Word: corns
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Lewis Pilcher, Eleanor Bogart; Gordon Crothers, Dorothy Brooks; Joseph Corn, Frances Ehrlich; Wilson Powell Marjorie Morse; William Flexner, Elsie Spoerl; Russell Stabler, Martha Morris; Philip E. Moseley...
...yield. It has a big interest in a major oil company in Russia that is well positioned to supply China directly. The play in U.S. agriculture is in the early stage. The classic big-cap player is Deere. As a result of drought and stronger demand, carry-overs of corn and soybeans are at record lows and prices are up. Farm machinery is old. So we think Deere has an excellent shot at a multiyear...
...first post-Pirates movie is Secret Window, in theaters this Friday. He plays Mort Rainey, a successful writer being stalked by a psychotic dairy farmer. Before the movie ends, for reasons too crucial to the plot to fully explain, Mort manically consumes the equivalent of Iowa's annual corn harvest. But that's not the crazy part. "Much of the first half of the movie is just Mort in a cabin by himself not doing things," says Secret Window's writer-director, David Koepp, a man you would expect to have a vested interest in making the movie sound...
...Governors, he invited five of them back to the White House for dinner and a chance to spend the night in the presidential mansion. Over a batter-dipped feast in his private dining room that would have given Dick Cheney's cardiologist the bends--fried shrimp, fried onion rings, corn on the cob, French fries, cole slaw and cheesecake--Bush was jovial, confident. He told the group--George Pataki of New York, Dirk Kempthorne of Idaho, Mitt Romney of Massachusetts, Jim Douglas of Vermont and his Floridian brother Jeb--that the presidential race would be close but that he would...
...neatly along the walls. Allen, sporting chef’s attire—but sadly, no hat—escorts us past miniature forklifts, speaking over the bustling noise of the kitchen. We get amicable waves as we work our way past folks preparing gallons of tuna salad and corn salad in vats that look like enormous Tupperware. Yards of vegetables are lined up neatly on twenty-feet steel counters, ready to become salad fixings. King-Kong-sized industrial mixers and pumping devices churn away in the background. This ain’t your house kitchen—it?...