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Massachusetts and New York Outnumber by Far Other States in Representation in Business School-Ohio is a Poor Third

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

Statistics compiled recently in the Graduate School of Business Administration reveal that 17 universities and colleges send more than ten graduates to the Business School here, and that ten states are represented by more than 20 men.

As might well be expected, Harvard leads the universities in number, as Massachusetts stands at the head of the states. Yale and Stanford, coming next to Harvard, do not seriously jeopardize its standing. In the state list, New York follows Massachusetts, with Ohio a poor third.

Harvard is represented in the Business School by 159 men, Yale by 50, and Stanford by 40. The other colleges and universities which contribute students, and their numerical rank, follow: University of California, 31; Princeton, 28; Williams; 26; Cornell, 25; Dartmouth, 24; Bowdoin, 18; Brown, 17; Amherst, 15; Colgate, 14; Boston College, 12, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 12; University of Michigan, 12; University of Washington, 12.

Northern and middle western states are best represented in the School of Business Administration, no others sending men to any number. Massachusetts men number 197; New York, 119; Ohio, 70; California, 65; Pennsylvania, 45; Missouri, 38; Illinois, 36; Michigan, 23; and Kansas, 20.,

These figures are part of a report compiled recently at the Business School for the information of the Visiting Committee, which will meet shortly, it is interesting to note from this tabulation that the smaller colleges of New England, Amherst, Williams, Brown, and Bowdoin, enter more graduate students in the Business School than do many of the larger universities of the country, with the exception of Harvard, Yale, and Princeton, and that the Williams delegation is close on the number of Princeton men here.

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