Word: touchingly
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Dates: during 1910-1910
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...rare event to hear him pass an unfriendly judgment, and he disliked to hear it done by others. He appreciated keenly the peculiarities of his acquaintances, and could characterize them with accuracy and wit. But such comments were always kindly or marked by a light and playful touch, devoid of sting...
...powers of the new Council: anyone who was in touch with the organization in the past knows that the defect of last year's Council was not its personnel--it was representative enough--but its careful observance of the limits of its authority; its punctilious avoidance of certain burning questions which concerned the whole body of undergraduates but which had not been expressly nominated in the bond which created the Council. The new Council of course will have any powers with which it is endowed by the President and Deans of the University on the one hand...
...brains; it is in excellent physical condition, and has great physical capacity; lastly it is determined to win. Malcolm Donald '99, the second speaker, talked along the same lines, emphasizing the importance of Coach Haughton and the Committee on Athletics. This Committee has always kept in close touch with the undergraduates and will continue to do so as long as Dean Briggs is chairman...
...together all component clubs, or a number of them, to discuss such an issue in common, thus helping to form and guide undergraduate opinion. It is hoped that questions may be referred from the Faculty or from the Student Council. Fourth, the council will endeavor to keep in close touch with the club situation in the University, to encourage the clubs in their individual work, to prevent needless duplication, and if necessary to decide disputes as to jurisdiction. Finally, the council will issue a pamphlet giving a general detailed account of its work which will be available to all members...
...four main objects, set forth in another column of this morning's CRIMSON, the Council of Federated Clubs adopts a business-like policy for attaining its ends. In preventing conflicts in dates and in the clubs mutually in touch with each other, unanimity of feeling and action can be brought about, which will enable the council's third object, the general discussion of matters of wide interest and significance, to become of importance...