I News From The Other Colleges/ iI - I of the meeting at Le two I Lunches Confectionery ,ream, Delicious Sodas lake our own Ice Cream licited from Fraternities and 218 S. Main Phone 166 Notice to Students Desir- iter Professional Schools. /. , Princeton.-Next year's Princeton t fellowship at Harvard has been awarded to Sidney D. Sherrerd, '18. The award was made by the Harvard corporation on the recommendation of the committee on general scholar- ships. The Princeton fellowship, given in 1910 by a Princeton alumnus as a token of the friendly relations ,exist- ing between Harvard and Princeton, goes each year to a Princeton man who desires to enter one of the Har- vard graduate departments. Dartmouth.-Darthmouth freshmen have instituted something novel by organizing a jazz band to play at meal hours in the commons. The plan was fostered by a committee and later supported by the commons' manager, who is arranging a definite schedule for the musicians. Harvard.-In a recent drive for "Ame'rica's Gift to France" held by 20 different colleges, $1,500 was raised. Harvard leads the list with $628, Penn follows with $234.07, and Yale and Cornell take third and fourth places. Hobart was the only one to report a 100 per cent offering. Marquette.-The "I Hate Me Club" has been converted into a sorority- fraternity combination. The name of the new club is Iota Eta Mu. Making the egotistical person supreme, and cultivating greater self-love are the noble purposes of this club. Iowa.-A big pep meeting was held at Iowa college recently at which the membership mystery of the "Howling 300" club was to be divulged. This new campus organization is being planned by the University yell leaders. The purpose of the club is to promote Iowa spirit. Columbia.-Under the auspices of the Columbia Spectator and the School of Journalism, repiesentatives of most of the Eastern dailies will meet at Columbia on May 7 and 8. Previous to the war these papers were organized as the Intercollegiate Pub- lications' association, but under the. stress of war conditions it broke up. The association will facilitate the ex- change of stories and cuts among the members and will serve as a connect- ing bond between them. Coincident with the meeting at Co- lumbia, the Intercollegiate Newspaper association qf the Middle Atlantic states will meet at Rutgers college, groups of representatives will meet to- gether. Columbia university has lately inau- gurated a course in scoutcraft. In co- operation with the Boy Scouts of America the classes are conducted similarly to a meeting of a scout troop and overnight hikes to nearby camps are taken regularly. In this way all the principles of scouting are inter- estingly taught to the student teach- ers and business men, many of whom take the course as a recreation and a means of learning the secrets of the great outdoors. The sa-ving in rug wear alone will pay for the TORRINGTON. It removes the gritty, introdden dirt that cuts the fabric. It brightens up the delicate colorings of your expensive rugs and carpets and adds yeais to their life. Free demonstration. +ARRON 9groY -?fadored SOFT COC CLLIETT, PEABODY & co., INC.. TI applying for admission to one of the professional ie University will not only be required to present two years of college credit (including the specific anded for admission to the respective schools) but ow evidence of an average scholarship for the two east a "C" grade and not be upon the "Warned" n" list in their final semester in the College of Lit- nce, and the Arts. coming from other institutions not employing' a ngs system will be required to furnish a recommen- the proper authority in the school from which they- ' WASUTENAW ELECTRIC S r THE SHOP OF QUALITY - 200 E. Washington 'Ph..,:278 1U , _ VICTOR C. VAUGHAN, Dean of Medical School HENRY M. BATES, Dean of Law School WILBERT B. HINSDALE, Dean of Homoeopathic Medical School PORTRAIT Personal and Distinctive Communicationsj Editor, The Michigan Daily: "How do you think about the pic- tures?" a Chinese student asked his American friend right after a recent lecture.' "Well, I don't know," said his friend, "but I have always seen pictures of the same kind represent- ing your country. One day I saw a picture, 'The Yellow Man and a White irl,' in a movie; and another day i saw some of your poor countrymen in another picture. They are alwa'ys villains." This short co'nversation expresses 'the whole situation. The writer has no objection to the pictures the lec- turer has given. But one thing lie is afraid of is that his country may likely be misinterpreted, if all the pictures representing his country are of the same kind. Do the Americans know how the Chinese made thseir conception of America? Most Chinese people, no doubt, judge the United States by the pictures they have seen. The writer saw pictures of the Ford Motor Car Co., the U. S. Asphalt Co., the Fifth Avenue- of New York,, and President Wilson in Paris, etc. So the conver- sation in China runs as the following: "Well, the United States is fine," said the white-beard; "I shall spend all my savings to send my son there to study." "Yes, father," said the son gladly, "I want to go. r like the United States and its people." Now it is clear what the conception of the Americans will be when they see the pictures of this kind.. The writer hopes that some pictures representing the inodern China, or the bright side of China, will be shown some time; so that people will under- stand each other better and like each other. A CHINESE STUDENT. a k S t ishingtrn Str.eet Phone 598 "I -r G 4 the master diaWhvd~Pencir. A man is judged by the pencil hemeeps. A well-sharpened Dixon's Eldorado is a friend to be proud of.K JOSEPH DIXON CRUCIBLE CO. Pencil Dept. Jersey City, N. J. Ca ian DistributorE . . 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