Word: regarded
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...different. Out of the twenty-four games played in the last seven years, Harvard has won thirteen, while Yale has been victorious in eleven. Harvard has won four series, Yale one, with two ties. In 1881 the tie could not be played off, owing to some disagreement with regard to the date. In 1882 a date was arranged for a deciding game, but Yale, knowing they had won the championship without showing a superiority over at least two teams, backed squarely out of the game. They claimed that they could not hold their nine together, but the fact that they...
...Princeton man writes in regard to the foot-ball championship: "Our place this year is very poor; our confidence during the first part of the year was of the highest. and, I think, the fact that three of our best players were injured early in the season accounts for our failure...
...course," alluding to Harvard, "but does that justify the conduct of their men among the spectators, hissing every fine play made by the Yale team?" We owe thanks to the Record for furnishing us with this truly Yaleistic idea of "fine playing." It is quits an innovation to regard intentional and repeated breaking of the established rules in the light of skill, and as if it deserved high credit in place of the well-merited condemnation it received. There is one way, and only one, by which our New Haven friends may escape all imputation of "muckerism," and as they...
...even seen a city-cut garment. Professor - passed my window this morning, taking a walk, for he did not learn the antics of the gymnasium in his college days, and still holds to the old-time constitutional in the open air. He dresses so plainly, and with so little regard to modern style, that he looks positively quaint. Another equally learned professor, whom I met the other day, dresses also very plainly and unfashionably. Their manners are so unaffected and simple, with all their learning, and not in the least like the 'airs' of the students they teach. The freshmen...
...World thinks that the Harvard-Yale game "showed that the rules are not sufficiently strict in regard to the penalties for foul tackling. For this offense the penalty should be the removal of the player guilty of it from the field during the half-time in which it was committed. In regard to the block game, the only rule likely to put a stop to that is to make so many safety touchdowns equal to a regular touchdown. Four touchdowns are equal to a goal, and it would be well to make four safety touchdowns equal to a regular touchdown...