Word: meats
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...antibiotic-resistant S. newport in the state in three months. Interviews established that the victims lived on farms six miles apart and that they got their beef from the same nearby feed lot, which routinely added chlortetracycline to the animals' feed. The CDC traced the path of the meat shipments from the feed lot to eight supermarkets patronized by the ten Minnesota victims. All had reported eating hamburgers within a week of the time they became...
...that much of the weakened impact of antibiotics can be blamed on doctors who overprescribe antibiotics, ordering them, for example, for virus-caused colds, and on people who use them indiscriminately. Veterinarian Jerry Brunton of the Animal Health Institute, a lobbying group, finds major flaws in the study: "No meat samples were available to indicate that disease-causing organisms were ever present, nor were such organisms isolated in the meat processing and preparation locations or from the farm where the alleged source animals were raised...
...most important issue for Poles today is the country's desperate economic situation. I found drab stores stocked but lacking variety. Citrus fruits and juices were unavailable. Sugar, butter, and meat are rationed; a cup of coffee cost as much as a medium-priced meal. Lines at meat stores often stretched through the door. I routinely noticed 10 or 15 people lingering outside two hours before a meat store opened...
Godwyn's four-year-old farm has 80 artificially fertilized gators growing vigorously, each worth about $300. The biggest market is for the hides, but Godwyn wants to develop sales of alligator meat. About 200 Florida restaurants serve it. Says Godwyn: "If you deep fry the meat, it tastes like chicken. And if it's sauteed, it tastes like shrimp or lobster." See you later, alligator−on a plate...
...planning to offer in-flight phoning. More than business will be done at 30,000 ft. Says American's public relations manager, Joe Stroup: "We now see the passenger calling Aunt Bessie to tell her what time he'll arrive and to make some of that great meat loaf. The American public just doesn't want to be divorced from its telephone...