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Word: repeating (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1920
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Usage:

...right now everyone interested in athletics or in exercise, and is not a candidate for any other team, will report to the Hemenway Gymnasium on Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoons at four o'clock to Mr. Surbeck. After Christmas, we shall start running on the track, but, I repeat the time to get in "on the ground floor...

Author: By Ex-captain WILLIAM J. bingham and University TRACK Supervisor., (SPECIAL ARTICLE FOR THE CRIMSON)S | Title: "GET IN ON THE GROUND FLOOR," URGES BINGHAM | 12/6/1920 | See Source »

...Unless the Yale players are mentally backward, they won't repeat the mistakes in judgment which have counted against them earlier this year...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "4 TO 1?" | 11/19/1920 | See Source »

Brown, as a result of its fine showing last Saturday which almost caused the defeat of the Elis, hopes to repeat its performance of 1916 in which it beat the University team 21 to 0. However, in 1916, Brown had a remarkable eleven composed of several All-American men and succeeded in defeating all of its opponents except Colgate...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BROWN ELEVEN INVADES STADIUM WITH ONLY DEFEAT OF SEASON THAT BY ELIS | 11/13/1920 | See Source »

...remarkable showing it made against the husky West Virginia Mountaineers. The undergraduates who had begun to fear that "Tad" Jones would not live up to their expectations, were partly consoled for the defeat at the hands of Boston College and are now hoping that their eleven will repeat its performance of 1916 when, after a mid-season defeat at the hands of Brown, it turned around and beat both Harvard and Princeton...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: YALE MORALE IMPROVED AS RESULT OF B. C. SHAKE-UP | 10/27/1920 | See Source »

...show their loyalty to the University, or to hear some prominent speaker, to be partially suffocated whenever they do so? This condition certainly does not aid athletic meetings; for how can one cheer when he is having difficulty in breathing; and who is going to be ready to repeat the experience? A stranger, watching the hopeless overcrowding at the Union Tuesday evening would certainly ask. "Why don't they hold such meetings in a hall of adequate size?" And those familiar with Harvard would have to answer, "We have no hall of adequate size, or even any approaching adequate size...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SUFFOCATION AND ITS REMEDY | 10/22/1920 | See Source »

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