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...Weil In this week's magazine, Dr. Weil looks at the power of the pomegranate. Have questions about health, diets or fruit? Submit them below and be sure to check back later this week for selected answers

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Health: Bones of Contention | 3/13/2006 | See Source »

...ponds and the glory of Venice but pursued the realist tradition with stark but tender scenes inspired by daily life. Demuth—with his trademark sparse but concentrated application of color—turned to a cubist-influenced realism, as is evident in his entrancing “Fruit and Sunflowers?...

Author: By Alexander B. Fabry, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Watercolors Resurface at Fogg | 3/9/2006 | See Source »

...what eventually became a secularizing process.”Gomes says the sea change came in 1869 with the inauguration of University President Charles W. Eliot, who drew on Unitarian and Emersonian ideals in laying out a revolutionary treatise of higher education. “The worthy fruit of academic culture is an open mind,” Eliot said, “trained to careful thinking, instructed in the methods of philosophic investigation, acquainted in a general way with the accumulated thought of past generations, and penetrated with humility. It is thus that the University in our day serves...

Author: By Anna K. Kendrick, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Harvard’s Secularization | 3/8/2006 | See Source »

...remarkable on every bite right now, and it has to be to be four stars. So I'm happily accepting of Frank Bruni's review. I'm also happily accepting that I know he'll come back...After a year, we'll be able to see what kind of fruit we can pull from this tree." And with that, Batali got up and did something he hasn't yet been able to do in these frenzied months of worrying about Del Posto: sit down with his wife and eat a meal there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Food Fight | 3/6/2006 | See Source »

...Panlong saga isn't an isolated case. In the village of Liujiaying, in eastern Shandong province, local officials told residents in 2003 that they would lose their fruit and vegetable fields. After finding out how little compensation the village committee was offering, Liujiaying villagers refused to clear their land. Within a few months, the fields were bulldozed in the middle of the night, destroying decades-old grapevines and fruit trees. Later, rows of greenhouses were torn down. Peasants who complained say they were awakened at night by bricks crashing through their windows, and that several villagers were beaten...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inside the Pitchfork Rebellion | 3/5/2006 | See Source »

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