Word: kayes
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Just as with the Squidgy tapes and Camillagate -- already part of the language -- the Waleses were undone by the telephone. To deny the charges, mysteriously leaked to the paper, Diana took the unusual step of contacting a rival royals reporter, the Daily Mail's handsome Richard Kay. Well, she almost denied them. Kay reported she had been in phone contact with the dashing Hoare at the time the calls began in September 1992, just before the Waleses separated. Hoare was an old friend of the couple and, hoping to save the marriage, tried to negotiate between them. When Hoare...
...into a whooping, roiling demonstration of their clout, forcing through the election of their candidate for party chairman and the adoption of a hard-right plank that gubernatorial candidate George W. Bush, the ex- President's son, will now have to run on. Wary moderates like Bush and Senator Kay Bailey Hutchinson were careful not to offend the rightists, who rolled over anybody in their way. When one centrist delegate argued that the party was not a church, she was roundly booed...
...year-old son a year after another state judge decided she was an unfit mother because she and her live-in lover engaged in oral sex. The judge in the earlier case called the act a "crime against nature." That ruling sent the child to his maternal grandmother Kay, who now plans an appeal. "I think it's a tragedy . . . to put him back in that environment," Kay Bottoms' lawyer told the press. Gay-rights attorneys, such as the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund's Evan Wolfson, said the case chisels away at a legal edifice in conservative states...
Stonecypher's complaint addressed "all Black minority students that applied to Harvard receiving special treatment." He singled out his high school classmate Eugenia Kay Harris, a Black female, who was accepted to Harvard. Stonecypher, a sophomore at Vanderbilt, was rejected by Harvard in the spring...
...kind of tentacles everywhere," saysProfessor of Music Kay K. Shelemay, anethnomusicologist. "Folklorists are likechameleons," because they can fit in anywhere andconstruct their own opportunities...