Word: deere
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Jonathan D. Chase ’77—Chase’s brother and a self-taught chef of Deer Isle, Maine—disagrees. He says his sister’s “passion for wine, food and everything that goes with it has not diminished” since the birth...
...thing, the wild game our ancestors ate was high in protein but very low in fat--only about 4%, compared with up to 36% in grain-fed supermarket beef. For another, our ancestors couldn't count on a steady supply of any particular food. Hunters might bring down a deer or a rabbit or nothing at all. Fruit might be in season, or it might not. A chunk of honeycomb might have as many calories as half a dozen Krispy Kreme doughnuts, but you might be able to get it once a year at best--and it wouldn't have...
...foreign beers; it also has a 10% stake in Tsingtao; and it's now negotiating for stakes in smaller Chinese breweries. Other foreign companies are following. World No. 3, Interbrew, has management control of joint ventures with 17 Chinese breweries, giving it a stable of brands, such as Double Deer, and it is scouring the countryside for more deals. "In early days, operators just weren't sure they could run local brands," says Wai Kee Tan, Interbrew's vice president in Asia, but they have since "gotten the hang of marketing and distribution...
...credit, Wyoming, the least populous state in the U.S., does not feel like an ideal place for a terrorist attack. The 493,800 people who live here have a well-deserved affection for the state's yawning prairie land, framed by mountains and speckled with elk, antelope and mule deer. Wyoming's biggest city is Cheyenne, the capital, which is still not serviced by jet liners. "It's very hard to hide in Wyoming," says Joe Moore, head of Wyoming's office of homeland security, on my first morning in town. "By the end of the day, everyone will know...
...after Super Tuesday, a ghost of politics past materialized in Los Angeles: George W. Bush the Candidate. This is a different guy from George W. Bush the President, whose rotating personae--resolute defender of freedom, deer in the headlights, jaunty flyboy--haven't been nearly as engaging as the low-key fellow who campaigned in 2000. Bush the Candidate is charming, plainspoken and humble. He rarely raises his voice; he never orates; he always drops his gs. It is hard to imagine a politician more different from John Kerry, who has dominated the past few months with equine dignity...