NOTES. 271 The following are the usual tables showing the sources from which nine successive classes have been drawn, both as to previous college training and as to the geographical districts from which they have come : — Harvard Graduates. From Mas- New England outside Outside of New Class of sachusetts. of Massachusetts- England. Total. 1893 34 I 19 54 1894 30 2 17 49
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32 23 4 7 13 17 49 47 1897 27 2 IS 44 1898 42 I 25 68 1899 45 6 19 70 1900 50 II 32 95 1901 45 3 28 76 Graduates of OTHBR COLLBGRS From Mas- New England outside Outside of New Gassof sachusetts. of Massachusetts. England. Total 1893 5 9 21 l 1894 7 20 38
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8 14 II 30 52 70
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9 12 56 77 1898 19 ^i 02 ■?J 1899 21 12 g 1900 30 19 109 1901 27 22 59 107 Holding NO Degreb. New England Outside From Mas- outside of of New Total Total of Qass of sachusetts. Massachusetts. ] England. Class. 1893 4 I 7 12 lOI 1894 20 I 10 31 142
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16 3 14 33 135 10 4 9 23 140 '!97 26 7 16 49 170 1898 25 2 1 52 224 1899 II 2 21 169 1900 II 2 3 16 216 1901 25 — 9 34 218 Twenty-nine of the men in the present first year class who hold no degrees are Harvard seniors on leave of absence. The following thirty-four colleges have conferred their first degrees on members of the entering class, the figures indicating the number of men from each college, where there are more than one : Yale (30), Amherst (8), Bowdoin (7), Brown (7), Princeton (5), Boston College (4), Dart- mouth (4), Tulane University of Louisiana (4), Williams (4), Holy Cross (3), Oberlin (3), University of Chicago (3), Earlham (2), Tufts (2), Stanford University (2), University of New Brunswick (2), Uni- versity of Virginia (2), Colby, College of the City of New York, Cornell, Georgetown, Iowa, Indiana University, Knox, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Miami, Ohio Wesleyan, University of California, University of Georgia, University of Nebraska, University of North Carolina, Uni- versity of Wooster, Western Reserve. The increased number from Yale is particularly interesting.