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  1. 6. huhtik. 2019 · Roar-ee the Lion; Talk:Roar-ee the Lion; Template:Did you know nominations/Roar-ee the Lion; Wikipedia:Recent additions/2021/August; Wikipedia:Main Page history/2021 August 27b; Wikipedia:Did you know/Statistics/Monthly DYK pageview leaders/2021/August; Usage on tum.wikipedia.org Wikipedia:Recent additions/2021/August

  2. 18. syysk. 2019 · Today, there are over 750 student-athletes that play under the Columbia banner. In four years, every single one of those athletes will have graduated. Teams can win an Ivy League title one season and then rank last the next. But in spite of the fleeting nature of college sports, there remains one constant in Columbia Athletics: Roar-ee the Lion.

  3. Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Roaree_the_Lion&oldid=1033026297"

  4. 18. marrask. 2018 · This file has an extracted image: Roaree the Lion, Columbia University mascot (cropped).jpg. Camera location. 40° 52′ 25.74″ N, 73° 55′ 00.27″ W. View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMap. 40.873817; -73.916742.

  5. Already a long established symbol of the university, it was first adopted as the university's mascot in 1910 under the name "Leo Columbiae", and was renamed Roar-ee the Lion in 2005. Throughout its history, the Lion has been represented by live specimens on several occasions, including the 1934 Rose Bowl and a 1963 football game against Princeton .

  6. The Lions Columbia's Mascot, Roar-ee the Lion, at a football game, 2018. Columbia University was founded in 1754 and currently fields 31 co-ed, men's and women's teams. Women's teams are cooperatively organized with the affiliated Barnard College.