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...27—Apparently, Asha had a relationship with J. Isaac. He liked to be tied up in beef jerky and fruit roll-ups. Meanwhile, J. Isaac is growing more and more insane by the scene, now employing a full on British accent...

Author: By Amos Barshad, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Ivory Tower Saga Retold | 5/5/2005 | See Source »

...33—Colby quits as campaign manager, and J. Isaac, who has officially lost his mind at this point, swears revenge on him. There’s more beef floating around than at the Shakur and Wallace families’ annual potato-sack race...

Author: By Amos Barshad, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Ivory Tower Saga Retold | 5/5/2005 | See Source »

...birthday salute was fired at Hyde Park and the Tower of London. But the best present came when the Queen Mum got her long-standing wish to fly aboard the Concorde. During her nearly two-hour specially chartered flight over Britain, she dined on Scottish lobster and Angus beef and sipped her favorite champagne. Then she was strapped into a seat behind the pilot as he accelerated beyond the sound barrier to 1,340 m.p.h. Mum's word: "Incredible...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Aug. 19, 1985 | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

...cedar-covered knoll in the high desert of northwest Arizona. Another day of the fall roundup at the Double O Ranch begins as six sleepy cowpunchers stir from their bedrolls and head for the campfire's warm glow. Beyond the flames is the covered cook wagon, sides of beef hanging outside and a bag of flour sitting within. After wolfing down biscuits, meat and gravy, the six men pull on their chaps and walk slowly to the corral to saddle the horses and head...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Arizona: Cowboy Poets | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

Long fences now divide ranches that once ran over unbroken plains. Trailers haul horses from one job to another; those long treks in the saddle, sometimes upwards of 1,200 miles, are a thing of the past. Beef prices have plummeted. Notes Knox: "You sell a cow for $300; you got $600 in her. It's hard to make a living that way." With salaries ranging between $500 and $800 a month, cowboys don't get rich either, a fact that recently prompted Knox to move from solely punching cows to shoeing horses and doing daywork...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Arizona: Cowboy Poets | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

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