges, it is a weapon. The kitchen is not free of hazard.
Like other non-custody staff, food service staff perform three particular roles in contraband control. They feed the information machine, relate tales of contraband to newer staff, and monitor the work patterns of prisoners on assignment in the kitchen.

Joe Bouchard is a Librarian employed with the Michigan Department of Corrections and a collaborator with The International Association of Correctional Training Personnel (IACTP). He is also the author of 'IACTP's Corrections Icebreakers: The Bouchard 101, 2014'. The installments in this series include his opinions. The agency for which he works is not in any way responsible for the content or accuracy of this material, and the views are those of the contributor and not necessarily those of the agency. While some material is influenced by other works, all of the icebreakers have been developed by Joe Bouchard.
Visit the Joe Bouchard page
Other articles by Bouchard:

Donut County Review

Donut

Donut county quack enthusiast achievement

  1. Donut County Quack Anthem
  2. Donut County Review
  3. Donut County Buy
  4. Donut County Cracker
A semi-pejorative term for polystyrene plastic figurines and miniature model kits made for tabletop role-playing games and wargame simulations, particularly the popular Games Workshop Warhammer Fantasy and Warhammer 40,000 lines. The 'crack' designation applies in that fans of these types of games seem 'addicted' to them like a drug, and crave buying, assembling, and painting the models, spending large amounts of money and time in doing so, and anxiously await the latest, most finely-detailed releases.
Also used self-effacingly and endearingly by samesaid fans of these games with a good sense of humor about their 'addiction'.
'Oh, man, it's the new Leman Russ Demolisher kit, and it comes with all the main cannon variants..sweet, sweet plastic crack!'
'Garth came into the comic shop this afternoon and dropped over $300 on plastic crack. Poor, sad bastard..he must live on soda crackers and peanut butter.'
Get a plastic crack mug for your Uncle José.
Get a 21 mug for your bunkmate Rihanna.
A term used to describe the 'addicting' manner of obsession seen by certain groups of people and individuals who collect and/or build plastic models and figurines ranging from tabletop RPGs like warhammer 40k to Gundam Plastic Models or 'Gunpla'. The term has been used due to certain individuals sometimes dropping hundreds of dollars on what to other's perspectives seems like a useless piece (or unassembled pieces) of plastic. The first widespread use of the term was to describe Players of the Warhammer 40K Series and eventually Gunpla Builders. It is mainly used by outsiders for the respective fanbases but the people inside the 'Plastic Crack' addiction category use it in a joking manner to describe their hobby.
'Just picked up The OG HGUC Zaku I Sniper Type which was basically impossible to find with the Yonem Kirks custom floating around so it looks like my Plastic Crack addiction has been sated for a while'
'How can that guy just casually walk out of the store after dropping 150 on that Plastic Crack junk?'
'Always that one money loaded guy that drops into the comic store every saturday just to buy at least 50 dollars worth of Plastic Crack'
'All I can say after seeing that dude's transaction total for that warhammer set is that Plastic Crack is on hell of a drug.'

Donut County Quack Anthem

Get the Plastic Crack neck gaiter and mug.

Dec 13 trending

  • 1. Watermelon Sugar
  • 2. Ghetto Spread
  • 3. Girls who eat carrots
  • 4. sorority squat
  • 5. Durk
  • 6. Momala
  • 7. knocking
  • 8. Dog shot
  • 9. sputnik
  • 10. guvy
  • 11. knockin'
  • 12. nuke the fridge
  • 13. obnoxion
  • 14. Eee-o eleven
  • 15. edward 40 hands
  • 16. heels up
  • 17. columbus
  • 18. ain't got
  • 19. UrbDic
  • 20. yak shaving
  • 21. Rush B Cyka Blyat
  • 22. Pimp Nails
  • 23. Backpedaling
  • 24. Anol
  • 25. got that
  • 26. by the way
  • 27. Wetter than an otter's pocket
  • 28. soy face
  • 29. TSIF
  • 30. georgia rose
Article ToolsPrint This Page | Comments(63) | Suggest a Story
Doughnut Trivia
By Joe Bouchard
Published: 12/14/2015

The following is an installment in 'The Bouchard 101', a series featuring 'Ice Breaker's' designed to promote training awareness and capabilities in the corrections industry.
Think about the perfection of a circle. It has no beginning and it has no end. It is the basis for an infinity sign. And, it can sometimes be delicious.
Doughnut trivia is a way to use simple pastries to get teams involved in a competition involving food. And it is a great way to segue into the concept of food as contraband.
Teams compete on doughnut trivia. The winning team gets to sample the doughnuts first. There are eleven questions to eliminate the possibility of a tie.
Break the class into teams and have them take turns answering the following questions. If during a team's turn the team guesses the correct answer, they will earn one point. If they fail to respond correctly, the opposing team has the opportunity to earn two points with a correct answer.
So grab a cup of coffee and dig in to the test.
DOUGHNUT TEST
Something as simple as a donut has a very complex history. How much do you know about these delicious breakfast (or any time) treat? Try your luck with the following.
  1. Which ethnic group brought the doughnut to America?
  2. What was the original name of the doughnut?
  3. What kind of animal was involved in accidently inventing the doughnut?
  4. How did this allegedly happen?
  5. In what year was doughnut billed as 'the hit food of the Century of Progress'?
  6. In what city did this happen?
  7. What is the significance of Doughnut Dollies?
  8. How big was the largest doughnut ever made?
  9. Where was this giant doughnut made?
  10. The world record for eating doughnuts occurred in 1981. How many doughnuts did the record holder consume in six minutes?
  11. Which famous explore and doughnut enthusiast took 100 barrels of donut flour, enough for two years' worth of donuts while exploring Polar Region?
DOUGHNUT TEST ANSWERS
  1. The doughnut, as we know and love, supposedly came to Manhattan (then New Amsterdam) by the Dutch.
  2. 'Oily cakes.'
  3. A cow.
  4. So, the story goes, a cow kicked a pot full of boiling oil over onto some pastry mix, thus inventing the golden brown delight.
  5. 1934
  6. At the World's Fair in Chicago
  7. During World War II, Red Cross women, known as Doughnut Dollies passed out hot doughnuts to the hard fighting soldiers.
  8. The largest doughnut ever made was an American-style jelly doughnut weighing 1.7 tons (3739 lbs.), which was 4.9 m (16 ft.) in diameter and 40.6 (16in) high in the center. It was made in Utica, New York, USA on January 21, 1993
  9. It was made in Utica, New York, USA on January 21, 1993.
  10. According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the record for donut eating is held by a man named John Haight, who consumed 52 ounces of donuts (about 26 average donuts - or 20 Tom and Son's donuts) in just over six minutes in 1981.
  11. On one of his expeditions, Admiral Richard Byrd, a noted donut-lover, took along 100 barrels of donut flour, enough for two years' worth of donuts.
From: http://www.ottawadonuts.com/donut_facts.htm Accessed September 30, 2012
Winning team gets first crack at donuts. Of course, the smart instructor will bring enough for all in class, though they may be withheld in order to build suspense and competition.
The trivia section can segue into information about the contraband one can find in the kitchen area of a correctional facility. Use your own information or sample from the information below.
Food service staff in correctional facilities have the awesome responsibility of ensuring that quality meals are prepared and delivered to hundreds of people. This happens three times a day, all year long – regardless of the state of equipment.
But, in this relentless preparation of meals for hundreds, there is a potential for profound danger. This comes in two basic forms, barter and weapons. Being aware of these two dangers, food service staff are important partners in contraband control efforts.
Food as barter. Food and items acquired from the kitchen can be used as barter. Food can be used as contraband, mostly in the way of trade for other goods and services. Extra rations can be promised by prisoner workers in exchange for protection, sex, as a payoff for gambling, etc. There are also the raw materials in the kitchen that can be used to produce prison-made alcohol.
Kitchen weapons. Materials to create weapons often originate from the kitchen. They can be made from discarded cans, altered equipment, and packaging. There are many other opportunities to acquire weapons. Staff patterns are scrutinized by enterprising prisoners to discern the perfect occasion to loosen unessential steel or plastic. If it moves, it will dislodge. If it dislodges, it is a weapon. The kitchen is not free of hazard.
Like other non-custody staff, food service staff perform three particular roles in contraband control. They feed the information machine, relate tales of contraband to newer staff, and monitor the work patterns of prisoners on assignment in the kitchen.

Joe Bouchard is a Librarian employed with the Michigan Department of Corrections and a collaborator with The International Association of Correctional Training Personnel (IACTP). He is also the author of 'IACTP's Corrections Icebreakers: The Bouchard 101, 2014'. The installments in this series include his opinions. The agency for which he works is not in any way responsible for the content or accuracy of this material, and the views are those of the contributor and not necessarily those of the agency. While some material is influenced by other works, all of the icebreakers have been developed by Joe Bouchard.
Visit the Joe Bouchard page
Other articles by Bouchard:

Donut County Review


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Donut County Buy


Donut County Cracker






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