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...around The Square, The Voyagers (45.5 Mt. Auburn St.), The Harvest (44 Brattle St.), Upstairs at The Pudding (10 Holyoke St.) and Henry IV (96 Winthrop St.) receive consistently strong reviews...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Last Supper | 7/16/1985 | See Source »

Unless someone else is paying, you probably won't see The Harvest (44 Brattle St.), which sports an outdoor garden and a quintessentially yuppie crowd. More reasonable is Autre Chose (1105 Mass. Ave.), with excellent French provincial specialities that aren't exhorbitant. The Swiss Alps (where Brattle and Mt. Auburn Sts. meet) offers some tasty and reasonably priced cheesey entrees with lots of rich sauces for the cholesterol fan. Upstairs at the Pudding (10 Holyoke St.) is expensive and trendy and clearly designed for after the theater. That's the best--and maybe the only--excuse for going...

Author: By Rebecca K. Kramnick, | Title: This Guide's for You | 7/16/1985 | See Source »

...contradictions implicit in the U.S. need for illegal Mexican farm laborers once produced a strange harvest on a truck farm near El Mirage, Ariz. The farm grew a vegetable called broccoli di rapa, a plant that needs lots of irrigation, so the surrounding fields were muddy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Little Game of Chance | 7/8/1985 | See Source »

...reported over a month ago in several other famine-relief camps; given the unusually large population at Ibnet, the danger of disease was considered especially acute. The government's encouragement of planting before the seasonal rains also made sense, at least in principle. "If these people are going to harvest in the next few months," said Father Jack Finucane, the field director of Concern, an Irish relief agency, who visited Ibnet last week, "this is the time they should go back home. There is very little hope for them in the camp...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ethiopia Homeless Again | 5/13/1985 | See Source »

Almost since the grapes were harvested, growers and shippers in Bordeaux have been proclaiming 1982 as a truly great vintage. That year the wine-growing area benefited from gentle spring rains and exceptionally sunny weather during harvest, particularly in the crucial month of September. Says Steven Spurrier, a Paris wine merchant: "In 1982 the growers almost couldn't believe their eyes." Alas, prices for the exceptional wines are also spectacular. The cost of a premier grand cru like Chateau Lafite-Rothschild '82 is nearly $58 a bottle (compared with $45 for the 1981 vintage), and even humbler chateaux like Prieure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Wine: Stampede for 1982 Bordeaux | 4/15/1985 | See Source »

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