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Word: harvester (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...traditional Thursday meal will be repletewith roast turkey with homemade stuffing andgravy, baked sugar cured ham, harvest nut roastwith vegetarian gravy, whipped potatoes, butternutsquash, mashed turnips, garden green peas, freshcranberry sauce, dinner rolls and fresh pumpkin,apple and pecan pies...

Author: By Allyson V. Hobbs, | Title: Staying At School for Thanksgiving | 11/24/1993 | See Source »

...much likes the idea of thawing out one of the clone kids to harvest its organs, but according to Andrew Kimbrell, author of The Human Body Shop, in the past few years an estimated 50 to 100 couples have produced babies to provide tissue for an existing child. Plus there is already a thriving market in Third World kidneys and eyes. Is growing your own really so much worse than plundering the bodies of the poor? Or maybe we'll just clone for the fun of it. If you like a movie scene, you can rewind the tape, so when...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Economics of Cloning | 11/22/1993 | See Source »

From White's, I headed to the Harvest Co-operative supermarket, which has a profit-sharing system which works like the Coop's is supposed to. There are more types of Basmati rice and oat-based grains on sale at Harvest than I ever knew existed. The supermarket also boasts a message board on which locals advertise for roommates ("Two Lesley Grad Students in expressive therapies and one creativity workshop facilitator seek non-smoker to share Central Square apartment with...

Author: By Michael E. Farbriarz, | Title: Close, but Crummy Cigar | 10/28/1993 | See Source »

Needles to say, before entering Harvest I was asked to put out my cigar. Earlier in the evening, being asked to dispense with my stogie might have had me down. By now, however, I didn't mind, because I was almost ready to take the bus back to Harvard Square. Even if it was packed with high-schoolers looking for a party, or at least some beer...

Author: By Michael E. Farbriarz, | Title: Close, but Crummy Cigar | 10/28/1993 | See Source »

...revenues of $3 billion a year, the government too has looked determined to fight to the finish. Thus, unless this week's developments lead to a lasting truce, the worst is perhaps still to come. In the countryside, the fighting has disrupted the planting season, and without a harvest in early 1994, says World Food Program spokeswoman Mercedes Sayagues, deprivation could envelop all of Angola. Even Luanda, the capital, has not gone untouched. On its northern outskirts 10,000 refugees have pitched camp, and in Josina Machel hospital, the country's largest, scores of amputees lie in unlighted corridors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Angola: The Forgotten War | 10/18/1993 | See Source »

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