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SCIENCE 



[N. S. Vol. XXXIX. No. 995 



bers, as against 737 at Illinois, 731 at Har- 

 vard, 725 at Cornell, and 633 at Wisconsin. 



The 638 students enrolled at the Univer- 

 sity of California in extension and similar 

 courses are distributed as follows: San 

 Francisco Institute of Art 201, Wilmerding 

 School of Industrial Arts 155, University 

 Farm School 187, and short courses in agri- 

 culture 95. 



The 3,182 students listed under extension 

 and similar courses at the University of 

 Chicago are enrolled in correspondence 

 study courses. The 808 students mentioned 

 under other courses are enrolled in regular 

 university courses given primarily for 

 teachers which meet on Saturday mornings 

 and late in the afternoons. 



Among the 84 students of medicine en- 

 rolled at the University of Cincinnati, 23 

 are registered in clinics and pathological 

 work. The 486 students mentioned under 

 other courses are enrolled in evening aca- 

 demic courses. 



Of the 3,644 students enrolled under ex- 

 tension and similar courses at Columbia 

 University, 1,152 are students in special 

 classes at Teachers College and 2,492 are 

 students in extension courses. 



Of the 1,120 students registered at Cor- 

 nell University under arts and sciences, 950 

 are candidates for the degree of A.B. and 

 170 for the degree of B.Chem. Of the to- 

 tal number of 4,760 students enrolled in the 

 fall, 4,273 are men and 487 women. The 

 students mentioned under extension and 

 similar courses were enrolled in the short 

 winter course in agriculture for 1912-13. 



The 113 students mentioned under com- 

 merce at Harvard University are enrolled 

 in the graduate school of business admin- 

 istration. Of the 61 students in architec- 

 ture, 23 are enrolled in landscape architec- 

 ture, while the 76 students mentioned un- 

 der scientific schools are enrolled in the 

 graduate school of applied science. Only 



one department, forestry, which is a part 

 of the graduate school of applied science, 

 shows a marked decrease, the enrollment 

 having dropped from 18 to 9. This may 

 possibly be accounted for by the fact that 

 this year for the first time students were 

 expected to register in July, instead of in 

 September, and this may not have been 

 sufficiently widely known. Also, the course 

 has been changed somewhat, including gen- 

 eral work in the first year and special 

 work in the second year. In landscape 

 architecture, which is also in the graduate 

 school of applied science, there has been a 

 marked increase, 23 students being enroll- 

 ed this year, as opposed to 15 in 1912, and 

 7 in 1911. 



Of the 350 students given under other 

 courses at the University of Illinois, 310 are 

 enrolled in household science and 40 in li- 

 brary economy. In Chicago, the depart- 

 ments of medicine and dentistry have been 

 reopened with higher entrance require- 

 ments — hence the material loss in the regis- 

 tration in these schools as compared with 

 the registration of two years ago. 



The students mentioned under scientific 

 schools at Indiana University are pursuing 

 courses in chemistry, provision for tech- 

 nical work being made at Purdue Univer- 

 sity. 



The 86 students given under other 

 courses at the State University of Iowa are 

 enrolled in courses for nurses. 



At Johns Hopkins, 169 men and 39 

 women are enrolled in the graduate school, 

 and 15 are taking graduate work in engin- 

 eering. Of the 368 students given under 

 medicine, 8 are physicians attending spe- 

 cial courses. 



Of the 353 students given under medi- 

 cine at the University of Michigan, 75 are 

 enrolled in the homeopathic medical col- 

 lege. 



At the University of Minnesota, agricul- 



