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Word: cowboy (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Internet Movie Database identifies Herb Jeffries as being of "Ethiopian-French Canadian-Italian & Irish descent," and notes that one of his five wives was the stripper Tempest Storm. Jeffries was a mellow baritone; he had sung with Cab Calloway. On screen, as Herbert Jeffrey, he became the smoothest cowboy west of Sugar Hill in four sagebrush sing-a-longs made in the late 30s at a black-owned California ranch. As Bogle observes, Jeffries and his light-skinned leading ladies were the "whites" in these films; the supporting roles were taken by dark-skinned comics like Mantan Moreland...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: That Old Feeling: Basic Black | 4/24/2002 | See Source »

Blade II is not without its shortcomings—some tracks, such as the Eve and Fatboy Slim collaborative, “Cowboy,” and Cypress Hill and Roni Size’s “Child of the Wild West” suffer from painfully annoying choruses that are repeated far too many times. Mos Def’s angry nasal rantings run incongruous to the downbeat trip-hop of Massive Attack on “I Against I,” and Danny Saber and Marco Beltrami’s “Theme From Blade?...

Author: By Crimson STAFF Writers, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: New Music | 4/12/2002 | See Source »

...dangerous charade. If the Europeans don't go along with whatever military action the U.S. takes, too bad, says the White House. "The way to win international acceptance is to win," a senior White House aide says bluntly. "That's called diplomacy: winning." That is the kind of cowboy chatter that makes U.S. allies so itchy, but some on Blair's team have grown used to Bush's bark being worse than his bite. "The great thing about the United States is that it always does the right thing in the end," deadpans a Blair adviser. "It's a little...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bush, Blair and the Eurowimps | 4/8/2002 | See Source »

...dangerous charade. If the Europeans don't go along with whatever military action the U.S. takes, too bad, says the White House. "The way to win international acceptance is to win," a senior White House aide says bluntly. "That's called diplomacy: winning." That is the kind of cowboy chatter that makes U.S. allies so itchy, but some on Blair's team have grown used to Bush's bark being worse than his bite. "The great thing about the United States is that it always does the right thing in the end," deadpans a Blair adviser. "It's a little...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bush, Blair and the "Eurowimps" | 4/1/2002 | See Source »

...Russia were also hit by the tariffs.) Even British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who never met an American President he didn't like, howled at the "unacceptable and wrong" measures. European Union trade Commissioner Pascal Lamy resorted, as Europeans so often do when the Americans baffle them, to cowboy clichés. "The world steel market is not the Wild West where everyone can do as he pleases," he said. "There are rules...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Steeling For a Fight | 3/11/2002 | See Source »

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