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ChevronTexaco, for one, took a buzz cut in the restructuring.
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You just see that the player is really enjoying his football and taking a buzz out of it.
And they plan to pay for this by taking a buzz saw to programs that benefit the poor, elderly and otherwise vulnerable.
In previous seasons wry deconstructions of the fair environment, taking a buzz saw to the walls of the booth, for example, or leaving it mostly empty, were common sights.
After a late start in Japan, Internet growth is exploding, but with even more far-reaching consequences for commerce than in the U.S. Whittall, who calls Japan the "land of the middleman," says the Internet could potentially take a buzz saw to the country's inefficient layers of wholesalers and retailers.
In response to changes in dietary style, a pace of living that defies slow-cooked meals and the shrinking size of American households, most butchers divide the brisket into two pieces and take a buzz-cut approach to trimming the fat.
In January, when he was flying his private plane from Namibia to Brazil, he took a detour to "buzz" St Helena at low altitude, to publicise their cause.
Still, Jones took a risk and created a buzz.
Although his old college buddies had urged him to come, he took a pass, and the buzz at the event was that Mr. Bush, then governor of Texas, had determined that Yale did not fit the image he was cultivating as a down-home, unpretentious Southern guy.
Buzz Aldrin took a miniature communion set on Apollo 11 and performed the rite on the moon.
At 30 minutes, I took a shower and felt the buzz fade.
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