Arya, whose diet comprises mainly tinned food when he's out at sea, tries to eat as much fresh food as possible while on shore, since the rest of the time is spent consuming " pasta, rice, pasta and rice ."
42.
Back in the seventies Anarchy Magazine published a graphic of tin can with a picture of Lenin on it ( like Andy Warhol's graphics ) depicting the plethora of marxist-leninist groups as the Heinz range of 57 Varieties of tinned food.
43.
The genitalia were removed in Fixedsys Excelsior 3, though the steaming excrements remained and a " Now More Moist ! " sign was added ( to complement a dingbat of a logo for a tinned food product named " Catbeef " ).
44.
Through the exhumation in 1984 and 1986 of the frozen bodies of Petty Officer John Torrington, Able-bodied Seaman John Hartnell and Royal Marine William Braine, on Beechey Island, Beattie was able to trace the source of the lead to the expedition's tinned food supply.
45.
To say'I accept'in an age like our own is to say that you accept concentration camps, rubber truncheons, Hitler, Stalin, bombs, aeroplanes, tinned food, machine guns, putches, purges, slogans, Bedaux belts, gas masks, submarines, spies, provocateurs, press-censorship, secret prisons, aspirins, Hollywood films and political murders.
46.
Some 1, 000 Martini-Henry rifles, the two field artillery guns, 400, 000 rounds of ammunition, three colours, most of the 2, 000 draft animals and 130 wagons, provisions such as tinned food, biscuits, beer, overcoats, tents and other supplies, were taken by the Zulu or left abandoned on the field.
47.
Lilith takes Eve to the coast to meet with Mother again, here they see a crazy old lady on a beach a manifestation of ageing superficiality : dirty, caked in make-up, with piled high golden locks, singing old musical songs and living on vodka and cold tinned food and defecating in the bushes behind her deck chair.
48.
Reports in recent days have told of Taliban and al-Qaida fighters in Kabul, Kandahar and Jalalabad stocking up on tinned foods and, in the case of the " Arab Afghans, " buying cattle _ possibly to slaughter them for meat to be hung and dried into what is known, in some Arab lands, as " hunter's beef ."
49.
In 1919 the Tugwell family sold the house and it was purchased by Major Maconochie who made profit from supplying tinned food as food rations for British soldiers in the field during the Boer War and in front-line trenches during World War I . It changed hands several times afterwards, before being purchased by Sir Sydney Barratt in 1960, who further developed the garden.