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Word: predictible (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...makes it tough to predict what some of the non-league teams will be like this year," Cleary said. "But I really doubt that too many freshmen will be playing." UNH lists have frosh on their runner...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Crimson Hockey Squad Faces Off Against UNH | 12/2/1972 | See Source »

...about 80 per cent for Nixon. The Cadets like to deal is facts rather than speculation, so a political discussion often involves definitive statements of what is rather then musings about what might be. Most of the Cadets can describe each weapon in the American or Soviet military arsenal, predict its strengths and weaknesses, and most still view the world as a battlefield where it is important that the U.S. arsenal be stronger missile for missile than that of the Soviet Union...

Author: By Michael S. Feldberg, | Title: The Other Side of This Life | 11/29/1972 | See Source »

Conflict. For the sake of campus peace, white administrators seem willing to tolerate a quiet separation of the races. They take satisfaction in the absence of open racial conflict, and they predict that self-segregation will go away by itself, though Elliot Soloman, a white junior at Columbia, points out: "There's no tension if there's no contact." Other administrators minimize the existence of self-segregation by describing it in euphemisms. Thus John Bunzel, president of California State University at San Jose, calls it "self-development," while at Barnard, Housing Director Blanche Lawton justifies reserving two dormitory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The Two Societies | 11/27/1972 | See Source »

...HAVEN, Conn.--carmen Cozza, head coach of the Yale fastball teams, calling breaks the boy to the game, declined earlier this week to predict the outcome of today's battle between the Crimson and the Elis...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yale's Cozza: 'Breaks Are the Came' | 11/25/1972 | See Source »

...accuracy that counts," insisted NBC Executive Producer Robert Northshield. "I didn't give one goddam who won the race. The minute I walk into the studio I always enjoy a suspension of citizenship." Still he was quick to recall that NBC had been the first to predict the Johnson victory in 1964. ABC News President Elmer Lower also demanded accuracy over immediacy-and put his network where his mouth was. Ronald Reagan, among others, had asked that broadcasters hold predictions until Western polls closed. ABC alone honored the request, thereby losing the first-with-the-least sweepstakes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Last-Place Tie | 11/20/1972 | See Source »

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