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Word: egges (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Dunkin Donuts because I had finished running errands in the area and was waiting for Pier One to open. I wanted to buy new cushions for the chairs in my room. Because I chose to sleep late, I hadn’t eaten at Cabot and was enjoying an egg and cheese and coffee while I made flashcards for Spanish Bab at a semi-frantic pace...

Author: By Katie Disalvo, | Title: Nicer Not Necessary | 10/11/2002 | See Source »

...privacy, among the most beautiful. "You try to penetrate the canvas or have it penetrate you," she says. In 1955, Newman was 50 and his finances were shaky. He made one vast painting, Uriel, also in the Tate exhibition, whose verticals are balanced by an expanse of bird's egg blue, and then produced nothing for two years. After suffering a heart attack in 1957, he began to work again, starting a series that continued until 1966 and was eventually entitled The Stations of the Cross. The paintings are in black or white on plain canvas, whose natural cream surface...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Primal Force | 10/6/2002 | See Source »

Leaving the experiment to solidify, we head to the walk-in refrigerator. Plastic buckets labeled “egg whites,” “basil,” “crème anglais,” “chocolate“ and “fruit puree” line the walls. Branigan swings a full bucket of liquid chocolate off a shelf and swoops back out to the room...

Author: By Margot E. Kaminski, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Cold Fusion | 10/3/2002 | See Source »

...Cuba's struggling economy, eggs are often a luxury for many families. But they might be more plentiful if the government could import them more cheaply from the nearby U.S. - which has kept an economic embargo against the communist island for four decades. So it was little wonder that Cuban President Fidel Castro made a point of dropping by the American Egg Board's stand at the Havana food exposition that started yesterday. "How fast can you make them?" he asked New Yorker Howard Kelmer, 64, who is the Board's senior representative - and who holds the Guinness Book...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cuba Wants a Taste of America | 9/27/2002 | See Source »

...from the potential contained within every human cell—including those in your mouth—to produce a genetically identical human being. This potential has dominated the contemporary debate about cloning. The procedure involves taking all the DNA from one cell and inserting it into an unfertilized egg to grow a new animal (human or otherwise). Even the cells that slough off your gums when you brush your teeth could be used to make a whole new person. Of course, the most virulent opponents of cloning will not soon want to ban tooth-brushing. But they insist that...

Author: By Jonathan H. Esensten, | Title: Put Down That Toothbrush | 9/26/2002 | See Source »

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