Word: needless
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Athletic Committee of the Faculty attended in a body the Yale-Princeton and Wesleyan-Pennsylvania games of foot ball in New York on Thursday, and, it is needless to add, came away greatly edified...
Tuesday evening, the Chelsea Republicans enjoyed the services of the band in a parade in that classic town. The procession was a great success, notwithstanding the mud and wet weather. The band, it is perhaps needless to say, kept to its usual high standard of merit, and met with the universal approval of muckerdom, which was extremely well represented along the route. The beet part of this parade is generally considered to be the supper, which a member, living in Chelsea, kindly provided for the band. It is rumored that there were several young ladies present at the party...
...almost needless, after the long discussion of the subject with which we have been favored, to refer again to the proposed torchlight procession on next Thursday evening. But much has been said of late concerning the alarming difference in political opinions among the students with reference to their bearing upon college unity. Twice have we seen partisan processions go out from Harvard, in support of partisan felling. Each time the college at large has not felt cooled upon to accompany the movement and has looked upon the procession as a merely local affair. And here the division of the students...
...trained men with marked success purely from a lively interest in, and love of the sport, and the fact that his timing of records is accepted by the National Association of American Athletes, is a proof of his high standing in athletic circles. It may, perhaps, be needless to add that his appointment, as far as can be ascertained, is recommended by all athletic men in college, and would be endorsed by many outside who have personal knowledge of his character and ability to fill the position in question in a creditable manner. We might well be congratulated on having...
...with his other fist and struck President Barnard in the shoulder; for it was he who, interfering to stop the rush, had laid his hand upon the freshman. Nothing daunted, the president returned the blow in a manner which made the young man have a nose bleed. It is needless to say that the other participants in the rush retired precipitately, and order was restored at once. Hereafter, when Columbia under-classmen desire to rush each other, they will have to resort to some place outside of the college...