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A careful survey of the statistics of the Freshman classes at Yale, Princeton and Harvard reveals many striking comparisons. Andover, Exeter and St. Paul's School appear to be the only private secondary schools to distribute their graduates almost impartially among the three colleges, whereas the other eastern schools regularly favor one of them.
It is also interesting to note that Harvard draws a large number of pupils from schools in the neighborhood of Boston which send men almost exclusively to Cambridge. In this category are Milton, Country Day, Groton, St. Mark's, Middlesex, St. George's and Morristown. Yale and Princeton, on the other hand, seem to draw from a field of schools such as Hotchkiss, Mercersburg, Hill and Lawrenceville, which divides its representatives almost equally between the two colleges, neglecting Harvard altogether.
Through the courtesy of the Yale News and the Daily Princetonian, the CRIMSON is enabled to publish the following tables showing the enrollment from the principal eastern schools.
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