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Word: juneau (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...induction. It might be a many and not a one. But we are as many as we are one. One thing is for certain: it rests at a place where many different descriptions of it simply won't do. But it's there. In Honolulu and in Juneau. It's not so much the name of it or its particulars: it is what we make it, and we make it the same, with a difference. We make it differently, and it turns out the same. Whatever it is, it is what we will do. And it will do. Wherever, whenever...

Author: By Jim Cocola, | Title: One Many | 6/1/1998 | See Source »

...White did not give up. "I believed in him," he says quietly. "There was great work to do out there, and he was pivotally placed." Franklin, "under duress," tried again in 1989 in Juneau, Alaska. He preached one of his father's favorite sermons, the story of the blind man Bartimaeus, whose sight Jesus restored. The revival's first night was successful, White says, but the second was something more: "They packed the place, drunks and divorces and prostitutes. He gave the invitation, and they poured down. It was a miracle, and he knew...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER | 5/13/1996 | See Source »

...People overlook his two-way skills," Tomassoni says. "In the ECAC quarterfinals his sophomore year, I used him to shadow Joe Juneau [currently playing for the Boston Bruins...

Author: By John B. Roberts, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: An Olympian In Cambridge | 11/13/1992 | See Source »

After losing most of its key players to graduation last year (including super-thug Bruce Coles and recently-signed Boston Bruin Joe Juneau), the Engineers plunged into the depths of Division I mediocrity, closing the season in 10th place and barely scraping into the playoffs...

Author: By Jay K. Varma, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Icemen Open ECAC Playoffs Tonight | 3/7/1992 | See Source »

Thompson, whose grandfather ran unsuccessfully for the state assembly in 1928 and whose father served on the Juneau county board, showed an early flair for politics. In 1966, just out of the University of Wisconsin-Madison Law School, he borrowed $600, bought a 1959 Ford and campaigned successfully for a state-assembly seat. He was just 24. Following a failed 1979 congressional bid, he went on to win the governorship in 1986 and was easily re-elected last November...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Toughlove From Dr. No | 8/19/1991 | See Source »

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