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Word: meat (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...fine gifts offered in R.J. Reynolds' Select Trading Company Catalogue. It all began with Camel Cash, but maybe you find yourself maturing, turning away from cartoon genitalia. You are older, in need of more domestic domestic items like coffee mugs, commemorative tobacco tins, and large quantities of red meat, delivered right to your door. That's right, three pounds of fully cooked baby back ribs, if the smoke don't kill you, the fat intake will. But wait, there's more ! You also get free 650 Select proofs of purchase to buy more junk ! (That's 325 packs of Winston...

Author: By Daley C. Haggar, | Title: Why is Merle Haggard? | 3/9/1995 | See Source »

...course, there was always the famed Carlos 'nCharlie's, frequented by cruise-ship touristsstopping over for the day. It was a meat-market ofa bar with probably the highest hookup rate in allof Central America...

Author: By Nan Zheng, | Title: From Drab Cambridge To Lovely Cancun | 3/7/1995 | See Source »

...long-standing social-welfare initiatives and convert the money to block grants for states to set up their own programs. Aiming at perhaps the widest target of all-bureaucrats-the full House voted 276-146 to freeze thousands of environmental, health and safety regulations, including rules on everything from meat inspection to nuclear-waste disposal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE WEEK: FEBRUARY 19-25 | 3/6/1995 | See Source »

...American Chop Suey? John Shaffer, Assistant General Manager at the Freshman Dining Hall, explains, "American Chop Suey was based on the idea that chop suey was a whole bunch of stuff mixed together, so people used to take leftovers at the end of the week, grind up the meat, and mix it up." This may not sound too reasuring, but Shaffer further clarifies, "However, here American Chop Suey is not a leftover dish," as he hands me the secret recipe. Don't worry. It really is safe to eat. Finally, Shaffer warns me as I leave the underground dining services...

Author: By Sharon C. Yang, | Title: "California Soup? | 2/23/1995 | See Source »

...conditions of life for the soldiers in Chechnya were dreadful. In Afghanistan we were issued special rations of canned meat, condensed milk, juice, crackers, tea and a Sterno can, so you could heat up kasha or rice with the canned meat. All I saw our soldiers eating in Chechnya was pearl barley with a bare hint of meat. Looking at this meager fare, I had the impression that we must have eaten up all the army's stores of dried rations in Afghanistan and that no one had bothered to produce any since then...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Armed Forces: LESSONS NOT LEARNED | 2/20/1995 | See Source »

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