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Word: strucke (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...minutes into the match, Kelly nearly struck his first, also on a header. After a sequence of passes, freshman Kevin Ara headed it to Kelly who nearly beat O'Quinn to the left corner...

Author: By Jared R. Small, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Kelly Finishes to Lift M. Soccer of UMass 1-0 | 10/12/2000 | See Source »

...then disaster struck. In 1995, the NCAA found Miami guilty of recruiting violations and suspended 31 of the school's athletic scholarships. Unlike Ivy League football, large Div. I-A programs live or die by their ability to recruit with scholarships--and Miami effectively died...

Author: By Daniel E. Fernandez, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Tenacious D: Hurricanes Nostalgia | 10/12/2000 | See Source »

...flipping through the course book this summer, I was struck by a glaring fact. I noticed that, despite the many lectures on the necessity for open markets and a deep-seated devotion to the principle of fair competition, there are no alternatives offered to Ec 10. Think about it: Professor Feldstein has a monopoly on the introduction to economics at Harvard College...

Author: By Shauna L. Shames, | Title: The Principles of Economics | 10/12/2000 | See Source »

...sources reached back hundreds of years, and yet his way of writing "fat and thin" characters, some bold and emphatic and others trailing to the faintest visual whisper, was peculiarly his own (at least among Japanese calligraphers) and difficult to emulate. His ability to work with space through writing struck his admirers as a marvel. Ernest Fenollosa, the great Boston connoisseur of Japanese art who did the most to introduce Koetsu to a Western audience at the end of the 19th century, went into raptures about it: "Such a unique feeling for spacing, placing and spotting has never elsewhere been...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Subtle Magic of Koetsu | 10/11/2000 | See Source »

This is something Guest is good at. He says the idea for his new film arose at a dog park where he took his own pooches. He liked the "very low-key, nice people" but noticed that their discussions about dogs "sounded like they were about children." This struck him as funny, and he spent a year visiting dog shows. The director--who appears in his film as a bloodhound owner who really wants to be a ventriloquist--is also into technique. "In the past 10 years," he says, "film has become very unspontaneous, whether it's using digital technology...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The Lord of Losers | 10/9/2000 | See Source »

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