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SCIENCE 



[N. S. Vol. XL. No. 1043 



and 780 women; Wisconsin, with 8Y1 men and 

 874 women; Columbia, with 1,014 men and 

 689 women; Chicago, with 911 men and 746 

 women ; Minnesota, with 816 men and 905 

 women; Texas, with 817 men and 651 women; 

 Yale, with 1,437 men; Kansas, with 776 men 

 «nd 626 women; Nebraska, with 650 men and 

 761 women; Missouri, with 829 men and 562 

 •women ; Syracuse, with 1,330 men and women ; 

 tPrinceton, with 1,327 men; Indiana, with 778 

 men and 461 women; Cornell, with 926 men 

 and 279 women, and Northwestern, with 522 

 men and 653 women. In the scientific schools, 

 that is the schools of engineering, Illinois takes 

 the lead with 1,406 students, followed by Cor- 

 aell with 1,363, Michigan with 1,347, Tale with 

 1,056, Pennsylvania with 906, Ohio State with 

 851, Wisconsin with 796, California with 763, 

 Minnesota with 590, Columbia with 461. Cin- 

 cinnati with 458, Kansas with 427, and Stan- 

 ford with 418 ; and in the law schools Harvard 

 'takes the lead with 716 students, followed by 

 JJew York University with 715, Michigan with 

 "499, Columbia with 440, Pennsylvania with 

 356, Texas with 343 and Northwestern with 

 336. 



The largest medical school is now in the east 

 at New York University where 439 students 

 are registered in this subject. Michigan fol- 

 lows with 378 students, Johns Hopkins with 

 374, Columbia with 358, Tulane with 343, 

 Harvard with 321, Pennsylvania with 290, 

 Illinois with 287 and Ohio State with 281. 

 Columbia has the largest non-professional 

 graduate school with 1,689 students, far out- 

 numbering Chicago with 598, Harvard with 

 512, Pennsylvania with 489, California with 

 478, New York University with 376, Yale with 

 371, Illinois with 340 and Cornell and Wis- 

 consin with 321 each. Cornell holds the lead 

 in agriculture with 1,535 students, followed 

 by Wisconsin with 1,091, Ohio State with 973 

 and Illinois with 959. Four of the univer- 

 sities report courses in architecture. Of these 

 Cornell is the leader with 157 students in this 

 branch, followed by Michigan with 145, Colum- 

 bia with 110 and California with 16. Har- 

 vard, Illinois, Kansas, Minnesota, Ohio State, 

 Pennsylvania, Syracuse, Texas, Tulane and 



Washington University have registered stu- 

 dents in architecture, but listed in other de- 

 partments. In art Syracuse leads with 150 

 students and is followed by Washington Uni- 

 versity. Although courses in art are given at 

 California, Iowa State, Michigan and North- 

 western, the students are counted in other de- 

 partments. 



With 2,466 students New York University's 

 School of Commerce is in the lead, numeri- 

 cally speaking; Pennsylvania has the next 

 largest with 1,615 students; following comes 

 Pittsburgh with 790, Northwestern with 645, 

 Wisconsin with 469, Illinois with 376 and 

 California with 287. In this connection it 

 may be of interest to note that the largest 

 school is in the east and that the schools suc- 

 ceed each other in numbers following their 

 geographical location toward the west. In 

 dentistry Pennsylvania holds the lead with 

 663 students, followed by Northwestern with 

 578, Michigan with 318 and Iowa State with 

 302. Of the four divinity schools. North- 

 western continues leader with 216 students, 

 as against Chicago's 152, Yale's 112 and Har- 

 vard's 59. Syracuse's School of Forestry at- 

 tracts 242 students this year, Nebraska 43, 

 Yale and Minnesota 37 each. With 136 stu- 

 dents in journalism Columbia leads, followed 

 by New York University with 110, Wisconsin 

 with 101, Missouri with 76 and Indiana with 

 67. Syracuse has 960 music students, and is 

 followed by Northwestern with 400 and 

 Indiana with 100. Columbia has by far the 

 largest school of education, enrolling 1,817 stu- 

 dents as compared with Pittsburgh's 668, New 

 York University's 383, Syracuse's 343 and 

 Ohio State's 341. The largest school of pharm- 

 acy is at Columbia where 495 students are 

 enrolled. With 200 students Pittsburgh fol- 

 lows and then comes Illinois with 199, Western 

 Reserve with 120 and Michigan with 110. 

 There are only four universities on the list 

 teaching veterinary medicine. These are Ohio 

 State with 182 students, Pennsylvania with 

 122, Cornell with 116 and New York Univer- 

 sity with 15. 



All of the above figures are for the indi- 

 vidual schools and are exclusive of the sum- 



