Hoover hound. (poem)

From: Children's Digest | Date: December 1, 1996| Author: Rodgers, Denise | Copyright information

Some families have electric brooms. We have a faithful hound Who eats up every crumb that drops Before it hits the ground. He's not too very fussy; He'll eat onion slices raw ...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

Hoover Hound.(Poem)
Children's Digest ; Some families have electric brooms. We have a faithful hound Who eats up every crumb that drops Before it hits the ground. He's not too very fussy; He'll eat onion slices raw And radishes and pickled beets And several-day-old slaw. He really isn't fastidious; He'll eat food in his sleep. If only
Why I'm happy to eat GM food The Government's approval of more field trials for GM crops has reignited controversy in Britain. VICTOR SEBESTYEN, who has just interviewed American scientists and farmers on the issue, argues that our hysteria is profoundly misguided
Evening Standard - London ; AN opinion poll conducted last year for the International Food Information Council asked the public in Europe and America a deliberately idiotic question: "Would you eat food that contained any genes?" They got a predictably stupid answer - two thirds said no. It could be that respondents
AROUND THE WORLD..: 'Students put urine on food'.(News)
The Mirror (London, England) ; SEVERAL white students face criminal charges after allegedly forcing black campus employees to eat food covered in urine. A video has surfaced in South Africa which appears to show them instructing elderly workers to drink beer and perform athletic tasks. The University of Free State staff are
Students face race charges
Express & Echo (Exeter UK) ; Several white students in South Africa face criminal charges after allegedly forcing black campus employees to eat food that had been urinated on. A video has surfaced which appears to show the students instructing five elderly University of Free State employees to eat food which has been urinated
EAT & TELL
The Stranger ; "Eat Food. Not Too Much. Mostly Plants." That's Michael Pollan's answer to the question of "what we humans should eat in order to be maximally healthy." This week the celebrated author visits Seattle with his latest book, In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto (see Annie Wagner's review, page