When asked if he can explain how it helps his patients with MS, Pollack rambles off a laundry list with ease.
New Jersey Patients in Pain Over Scarcity of Medical Marijuana|Abby Haglage|February 7, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Others, like Pollack of the Crime Lab, suggest that shaking up the well-to-do would likely only cause them to hunker down.
Chicago Gangs Go ‘Wilding’ Amid Rising Gun Violence in Obama’s Hometown|Michael Daly|August 31, 2012|DAILY BEAST
Pollack also concluded that men were more likely to keep quiet.
Why Men Commit Mass Murders|Lizzie Crocker|July 25, 2012|DAILY BEAST
Pollack calls it “a tool of the act, not the heart of the act,” and believes that losing the mandate would not be a death blow.
Democrats, Republicans Mobilize for Adverse Supreme Court Ruling on Obamacare|Eleanor Clift|June 20, 2012|DAILY BEAST
I lay there hating him and wondering if I and Pollack could lock him in his cabin and run the ship without him.
Tono Bungay|H. G. Wells
It was delightful to have been alone for so long,—no captain, no Pollack, no one.
Tono Bungay|H. G. Wells
Was it a whale sunning itself, or a pollack moving idly after the liath?
Pharais and The Mountain Lovers|Fiona Macleod
They learnt that the prestige of the British arms had been restored by Pollack, and that the campaign was ended.
The Life of Sir Richard Burton|Thomas Wright
There were some large fellows, something like pollack, cruising around, and these are called buffaloes.
Lines in Pleasant Places|William Senior
British Dictionary definitions for pollack (1 of 2)
pollack
pollock
/ (ˈpɒlək) /
nounplural-lacks, -lack, -locksor-lock
a gadoid food fish, Pollachius pollachius, that has a dark green back and a projecting lower jaw and occurs in northern seas, esp the North Atlantic Ocean
Word Origin for pollack
C17: from earlier Scottish podlok, of obscure origin
British Dictionary definitions for pollack (2 of 2)
Pollack
/ (ˈpɒlək) /
noun
Sydney. 1934–2008, US film director. His films include Tootsie (1982), Out of Africa (1986), and The Firm (1993)