![](/uploads/1/2/7/4/127423557/512710962.png)
GameFAQs game ID 588579 platform Super Nintendo Entertainment. For Pocky & Rocky on the Super Nintendo, the GameFAQs information page shows all known release data and credits.
Pocky & Rocky | |
---|---|
Box art for the North American version of Pocky & Rocky | |
Basic Information | |
Video Game | |
Natsume | |
Natsume | |
Taito | |
Shoot 'em up | |
24 megabit cartridge | |
Gamepad | |
SNES and Super Famicom | |
Retail Features | |
Main Credits | |
Yoshihino Hattori | |
Sunichi Taniguchi | |
Hiroyuki Iwatsuki | |
European Release Date(s) | |
Super Nintendo Entertainment System August 19, 1993 | |
North American Release Date(s) | |
Super Nintendo Entertainment System June1993 | |
Japanese Release Date(s) | |
Super Famicom December 22, 1992 | |
Awards | Changelog | Cheats | Codes | Codex Compatibility | Covers | Credits | DLC | Help Localization | Manifest | Modding | Patches Ratings | Reviews | Screenshots | Soundtrack Videos | Walkthrough |
Pocky & Rocky, known in Japan as KiKi KaiKai: Nazo no Kuro Manto (奇々怪界~謎の黒マントlit. 'Mysterious Ghost World: The Riddle of the Black Mantle'?), is a scrolling shootervideo game with action elements licensed by Taito to Natsume, who developed and published the game for release in Japan in 1992 and the rest of the world in 1993. It is the sequel to the 1986arcade gameKiKi KaiKai (unofficially released in North America as Knight Boy) and follows the continued adventures of a young Shintoshrine maiden named Pocky (known in Japan as Sayo-chan (小夜ちゃん?)) and her new companion, Rocky the Tanuki, or raccoon (known in Japan as Manuke (魔奴化?)).
Development[edit | edit source]
Unlike its predecessor, Pocky & Rocky was not developed by Taito, but was instead licensed to Natsume, for the series' console debut.[1] The project was overseen by Yoshihino Hattori,[2] who wrote the game's story which he based heavily on Japanese mythology and folklore. The game contains elements of standard arcade shooters, with a top-down scrolling display. It was also given action game features, such as the ability to move or attack in eight directions. Rocky, who was designed by Tomoyuki Ishiyama,[2] was given the role of Pocky's sidekick, and served as the default second-player character who could also be freely chosen in a one-player game.
Sequences featuring 2D artwork were added at set points throughout the game to help move the story forward, which usually occurred when a boss character was defeated at the end of a level. These scenes, though present in the Japanese and North American versions of the game, were omitted for the PAL region releases.[3]
Story[edit | edit source]
Set in Feudal Japan, Pocky & Rocky has the player assume the role of a young girl who, while tending to a shrine one night, is visited by Rocky, a tanuki and member of a group of yōkai known as the 'Nopino Goblins', all of whom have recently been driven insane by an unknown force. Together, Pocky and Rocky must travel through several levels consisting of various ancient Japanese locales while battling a number of creatures from popular Japanese myth, including kappas, obake, and yūrei. Eventually, they must breach the stronghold of the mysterious Black Mantle, who has been using these monsters (collectively referred to as the 'Gorgonzola Goblins') to fulfill his evil deeds. Whichever character the player chooses to play will make no difference in the outcome of the story.
Gameplay[edit | edit source]
Pocky & Rocky takes place from a top-down perspective with the characters moving either horizontally or vertically through a level while defeating approaching enemies and destroying obstacles that may block the player's path. Pocky can use her ofuda talismans (simply called 'cards' in the English language version) to attack enemies from afar, or purification rod, which she swings at a wide arc, to hit ones close up. Likewise, Rocky can throw leaves across the screen or quickly turn his backside towards the enemy and swing his tail from side to side. By holding the short-ranged attack button down and then releasing it, Pocky does a spinning attack that can hit any enemy around her, while Rocky is able to transform into a statue, rendering him invulnerable to all attacks for a short time while leaving him immobile. Both characters can also slide across the ground, covering an area quickly. If a player bumps into the other while sliding, it will cause them to spin out of control across the screen, damaging any enemies they come in contact with, though the initial bump causes some damage to the receiving character. A limited-use special attack can be used to hit several or all the enemies present on the screen, and is only available once per life (they differ in actual range and power between the two characters). Though most enemies only require a few attacks to defeat, boss monsters present at the end of each level take much more, and may require an additional use of strategy.
Various power-ups can also be acquired that will increase the effectiveness of either Pocky or Rocky's attacks, such as making their projectiles larger or giving them the ability to throw multiple ones at once. Others include the ability to become invincible, or regain hit points, giving them more endurance. Each item obtained will add to the player's total score, and when a certain amount is reached, they are given an additional life, another chance to complete the current level.
Three levels of difficulty can be selected before a player begins the game: easy, normal or hard. Selecting a higher difficulty will make the enemy creatures more difficult to defeat and provide a higher challenge to the player, as well as increase the number of hits required to defeat a boss. Defeating the game on a harder mode will not yield any greater ending or reward, and it is merely for the player's own gameplay preference.
Music[edit | edit source]
The background music for Pocky & Rocky was composed by Hiroyuki Iwatsuki, an in-house Natsume composer who utilized traditional Japanese music with an electronic beat. No commercial soundtrack was ever made available, nor has the music appeared on a compilation album since the game's initial release.
Reception[edit | edit source]
Pocky & Rocky was awarded Best Game Duo of 1993 by Electronic Gaming Monthly.[4]
Sequels[edit | edit source]
Pocky & Rocky became popular enough to spawn two official sequels and one spiritual successor, though none are well recognized. The first sequel is called Pocky & Rocky 2 (or Kiki KaiKai: Kayako), also on SNES, and the other is Pocky & Rocky with Becky (Kiki KaiKai Advance) on the GBA. The GBA game introduces a new character called Becky (or Miki-chan in Japanese) who is also a miko like Pocky, but is only beginning her duties. UFO Entertainment later released a spiritual successor to the series called Heavenly Guardian, developed by Starfish, for the PS2 and Wii systems.[1]
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑'Pocky & Rocky series' Bub and Bob.com. URL Accessed on November 18, 2006
- ↑ 2.02.1In-game credits for the English-language release. Pocky & Rocky. 1993
- ↑'Pocky & Rocky (SNES)' IGN.com. URL Accessed on November 18, 2006.
- ↑Electronic Gaming Monthly's Buyer's Guide. 1994.
External links[edit | edit source]
|
Retrieved from 'https://gamicus.gamepedia.com/index.php?title=Pocky_%26_Rocky&oldid=736214'
Pocky & Rocky is a 1992 multidirectional scrolling shooter video game developed by Natsume for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. It is the sequel to the 1986 arcade game. Pocky & Rocky follows the adventures of a young Shinto shrine maiden named Pocky and her new companion, Rocky the tanuki as they attempt to save a group of creatures known as the Nopino Goblins. Gameplay takes place from a top-down perspective and features both single-player and cooperative modes; the game was well received by critics, was followed by a sequel in 1994, Pocky & Rocky 2. Pocky & Rocky is a scrolling shooter video game; the screen can move either horizontally or vertically and the player-controlled characters can move in eight directions. The game allows its players to continue indefinitely. In single-player mode, the player can choose to play as either Rocky. In two-player cooperative mode, both characters are on the screen at the same time. Pocky can use her ofudas to swing her gohei to damage enemies close up.
Rocky can throw leaves across the screen or turn his backside and swing his tail. Both characters can slide across the ground to cover area quickly. If a player bumps into the other while sliding in a two-player game, it will cause the other player to spin out of control across the screen, damaging any enemies they come in contact with. A limited-use special bomb attack can be used to hit several or all the enemies present on the screen. There are some differences between both characters. Pocky moves and slides faster than Rocky does. However, Rocky's slide attack goes a longer distance. Pocky's bomb attack is more powerful than Rocky's. Pocky can perform a spinning attack whereas Rocky is able to transform into an invulnerable and immobile statue for a short time. Various power-ups can be acquired that will increase the effectiveness of either Pocky or Rocky's attacks, such as making their projectiles larger or giving them the ability to throw multiple ones at once. Others include a shield that absorbs enemy attacks, a power-up that replenishes hit points, giving Pocky and Rocky more endurance.
![Rocky Rocky](https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/vgauntlet/images/f/ff/Status_is_Idol.png/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/160?cb=20120529054729)
A floating being called 'Help man' is hidden in each level. Set in a Far East-themed world, Pocky & Rocky is about a young miko girl named Pocky, tending to a shinto shrine when she is visited by Rocky the Tanuki, or raccoon. Rocky is a member of a group of creatures known as the Nopino Goblins; some time ago, the Nopino Goblin were stopped and cured by Pocky. Rocky tells Pocky that the Nopino Goblins have gone insane yet again, that she must help them. Pocky and Rocky are ambushed by the Nopino Goblins, which appear to be under a spell. Together and Rocky must unravel the mystery of, controlling the Nopino Goblins. Throughout the game, they battle a number including kappas. Pocky & Rocky was licensed by Taito to Natsume, who developed and published the game for release in Japan in 1992 and the rest of the world in 1993, it is the sequel to the 1986 arcade game KiKi KaiKai. In Japan, Pocky & Rocky was broadcast on the Satellaview service on June 6, 1997. Pocky & Rocky was well received by critics, some calling the gameplay addictive.
The two-player mode was considered by some reviewers to add a lot of value to the game. In addition, the controls were considered easy to play. On the other hand, some reviewers experienced slowdowns in frame rate; the graphics of the game the backgrounds and enemies, received praise for being colorful and well-animated, many comparing it to The Legend of the Mystical Ninja in graphical style. The special effects and weather effects in the game were well received by reviewers. However, some critics commented the lack of parallax Mode 7 effects; the music and sound was positively received, many critics thought it fit the theme and setting of the game well. Pocky & Rocky spawned one spiritual successor. In Pocky & Rocky 2 for SNES, Pocky and Rocky must work together once again to stop a forced marriage between a princess and a tyrant. In the second sequel, Pocky & Rocky with Becky for Game Boy Advance, the duo are joined by their friend Becky to stop a hydra dragon. UFO Interactive Games released a spiritual successor to the series called Heavenly Guardian, developed by Starfish for the PlayStation 2 and Wii video game consoles.
Notes References Pocky & Rocky at GameFAQS Pocky & Rocky at MobyGames IGN: Heavenly Guardian
The Jirajaran languages are group of extinct languages once spoken in western Venezuela in the regions of Falcón and Lara. All of the Jirajaran languages appear to have become extinct in the early 20th century. Based on adequate documentation, three languages are definitively classified as belonging to the Jirajaran family: Jirajara, spoken in the state of Falcón Ayomán, spoken in the village of Siquisique in the state of Lara Gayón, spoken at the sources of the Tocuyo River in the state of LaraLoukotka includes four additional languages, for which no linguistic documentation exists: Coyone, spoken at the sources of the Portuguesa River in the state of PortuguesaCuiba, spoken near the city of Aricagua Atatura, spoken between the Rocono and Tucupido rivers Aticari, spoken along the Tocuyo RiverMason lists: Gayón Ayomán Xagua Cuiba Jirajara The Jirajaran languages are regarded as isolates. Adelaar and Muysken note certain lexical similarities with the Timotean languages and typological similarity to the Chibchan languages, but state that the data is too limited to make a definitive classification.
Jahn, among others, has suggested a relation between the Jirajaran language and the Betoi languages on the basis of similar ethnonyms. Greenberg and Ruhlen classify Jirajaran as belonging to the Paezan language family, along with the Betoi languages, the Páez language, the Barbacoan languages and others. Based on the little documentation that exists, a number of typological characteristics are reconstructable: 1. VO word order in transitive clauses apasi mamán I.cut my.hand I cut my hand2. Subjects precede verbs depamilia buratá the.family is.good The family is good3. Possessors which precede the possessed shpashiú yemún arc its.rope the arc of the rope4. Adjectives follow the nouns they modify pok diú hill big big hill5. Numerals precede the nouns they quantify boque soó one cigarette one cigarette6. Use of postpositions, rather than prepositions angüi fru-ye I.go Siquisique-to. Jahn lists the following basic vocabulary items. Loukotka lists the following basic vocabulary items
Biography of a Bookie Joint is an American documentary that aired on November 30, 1961, on CBS under the network's CBS Reports banner. It documented Swartz's Key Shop, an illegal bookmaking establishment located at 364 Massachusetts Avenue in Boston, it was narrated by producer/reporter Jay McMullen. Filming began as early as May 30, 1961. According to Fred W. Friendly, Swartz's Key Shop was chosen because 'there was a prolonged attempt by law agencies to close up this one place'. CBS's crew concealed cameras in an apartment across the street. McMullen used an 8mm camera hidden in a lunch box to get footage of bookmakers accepting bets from hundreds of people inside the shop; the film showed 10 uniformed officers of the Boston Police Department and one retired BPD detective entering the establishment while illegal betting took place. Cameras captured members of the BPD walking past a burning trash can. One of the bookmakers was filmed leaving the shop around 8:30 AM to drive to his regular job at the Metropolitan District Commission headquarters.
On September 29 the shop was raided by members of the United States Department of the Treasury. The shop reopened again a week later. On October 27 it was raided again, this time by members of the Massachusetts State Police. In addition to footage of the key shop, Biography of a Bookie Joint featured interviews with members of the Internal Revenue Service's intelligence unit, the Massachusetts State Police, the New England Citizen's Crime Commission. State Representative Harrison Chadwick spoke about the influence bookmakers had on the state legislature. MSP Col. Carl Larson stated that he had informed Boston Police CommissionerLeo J. Sullivan on at least four occasions that illegal gambling was occurring at the key shop; each time, Sullivan sent back word to Larson that members of his department had visited the shop and found nothing to warrant an arrest. CBS elected not to air the program in Boston and Providence due to pending charges against the gamblers, it was rebroadcast nationally and for the first time in New England on March 20, 1963.
George McKinnon of The Boston Globe called Biography of a Bookie Joint 'a brilliantly handled documentary, far more intriguing than any TV private eye drama'. Jerome Sullivan stated that it may have been 'the biggest thing that has hit Boston in 20 years'. Biography of a Bookie Joint was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Program of the Year, it lost to the Hallmark Hall of Fame episode Victoria Regina. The day after the program aired, Governor John Volpe announced that he would have a 'showdown' with commissioner Sullivan. On December 8, Volpe asked Sullivan for his resignation. Sullivan refused and Volpe hired James D. St. Clair to prepare removal proceedings against Sullivan. Sullivan was brought before the Massachusetts Governor's Council's on charges of neglecting his duty by not ordering an investigation into the officers who were filmed visiting Swartz's Key Shop as well as three unrelated offenses. Sullivan resigned on March 1962, during the hearings on his removal. Following Sullivan's resignation, a number of changes were made to the department.
Fiscal control of the BPD and the power to appoint the police commissioner was transferred from the Governor of Massachusetts to the Mayor of Boston. Edmund McNamara was brought in from the FBI to become police commissioner and Quinn Tamm was hired to perform a survey of the department. Harrison Chadwick was publicly censured by the Massachusetts House of Representatives for his remarks in the film. In 1964 the House voted to reverse its censure. Abraham Swartz, proprietor of the shop, was fined $1,000 and given a three-month suspended sentence in November 1961, he died on February 26, 1962. Harry Portnoy, principal in the gambling operation, was not arrested because he possessed a federal wagering stamp, he was convicted of assaulting a U. S. Marshal who attempted to serve him a summons. Michael DiNunzio, a key maker who served as a front for the operation, was fined $1,000 and spent three months in jail. In 1963, DiNunzio was arrested in a raid of gambling operation located in a key shop across the street from Swartz's
Western Cattle in Storm is a $1 stamp issued by the United States Post Office Department as part of the 1898 Trans-Mississippi Issue. Western Cattle in Storm is one of nine commemorative postage stamps in the series, which marked the 1898 Trans-Mississippi Exposition held in Omaha, Nebraska. While the entire Trans-Mississippi Issue set has been praised for its quality, viewed by generations of U. S. stamp specialists as 'one of the most beautiful sets of postage stamps our country has issued,' the $1 stamp called the Black Bull, stands out from the rest. The breed of cattle used in the issue were meant to represent the ruggedness of the American West, but derive from the Highlands of Scotland. That's because the design originated in a John MacWhirter painting depicting cattle in a winter storm in central Scotland. An engraving of this painting by one C. O. Murray was published at least twice in England, this image, without the permission of the painting's owner, Lord Blythswood, was used by an American cattle company on its calendar as a trademark of sorts.'MacWhirter, was a Scot, his painting, entitled The Vanguard, was soon discovered to have been a depiction of Scottish cattle in a storm in Scotland,' according to a company called Chicago Stamps.
'It was painted in a small farmhouse near the Scottish highland town of Calendar. The scene did not depict an event west of the Mississippi, but it might have been, few cared about this detail, for cattle were an important part of the western U. S. economy.' This image caught the attention of the Post Office Department and Raymond Ostrander Smith, the staff designer of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing at the time, it was adopted for the $1 design. Little did the designer know that the scene depicted was in Scotland, not the Western U. S. as was supposed. A full apology was issued to the owner of the painting. Both the frame and the vignette of the stamp were engraved by Marcus W. Baldwin; the feature that gives this stamp its singular distinction and beauty, its coal-black color, was decided upon only a few days before the issue went to press. The $1 stamp and the eight others in the Trans-Mississippi series were to be two-toned, with all the vignettes printed in black and the various frames printed in different colors.
In preliminary bi-color die essays, a brownish-purple frame surrounds the cattle herd. However, after the outbreak of the Spanish–American War in April, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing found its resources overtaxed by the need for additional revenue stamps, so, elected to simplify the printing process for the Trans-Mississippi series by issuing the stamps in single colors; the color chosen for the $1 value, announced by the Post Office on May 16, was light brown. Only on May 26, four days before printing began, did the public learn that the denomination would instead be printed with black ink; the entire printing run of Western Cattle in Storm lasted three days, from June 1–3, 1898. In all, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing shipped 56,900 copies of the stamp to post offices; the earliest known date of delivery to postmasters of stamps of the Trans-Mississippi Issue is June 15, 1898. The assigned first day of issue was June 17. There had been considerable pre-issue publicity regarding the series, which resulted in an early rush on the initial limited supplies available at post offices.
But such interest was short-lived as post offices replenished their stocks, the novelty of the new stamps wore off, speculative interest waned. On December 31, 1898, the sale of stamps to postmasters was discontinued. Afterward, an unknown quantity of unsold stamps were destroyed. Prior to the issuance of the $1 Western Cattle in Storm, only two other $1 US postage stamps had been printed and released: the $1 Columbian Exposition stamp issued in 1893 and titled Isabella Pledging Her Jewels and the $1 Oliver Hazard Perry issued in 1894. While today Western Cattle in Storm is regarded as one of the most attractive U. S. stamps produced, there have been detractors. John Luff, one of the most influential philatelic writers of his day did not think much of the stamp or others in the series, according to Chicago Stamps. 'The stamps are poorly conceived and executed, overloaded with ornaments, heavy in color and blurred in printing,' he wrote in 1902. But by 1933, author Ralph Kimble described the Trans-Mississippi stamps as 'perhaps the most attractive set of commemoratives which we have had,' adding additional flattery for the $1 stamp.
In 1934, Stamps magazine asked readers to vote on the most beautiful stamp in the world. The Canadian 1928 50¢ Bluenose stamp won first place with Western Cattle in Storm placing second. Today, pristine copies of Western Cattle in Storm can sell for tens of thousands of dollars. In 1998, the nine stamps of the Trans-Mississippi Issue were all reissued on a souvenir sheet by the U. S. Postal Service, along with a separate souvenir sheet containing nine copies of 'Western Cattle in Storm.' Unlike in 1898, the 1998 versions were issued in two colors. Notes SourcesLester G. Brookman, The Nineteenth Century Postage Stamps of the United States. John N. Luff and Benno Loewy, The Postage Stamps of the United States
Secret Beyond the Door is a 1947 American film noir psychological thriller and a modern updating of the Bluebeard fairytale, directed by Fritz Lang, produced by Lang's Diana Productions, released by Universal Pictures. The film was produced by her husband Walter Wanger; the black-and-white film noir drama is about a woman who suspects her new husband, an architect, plans to kill her. The behavior of Mark Lamphere, an architect, turns strange shortly after his honeymoon with bride Celia, who begins finding out that Mark has many secrets, it turns out he was married before, his wife died suspiciously and they have a son. He has a fiercely loyal secretary, Miss Robey, whose face is disfigured. Mark appears to be somewhat delusional and could be intending to murder Celia inside a room he keeps locked; the disturbed Miss Robey ends up setting fire to the house, whereupon Mark redeems himself in Celia's eyes by saving her life. Joan Bennett as Celia Lamphere Michael Redgrave as Mark Lamphere Anne Revere as Caroline Lamphere Barbara O'Neil as Miss Robey Natalie Schafer as Edith Potter Paul Cavanagh as Rick Barrett Anabel Shaw as Intellectual Sub-Deb Rosa Rey as PaquitaJames Seay as Bob Dwight Mark Dennis as David Lamphere The film recorded a loss of $1,145,000.
Secret Beyond the Door was released in the UK on DVD in November 2011 by Exposure Cinema. Olive Films released the film in the United States on DVD and Blu-ray on September 4, 2012. Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 54% of 13 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; when the film was first released, film critic Bosley Crowther, gave the film a mixed review, writing, 'If you want to be tough about it—okay, it's a pretty silly yarn and it is played in a manner no less fatuous by the sundry members of the cast. But Mr. Lang is still a director who knows how to turn the obvious, such as locked doors and silent chambers and roving spotlights, into strangely tingling stuff, and that's why, for all its psycho-nonsense, this film has some mildly creepy spots and some occasional faint resemblance to Rebecca which it was aimed to imitate.' Variety called it arty and surrealistic. The motivations of the characters were described as murky. Jonathan Rosenbaum of the Chicago Reader called the film's murkiness a strength.
Secret Beyond the Door at the American Film Institute Catalog Secret Beyond the Door on IMDb Secret Beyond the Door at AllMovie Secret Beyond the Door at the TCM Movie Database Secret Beyond the Door film scene on YouTube
This is a list of middle schools in the state of Kentucky. If necessary, the schools are split into public and private, by district. Note that Kentucky has two types of public school districts: county districts, styled 'XXXX County Schools' or in some cases 'XXXX County School District'. Unless specified, public schools are affiliated with their associated county district. Adair County Schools Adair County Middle School, Columbia Allen County Schools James E. Bazzell Middle School, Scottsville Anderson County Schools Anderson County Middle School, Lawrenceburg Private Christian Academy of Lawrenceburg, Lawrenceburg Ballard County Schools Ballard County Middle School, Barlow Barren County Schools Barren County Middle School, Glasgow Glasgow Independent Schools Glasgow Middle School, Glasgow Private Glasgow Christian Academy, Glasgow Bath County Schools Bath County Middle School, Owingsville Bell County Schools Bell Central School Center, Pineville Frakes School Center, Frakes Lone Jack School Center, Fourmile Page School Center, Pineville Right Fork School Center, Kettle Island Yellow Creek School Center, Middlesboro Middlesboro Independent Schools Middlesboro Middle School, Middlesboro Pineville Independent Schools Pineville Middle School, Pineville Boone County SchoolsBallyshannon Middle School, Union Camp Ernst Middle School, Burlington Conner Middle School, Hebron Gray Middle School, Union Ockerman Middle School, Florence R. A. Jones Middle School, Florence Walton-Verona Independent Schools Walton-Verona Middle School, Walton Private Heritage Academy, Florence Bourbon County Schools Bourbon County Middle School, Paris Paris Independent Schools Paris Middle School, Paris Private Bourbon Christian Academy, Paris Ashland Independent Schools George M. Verity Middle School, Ashland Boyd County Public Schools Boyd County Middle School, Ashland Fairview Independent Schools Fairview High School, Westwood Private Rose Hill Christian School, Ashland Boyle County Schools Boyle County Middle School, Danville Danville Independent Schools John W. Bate Middle School, Danville Private Danville Christian Academy, Danville State-operated Kentucky School for the Deaf, Danville Augusta Independent Schools Augusta Junior High School, Augusta Bracken County Schools Bracken County Middle School, BrooksvillePrivate Saint Augustine School, Augusta Breathitt County Schools Eugene Sebastian Middle School, Jackson Jackson Independent Schools Jackson City School, Jackson Breckinridge County Schools Breckinridge County Middle School, Harned Bullitt County Public Schools Bernheim Middle School, ShepherdsvilleBullitt Lick Middle School, Shepherdsville Eastside Middle School, Mount Washington Hebron Middle School, Shepherdsville Mount Washington Middle School, Mount Washington Zoneton Middle School, Shepherdsville Butler County Schools Butler County Middle School, Morgantown Caldwell County Schools Caldwell County Middle School, Princeton Calloway County Schools, Murray Calloway County Middle School Murray Independent Schools Murray Middle School, Murray Campbell County Schools Campbell County Middle School, AlexandriaCarlisle County Public Schools Carlisle County Middle School, Bardwell Carroll County Schools Carroll County Middle School, Carrollton Carter County Schools East Carter Middle School, Grayson West Carter Middle School, Olive Hill Casey County Schools Casey County Middle School, Liberty Christian County Public Schools Christian County Middle School, Hopkinsville Hopkinsville Middle School, Hopkinsville North Drive Middle School, Hopkinsville Clark County Public Schools Clark Middle School, Winchester Conkwright Middle School, Winchester Clay County Public Schools Clay County Middle School, Manchester Clinton County Schools Clinton County Middle School, AlbanyCrittenden County Schools Crittenden County Middle School, Marion Cumberland County Schools Cumberland County Middle School, BurkesvilleDaviess County Public Schools College View Middle School, OwensboroDaviess County Middle School Owensboro F.
T. Burns Middle School, Owensboro Owensboro Public Schools Owensboro Middle School, Owensboro Edmonson County Schools Edmonson County Middle School, Brownsville Elliott County Schools Elliott County High School, Sandy Hook Estill County Schools Estill County Middle School, Irvine Fayette County Public Schools Beaumont Middle School, Lexington Bryan Station Middle School, Lexington Crawford Middle School, Lexington E. J. Hayes Middle School, Lexington Jessie Clark Middle School, Lexington Leestown Middle School, Lexington Lexington Traditional Middle School, Lexington Morton Middle School, Lexington Tates Creek Middle School, Lexington Winburn Middle School, Lexington Southern Middle School, Lexington Fleming County Schools Simons Middle School, Flemingsburg Floyd County Schools Allen Central Middle School, Eastern James D. Adams Middle School, Prestonsburg Betsy Layne Middle School, Betsy Layne, Kentucky South Floyd Middle School, Hi Hat Frankfort Independent Schools Second Street Elementary School, Frankfort Wilkinson Street School, Frankfort Franklin County Public Schools Bondurant Middle School, Frankfort Elkhorn Middle School, Frankfort Fulton County Schools Fulton County Middle School, Hickman Fulton Independent Schools Fulton City High School, Fulton Gallatin County Schools Gallatin County Middle School, Warsaw Garrard County Schools Garrard Middle School, Lancaster Grant County Schools Grant County Middle School, Dry Ridge Williamstown Independent Schools Williamstown High School, Williamstown Graves County Schools Graves County Middle School, Mayfield Mayfield Independent Schools Mayfield Middle School, Mayfield Grayson County Schools Grayson County Middle School, Leitchfield Green County Sc
![](/uploads/1/2/7/4/127423557/512710962.png)