Word: regardless
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...first two of the new rules adopted at Harvard, which were also adopted in the Harvard-Pennsylvania football agreement. Rule III, with regard to the time limit, is the same as the Harvard rule except that a student is allowed to play four years on a 'varsity team regardless of whether he has represented another college before or not. This difference is due to the fact that many of the so-called colleges from which students go to the University of Pennsylvania, are in reality little above the large New England preparatory schools...
...strictly college basis, but it was found that Yale had prepared laws that would benefit Yale and reduce her opponents. Harvard, with a spirit which all colleges would do well to imitate, begins at home and enacts a series of laws for the purification of Harvard athletics, regardless of the advantages her adversaries might gain by them. As a result Harvard has to elect a substitute to captain her baseball team and her crew is seriously handicapped. But what of that? The victory is Harvard's, whether she win or lose, for she has taken a higher stand and bound...
...year only, and is subject to considerable modification. It can hardly prove an insurmountable obstacle, considering the strong feeling at Yale against it and in view of the declaration which was made, when the first vote at Yale was reconsidered, that games would be arranged with Harvard regardless of the action of the university on the second vote...
...club started in 1889 as the Harvard Free Wool Club, but last year the objects of the club were extended beyond a mere reform in the tariff, and the club devoted itself to the broader subject of political reform. The club welcomes any member of the university regardless of party, who is in sympathy with the objects of the club - reform. Men who are not yet members may apply to the secretary, J. D. Hubbell, 7 Linden...
...instructor to treat him in any such manner. It seems a petty thing to refer to, but we hope that Ninety-six will look out for it in future. Moreover when the class is dismissed the men generally make a great rush from Boylston Hall to Memorial, regardless of trees and shrubs on the lawns. In this manner several valuable plants have been badly injured. We can understand, considering the unpleasant system of general tables and checking at Memorial, how each man wishes to get there as soon as possible, but it should not be done at the expense...