Word: ki
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...result of the dual meet rested on the Nos. 5 and 6 matches. Freshman Ki-teh Kim, playing in only his second dual match of the season, got trounced, 6-1, 6-0. At No. 5, Barker was playing Oscar Chow in the deciding match. After splitting the first two sets, Barker was up a break, 2-1, in the third when he starting cramping in his right leg. The problem was minor, but it was enough for Chow to get an opening. He got on a roll and went up 5-3. Barker staved off three match points...
Most of the traveling team should be playing this weekend. Co-captain John Doran and freshman Ki-teh Kim are still recovering from injuries and won't play...
...members of Chu-Ki-Nren, a group of repentant Japanese war criminals whose name means "Those Who Returned from China," are guilty of many things: some raped and killed in Nanking; others did Nazi-style medical "research" on captured Chinese. After years of expressing regret quietly in Japan, Chu-Ki-Nren members are seeking to apologize to American audiences, but Washington's ban on visas for war criminals is preventing them. Convinced, however, that the group's regrets should be heard, RABBI ABRAHAM COOPER, associate dean at the Simon Wiesenthal Center's Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles, has organized...
...felt very conflicted," Cooper recalls when he first met with Chu-Ki-Nren in Tokyo. "Imagine sitting across the table from Joseph Mengele." Still, he decided to help because "young people in Japan live in a historical black hole...
...members of Chu-Ki-Nren, a group of repentant Japanese war criminals whose name means "Those Who Returned from China," are guilty of many things: some raped and killed in Nanking; others did Nazi-style medical "research" on captured Chinese. After years of expressing regret quietly in Japan, Chu-Ki-Nren members are seeking to apologize to American audiences, but Washington's ban on visas for war criminals is preventing them. Convinced, however, that the group's regrets should be heard, Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean at the Simon Wiesenthal Center's Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles, has organized...