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Word: kentucke (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Kentuck again as the number one college basketball team in the nation for 1952, just as it was in 1949 and 1951. For the third time in four years, Kentucky's Wildcats won the top rank in the final Associated Press ranking poll of the 1951-1952 season...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: National Sports | 3/4/1952 | See Source »

...Kentuck Wesleyan 71, Georgetown...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: National Sports | 2/6/1951 | See Source »

Wending his way up to 14 Plympton Street, Vag sobbed. How awfully sad it was! No more to see the genial conservative M.E., the boy who made Winnetka ill. The sporty lad from Milwaukee, the peerless peer from Cleveland, the genial South'n gennleman from Kentuck'. . . . The turnover of the Crime always made the Vagabond sad, but this was an especially unhappy night. He looked at his watch--4:12, time for a quick session with the pinball boards at Harry's Club. Man against machine, amateur against the elements, sucker against Gottlicb. Vag racked-up four frees...

Author: By E. D. K., | Title: THE VAGABOND | 2/4/1942 | See Source »

...selections rendered at all concerts will be: Banjo Club: "Campus Memories", "Clicquot", "American Patrol", and "Bullfrog Blues"; Mandolin Club: "Blue Kentuck Moon", "Dark Eyes", "Volga Boatman", and "Selections from Gilbert and Sullivan"; Vocal: "Gay Nineties Medley", "Keep in the Middle of the Road", "Bonnie Dundee", "Australia", and "Johnny Harvard". Three presentations will be made in the way of special numbers; a violin solo, a guitar quartet, and a magician...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: INSTRUMENTAL CLUBS WILL END WINTER SEASON FRIDAY | 3/28/1932 | See Source »

With the skill of a great composer, the authoress establishes her main theme upon the plan of a symphony. The environment and teachings of the main character Diony Hall form the motif recurrent throughout. Behind the sudden death and vivid reality of the frontier life in Kentuck runs strands of memories from his days in Virginia. Such repetition of familiar ideas is helpful in conveying to the reader the longings of the pioneer woman's soul. The prose is melodiously in keeping with symphonic structure, possessing a meaty sensuousness seldom encounted in modern authors and rising at points to poetry...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Novels For Early Spring Reading | 3/25/1930 | See Source »

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