THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS *• *. ' ' LIBRARY d CLop. 2 Return this book on or before the Latest Date stamped below. Theft, mutilation, and underlining of books are reasons for disciplinary action and may result in dismissal from the University. University of Illinois Library ULi 2* BM : j W L161— O-1096 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://archive.org/details/reportsofregistr3013univ UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS REPORT OF THE REGISTRAR FOR THE B1ENNIUM ENDING JUNE 30, 1913 Published by the University Urbana, Illinois 1913 TABLE OF CONTENTS PART ONE. ENROLLMENT PAGE Introductory Statement 7 Table i. Summary of Enrollment, by Colleges, 1911-12 11 Table 2. Summary of Enrollment, by Colleges, 19 12- 13 11 Figure 1. Enrollment by Colleges, 1911-12 12 Figure 2. Enrollment by Colleges, 1911-13 13 Table 3. Detailed Statement of Enrollment, 1911-12 14 Table 4. Detailed Statement of Enrollment, 1912-13 16 Table 5. Comparative Enrollment, by Courses, 191 1-12, 1912-13 18 Table 6. Comparative Enrollment, by Classes, 1911-12, 1912-13 19 Table 7. Composition of the Undergraduate Colleges, November 30, 1912 21 Table 8. Percentages Graduated, Returned, Not Returned — Students of 1911-12 22 Figure 3. Percentages Graduated, Returned, Not Returned 23 Table 9. Total Enrollment, 1868-1913 24 Figure 4. Total Enrollment, 1868-1913 25 Table 10. Enrollment by Colleges, 1890-1913 _ 26 Figure 5. Enrollment by Colleges, 1893-1913 32 PART TWO. THE COMPOSITION OF THE STUDENT BODY Introductory Statement 33 Table 11. Geographical Distribution of Students, 1911-12 41 Figure 6. Geographical Distribution, 1911-12: Counties in Illinois 43 Figure 7. Geographical Distribution, 1911-12: Illinois and Other States _ 45 Figure 8. Geographical Distribution, 1911-12: The United States and Foreign Countries 47 Table. 12. Geographical Distribution of Students, 1912-13 48 Figure p. Geographical Distribution, 191 1-13 : Counties in Illinois 51 Figure 10. Geographical Distribution, 1912-13: Illinois and Other States _ 53 Figure 11. Geographical Distribution, 1912-13: The United States and Foreign Countries 55 Table 13. Scholastic Distribution of Intrants, 1911-12 56 Table 14. Scholastic Distribution of Intrants, 1912-13 63 Table 15. Parentage of Degrees Held by Students, 1911-12 71 Table 16. Parentage of Degrees Held by Students, 1912-13 74 Table 17. Occupations of Students' Parents and Guardians, 1911-12 78 Figure 12. Occupations of Students' Parents and Guardians, 1912-13 84 Table 18. Religious Affiliations of Students, 1912-13 85 Table 19. Ages of Students, 1912-13 86 Figure 13. Ages of Students, 1912-13 , 90 5' REPORT OF REGISTRAR PART THREE. DEGREES CONFERRED PAGE Introductory Statement _ _ 91 Table 20. Degrees Conferred, 1911-12 _ 93 Table 21. Degrees Conferred, 1912-13 _ _ _ 94 Table 22. Geographical Distribution of Degrees Conferred, 191 1-12.- 95 Figure 14. Geographical Distribution of Degrees, 1911-12: Counties in Illinois - _.. .• 97 Figure 15. Geographical Distribution of Degrees, 1911-12: Illinois and Other States _ _ _ 98 Figure 16. Geographical Distribution of Degrees, 1911-12: The United States and Foreign Countries _ 99 Table 23. Geographical Distribution of Degrees Conferred, 1912-13 _ 100 Figure ij. Geographical Distribution of Degrees, 1912-13: Counties in Illinois „ 1 1 Figure 18. Geographical Distribution of Degrees, 19 12-13: Illinois and Other States _ _ 103 Figure 19. Geographical Distribution of Degrees, 1912-13: The United States and Foreign Countries 104 PART FOUR. THE FACULTY Introductory Statement 105 Table 24. Number in the Faculty: Summary 191 1- 12, 19 12-13 ro 9 Table 25. Number in the Faculty: by Colleges and Schools, 1911-12 _ no Table 26. Number in the Faculty: by Colleges and Schools, 1912-13 no Table 27. Number in the Faculty : by Departments, in the Undergraduate Colleges at Urbana, 1911-12 112 Table 28. Number in the Faculty : By Departments, in the Undergraduate Colleges at Urbana, 1912-13 114 Table 29. Number in the Faculty, 1868-1913 116 PART FIVE. COURSES OFFERED Introductory Statement 117 Table 30. Courses Offered, 1911-12 120 Table 31. Courses Offered, 1912-13 122 Table 32. Courses Offered, Summer Session of 1912 124 Table 33. Courses Offered, Summer Session of 1913 125 Index „ 12J PART ONE. ENROLLMENT Part One contains the data which are the primary statistical concern of a registrar's office — the figures in regard to the total enrollment in the University and the enrollment in the several colleges, courses, and classes. This information is given first in summarized form, by colleges, for each of the two years of the biennium; then in complete detail for each year; and finally in comparative form for the two years, by courses (Business, General Science, Architecture, etc.), and by classes (Seniors, Juniors, etc.). Enrollment: Grand Total It will be noted that the grand total for the second year of the biennium is smaller than the corresponding total for the first year. The difference represents approximately the loss in numbers sustained by the discontinuance of the College of Dentistry, which was closed on June 30, 1912, and not reopened during the following year. (Its reopening on October 1, 1913, was decided upon by the Board of Trustees on July 2, 1913.) The enrollment of the College of Dentistry in 1911-12 was 125; the difference between the grand totals for the two years is 113. The total enrollment for all departments exclusive of the College of Dentistry increased from 1911-12 to 1912-13 by 12 students. Enrollment: Colleges Altho the totals for the two years, exclusive of the College of Dentistry, are practically the same, there was considerable variation in the enrollment of the various colleges and schools — substantial gains in the College of Science (55 students) and the College of Agriculture (61 students), and small gains in most of the other departments, except the College of Engineering, which showed a loss of 130 students, and the School of Pharmacy, which fell off 22 students. The details of these gains and losses may be exhibited as follows : GAIN OR LOSS BY COLLEGES, 1911-12 to 19 12-13 College or School Gain Loss Literature and Arts 1 7 Science 55 Engineering 130 Agriculture 61 Music 6 Law 4 Library 4 Graduate 10 Summer Session ( net ) 10 Medicine 14 Dentistry 125 Pharmacy 22 Duplicate registration 9 177 290 177 Net loss 113 7 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Enrollment: Courses When we come to compare the enrollment for the two years by courses (Table 5, page 18), several interesting points appear. In the College of Literature and Arts there was a marked increase in the courses in Business and Household Science — in Business, 33 students; in Household Science, 28 students. On the other hand, the enrollment in the General Course in Literature and Arts fell off from 603 in 1911-12 to 559 in 1912-13—44 students, bringing the net gain for the College down to 17 students. In the College of Science, however, the largest single gain was in the General Science Course — 29 students. This figure was exactly equaled by the combined increase in the courses in Ceramics and Ceramic Engi- neering — 15 students and 14 students respectively ; total, 29. The courses in Chemistry and Chemical Engineering gained 8 students over the preceding year. The Household Science Course in this College had exactly the same enrollment for the two years. The Course Preparatory to Medicine showed a decrease the second year of 11 students. The totals for the two colleges of Literature and Arts and Science, which by action of the Board of Trustees on July 5, 1912, constitute now the single College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, show an increase of 72 students, which is 5.5 per cent. It will be noted that while the enrollment in the College of Engi- neering as a whole fell off, the course in Architecture gained approxi- mately 5 per cent (to be exact, 5.7), and the courses in Architectural Engineering and Mining Engineering registered small increases — 2 stu- dents and 3 students respectively. The additional 61 students enrolled the second year in the College of Agriculture represent an increase of 7.4 per cent. Of the three courses offered in Household Science, the one in the College of Agriculture lost 4 students and the one in the College of Science enrolled the same number both years, while the one in the College of Literature and Arts gained 28 students. The net gain in Household Science courses was 24 students, which is 10.3 per cent. Enrollment: Men and Women The relative number of men and women students remained practi- cally unchanged. Of the total enrollment for 1911-12, 19.3 per cenl were women; for 1912-13, 20.1 per cent. The statement which lias ap- peared for many years in the Annual Register, (hat beginning with the year 1870-71, when women were first admitted to the University, they "have constituted from one-sixth to one-fifth of the total number of students," remains substantially correct. The gain in the number of women students enrolled the second year of the biennium was 22. As noted above, there was an increase of 24 Students in the Household Science Courses; the total number of women enrolled in courses other than those in Household Science act uallv fell off, therefore, bv 2. The General Course in Literature and Arts losi S UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS women as well as 36 men. In the General Science Course there was a gain of 4 women as well as of 25 men. The following figures extracted from Table 5 (page 18) show the enrollment of women in vocational courses other than the courses in Household Science and courses in preparation for teaching (which by our organization are included under the general courses in Liberal Arts and Sciences). ENROLLMENT OF WOMEN IN VOCATIONAL COURSES (OTHER THAN HOUSEHOLD SCIENCE AND EDUCATION) 1911-12 1912-13 Business ~ - - 3 5 Chemistry _ - ~ - o 1 Architecture _ 2 I General Agriculture - 8 13 Library — - 39 34 Medicine - _ 37 35 Dentistry 5 Pharmacy 4 3 98 92 If allowance be made for the 5 women enrolled in the College of Dentistry in 1911-12, for whom we have no corresponding figures in 1912-13 on account of the closing of that College, these two totals are almost identical— 93, for 1911-12 ; 92, for 1912-13. "Percentage of Loss" Tables 7 and 8 attempt to indicate the extent to which the under- graduate student body consisted of the same individuals during the two years of the biennium and to what extent it was a changing body. It will be seen (Table 8, page 22) that of the number of under- graduate students (including law students) enrolled in 1911-12, 14.4 per cent were graduated in June, 1912, and 56.2 per cent were continuing their studies on November 30, 1912. This leaves 29.4 per cent who are unaccounted for. They were not graduated; they did not return. For one reason or another they "dropped out." The complementary figures for the student body of the fall of 1912-13 are shown in Table 7 (page 21) : former students, 58.2 per cent; new students, 41.8 per cent. The interest in this matter centers, of course, in the group of students who failed to return — the "percentage of loss," as it is sometimes called. It will be noted that this varied considerably in the several colleges. It is perhaps natural that it should be highest in the School of Music — 40.2 per cent. The College of Engineering is next — 33.7 per cent; with the College of Agriculture a close third — 32.5 per cent, Then come, at con- siderable intervals, Literature and Arts, with 26.9 per cent, and Science, with 18.6 per cent ; while the College of Law has the notably low loss of $.9 per cent. 10 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Growth of the University, 1868-1913 Finally come two tables (Nos. 9 and 10, pages 24 and 26) which summarize the increase in the number of students in the University from its opening in the spring of 1868 through the year 1912-13 — forty-six years. For its short spring term in 1868 the Illinois Industrial University enrolled 77 men. The total for the first full school year, 1868-69, was 128. This number increased rapidly till it reached in 1873-74 a grand total of 406. Women students, first admitted in 1870-71, numbered 24 in that year, 53 in 1871-72, 74 in 1872-73, and 90 in 1873-74. The next year, 1874-75, the total dropped back to 373; from which it worked up again rather slowly to 434 in 1879-80. In this year the number of women for the first time exceeded 100, reaching the total of 112, which was not equaled again for fifteen years — until 1894-95. In 1880-81, the enrollment again decreased, to 379, and it was a full decade — in 1889-90 — before it again reached (and passed) the figure for 1879-80. In 1890-91, the 500 mark was passed. In the next two decades the enrollment increased approximately 900 per cent — from 519 in 1890-91 to 5217 in 1910-11. A part of this gain in numbers was due to the organi- zation or annexation of new departments — in 1894, the Summer Session ; in 1896, the School of Pharmacy ; in 1897, no less than four new colleges and schools: the School of Music, the Library School, the College of Law, and the College of Medicine; in 1900, the Courses in Business Administration; and in 1901, the College of Dentistry; but the major part of it was the result of the growth in the four undergraduate colleges at Urbana. In 1910-11, of the total enrollment of 5217, 3196 were regis- tered in the four undergraduate colleges, which were differentiated as far back as 1870 ; all the departments added or differentiated at a later date, including the School of Music, the College of Law, the Library School, the Graduate School, the Summer Session, the Academy, and the Chicago departments, numbering 2021. The highest grand total so far recorded was reached in 1910-11 — 5217 students. In June, 1911, the Academy was discontinued. This de- partment then numbered 304 students, and this loss in the count brought the total for 1911-12 down to 5200, altho there was a gain in that year of 287 collegiate students. As explained above, the still lower figure for 1912-13 represents substantially the loss in numbers sustained by the closing for the year of the College of Dentistry. The details of the growth of the University by colleges and schools from 1889-90 to date may be seen in Table 10 (page 26) or more casually in Figure 5 (page 32) . UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS II Table i SUMMARY OF ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGES 1911-12 College or School Men Women Total Literature and Arts 467 442 909 Science 321 72 393 Totals, Arts and Science 788 514 1302 Engineering 1288 2 1290 Agriculture 710 108 818 Music _ 6 y6 82 Totals, Undergraduates at Urbana 2792 700 3492 Law 122 1 22 Library 1 39 40 Totals, Undergraduate and Professional Schools at Urbana 2915 739 3654 Graduate School 270 59 329 Summer Session (1911), total registration 417 230 647 Deduct students returned 220 70 290 Net total _ 197 160 357 Totals at Urbana,. 3382 958 4340 Medicine 500 37 537 Dentistry 120 5 125 Pharmacy 194 4 198 Totals in Chicago 812 48 860 TOTALS IN UNIVERSITY 4196 1004 5200 Table 2 SUMMARY OF ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGES 1912-13 College or School Men Women Total Literature and Arts 462 464 926 Science 371 yy_ 448 Totals, Arts and Science 833 541 1374 Engineering 11 S9 l 1160 Agriculture 770 109 879 Music _4 84 88__ Totals, Undergraduates at Urbana 2766 735 3501 Law „ 126 126 Library 2 34 36 Totals, Undergraduate and Professional Schools at Urbana 2894 769 3663 Graduate School 274 65 339 Summer Session (1912), total registration 430 210 640 Deduct students returned 222 51 273 Net total 208 159 367 Totals at Urbana 3376 993 4369 Medicine 516 35 551 Pharmacy 173 3 176 Totals in Chicago 689 38 727 Totals in University 4065 103 1 5096 Deduct duplicates 4 5 g_ NET TOTALS IN UNIVERSITY : 4^61 IO26 5087 12 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Figure i ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGES, 1911-12 Library School AO (Total, 5200) UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 13 Figure 2 ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGES, 1912-13 Library School 36 (Gross total, 5096; net total, 5087) 14 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 3 DETAILED STATEMENT OF ENROLLMENT 1911-12 Seniors College and Course Men Wom. Literature and Arts General Literature and Arts 32 60 Business 3 5 Household Science 10 Juniors T'l. Men Wom. T'l. 9 2 34 61 95 35 33 33 10 S 5 Totals 67 Science General Science 20 Medical Preparatory 4 Household Science . Chemistry 7 Chemical Engineering 1 1 1 1 Ceramics 3 3 Ceramic Engineering 3 3 70 137 7 27 4 3 3 7 34 01 33 5 67 66 12 4 9 7 6 15 3 5 133 16 9 7 6 15 3 5 Totals 48 10 58 SO 11 61 Totals, Arts and Science 115 80 195 117 jj 194 Engineering Architecture 16 16 Architectural Engineering _ 19 19 42 4i 29 1 4 6 4 3 Civil Engineering 42 Electrical Engineering 41 Mechanical Engineering 29 Mining Engineering I Municipal and Sanitary Engineering 4 Railway Civil Engineering 6 Railway Electrical Engineering 4 Railway Mechanical Engineering 3 Totals 165 Agriculture General Agriculture 52 Household Science Totals 52 Music Totals, Undergraduates at Urbana 332 93 425 Fourth Year Men Wom. T'l. Law Library Totals, Undergraduate and Professional Schools at Urbana,. Graduate School Summer Session (1911), total registration Deduct students returned Net total Totals at Urbana Medicine 135 14 140 Dentistry Pharmacy I'li.G. Course Ph.C. Course . Totals, Pharmat y Totals in ( 'hit ago TOTALS IN UNIVERSITY. 25 19 50 67 32 5 5 5 1 2 25 19 So 67 32 5 5 5 1 2 165 165 211 211 52 II 52 II 91 8 9i 8 52 II 2 63 2 91 8 4 99 4 419 89 508 Third Year Men Wom. T*l. 28 __ 28 110 4* 45 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 15 Table 3 DETAILED STATEMENT OF ENROLLMENT 1911-12 Sophomores Freshmen ( Specials Totals Men WOM. T'l. Men WOM. T'l. Men Wom. T'L. Men W0MEI« r Total 41 51 92 138 169 307 6 II 17 251 352 603 37 2 27 39 27 108 I 45 109 45 3 3 216 3 87 219 87 78 80 158 246 215 461 9 II 20 467 442 909 14 5 19 51 9 60 5 2 7 102 27 129 12 7 12 7 43 28 43 28 1 1 69 45 69 45 3 3 21 21 37 37 15 15 25 25 66 66 8 8 16 16 1 1 31 3i 2 2 6 6 16 16 54 12 66 162 37 199 7 2 9 321 72 393 132 92 224 408 252 660 16 13 29 788 5H 1302 37 37 no 2 112 3 3 191 2 193 28 28 61 61 127 127 56 56 124 124 4 4 276 276 62 62 136 136 1 1 307 307 76 76 154 154 5 5 296 296 7 7 9 9 22 — 22 6 6 13 13 1 1 29 29 2 2 6 6 19 19 1 1 3 7 3 7 — 9 12 9 12 275 275 623 2 625 14 14 1288 1290 121 121 14 14 307 I 308 62 62 139 7 146 5 5 710 8 100 718 100 121 14 135 307 63 370 139 12 151 710 108 818 6 6 4 34 38 2 30 32 6 76 82 528 112 640 1342 351 1693 171 55 226 Second Year First Year Specials Men Wom. T'l. Men Wom. T'l. Men Wom T'l. 28 28 53 ...... 53 13 13 14 14 I 24 25 I I 106 4 no 115 10 125 35 1 36 43 1 44 34 1 35 87 2 89 1 1 4 4 35 36 9i 25 67 i_ 2 93 68 26 68 i_ "69" 2792 122 1 700 39 3492 122 40 2915 739 3654 270 59 329 417 230 647 220 70 290 197 160 357 3382 500 120 958 4340 37 537 5 125 188 6 192 6 194 814 4196 46 1004 198 860 5200 i6 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 4 DETAILED STATEMENT OF ENROLLMENT 1912-13 College and Course Literature and Arts General Literature and Arts _. 24 Business _ 33 Household Science _ — Seniors Men Wom. T'l. 68 92 33 5 Totals 5 7 Science General Science 38 Medical Preparatory _.. 3 Household Science ~ Chemistry 8 Chemical Engineering 13 Ceramics — 5 Ceramic Engineering 4 Totals — 73 130 45 3 11 8 13 5 4 11 71 18 89 Totals, Arts and Science 128 Engineering Architecture 22 Architectural Engineering 18 Civil Engineering 33 Electrical Engineering 22 Mechanical Engineering 18 Mining Engineering — 3 Municipal and Sanitary Engineering 3 Railway Civil Engineering 2 Railway Electrical Engineering 1 Railway Mechanical Engineering 2 91 219 22 ...._ 18 — 33 22 _ 18 3 3 2 1 2 Totals 124 Agriculture General Agriculture 93 Household Science 124 94 9 Totals 93 10 103 Music 2 3 5 Totals, Undergraduates at Urbana 347 104 451 Fourth Year Law Library Juniors Men Wom. T'l. 37 66 103 40 2 42 ~- 3 2 32 yy 100 177 22 7 31 7 Q 6 8 9 3 55 18 73 132 118 250 43 17 47 80 54 5 9 2 43 17 47 80 54 5 9 2 259 115 1 20 259 116 20 115 21 7 136 7 506 146 652 Third Year 29 29 Totals, Undergraduate and Prpfessional Schools at Urbana Graduate Schooi Summer Session (1912), total registration Deduct students returned Net total Totals at Urbana Medicine - 136 8 144 109 Pharmacy Ph.G. Course Ph.C. Course Totals, Pharmacy Totals in Ch icago Totals in Universii v Deduct duplicates NET TOT/IIS 5 114 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 17 Table 4 DETAILED STATEMENT OF ENROLLMENT 1912-13 Sophomores Freshmen < Specials Totals Men Wom. T'l. Men Wom. T'L. Men Wom. T'l. Men 1 Wom. T'l. 31 75 106 119 121 240 4 14 18 215 344 559 45 45 127 2 129 2 I 3 247 5 252 22 22 55 55 I 1 115 "5 76 97 173 246 178 424 6 16 22 462 464 926 15 7 22 50 7 57 2 I 3 127 3i 158 12 12 36 36 58 58 6 6 18 18 I 1 45 45 5 5 22 1 23 41 1 42 19 19 28 28 I 1 69 69 9 9 23 23 46 46 8 — 8 15 15 30 30 68 13 81 174 26 200 3 2 5 371 77 448 144 no 254 42O 204 624 9 18 27 833 54i 1374 38 38 97 1 98 3 3 203 1 204 27 27 67 67 129 129 56 56 7« 78 3 3 217 217 53 53 122 122 3 3 280 280 49 49 138 138 1 1 260 260 8 — 8 9 9 25 25 4 4 7 7 1 1 24 24 2 ...... 2 2 2 8 8 2 2 3 3 6 6 1 1 1 1 1 1 7 7 240 240 524 1 525 12 12 "59 1 1160 140 140 273 1 274 149 10 159 77o 13 783 — 20 20 42 42 5 5 96 96 140 20 160 273 43 316 149 15 164 770 109 879 1 6 7 1 35 36 33 33 4 84 88 525 136 661 1218 283 1 501 170 66 236 2766 735 35oi Second Year First Year Specials 27 ___ 27 62 62 8 8 126 126 — 16 16 2 18 20 2 2894 274 430 222 34 36 769 3663 65 339 210 640 5i 273 159 367 993 4369 35 55i 208 3376 5i6 112 8 120 145 12 157 14 2 16 54 ...... 54 63 . 3 66 47 47 164 3 167 3 3 5 5 1 1 9 9 57 — 57 68 3 7i 48 48 173 3 176 689 4065 4 38 7V 103 1 5096 5 Q 4061 1026 5087 1 8 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 5 COMPARATIVE ENROLLMENT BY COURSES 1911-12 and 1912-13 1911-12 1912-13 College and Course Men Women Total Men Women Total Literature and Arts General Literature and Arts 251 352 603 215 344 559 Business _ 216 3 219 247 5 252 Household Science 87 87 115 115 Totals 467 442 909 462 464 926 Science General Science 102 27 129 127 31 158 Medical Preparatory 69 69 58 58 Household Science 45 45 ...... 45 45 Chemistry 37 37 41 1 42 Chemical Engineering 66 66 69 69 Ceramics 31 31 46 46 Ceramic Engineering 16 16 30 30 To tals 321 72 393 371 77 448 Totals, Arts and Science 788 514 1302 833 541 1374 Engineering Architecture _ 191 2 193 203 1 204 Architectural Engineering 127 127 129 129 Civil Engineering 276 ...... 276 217 217 Electrical Engineering 307 307 280 280 Mechanical Engineering 296 296 260 260 Mining Engineering 22 22 25 _.... 25 Municipal and Sanitary Engineering... 29 29 24 24 Railway Civil Engineering 19 19 8 8 Railway Electrical Engineering 9 9 6 6 Railway Mechanical Engineering 12 12 7 7 Totals 1288 2 1290 1159 1 1160 Agriculture General Agriculture 710 8 718 770 13 783 Household Science 100 100 96 96 Totals - 710 108 818 770 109 879 Music _ 6 76 82 4 84 88 Totals, Undergraduates at Urbana...2~g2 700 3492 2766 735 3501 Law _.. 122 122 126 126 Li brary 1 39 40 2 34 36 Totals, Undergraduate and Profes- sional Schools at Urbana 2915 739 3654 2894 769 3663 Graduate School 270 59 329 274 65 339 Summer Session Total Registration 417 230 647 430 210 640 Deduct students returned _ 220 70 290 222 51 273 Net total, Summer Session 197 160 357 208 1 59 3 (> 7 Totals at Urbana 3382 Medicine 500 Dentistry 1 20 Pharmacy Ph.G. Course 188 4 102 [64 3 167 Ph.C. Course 6 6 9 Totals, Pharmacy 194 4 1 98 1 73 3 176 Totals in Chicago 81 1 46 800 609 ~~ 38 727 Totals in University 4 1 o(> 1004 5200 4005 1031 5096 Deduct duplicates 4 5 9 NET TOTALS - 419S 1004 5200 4061 1026 5087 958 4340 ?>?>7b 993 43 ( *> 37 537 516 35 55i 5 125 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 19 Table 6 COMPARATIVE ENROLLMENT BY CLASSES College or School and Class Men Undergraduates Literature and Arts Seniors 67 Juniors 67 Sophomores 78 Freshmen 246 Specials 9 Totals Science Seniors 48 Juniors 50 Sophomores 54 Freshmen 162 Specials 7 Totals Engineering Seniors 165 Juniors 211 Sophomores 275 Freshmen 623 Specials 14 Totals Agriculture Seniors 52 Juniors 91 Sophomores 121 Freshmen 307 Specials 139 Totals Music Seniors Juniors Sophomores Freshmen 4 Specials 2 Totals TOTALS, UNDERGRADUATES BY CLASSES Seniors 332 Juniors 419 Sophomores 528 Freshmen 1342 Specials 171 Totals 1911-12 and 1912-13 467 321 1288 710 1911-12 Women 70 66 80 215 11 Total 137 133 158 461 20 Men 57 77 76 246 6 1912-13 Women 73 100 97 178 16 Total 130 177 173 424 22 442 909 462 464 IO II 12 37 2 58 61 66 199 9 7i 55 68 174 3 18 18 13 26 89 73 81 200 5 72 393 37i 77 165 211 275 625 14 124 259 240 5 2 4 12 124 259 240 525 12 1290 "59 11 8 14 63 12 63 99 135 370 151 93 "5 140 273 149 10 21 20 43 15 103 136 160 316 164 108 770 109 2 4 6 34 30 4 6 38 32 3 7 6 35 33 5 7 7 36 33 76 82 84 93 89 112 35i 55 425 508 640 1693 226 347 506 525 1218 170 104 146 136 283 66 45i 652 661 1501 236 926 448 1160 879 88 2792 700 3492 2766 735 350i 20 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 6 (Continued) COMPARATIVE ENROLLMENT BY CLASSES College or School and Class Men Law Seniors 28 Juniors 28 Sophomores 53 Specials 13 Totals _ Library Seniors Juniors 1 Specials _ Totals Graduate School Summer Session _ 417 Deduct duplicates 220 Net totals Totals in Urbana Medicine Seniors 135 Juniors 119 Sophomores _ 106 Freshmen 115 Specials 25 Totals _ Dentistry Seniors 42 Juniors 35 Freshmen 43 Totals Pharmacy Seniors ._ 35 Juniors „ „_ 91 Specials „ 68 Totals _ Totals in Chicago Totals in University Deduct duplicates NET TOTALS 1911-12 and 1912-13 1911-12 Women Total 28 28 53 13 Men 29 27 62 8 1912-13 Women Total 29 27 62 8 122 122 126 14 24 1 14 25 1 16 18 16 20 1 270 39 59 40 329 2/4 34 65 230 70 647 290 430 222 210 5i 640 273 197 3382 160 958 357 4340 208 33/6 159 993 14 8 4 10 1 149 127 no 125 26 136 109 112 145 14 5 8 12 2 144 114 120 157 16 500 37 537 5i6 35 45 36 44 120 125 126 36 339 3 6 7 4369 55i 36 93 69 57 68 48 57 48 194 814 4196 4 46 1004 198 860 5200 *73 689 4065 4196 3 38 1031 S 176 :-: 5096 9 1004 5200 4061 [020 50S7 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 21 Table 7 COMPOSITION OF UNDERGRADUATE COLLEGES NOVEMBER 30, 1912 (Former Students and New Students) Colleges Total (Undergraduate) Literature and Arts 880 Science 434 Engineering 1161 Agriculture 817 Music 80 Law 122 Total 3494 Former Percentages Students New Former New- Returned Students Students Students 50I 379 57-o 43-0 256 178 59-o 41.0 661 500 57-0 43-0 485 332 59-4 40.6 47 33 58.8 41.2 84 * 3 8 69.9 3i-i 2034 1460 58.2 41.8 *Includes 18 who were in other undergraduate colleges in 1911-12 to earn the credit necessary for admission to the College of Law, and who entered the College of Law in September, 1912. 22 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 8 PERCENTAGES GRADUATED, RETURNED, NOT RETURNED (Students of 1911-12) Colleges Total (Undergraduate) 1911-12 Literature and Arts 909 Science 393 Engineering 1 290 Agriculture 818 Music 82 Law 122 Totals 3614 519 2034 *io6i 14.4 56.2 29.4 ADUATED Returned Not Ret'd Percentages NE 1912 1912 1912 Grad. Ret'd Out 164 64 501 256 244 73 18.O 16.3 55-i 65.1 26.9 18.6 195 68 661 485 434 265 I5-I 8-3 51-2 59-2 33-7 32-5 2 26 47 84 33 12 2-5 21.3 57-3 68.8 40.2 9-9 ♦Includes 18 who were in Other uih1itki.h1u.iIc colleges in 101 1 u to cam tlic credit necessary for admission to the College of Law, and who entered the (."olle^c of Law in September, 1912. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 23 Figure 3 PERCENTAGES GRADUATED, RETURNED, NOT RETURNED (Students of 1911-12) 24 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 9 TOTAL ENROLLMENT, 1868-1913 Year Men Women Total 1868 (spring) _ _ _ yy 1 868-69 1 28 1 869-70 1 80 1 870-7 1 254 1 87 1 -72 _ _.. 328 1872-73 326 1873-74 - 316 1874-75 285 1875-76 - - 303 1876-77* _ 296 1 877-78 29 1 1878-79 - 3i8 1 879-80 3 22 1880-81 299 1 881-82 .; 276 1882-83 290 1883-84 261 1884-85 _ 292 1885-86 269 1886-87 289 1887-88 305 1888-89 346 1889-90 392 1 890-9 1 444 1 89 1 -92 494 1892-93 610 1893-94 609 1894-95 673 1895-96 672 1896-97 865 1 897-98 1 335 1898-99 1492 1 899- 1 900 1 747 1 900-0 1 2038 1901-02 2334 1902-03 2560 1903-04 2872 1904-05 3012 1905-06 3266 1906-07 3402 1907-08 3752 1908-09 40 1 3 1909-10 4118 1910-11* I^jj i9"-i2 ,,,,., 1912-13 4061 77 128 180 24 278 53 381 74 400 90 406 88 373 83 386 92 388 86 377 98 416 112 434 80 379 76 352 92 382 69 330 70 362 63 33 2 54 343 72 377 72 418 77 469 75 5i9 89 583 104 714 109 718 137 810 183 855 194 1059 247 1582 332 1824 478 2225 467 2505 598 2932 729 3289 720 3592 722 3734 825 4001 916 4318 994 4746 000 4070 1000 5118 995 5217 1006 5200 1026 5087 "Figures from 1876-77 to 1910-n include the preparatory department UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 25 Figure 4 TOTAL ENROLLMENT, 1868-1913 00 CO 00 GO CO CO op op tH CO 00 00 00 00 in os o» 00 os o CO T-t OS O CO OS CD o o os CN 5100 4800 4500 4200 3900 3600 3300 3000 2700 2400 2100 1800 1500 1200 900 600 300 --■- m- ***- «- — _ t. ■ ■ ■ __ j ■ J^M ; | | nH 1 ; ! 1 ; j I 1 ; 1 i 1 ! ! | ! ! ! | i 1 | i : • '■H i 1 i i ■: : ; ! i . .'■ 1 : 1 ! 1 i ; 1 ! : : i \ 1 1 i ! ; 1 i ; ; i ! ' 1 ! 1 i i : ;' i * I ' ! 1 \ ! •' \ IH : 1 - I ! ! 1 i ■ 1 i i ■ ■ H H i ^^H 1 - ! ■ ■ H 1 . ■ ■ . 1 m ■ m ■ 1 ! ' ' 1R L i i I - . - ■ ' 1 \ ' ! i'" ' " . ■-■■! Kb ! j ........ ^ j — ^HBflflBBHBafli ■ ' Hr — 26 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table io ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGES 1890-1913 -.- s<; o z u U S ,° >3 < s 05 < "3 <: < "3 M o s Oh K. Ck h. Q ^ 93 392 392 20 77 77 299 57 356 "3 469 -- 469 332 "2 444 .... 444 55 20 75 .... 75 387 132 519 -- 519 6 357 137 494 -- 494 63 26 89 .... 89 6 420 163 583 .... 583 1 444 166 610 .... 610 74 30 104 .... 104 1 518 196 714 .... 714 464 145 609 .... 609 88 21 109 .... 109 552 166 718 .... 718 18 28 557 116 673 .... 673 12 1 106 31 137 .... 137 30 29 663 147 810 .... 810 14 17 557 119 676 4 672 13 1 152 32 184 1 183 27 18 709 -- 151 860 5 855 15 554 175 175 136 865 .... 865 1 145 6 6 43 194 .... 194 16 699 .... 181 181 179 1059 .... 1059 2 3 661 391 .... 138 529 145 1335 .... 1335 174 17 ■- 2 19 54 247 .... 247 23 835 408 .... 140 548 199 1582 .... 1582 28 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table io (Continued) ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGES, 1890-1913 § ill ■* a a 5j a S 5 OS H O M £. O < "2 » o 2 5 5 fcj; « g* H u « S ^ go ^. > n u^ c% a < S < a {-. _ j a 1898-99 Men 143 "4 287 21 6 1 .... 572 69 3 Women 109 27 .... 1 46 8 .... 191 2 37 Total 252 141 287 22 52 9 .... 763 71 40 1899-00 Men 157 127 298 85 3 2 .... 672 90 3 Women 185 30 — 2 43 9 .... 269 2 48 Total 34 2 157 298 87 46 11 .... 941 92 51 1900-01 Men 179 124 388 143 5 3 .... 842 96 1 Women 177 28 2 7 48 10 4 276 3 48 Total 356 152 390 150 53 13 4 1 1 18 99 49 1001-02 Men 172 102 476 203 7 4 .... 964 112 4 Women 207 24 3 8 53 11 23 329 2 64 Total 379 126 479 211 60 15 23 1293 114 68 1902-03 Men 174 99 622 241 11 4 .... 1 151 108 3 Women 242 34 1 1 71 11 38 398 2 82 Total 416 133 623 242 82 15 38 1549 no 85 1903-04 Men 212 104 782 290 10 6 .... 1404 142 4 Women 267 27 4 1 91 13 42 445 .... 75 Total 479 131 786 291 101 19 42 1849 142 79 1904-05 Men 253 137 853 331 10 3 .... 1587 129 Women 288 36 10 1 70 16 72 403 .... 41 Total 541 173 863 332 80 19 72 2080 129 41 1905-06 Men 295 141 955 366 5 5 .... 1767 U7 1 Women 354 42 8 62 60 12 * 538 1 39 Total 649 183 963 428 65 17 * 2305 148 40 1906-07 Men 289 157 1092 390 6 1 .... 1935 [da Women 370 44 5 55 76 16 .... 566 .... 43 Total 659 201 1097 445 8a 17 .... 2501 162 43 ^Students in Household Science have been distributed unong the Colleges ol and Aris, Science, and Agriculture beginning with 1905-06. a s a w H u V. H u a D *S a < iv 49 9 58 .... 65 92 7 56 72 148 66 9 70 45 75 "5 67 132 72 74 204 79 14 132 96 93 228 92 26 137 92 118 229 103 23 MS 93 126 238 97 26 aoj tag 123 423 133 27 JOO 160 50a Literature UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS ' 20, Table io (Continued) ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGES, 1890-1913 o o a a a o K CD 2 3z en w 729 228 2065 689 182 168 1039 277 3381 92 3289 137 1779 641 159 184 984 189 2952 80 2872 92 638 53 4 1 58 68 764 44 720 229 2417 694 163 185 1042 257 3716 124 3592 63 82 1901 613 150 147 910 203 3014 2 3012 43 50 607 40 4 3 47 68 722 .... 722 106 132 2508 653 154 150 957 271 3736 2 3734 100 195 2207 522 141 169 832 242 3281 15 3266 4i 87 691 43 3 4 50 85 826 1 825 14 1 282 2898 565 144 173 882 327 4107 16 4091 116 180 2410 469 84 169 722 290 3422 20 3402 42 164 800 36 4 2 42 77 919 3 916 J 58 344 3210 505 88 171 764 367 4341 23 4318 3Q REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table io (Continued) ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGES, 1890-1913 3 as h 2 a w J 2 a z 5 ° £* S o S E< u z o _} cfl H < I907-O8 Men 347 216 1 180 432 Women 413 53 5 Si Total 760 269 1 185 483 1908-09 Men 405 245 1245 465 Women 432 52 5 61 Total 837 297 1250 526 1909-10 Men 403 246 1297 544 Women 477 51 6 84 Total 880 297 1303 628 1910-11 Men 428 287 1274 629 Women 434 61 .... 83 Total 862 348 1274 712 1911-12 Men 467 321 1288 710 Women 442 72 2 108 Total 909 393 1290 818 1912-13 Men 462 371 1 159 770 Women 464 77 1 109 Total 926 448 1 1 60 879 o w K % 3 "2 ° &■£ 2 R e -.* < S" a < m a 2 O in 163 333 43 222 6 66 3 11 2184 599 185 1 48 72 3 62 14 2783 186 48 206 555 2363 612 179 1 36 219 53 477 187 65 4 57 2975 180 36 272 664 2494 192 3 236 456 675 I 28 47 175 3169 193 31 283 631 2625 155 I 259 463 656 40 57 214 3281 155 41 316 677 2792 122 I 270 417 700 39 59 230 61 7 78 85 6 76 82 4 84 3492 122 40 329 647 J-Ui 126 2 274 430 735 34 65 210 88 3501 126 36 339 640 1 Students in Art and Design have hern registered in the College of Literature and Arts beginning with 100K <*). UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 31 Table io (Continued) ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGES, 1890-1913 u Z W g »S O H b - ) .S 2 II * ! I -§ a ^ I Jl I 5 2731 440 74 256 770 270 3771 19 3752 854 36 2 3 41 IQ4 999 5 994 193 362 3585 476 76 259 811 374 4770 24 4746 III « to p S * (a s 3 O 3 V} H w O O « u M « K w g W 5 u asJ S h "<: a 3 5 z £- 134 199 59 163 3585 476 76 259 811 374 4770 2964 480 102 225 807 259 4030 838 40 4 4 48 80 966 274 203 2964 48O 102 225 807 259 403O 17 4013 51 I36 838 40 4 4 48 80 966 .... 966 325 339 3802 520 106 229 855 339 4996 17 4979 271 185 31 10 493 102 169 764 257 4131 13 4118 47 128 879 33 6 s 44 77 1000 .... 1000 318 313 3989 526 108 174 808 334 5131 13 51 18 289 174 3214 480 135 156 771 237 4222 .... 4222 84 130 883 38 5 2 45 67 995 -- 995 373 304 4097 518 140 158 816 304 5217 .... 5217 220 197 3382 500 120 194 814 .... 4196 .... 4196 70 160 958 37 5 4 46 .... 1004 .... 1004 290 357 434° 537 125 198 860 .... 5200 .... 5200 222 208 51 159 273 367 4369 55i -- 176 727 — 5096 9 5087 3376 516 . 173 689 .... 4065 4 4061 993 35 3 38 .... 1031 5 1026 32 REPORT OF REGISTRAR PART TWO. THE COMPOSITION OF THE STUDENT BODY Part Two presents data relating to the composition of the student body, derived from the answers given by the students themselves to questions printed on the registration blanks; it indicates, broadly at least, the sources of our constituency — the territories, geographical, scholastic, economic, and religious, from which our students are drawn. Geographical Distribution Tables 11 and 12 (pages 41 and 48) show first of all that, roughly speaking, four thousand out of our five thousand students come from the State of Illinois (3936 out of 5200 in 1911-12 ; 3817 out of 5087 in 1912-13) . Only one county in the State — Calhoun (in the southwest above St. Louis, the county containing no railroad) — failed of representation in the University during the biennium. Three counties in the extreme south — Hamilton, Hardin, and Pope — were represented in only one of the two years. Cook County, of course, sent a larger number of students than any other one division of the State — approximately a thousand students each year (1047 in 1911-12; 966 in 1912-13). Champaign County followed with 689 in 1911-12 and 613 in 1912-13. It should be noted, however, that the numbers for Champaign County are swelled by students whose parents have moved to this county temporarily from other parts of the State for the purpose of enabling their children to live at home while attending the University. Eighteen counties besides Cook and Champaign sent 40 or more than 40 students to the University in one or the other year or both years of the biennium : COUNTIES SENDING FORTY OR MORE STUDENTS 1911-12 1912-13 Adams 38 46 Bureau 31 44 Edgar 43 35 Fulton 35 57 Iroquois 46 42 Kane 106 105 LaSalle '. 81 87 McLean 56 56 Madison 40 36 Peoria y2 65 Rock Island 42 42 St. Clair 41 39 Sangamon 70 70 Tazewell 42 ^y Vermilion 61 74 Whiteside 36 42 Will 64 41 Winnebago 35 44 Exactly one-half the counties (51) sent 20 or more students to the University, and approximately four-fifths of the counties (79) sent 10 or more students, in one or the other year or both years. 33 34 REPORT OF REGISTRAR The number of students from Illinois outside of the counties of Cook and Champaign was, in 1911-12, 2200; in 1912-13, 2238. The following tables show the distribution of these students north and south and east and west in the State. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION IN ILLINOIS, NORTH AND SOUTH 1911-12 1912-13 Students from counties (other than Cook and Champaign) lying north of a line drawn east and west through Springfield 1416 1430 Students from counties which would be cut by such a line 254 232 Students from counties lying south of such a line.... 530 576 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION IN ILLINOIS, EAST AND WEST 1911-12 1912-13 Students from counties (other than Cook and Champaign) lying east of a line drawn north and south through Bloomington 846 789 Students from counties which would be cut by such a line 382 425 Students from counties lying west of such a line 972 1024 States other than Illinois sent us approximately 1100 students in each of the years in question (1112 in 1911-12; 1110 in 1912-13 ). All the states except Delaware and Maine were represented in 1911-12, and all except Delaware and North Carolina in 1912-13. The adjoining commonwealths of Indiana, Iowa, Missouri, and Wisconsin naturally contributed the largest numbers. From the Insular Possessions of the United States we drew 14 students in 1911-12 and 17 in 1912-13. From foreign lands we had in 1911-12, 138 students; in 1912-13, 113. Thirty-six countries were represented in one or the other year or both years. Five foreign countries had 10 or more students in residence in one year or both years : 1911-12 1912-13 China _ 50 46 Japan 19 16 Mexico 13 11 Canada 10 13 India 5 10 Schools from Which Intrants Were Received In studying the composition of the student body the question which arises next after that of geographical distribution naturally relates to the schools from which tlte students have come. Tables 13 and 14 (pages 50 and 03) answer this question with reference to the new students received as undergraduates in regular standing during the biennium. Tlie phrase "in regular standing" is here used to indicate both "matricu- lated" students — those who have satisfied the entrance requirements in full, including all prescribed subjects — and "conditioned Freshmen" — students admitted with deficiencies of not to exceed two units to be removed within their first year of residence. It excludes "special students" those admitted, without having satisfied the regular entrance requirements) on the ground of maturity and special preparation in par- ticular subjects which they are permitted to pursue. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 35 The large facts in this matter may be seen at a glance in the three- line summaries at the beginning of the two tables (at the top of pages 56 and 63). More briefly still: the total number of intrants as under- graduates in regular standing during the two years was 2543; of whom 1885 came from public high schools, 231 from other secondary schools, 63 from normal schools, and 364 from other colleges and universities; 1822 came from Illinois schools, 721 from the schools of other states or foreign countries. A complete list of the accredited public high schools of Illinois is included in each table, so that the schools which sent no new students in either year are shown as well as those that did send new students. Thirty-five Illinois high schools sent 10 or more new students to the University during the biennium : Urbana, 87 ; Champaign, 81 ; Lane (Chicago), 42; Crane (Chicago), 41; Springfield, 31; Oak Park and Eiver Forest Township (Oak Park), 29; Hyde Park (Chicago) and Kockford, each 26; Joliet Township, 25; Englewood (Chicago), 23; Elgin, 20 ; Decatur, 19 ; Moline and Quincy, each 18 ; Danville and Free- port, each 17; LaSalle-Peru Township (LaSalle), 16; Lyons Township (La Grange) and Wendell Phillips (Chicago), each 15; Canton, 14; East Aurora and Mattoon, each 13; Clinton and Lake View (Chicago), each 12; Alton, Austin (Chicago), Bo wen (Chicago), East St. Louis, Lake (Chicago), Sterling Township, and Thornton Township (Harvey), each 11; and Bloomington, Calumet (Chicago), Paris, and Streator Town- ship, each 10. A general summary of the representation of the Illinois high schools follows: NEW INTRANTS IN REGULAR STANDING FROM ILLINOIS HIGH SCHOOLS 1911-12 1912-13 High schools not represented 96 83 High schools which sent 1 student 66 56 High schools which sent 2-4 students 92 106 High schools which sent 5-9 students 27 27 High schools which sent 10 or more students (in one year) 10 18 Total, accredited high schools 291 290 The representation of other Illinois schools may be summarized as follows : NEW INTRANTS AS UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING FROM OTHER ILLINOIS SCHOOLS Schools Represented Students 1911-12 1912-13 1911-12 1912-13 Private secondary schools 16 24 97 74 Normal schools 6 5 28 18 Colleges and universities 13 17 54 47 Totals 35 46 179 139 The representation of schools in states other than Illinois and in foreign countries is exhibited in the following summaries: 36 REPORT OF REGISTRAR NEW INTRANTS AS UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING FROM STATES OTHER THAN ILLINOIS States Schools Represented Represented Students 1911-12 1912-13 1911-12 1912-13 1911-12 1912-13 Public high schools 31 26 128 131 192 187 Private secondary schools 13 14 24 21 29 23 Normal schools 67 67 8 8 Colleges and univer- sities 24 30 64 70 114 123 Totals 222 229 343 341 NEW INTRANTS AS UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING FROM FOREIGN COUNTRIES Countries Schools Represented Represented Students 1911-12 1912-13 1911-12 1912-13 1911-12 1912-13 Secondary schools ... 3 4 45 45 Normal schools 1 1 1 Colleges and univer- sities 7 6 11 9 15 11 Totals 15 15 19 17 Parentage of Degrees Tables 15 and 16 (pages 71 and 74) show the parentage of the degrees which were held by students registered during the two years. The important part of each of these tables is, of course, that which shows the parentage of degrees held by the students registered in the Gradu- ate School. This part of these tables is virtually a continuation for the Graduate School of Tables 13 and 14, "Schools from which Intrants (Undergraduates in Regular Standing) Were Received". The part of these tables relating to the Graduate School may be summarized, to show the representation of the several classes of institu- tions, as follows. (Where a student holds two degrees, both arc counted in the columns headed "No. of Degrees"; hence the totals of these columns are considerably larger than the number of graduate students. Seventy -one out of 329 graduate students iu 1911-12, and 105 out of 339 students in 1912-13, held more than one degree.) REPRESENTATION OF DIFFERENT CLASSES OF INSTITUTIONS No. of Institutions Represented 1911-12 191: University of Illinois 1 Other state universities 17 State colleges of agriculture and mechan- ic arts 8 Larger endowed universities -. 8 Small colleges, Illinois 10 Small colleges, other states \j Foreign institutions 7 Totals 107 tao i 111 ~.D No. OF Degrees [2-13 1 () 1 1 - 1 . : 101 2-13 I 173 [93 14 5-' 5- IO 1 1 *3 ' 1 36 43 >7 45 44 59 n >M 5 9 5 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 2)7 The various kinds of degrees held by registrants in the Graduate School during the biennium are shown in the following table (the dupli- cation, with respect to students, being the same as in the preceding summary) : KINDS OF DEGREES HELD Degree 1911-12 1912-13 Bachelor of Arts 182 182 Bachelor of Philosophy 8 8 Bachelor of Science 140 146 Bachelor of Civil Engineering 1 1 Bachelor of Commerce 1 o Bachelor of Divinity 1 1 Bachelor of Library Science 2 2 Bachelor of Laws o 2 Master of Arts 41 59 Master of Philosophy o 1 Master of Science 13 29 Doctor of Law (J.D.) 1 1 Architectural Engineer 1 1 Civil Engineer 1 2 Electrical Engineer 1 2 Mechanical Engineer 3 4 Doctor of Philosophy 1 1 *Graduate of a higher institution which gives no degree 2 2 f Graduate in Pharmacy 1 o Totals 400 444 The third page of each of these tables (pages 73 and 76) shows the parentage of degrees held by students in (1) the undergraduate and professional departments at Urbana and (2) the College of Medi- cine (Chicago). In 1911-12, out of 3654 students enrolled as undergraduates or in Law or Library Science at Urbana, 43 already held degrees; 4 of these students already held two degrees. Sixteen institutions besides the University of Illinois were represented. In the second year of the biennium, the corresponding enrollment total was 3663, and this figure included 74 students who held degrees, 9 of whom held two degrees. The representation of institutions other than the University of Illinois was 29. Of 537 students enrolled in the College of Medicine in 1911-12, 33 were college graduates, and 3 held two degrees. Twenty-six institu- tions were represented. In 1912-13 the College of Medicine enrolled 551 students. Of these 24 were college graduates, and 3 held two degrees. The institutions represented numbered 20. Occupations of Parents and Guardians Table 17 (page 78) summarizes the statements made by the students in the undergraduate and professional colleges and schools at Urbana in 1912-13 in answer to the following query printed on the registration *The institutions represented in these four cases are Concordia College, the United States Naval Academy, Tangshan College, and the Tokyo Higher Technical School. tThe Graduate in Pharmacy held also the degree of Bachelor of Science. 38 REPORT OF REGISTRAR blanks: "Occupation of parent or guardian?" It serves to indicate, broadly at least, the extent to which each of the economic classes in the community contributes to our student body. It will be noted that this table and the two tables which follow (dealing with "Religious Affiliations" and the "Ages of Students") cover only the second year of the biennium. It was felt that there was no particular point in making up data of this sort for every successive year. If such statistics be made available for every third year, for example, any significant variations will probably appear with sufficient clearness. Considerable difficulty was experienced in making a satisfactory classification of the varied occupations, and the grouping here given is undoubtedly open to question at several points. All that is claimed for it is that it seemed on the whole distinctly better than a number of other classifications which were tried. A further weakness in this tabulation arises from the indefiniteness of many students' replies relative in this matter. Eighty-five students, for example, described their fathers as "manufacturers", without further specification; 233 wrote merely "merchant"; 13, "manager"; and so on. With all these defects, however, this table exhibits unmistakably the highly democratic character of our undergraduate population. Seventy-six students are sons or daughters of bankers, but 92 are the children of unskilled laborers, and 244 are from the families of skilled laborers (barbers, blacksmiths, carpenters, miners, tailors, tinners, etc.). The representation from what have been called the "artistic professions" (architecture, art, literature, music) happens to be exactly the same as that from the grocery business — 41 students in each case; while the total for "mercantile business", which is really comparable with the total for the "artistic professions", is 680. Or take the business of rail- roading: we have several high officials represented — one president, one chief engineer, one division engineer; we have also 90 young men and women whose fathers are conductors, locomotive engineers, and station agents, or belong to similar divisions of the service. Five more or less distinct occupational groups sent us 200 students or more in 1912-13 : Agriculture 909 "Mercantile business" 680 The professions 449 "Financial and semi-legal business" (bankers, brokers, real estate dealers, etc.) 251 Skilled labor 244 Religious A f filiations Table 18 (page 85) briefly summarizes (he answers given by the Students in the undergraduate and professional colleges and schools ai CJrbana in 1912-13 to the question on the registration blanks as to their religious affiliations. It is to be noted that the students are in no sense required to answer this question. The Registrar's clerks see to it that all the other blanks UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 39 are filled, but take no notice of omissions on this point. This accounts for the considerable number of students (410) from whom we had no expression as to their affiliation or lack of affiliation. The number of shades of religious belief represented is 41. The student body is apparently overwhelmingly "orthodox". One student described himself as an agnostic; 3 are liberalists; 2 wrote "undenominational" ; and 117 stated explicitly that they had no religious affiliations. There are 64 Unitarians and 38 Universalists. There are, also, 1 Confucianist, 6 followers of Hinduism, and 47 Jews. With all these deductions — made for widely varying reasons as they are, — we have 3001 students, out of 3253 who answered on this point, who belong to what are commonly known as "orthodox" denominations of the Christian faith. Eight denominations were represented, in 1912-13, by more than one hundred students: Methodist 907 Presbyterian 617 Congregationalist 264 Christian 239 Baptist 228 Roman Catholic 214 Episcopalian 195 Lutheran 105 Ages of Students The last table in Part II (No. 19, page 86) relates to the ages of the students in the departments at Urbana for 1912-13, taken as of September 1, 1912. First are shown the average ages, by colleges and schools, by classes, and by sexes; second, the distribution of ages, by classes and sexes. The average age of all the students registered at Urbana during 1912-13, taken as of September 1, 1912, was 22.02 years. Both in the institution as a whole and in the undergraduate colleges, the average age of the women students was higher by nearly one year than the average age of the men : Entire University — average age, men, 21.84; women, 22.70. Undergraduates — average age, men, 21.20; women, 22.18. The reverse is true, however, for the Graduate School, in which the men averaged 28.00 years, and the women 27.48 years. It is natural, perhaps, that the averages for the students in the College of Literature and Arts should run somewhat lower than the averages for the other undergraduate colleges. The lowest average shown is that for the freshmen men in the College of Literature and Arts — 18.66 years. Next comes the College of Engineering, with 21.31 years ; third, the College of Science, with 21.53 years ; fourth, the College of Agriculture, with 21.93 years; fifth and sixth, but almost together, the School of Music and the College of Law, with 22.42 years and 22.49 years respectively; and seventh, the Graduate School, with 27.90 years; while the Library School has the highest average age, 28.05 years. 40 REPORT OF REGISTRAR The latter part of the tahle shows the distribution of ages — count- ed as insurance companies do by the nearest birthday. We had, in 1912-13, 18 students of sixteen years of age — the lowest age at which candidates may be admitted, and one student fifty years of age. The distribution between these extremes may be summarized as follows : No. of students in their teens 1119 No. of students in their twenties 2 449 No. of students in their thirties 84 No. of students in their forties 10 No. of students 50 years of age 1 Total 3663 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 41 Table ii GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF STUDENTS, 1911-12 Summary Urbana Men Wom. Total Illinois 2584 816 3400 States other than Illinois... 684 141 825 Insular Poss. of U. S 819 Foreign Countries 106 106 Chicago Total Men Wom. Total Men Wom. Total 515 21 536 263 24 287 5 5 29 3 32 3099 837 3936 947 165 1 1 12 13 1 x 4 135 3 138 Total 3382 958 4340 812 48 860 4194 1006 5200 Counties in Illinois 3 2 3 7 11 3 5 2 2 1 7 2 3 17 9 28 21 30 29 38 4 10 11 28 3 25 3 19 25 1 28 1 2 25 42 10 7 13 7 11 3 21 100 3 14 3 4 1 3 24 12 27 10 Adams 30 3 33 Alexander 15 3 18 Bond 5 5 Boone 12 6 18 Brown 5 4 9 Bureau 22 5 27 Calhoun Carroll 8 3 11 Cass 11 3 14 Champaign 405 280 685 Christian 28 4 32 Clark „ 9 1 10 Clay 3 3 3 ...... 3 Clinton 314 Coles 17 8 25 Cook 587 104 691 339 17 356 Crawford 14 Cumberland 7 De Kalb 25 DeWitt 14 Douglas 19 DuPage 26 Edgar 33 Edwards 2 Effingham 8 Fayette 10 Ford 21 Franklin 1 Fulton 22 Gallatin 3 Greene 16 Grundy 20 Hamilton 1 Hancock 21 Hardin 1 Henderson 2 Henry 22 Iroquois 28 Jackson 7 Jasper 7 Jefferson 9 Jersey 6 To Daviess 8 Johnson 3 Kane 79 Kankakee 21 Kendall 10 Knox 19 I 10 35 15 5 12 5 26 38 18 5 18 9 3i 11 3 12 3 408 281 29 4 9 1 6 3 1 17 8 926 121 14 9 27 17 19 30 38 2 8 10 22 1 32 3 16 20 2 22 1 3 23 3^ 10 8 12 7 11 3 84 23 10 22 3 2 3 7 11 3 5 2 2 1 7 2 3 3 5 3 14 3 22 3 2 8 14 15 689 33 10 6 4 25 1047 17 11 30 24 30 33 43 4 10 11 29 3 35 3 19 25 2 29 1 3 26 46 13 8 16 8 14 3 106 26 12 30 42 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table ii (Continued) GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF STUDENTS, 1911-12 Counties in Illinois (Continued) Urbana Men Wom. Total Chicago Men Wom. Total Total Men Wom. Total Lake LaSalle _ Lawrence Lee 20 50 ii 26 22 Livingston Logan 17 McDonough _ _..._ 16 McHenry 18 McLean 43 Macon ...„ 27 Macoupin 20 Madison _ 32 Marion 17 Marshall 8 Mason „ 8 Massac _ 6 Menard 4 Mercer __ „ 10 Monroe _ 4 Montgomery 20 Morgan 18 Moultrie _._ _ 21 Ogle _ _ 13 Peoria 57 Perry „ „ 6 Piatt 21 Pike __ _ 14 Pulaski 2 Putnam _ 3 Randolph 7 Richland 8 Rock Island 33 St. Clair 35 Saline - 9 Sangamon 56 Schuyler _ 6 Scott 5 Shelby _ 13 Stark 5 Stephenson 16 Tazewell 31 Union 7 Vermilion 41 Wabash 7 Warren 10 Washington 2 Wayne 9 White 5 Whiteside 26 Will 38 Williamson 8 Winnebago 26 Woodford 2 5 20 1 7 11 4 10 2 4 4 1 7 1 8 7 4 1 3 6 1 8 4 6 9 2 1 3 2 2 9 2 18 2 1 1 1 6 8 '3 2 4 10 25 70 12 33 33 21 26 26 5i 33 25 40 19 9 12 6 6 14 4 24 19 28 14 65 6 28 18 3 6 13 9 41 39 15 65 8 6 16 7 18 40 9 59 9 11 3 10 1 1 34 5' 10 30 12 5 11 2 2 5 11 2 2 1 2 5 5 - 5 2 2 2 2 3 •••■ 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 .... 4 -7 2 12 1 13 2 2 s - 5 2 .. 25 61 II 28 24 17 17 20 48 27 22 32 19 8 9 6 4 11 4 23 19 22 18 64 6 21 15 2 3 7 8 34 37 9 61 6 5 13 5 18 33 10 43 7 12 4 88 50 10 31 4 5 20 I 7 11 4 10 3 6 1 8 4 6 9 2 1 3 2 2 9 2 18 2 1 1 1 6 8 14 2 4 10 30 81 12 35 35 21 27 28 56 33 28 40 21 9 13 6 6 15 4 27 20 29 19 72 6 28 19 3 6 13 9 42 41 15 70 8 6 16 7 20 42 12 61 9 13 S 10 15 36 04 ta 3S 14 Total, Counties 258.4 Xi<> j.,«> 515 21 536 30DQ S37 3036 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 43 Figure 6 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF STUDENTS, 1911-12 Counties in Illinois (Total, 3936) 44 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table ii (Continued) GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF STUDENTS, 1911-12 States other than Illinois Urbana Men Wom. Total North Atlantic Chicago Men Wom. Total Division Connecticut Maine Massachusetts 20 New Hampshire 1 New Jersey 9 New York 31 Pennsylvania 15 Rhode Island 4 Vermont 2 South 21 2 11 36 17 5 2 Atlantic Division Delaware District of Columbia 2 Florida 2 Georgia 1 Maryland 3 North Carolina 1 South Carolina 1 Virginia West Virginia 2 North Central Division Indiana 159 28 Iowa 71 19 Kansas 38 10 Michigan 45 4 Minnesota 13 2 Missouri 69 16 Nebraska 13 1 North Dakota 10 1 Ohio 31 8 South Dakota 6 2 Wisconsin 27 8 South Alabama 9 Arkansas 8 Kentucky 8 Louisiana 5 Mississippi 3 Oklahoma 13 Tennessee 5 Texas 10 Arizona California 10 Colorado 16 Idaho 2 Montana 4 Nevada 1 New Mexico 2 Oregon 2 Utah 2 Washington 7 Wyoming i Totals, Stairs other than Illinois I i8 | 187 90 48 49 15 85 14 11 39 8 35 Central 11 9 8 5 3 18 5 12 31 32 10 22 25 6 10 3 8 15 50 Division 3 3 Western Division 2 13 23 j 6 1 3 2 2 9 1 38 37 11 25 25 6 12 3 8 16 52 Total Men Wom. Total 21 I 9 33 19 5 2 190 103 48 67 38 75 23 13 39 21 77 9 10 11 6 3 15 8 13 1 1 21 4 9 1 2 3 6 »5 2 2 1 35 24 11 7 2 16 3 1 8 3 10 2 1 1 22 2 11 38 21 6 2 3 4 1 3 1 1 2 3 225 127 59 74 40 9i 26 14 47 24 87 11 11 11 6 3 20 8 15 14 4 1 1 1 3 3 [8 a 1 1 1 835 263 a 1 387 943 165 111 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 45 c* cs 03 Eh H P £> Eh 02 Ph O o l-H Eh & M l-H EH 03 02 Ph O o I— I Eh & PQ EH CO < O h-l w Ph O H 54 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 12 (Continued) GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF STUDENTS, 1912-13 Insular Possessions Urbana Men Wom. T'tl. Chicago Men Wom. T'tl. Total Men Wom. T'tl. Hawaii Philippine Islands Porto Rico _ Total, Insular Possessions 819 8 Foreign Countries Canada Cuba „ Jamaica „ Mexico _ 10 North America 9 1 10 2 Argentina Brazil Peru Austria _ Bohemia _ 1 Bulgaria 1 Denmark 1 Germany 4 Great Britain Greece _ _ Holland _ Italy Norway _ Russia Sweden Switzerland Armenia China 44 India 9 Japan 15 Turkey Egypt 1 Orange River Colony 1 South Africa 2 10 South America 2 Europe 1 1 2 6 1 1 Asia 44 9 1 Africa 1 1 2 16 17 II 2 13 2 _ 2 2 2 II 11 3 - 3 2 2 2 2 I 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 4 - 4 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 - 3 7 ••• 7 1 1 1 1 1 1 44 2 46 10 10 16 ... ... 16 5 1 6 1 1 1 1 2 2 Total, Foreign Countries 119 121 19 22 13* 143 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 55 56 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 13 SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1911-12 Summary High Normal Colleges and Schools Academies Schools Universities Total Illinois Other States Foreign Countries 690 192 2 97 29 2 28 8 54 114 15 869 343 19 Totals 884 128 Illinois 36 185 1231 ACCREDITED HIGH SCHOOLS 69 1 Abingdon o Albion O Aledo 1 Altamont O Alton 8 Amboy 2 Anna 2 Areola I Arlington Heights 3 Armington (Hittle Township) o Ashland o Assumption Township o Astoria O Atlanta 1 Atwood 2 Auburn O Augusta o Aurora 1 3 East 9 West 4 Avery ville (Peoria P. O.) o Barry 1 Batavia o Beardstown 3 Belleville 2 Bellflower Township o Belvidere 7 North _ 4 South 3 1 >cment O Benton Township o Biggsville Township o I 'loomington 7 Blue Island I tridgeport Township Bushnell Cairo ('.imli ridge ( 'amp Point ( lanton 2 ( larlinville 2 Carmi o ( larlyle 2 Carthage _. 1 Carrollton 2 Carterville o Casey _ 1 Catlin o Centralia Township _„. 1 Champaign _ 38 Charleston „ o Chatsworth _ o Chenoa _ o Chester „ o Chicago 136 Austin 6 Bowen 8 Calumet 4 Crane 23 Curtis 3 Englewood 15 Hyde Park 14 English High and M. T 1 Lake _ 5 Lake View 7 Lane 24 McKinley 5 Marshall 2 Medill 4 Northwest Division 1 Phillips 5 Schurz 4 Tuley 5 Chicago Heights (Bloom Town- ship) 1 Chillicothe Township (. Inisman O C 'la y ton Q Clinton 9 Clyde (I. Sterling Morton Town- ship 3 Colfax Collinsville Township 1 Crystal lake 1 Dallas City Danville 5 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 57 Table 13 (Continued) SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1911-12 Decatur 9 DeKalb Township o Delavan _ o Dixon 2 Downer's Grove 2 Dundee _ 3 DuQuoin Township 1 Dwight 1 Earlville 2 East St. Louis 1 Edwardsville 2 Effingham o Eldorado Township o Elgin 10 Elizabeth o Elmhurst _ o Elmwood 3 El Paso 2 Evanston Township 4 Fai rbury O Fairfield _ 5 Farmer City Township _ 4 Farmington O Flora (Harter-Stanford Township) 2 Forrest o Freeport _ 7 Fulton 1 Galena _ „ o Galesburg _ _ 2 Galva 3 Geneseo Township _ _. 1 Geneva _ _ 1 Genoa o Georgetown Township o Gibson City (Drummer Township) 1 Gilman _ 2 Girard _ 1 Granite City o Greenfield o Greenview o Greenville o Griggsville o Hamilton o Harrisburg Township 3 Harvard 3 Harvey (Thornton Township) 1 H avana _ 2 H en ry _ o Herrin Township __ 3 Hey worth „ o Highland „ 2 Highland Park (Deerfield Town- ship) 1 Hinsdale _ _ _ 1 Homer o Floopeston 1 Hume 2 Illiopolis i Industry Township o Jacksonville 2 Jersey ville 4 Joliet Township 19 Kankakee 2 Kansas o Kenilworth( New Trier Township) 6 Kewanee - 3 Kinmundy o Knoxville 1 LaGrange (Lyons Township) 8 LaHarpe o Lanark O LaSalle-Peru Township 4 Lawrenceville Township 1 Lena I LeRoy _ 1 Lewistown O Lexington _ o Liberty ville o Lincoln o Litchfield 4 Lockport Township 3 Loda _ _ _ 4 Lovington Township 1 McHenry „ _ I McLeansboro I Macomb 2 Madison O Maine Township _ 2 Mansfield 1 Marengo _ O Marion Township o Marissa Township „ _ o Marseilles _ _.. 4 Marshall Township _ 1 Martinsville _. _ O Mason City o Mattoon _ 4 May wood (Proviso Township).... 2 Mazon Township 3 Mendon _ o Mendota _ _ 2 Metropolis ._ _ „ 2 Milford Township _ 2 M inonk I Moline _._ 8 Momence 2 Monmouth I Monticello O Morgan Park Township _ „.. 3 Morris 2 58 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 13 (Continued) SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1911-12 Morrison _ _ _ 4 Morton Township _ 2 Mt. Carmel 1 Mt. Carroll 1 Mt. Sterling 1 Mt. Vernon Township 2 Moweaqua o Murphysboro Township o Naperville _ o Nashville _ 1 Neoga Township _ 1 Newman Township 4 Newton _ 2 Normal __ o Nokomis I North Dixon _ O Oakland _ _ O Oak Park and River Forest Town- ship ) 12 Oblong 2 Odell _ o Olney o Onarga o O regon 2 Ottawa Township 6 Palestine o Pana Township 2 Paris 5 Pawnee Township o Pawpaw 1 Paxton 3 Pekin 4 Peoria 5 Petersburg I Pittsfield 1 Plainfield _ 2 Piano 2 Polo _ 2 Pontiac Township 8 Princeton Township 3 Prophetstown O Quincy 5 Rantoul 1 Ridgefarm 1 Riverside o Robinson Township 1 Rochelle 3 Rock Falls o Rockford 10 Rock [sland 1 Roodhouse 2 Roseville Township Rossville _ Rushville Rutland _ St. Charles _ _ _ 4 Salem _ o St. Elmo _ o Sandwich _ _ 5 Savanna Township _..._ 2 Saybrook o Sheffield _ _ _ 2 Shelbyville _ _ 1 Sheldon 1 Sidell Township _„ _ o Sparta 6 Springfield - 9 Stanford o Staunton 2 Sterling Township 4 Stockland Township _ o Stockton 3 Stonington O Streator Township 3 Sullivan _ 1 Sycamore 3 Taylorville Township _ 4 Tiskilwa (Arispie-Indiantown") o Tolono - 2 Toulon Township 1 Tuscola 6 Urbana _ 38 Vandalia O Vermont 1 Virden I Vi rgin ia o Walnut I Warren O Washburn o Washington 3 Waterloo 1 Watseka 2 Waukegan Township I Wcnona 1 West Chicago 2 Wheaton o Whitehall o Wilmington O Winchester 2 Woodstock 2 Wyoming o Ybrkville 2 Total, Accredited High Schools vi mm m ess 97 Armour Academy 3 Bradley Institute 690 10 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 59 Table 13 (Continued) SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1911-12 DePaul Academy 2 Eureka College Academy 1 Evanston Academy 4 Illinois, University of, Academy 49 Illinois Wesleyan Academy 1 John Swaney School I Lewis Institute 16 Lincoln College Academy Monticello Seminary Morgan Park Academy _ St. Viateur's Academy _.. University High School (Chicago) Western Military Academy 2 Whipple Academy 2 Total, Academies 97 NORMAL SCHOOLS — 28 Illinois State Normal 9 Eastern Illinois State Normal 5 Chicago Normal School 2 Total, Normal Schools Northern Illinois State Normal 3 Western Illinois State Normal 5 Southern Illinois State Normal 4 28 COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES — 54 Carthage College 2 Chicago, University of 13 DePaul University 1 Ewing College I Illinois College 4 Illinois Wesleyan University 1 Illinois Woman's College 3 Total, Colleges and Universities .... James Millikin University 5 Knox College _._ — 6 Lake Forest College _ _.. 3 Monmouth College _ 3 Northwestern University _. 10 Wheaton College __ 2 54 States other than Illinois S.). HIGH Alabama — 3 Bessemer Mobile Arizona — 2 Phoenix Arkansas — 1 Little Rock California — 2 Oxnard Pasadena Colorado — 2 Denver (M. T. H. Pueblo _ District of Columbia, — 1 Washington Central High School Indiana — 65 Anderson Bloomfield Brazil _ _ Connersville Dayton Decatur East Chicago Elkhart Evansville Fairmount Flora Fort Wayne Garrett schools — 192 Goshen 2 2 Greensburg „ 2 1 Hammond „ I Indianapolis 5 2 Manual Training „ 4 Shortridge 1 1 Jasper 1 Kentland I 1 Kingman 1 1 LaFayette _ 1 Laporte I 1 Mt. Vernon _ 1 1 Newport _ 1 New Richmond 3 1 Osgood 2 Perrysville _ I 2 Plymouth I I Princeton 1 3 Richmond 1 1 South Bend 8 1 Sullivan 1 1 Thorntown 1 1 Union City 1 3 Veedersburg 2 3 Vincennes 2 1 Williamsport _ 2 1 Winchester 1 1 Windgate I 1 6o REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 13 (Continued) SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1911-12 Iowa — 2 1 Cedar Rapids _ _ 1 Charles City _ _.„ _ 2 Clinton __ I Davenport _ _ _ _ 2 Des Moines _ _ „ 2 Dubuque _ 2 Grundy Center _ - „ 1 Jefferson _.. 1 Keokuk _ _ _ 2 Mason City 1 Newton 3 Rockford 1 Vinton - 1 Washington 1 Kansas — 5 Cherokee _ _ 1 Garden City _ 3 Wichita 1 Kentucky — 1 Frankfort ~ 1 Louisiana — 1 New Orleans _ 1 Maryland — 1 Hagerstown 1 Massachusetts — 7 Boston (Dorchester) _ 1 Fitchburg 1 Lenox _.... 2 Westfield - - — 3 Michigan — 15 Battle Creek I Crystal Falls I Detroit 2 Grand Rapids (Central) 1 Ishpeming — 2 Jackson 1 Gwinn - 1 Menominee 2 Niles 3 Pent water 1 Minnesota — 4 Faribault 1 Jackson 1 Virginia 1 Winona 1 Mississippi — I I [azelhurst 1 Montana — I Beaverhead - l Missouri — 28 Joplin 2 Total, Uiijli Schools Kansas City (Westport) 4 La Plata 1 Mexico _ 1 St. Joseph 1 St. Louis _ _ _... 16 Central _ 2 McKinley _ _ 7 Soldan Yeatman _ _ _ Springfield Webb City Nebraska — 1 Omaha _ Nevada — 1 Elko _ New Jersey — 2 East Orange Orange „ Neiv Mexico — 1 Roswell New York — 6 Antwerp _ B rooklyn Buffalo _ Gouverneur _ New York City (Morris). Pulaski _ North Dakota — 4 Enderlin „_... Fargo Larimore Ohio — 1 Urbana _ _. Oklahoma — 4 Guthrie _.. Medford Oklahoma City .. Shawnee South Dakota — 4 Belle Fourche _ Lead Watertown Texas — 2 Dallas San Antonio Washington — 1 North Yakima West 1 iiiiinia — 1 Clarksburg II 'isconsin — 3 Kenosha LaCrossc 19a UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 61 Table 13 (Continued) SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1911-12 academies — 29 California — 1 Boone University Preparatory- School Indiana — 6 Culver Military Academy Howe School 4 Winona Academy Iowa — 1 Luther College Academy Massachusetts — 1 Williston Seminary Missouri — 5 Blees Military Academy 2 Drury Academy St. Louis University Academy Smith Academy New Hampshire — 1 Kimball Union Academy New York — 2 Cook Academy _ Total, Academies Franklin Academy I Ohio — 3 Buchtel College Academy 1 Oberlin Academy 1 Wooster College Academy 1 Oklahoma — 1 University Preparatory SchooL. 1 Pennsylvania — 2 Mercersburg Academy 2 Tennessee — 1 Tennessee Military Institute 1 Virginia — 3 Randolph-Macon Academy 1 Staunton Military Academy 1 Virginia Military Institute I Wisconsin — 2 Beloit College Academy 1 St. John's Military Academy 1 29 NORMAL SCHOOLS 8 California — I California State Normal School i Indiana — 2 Indiana State Normal School 2 Massachusetts — 1 Massachusetts Normal School 1 Minnesota — 1 Minnesota State Normal School I Montana — 1 Montana State Normal School 1 West Virginia — 2 West Virginia Normal College... 2 Total, Normal Schools 8 COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES — II4 Alabama — I Alabama, University of I California — 2 Leland Stanford Jr. Univ i Pomona College I Colorado — 2 Colorado, University of 2 District of Columbia — i George Washington University... I Indiana — 23 Butler College 1 Concordia College 1 DePauw University 4 Indiana University 2 Moores Hill College 1 Notre Dame University 2 Purdue University 9 Rose Polytechnic Institute 1 Union Christian College 1 Winona College 1 Iowa — 15 Iowa State College 5 Iowa, University of 7 Lenox College I Parsons College 2 Kansas — 9 Fairmount College 1 Kansas Agricultural College 5 Kansas, University of I Washburn College 2 Maryland — 1 Baltimore City College I Massachusetts— 6 Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology 2 Smith College 1 Vassar College 1 Williams College 1 Worcester Polytechnic Institute 1 62 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 13 (Continued) SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1911-12 Michigan — 3 Albion College _ „ 1 Michigan Agricultural College 1 Michigan, University of „ _ 1 Minnesota} — 5 Minnesota, University of 5 Missouri — 7 Central College 1 Drury College _ _ _.. 1 Missouri, University of _ 1 Missouri Valley College 1 Stephens College 1 Washington University _ 2 Nebraska — 3 Grand Island College 2 Nebraska, University of _ 1 New Jersey — 1 Princeton University _ 1 New York — 4 Columbia University 1 Hobart College 2 New York, College of the City of 1 North Dakota — 1 University of North Dakota I Ohio — 7 Oberlin College 1 Total, Colleges and Universities .... Ohio State University _ „ 2 Ohio Wesleyan University. 1 Western College for Women _ 1 Wilmington College I Wittenberg College _ I Oklahoma — 1 Methodist University of Okla- homa _ 1 Pennsylvania — 3 Haverford College 1 Lehigh University _ I Waynesburg College 1 Rhode Island — 3 Brown University _ _ _ 2 Rhode Island State College 1 Texas — 2 St. Louis College 1 Westminster College _... 1 Utah— 1 Agricultural College „.. 1 Washington — 1 Washington State College I Wisconsin — 14 Beloit College 2 Wisconsin, University of 12 .114 Foreign Countries HIGH SCHOOLS — 2 Argentina — I Government High School Buenos Aires I Germany — i Groessel'sche Realschule, Dresden Total, High Schools 2 academies — 2 China — 2 London Mission School Nanyung Middle School. Total, Academies 2 COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES — 1 5 Argentina — I National College, Cordoba I China — 8 Imperial Polytechnic Institute I St. John's University 4 Shantung Christian University 1 Shing I lua College 2 England — 1 Clifton College 1 India — 2 Allahabad University I Randhir College 1 Japan — 1 Imperial University of Sapporo... I Peru — 1 Institute de Lima I South Africa — 1 I 'Diversity of the Cape of ( lOOd Hope I Total, Colleges and Universities 15 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 63 Table 14 SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1912-13 High Schools Illinois 814 Other States 187 Insular Possessions Foreign Countries Totals 1 00 1 Summary Normal Colleges and Academies Schools Universities Total 74 18 47 953 23 1 8 123 34i j 5 1 11 17 103 27 181 1312 Illinois ACCREDITED HIGH SCHOOLS — 814 Abingdon o Albion 1 Aledo o Altamont 2 Alton 3 Amboy I Anna i Areola ....._ o Arlington Heights o Armington (Hittle Township) o Ashland o Assumption Township o Astoria 2 Atlanta 1 Atwood 5 Auburn o Augusta o Aurora 8 East 4 West 4 Avery ville (Peoria P. O.) 1 Barry _ o Batavia _ 3 Beardstown 3 Belleville _ 3 Bellflower Township 2 Belvidere (South) 4 Bement 4 Benton Township 4 Biggs ville Township o B loomington 3 Blue Island 2 Bridgeport Township o Bushnell o Cairo 5 Cambridge 1 Camp Point 3 Canton _ 1 2 Carlinville _ 3 Carlyle o Ca rmi 2 Carrollton 4 Carterville _ „ o Casey o Catlin o Centralia Township 4 Champaign 43 Charleston 1 Chatsworth 2 Chenoa _ 2 Chester o Chicago 116 Austin 5 Bovven 3 Calumet 6 Crane 1 8 Curtis _... o Englewood 8 Hyde Park 12 Lake 6 Lake View 5 Lane 1 8 McKinley 4 Marshall 4 Medill 3 Phillips 10 Schurz 5 Tuley 2 Waller 7 Chicago Heights (Bloom Town- ship ) 3 Chillicothe Township o Chrisman ! 4 Clayton o Clinton 3 Clyde (J. Sterling Morton Town- ship ) o Col fax _ _ 1 Collinsville Township 1 Crystal Lake 2 6 4 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 14 (Continued) SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1912-13 *Cuba _ 1 Dallas City _ _ Danville 1 2 Decatur 1 DeKalb Township 4 Delavan Des Plaines (Maine Township) 1 Dixon ..._ „ _ 1 Downer's Grove _ _ _ 2 Dundee _ 1 DuQuoin Township 2 Dwight _ 1 Earlville _ 1 East St. Louis 10 Edward sville o * Eureka 1 Effingham o Eldorado Township o Elgin „ _ 1 o Elizabeth 1 Elmhurst 1 Elmwood o El Paso _ 3 Evanston Township 5 Fairbury ...._ „ 2 Fai rfield 1 Farmer City Township 5 Farmington _ o Flora (Harter-Stanford Township) 3 Forrest o Freeport 7 Fulton o Galena 1 Galesburg 6 Galva o Geneseo Township 5 Geneva _ 4 Genoa 2 Georgetown Township 1 Gibson City (Drummer Township) 6 Gilman 2 Granite City _ 1 Greenfield 2 ♦Greenup 1 Green view O Greenville 2 Griggsville o 1 [amilton o I [arrisburg Township 2 Harvard 2 Harvey (Thornton Township). to Havana o Henry -.. 3 Herrin Township _ o H ey worth _ _ _ o Highland _ _ 4 Highland Park (Deer field Town- ship ) _ _ 2 Hillsboro _ _ 2 Hinsdale - 1 Homer _ 1 Hoopeston _ _ „ o Hume o Illiopolis „ Industry Township o Jacksonville 2 Jersey ville o Joliet Township _ 6 Kankakee _ _ _. 4 Kansas _ O Kenil\vorth(New Trier Township) 2 Kewanee _ -.. 2 Kinmundy o Knoxville o LaGrange (Lyons Township) 7 LaHarpe _ _ I Lanark _ 2 LaSalle (LaSalle-Peru Township) 12 Lawrenceville Township 5 Lena o LeRoy 4 Lewistown o Lexington o Libertyville _ _ o Lincoln _ _ _ o Litchfield 2 Lockport Township o Loda 1 Lovington Township O McHenry - 1 Mel .eansboro o Macomb 3 Madison o Mansfield I Marengo - o Marion Townsbip 3 Marissa Township Marseilles a Marshall Township 4 Martinsville O Mason City 1 Mattoon o Maywood (Proviso Township) .; Ma/on Township 1 *Studenl graduated from tlii*- high school during the term of its accredited relation (prior to 1 'j 1 • > . but did nol entei the University until September, 1912, UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 65 Table 14 (Continued) SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1912-13 Mendon o Mendota (West) 3 Metropolis 3 Milford Township 1 M inonk - - I Moline 10 Momence 1 Monmouth o Monticello o Morgan Park Township 2 Morris 3 Morrison 4 Morton Township 1 Mt. Carrnel 2 Mt. Carroll 2 Mt. Sterling 1 Mt. Vernon Township 3 Mo weaqu a _ o Murphysboro Township 3 Naperville I Nashville 2 Neoga Township O Newman Township o Newton 3 Nokomis I Norman 1 North Dixon 2 Oakland 2 Oak Park (Oak Park and River Forest Township 17 Oblong 2 Odell o Olney 2 Onarga o Oregon _ o Ottawa Township 2 Palestine 4 Pana Township 2 Paris 5 Pawnee Township o Paw Paw o Paxton 4 Pekin 4 Peoria 5 Central 4 Manual Training 1 Petersburg 2 Pittsfield 5 Plainfield o Piano 3 Polo I, Pontiac Township 2 Princeton Township 6 Prophetstown 4 Quincy 1 3 Rantoul 3 Ridgefarm 1 Riverside _ o Robinson Township 3 Rochelle 1 Rock Falls o Rockford 16 Rock Island 2 Roodhouse 2 Roseville Township o Rossville _ Rushville 2 Rutland 2 St. Charles 5 St. Elmo _ - o Salem 3 Sandwich o Savanna Township 3 Saybrook 1 Sheffield 1 Shelby ville 2 Sheldon 1 Sidell Township 1 Sparta 2 Springfield 22 Stanford o Staunton 2 Sterling Township 7 Stockland Township o Stockton 1 Stonington I Streator Township 7 Sullivan _ 7 Sycamore 2 Taylorville Township _ 3 T i s k i 1 w a ( Arispie-Indiantown Township ) 6 Toulon Township O Tuscola 2 Urbana _ 49 Vandalia 4 Virden I Vi rgin i a O Walnut - o Warren 2 Washburn o Washington 3 Waterloo (East) 2 Watseka + 3 Waukegan Township 1 Wenona 2 West Chicago 1 Wheaton 1 White Hall 2 Wilmington 2 Winchester 1 Woodstock 1 66 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 14 (Continued) SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1912-13 Wyoming _ _ I Yorkville _ Total, Accredited High Schools 814 ACADEMIES — 74 Armour Institute .._ 6 Bradley Polytechnic Institute 4 Evanston Academy _ _ _ 2 Ewing College Academy _ ... 2 Illinois, University of, Academy ...... 5 Illinois Wesleyan Academy 1 John Swaney School _ 3 Knox College Academy _ 2 Lake Forest Academy _ _... 3 Lewis Institute 17 Monticello Seminary ...... _ 3 Morgan Park Academy 1 Northwestern Military Academy 2 Total, Academies St. James School 1 St. Stanislaus School 1 Southern Collegiate Institute 2 Southern Illinois State Normal High School „ 1 Spalding Institute 2 University High School (Chicago) 5 University School (Chicago) 1 Union Academy _ 3 Vermilion Academy _ 1 West Illinois State Normal Acad- emy 2 Western Military Academy 4 NORMAL SCHOOLS — 18 ... 74 Eastern Illinois State Normal „_ 3 Illinois State Normal University... 5 Northern Illinois State Normal. 2 Southern Illinois State Normal 2 Western Illinois State Normal 6 Total, Normal Schools - _. 18 COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES — 47 Chicago, University of 9 Eureka College 2 Hedding College _ I Illinois College _.. 2 Illinois Wesleyan University 2 James Millikin University 10 Knox College 4 Lake Forest College 2 Lincoln College 1 Total, Colleges and Universities 47 Lombard College Loyola University McKendree College 3 Monmouth College Mt. Morris College Northwestern University 5 St. Ignatius College Westfield College States other than Illinois HIGH SCHOOLS — 187 Arkansas — 3 I [elena 1 I Idt Springs I Siloam Springs 1 California — 2 Los Angeles (Polytechnic) 1 San Francisco (Trinity) 1 Colorado — 6 Anaheim 1 Denver ( Wesl I I Lamar 1 Pueblo 3 District of Columbia — I Washington ( McKinley) Idaho — 3 American Falls Boise Indiana — 5 s Anderson Bicknell Bloomfield Broolcv ille Carlisle Clinton UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 6 7 Table 14 (Continued) SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1912-13 Columbus 1 Crown Point I Elkhart 1 Evansville 1 Greencastle 1 Greensburg 1 Hammond I Indianapolis 8 Manual Training 5 Shortridge 3 Kokomo I LaPorte 1 Linton 1 Lynn I Madison 1 Muncie 1 Newport 3 Noblesville 1 Plymouth 2 Rensselaer 1 Rochester 1 Rockport 1 Rockville 1 Russelville 2 Selva 1 South Bend 3 Terre Haute 1 Washington „..: 3 Waynetown 1 Whiting 1 Worthington 2 Iowa — 23 Albia 1 Burlington 1 Cedar Rapids 2 Corning 1 Davenport 1 Denison 1 Des Moines 3 East 1 West 2 Dows 2 East Waterloo 1 Fort Madison 1 Garner 1 Independence 1 Keokuk 1 Mason City 2 Osceola 1 Red Oak 2 Wilton Junction 1 Kansas — 8 Burlington 1 Garden City „ 1 Holton 2 Kansas City Onaga Pittsburg _ Waterville Kentucky — 2 Lawrenceburg City Louisville (Central Colored) Louisiana — 1 Baton Rouge „ Maryland — 1 Hagerstown (Washington Co., Ferndale High School) Massachusetts — 3 Medford Westfield Michigan — 6 Battle Creek Detroit (Central) Grand Rapids Menominee Mt. Clemens Minnesota — 6 Buffalo Crookston Duluth (Central) Faribault Litchfield Missouri — 29 Chillicothe 1 Kansas City 5 Westport 4 Manual Training 1 St. Joseph 1 St. Louis 19 Central 7 McKinley 3 Manual Training 2 Soldan 3 Sumner 3 Yeatman 1 Slater 1 Springfield 2 Nebraska — 3 Grand Island 1 Omaha 2 New Jersey — 2 Montclair 1 Englewood 1 Nezv Mexico — 2 Roswell 2 New York — 8 Buffalo 5 Technical 3 Western Park 1 Y. M. C. A. Night School... 1 68 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 14 (Continued) SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1912-13 Geneva __ Newark _ New Berlin Ohio — 5 Cincinnati (Woodward) Cleveland ( Glenville ) Delta Greenville _ _ Tiffin _ Oklahoma — 2 Muskogee Oklahoma City Pennsylvania — 1 Pittsburg (Central) South Dakota — 3 Lead Madison Texas — 1 San Antonio ... Washington — 6 Seattle Spokane (Lewis and Clark). Tacoma _ _ Wisconsin — 5 Augusta Eau Claire _ „ Kenosha Manitowoc Marinette _ _ Total, High Schools .187 academies — 23 Alabama — 2 Alabama Girls' Technical Insti- tute _ „ Arizona — 1 University of Arizona Academy Arkansas — 1 Hendrix College Academy California — 1 Occidental College Academy Indiana — 2 Howe School Wabash College Academy Kansas — 1 Colonial School Massachusetts — 2 Mt. Ida School Phillips Andover Academy Mississippi — 1 Marion Institute Total, Academies Missouri — 2 Blees Military Academy Wentworth Military Academy™ New Jersey — 1 Princeton Preparatory School New York — 3 Cascadilla School Eron School Genesee Wesleyan Seminar)' Pennsylvania — 2 Mercersburg Academy Washington and Jefferson Col- lege Academy Tennessee — 1 Sewanee Military Academy Wisconsin — 3 St. John's Military Academy Wisconsin Academy 23 NORMAL SCHOOLS — 8 Indiana, — i Indiana State Normal I Kentucky — i Kentucky Normal College I Michigan — 2 Michigan State Normal College 2 Minnesota — 1 Minnesota State Normal 1 Total, Normal Schools Missouri — 1 Missouri Normal 1 North Dakota — 1 Spearfish Normal I South Dakota — 1 Northern Normal and Industrial School 1 COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES — 123 California — 7 ( California, I University of .^ Leland Stanford Jr. University < Accidental College s UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 6 9 Table 14 (Continued) SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1912-13 Colorado — 3 Colorado Agricultural College 2 Colorado, University of 1 Connecticut — 1 Wesleyan University 1 District of Columbia — 1 George Washington University... 1 Georgia — 2 Georgia School of Technology... 1 Georgia, University of 1 Idaho — 1 Idaho, University of 1 Indiana — 19 Butler College 1 Concordia College _ 1 DePauw University 2 Hanover College _ _.. I Indiana University 3 Notre Dame University 2 Purdue University 8 Vincennes University 1 Iowa — 10 Cornell College 2 Grinnell College 1 Highland Park College 1 Iowa State College 2 Iowa Wesleyan University 1 Morningside College 1 Iowa, University of 2 Kansas — 6 Blackburn College 1 Kansas Agricultural College 1 Kansas, University of 2 Washburn College 2 Kentucky — 1 Kentucky State University 1 Maryland — 2 St. John's College (Annapolis)... 1 United States Naval Academy... 1 Massachusetts — 4 Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology r 2 Smith College 1 Worcester Polytechnic Institute... 1 Michigan — 5 Hillsdale College 1 Michigan Agricultural College... 1 Michigan, University of 3 Minnesota, — 5 Carlton College _ 1 Minnesota, University of 4 Mississippi — 1 Mississippi Agricultural and Me- chanical College 1 Missouri — 8 Missouri, University of 5 Washington University 2 Westminster College 1 Nebraska — 2 Nebraska, University of 2 Nevada — 1 Nevada, University of 1 New York — 5 Columbia University 1 Cornell University 1 Hamilton College 2 Hobart College 1 North Dakota — 2 North Dakota, University of 2 Ohio — 10 Denison University 1 Oberlin College 2 Ohio State University _ 4 Oxford College 1 Western College for Women...... 1 Wooster, University of 1 Oregon — 1 Oregon Agricultural College 1 Pennsylvania — 5 Lehigh University 1 Pennsylvania State College 2 Pittsburgh, University of _ 2 South Dakota — 1 South Dakota, University of 1 Tennessee — 2 Fisk University 1 Peabody College _ 1 Texas — 1 Texas, University of 1 Virginia — 1 Virginia Polytechnic Institute 1 Washington — 1 Washington State College 1 West Virginia — 1 West Virginia, University of 1 Wisconsin — 14 Beloit College 2 Wisconsin, University of 12 Total, Colleges and Universities 1 23 7o REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 14 (Continued) SCHOOLS FROM WHICH INTRANTS (UNDERGRADUATES IN REGULAR STANDING) WERE RECEIVED, 1912-13 Insular Possessions ACADEMIES — I Philippines — I Ateneo de Manila _ 1 Foreign Countries ACADEMIES- Brasil — 1 Anglo-Brazilian School (Sao Paulo) - - _ China — 2 Provincial Industrial School Total, Academies Shu Sze Academy Japan — 1 Toyooka Middle School Mexico — 1 National School (Guadalupe). NORMAL SCHOOLS — I Argentina — 1 Argentina Normal School COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES — II Brazil — I Mackenzie College (Sao Paulo) 1 China — 3 Pei Yang University -.. 1 Pekin College of Languages 1 Tangshan College of Engineering 1 India — 4 Calcutta, University of 3 Punjab, University of 1 Peru — 1 National College of Engineering 1 South Africa — 1 Victoria College, University of the Cape of Good Hope 1 Syria — 1 Syrian Pn testant College 1 Total, Colleges and Universities 1 1 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 71 Table 15 PARENTAGE OF DEGREES HELD BY STUDENTS, 1911-12 AB PhB Alabama Polytechnic Institute Albion College 3 — Allegheny Theological Seminary.. Amherst College 1 — Arizona, University of Augustana College 1 Basle, University of Bethany College 2 .... Blackburn College 1 2 Brown University — ■ 1 Bucknell University Carleton College Carroll College 1 — Carthage College Central Wesleyan College 1 1 Chicago, University of 1 Colorado College 1 Colorado, University of 1 Concordia College Cornell University 3 Danville College Dartmouth College Denison University Denver, University of 1 .... DePauw University 5 1 Doane College 1 .... Drake University 2 .... Drury College 1 Earlham College Edinburgh, University of Emporia College 1 .... Erskine College 1 ... . Ewing College Franklin College Greenville College 1 .... Grinnell College Harvard University 3 .... Hedding College 3 .... Heidelberg University (Ohio) 1 .... Illinois College 1 Illinois, University of 75 .... Illinois Wesleyan University 2 .... Indiana University 7 .... Iowa State College Iowa, University of 2 .... Iowa Wesleyan University 1 .... James Millikin University 3 .... J. B. Stetson University Kansas Agricultural College Kansas, University of 2 .... Knox College 2 .... Graduate School BS BCE BD CB JD BLS AM 72 3 IS 1 2 *Gradu- MS AE CE EE ME PhD PhG ates T'tl. 3 9 1 2 : 2 5 1 -■ 1 1 173 'Graduates of institutions giving no degrees 72 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 15 (Continued) PARENTAGE OF DEGREES HELD BY STUDENTS, 1911-12 AB PhB BS BCE BD CB Lake Forest College 5 Lawrence College 2 Lehigh University Lincoln College 1 Lombard College 1 McKendree College 3 McMaster University 1 McPherson College 1 Miami University 1 Michigan Agricultural College 1 Michigan, University of 5 Milton College 1 Minnesota, University of 1 Mississippi, University of 1 Missouri School of Mines 1 Missouri, University of 1 Monmouth College 1 Mt. Holyoke College 1 Nebraska, University of New Hampshire College North Carolina A. & M. College North Dakota Agricultural College North-Western College 1 Northwestern University 3 .... Ohio State University 4 Ohio University 1 .... Oklahoma. University of 2 Ouachita College 1 Oxford University 2 Park College 1 Peiyang University 1 Purdue University 2 Rhode Island State College 1 Ripon College 1 Rockford College 1 Rutgers College 2 Shurtleff College 1 Smith College 1 South Dak. Coll. Agr. & Mech. Arts 1 Southern University 1 Syracuse University I .... Tarkio College 1 Tohoku Imperial University Toronto, University of 1 Tri-State College 1 Tulane University 1 U. S. Naval Academy Valparaiso University* *i Vermont. University of 1 Wabash College 3 Wartbnrg College I Wased.i University 1 Washington University I Washington, University of Westminster College 1 JD BLS AM MS AE Gkadu- CE EE ME PhD PhG ates Ttu I I 6 'The Itudtnl ImlilitiK tliln degree lioltln also a later bachelor's ileRrce from the I'niveiMtv of Illinois. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 73 Table 15 (Continued) PARENTAGE OF DEGREES HELD BY STUDENTS, 1911-12 Gradu- ABPhB BS BCE BD LLB BLS AM PhM MS MA AE CE EE MEPhDates Total Wisconsin, University of 3 — - 4 2 9 Worcester Polytechnic Institute 3 3 Totals 182 8 140 1 1 1 1 2 41 13 1 1 131 12 400 Duplication - — 7 1 NET TOTAL - - - - —329 Undergraduate and Professional Schools AB PHB BS BMus LLB BLS AM TOTAL Amherst College 1 1 Chicago, University of 2 2 Colorado, University of 1 1 DePauw University _ 1 1 Hanover College 1 1 Illinois, University of _. 17 .... 41 1 2 2 27 Iowa, University of 1 1 2 Knox College 1 1 McKendree College 1 1 Moores Hill College 1 1 Ohio Wesleyan University 1 1 Pomona College 1 1 Temple University 1 1 Vassar College _ 1 1 Western College 1 1 Wisconsin, University of „ 4 4 Totals _ 30 3 8 1 1 2 2 47 Duplication - 4 NET TOTAL 43 College of Medicine AB BS BD PHG MD TOTAL Ada University _ 1 .... 1 B'eloit College „ _ 1 1 Central College _ 1 1 Chicago College of Pharmacy „ _ 1 1 Chicago, University of 1 1 2 Cornell College 2 2 Dearborn Medical College _ 1 1 Denison University _ _ _ 1 1 Dixon Normal School _ 1 1 Eureka College 1 „. 1 Fisk University 1 1 Illinois, University of _ _ 3 _ 1 4 Indiana University 1 1 Iowa, University of _ 1 1 Kansas Medical College _ 2 2 Lincoln University _ 1 .... 1 2 Monmouth College 2 2 National Medical College „ _ _ .... 1 Nebraska Wesleyan University 1 Notre Dame, University of _ 1 „ Rust University _ _ 1 St. Paul's College (Turkey) 1 „ Valparaiso University _ _ 1 Washburn College _ _ _ 1 Wheaton College _ _ _ _ 1 Total _.. 16 7 1 3 6 33 Duplication „ 3 NET TOTAL 30 74 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 16 PARENTAGE OF DEGREES HELD BY STUDENTS, 1912-13 Graduate School AB PhB Albion College 5 .... Allegheny Theological Seminary Amherst College i .... Augustana College i .... Bates College i .... Bethany College i .... Blackburn College i i Boston University I Brown University i Bucknell University Buena Vista College i Carleton College Carroll College i — - Carthage College ' — - Central Wesleyan College 2 .... Chicago, University of 1 — Coe College Colorado Agricultural College Colorado College 1 Colorado, University of 2 .... Columbia University Cornell College Cornell University 2 .... Dartmouth College Denison University l Denver, University of 1 DePauw University 1 1 Drury College 1 Earlham College Emporia College 1 Erskine College 1 Eureka College 1 •■■• Franklin College Greenville College 1 2 Hanover College Harvard University 4 Hedding College Heidelberg University (Ohio) 1 .... Hope College 1 .... Illinois College 1 .... Illinois, University of 61 .... Illinois Wesleyan University 2 .... Indiana University 3 ■••• Iowa State College 1 .... Iowa, University of 1 .... James Millikin University 3 •••• I. B. Stetson University Kansas Agricultural College Kansas, University of 1 Knox College -* • Lake Forest College 3 Lawrence College 3 Lehigh University ■Mattel ol \rt hlt< dure ; 1 1 iduiti 1 "i h ''o Infl no BS BCE BD LLB BLS AM PhM MS MA* AE CE fGRADU- EE ME PhD ates Total 36 I I 16 4 I 3 8 2 1 I 2 3 2 2 2 1 1 3 2 6 1 1 1 1 193 5 4 2 i 1 I UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 75 Table 16 (Continued) PARENTAGE OF DEGREES HELD BY STUDENTS, 1912-13 ABPhB Leland Stanford Jr. University 2 .... Lenox College Lombard College 4 — Louisville, University of McKendree College i McMaster University 3 Maine, University of Massachusetts Agricultural Coll Miami University Michigan Agricultural College Michigan, University of 4 — Milton College Minnesota, University of I .... Missouri School of Mines Missouri, University of Missouri Valley College Monmouth College i .... Momingside College 2 .... Mt.Holyoke College 2 .... New Hampshire College New York State Library North Dakota Agricultural College North-Western College i i Northwestern University 3 Oberlin College 2 .... Ohio Northern University Ohio State University 3 .... Ohio Wesleyan University i .... Oklahoma, University of 3 .... Olivet College i .... Otterbein University Ouachita College i .... Oxford University I .... Park College i .... Peiyang University i .... Purdue University Radcliffe College i .... Ripon College I .... Rutgers College St. Olaf College i .... Shurtleff College 2 .... Smith College 2 .... South Dakota Coll. Agr. & Mech. Arts Syracuse University i .... Tangshan College Tarkio College Texas, University of Tohoku Imperial University Tokyo Higher Tech. School Tri-State College Union Christian College i i Utah Agricultural College Vermont, University of I .... Wabash College 4 .... Washington State College Washington University BS BCE BD LLB BLS AM PhM MS MA AE CE Gradu- EE ME PhD ates Total 2 2 5 , i .... i 6 3 2 3 6 2 6 2 3 3 I 2 I I I I 2 j6 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 16 (Continued) PARENTAGE OF DEGREES HELD BY STUDENTS, 1912-13 GiADU- AB PhB BS BCE BD LLB BLS AM PhM MS MA AE CE EE ME PhD ates Total Wesleyan University — 1 — — — - — - - — — l Western College ~ 2 - — - 2 Western Reserve University 1 — — - - — — I Westminster College i — — I Wilson College _ I x - - — 2 Wisconsin, University of 6 .... 3 2 — II Wittenberg College 1 1 Wooster, University of 1 - 1 Worcester Polytechnic Institute.... 3 x 2 — - 6 Yale University _ — T 1 — 2 Yankton College 1 - x Totals - 182 8 146 1 1 2 2 59 1 29 1 1 2 2 4 1 2 444 Duplication ..._ - - - 105 NET TOTAL 339 Undergraduate and Professional Schools at Urbana AB PhB BS BMus BLS AM MS MD PhG Total Alabama, University of 1 _ ~ — — I Beloit College 1 ~ 1 Blackburn College _ 1 1 Brown University .... 1 — — 1 Chicago, University of — 1 1 2 Cincinnati, University of 1 1 Cornell University - - 1 1 Hanover College - ~ 1 - — 1 Hillsdale College - 1 1 Illinois, University of - - 3 2 -- 4 14 5 -- I I 48 Iowa State College 2 2 Iowa, University of - - — • 1 — I Kansas State Normal School 1 1 Kansas, University of 1 l Knox College - ~ 2 -- I 3 McKendree College - 2 - 2 Michigan, University of 1 ! Minnesota, University of - 1 Moores Hill College 1 Nebraska Wesleyan University - 1 - Ohio Wesleyan University I - Pomona College - - J Smith College - 1 Texas, University of - J Tulane University 1 - Western College - l - Whcaton College 1 William Smith College J — Wilmington College 1 Wisconsin, University of — — I — — — - — — Total 51 1 8 I 4 5 1 1 1 s - ; Duplication •• 9 NET TOTAL 74 2 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS JJ Table 16 (Continued) PARENTAGE OF DEGREES HELD BY STUDENTS, 1912-13 College of Medicine (Chicago) AB PhB BS LLB MD DDS PhC PhG T'tl Bishops College „ I I Chicago, University of I I „ 2 Chicago College of Medicine and Surgery i Cornell College _ I Denison University I Denver Homeopathic College i Hahnemann Medical College i _ Illinois, University of _ 12 2 Illinois Medical College i Indiana University „ i Iowa, University of I John Marshall College of Law _ i Lyceum Caral i (Roumania) I Maryland Medical College _ _ i St. Jerome's College i i St Paul's College i Texas, University of I Valparaiso University _ i I Washington and Tuscaloosa College I Wheaton College _ „ i Total „ 72715122 27 Duplication 3 NET TOTAL - _ 24 78 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 17 OCCUPATIONS OF STUDENTS' PARENTS AND GUARDIANS Undergraduate Students at Urbana, 1912-13 Summary L. A. & S. Professions (the ministry, medicine, the law, teaching, the army and navy) 204 Scientific professions (cera- mists, chemists, engineers, etc) _ .. 45 Artistic professions (archi- tects, artists, authors, etc.)... 9 Government service (United States, state, county, city)... 41 Business — Manufacturing 53 Mercantile _ 300 Business managers (advertising manager, manager of telephone company, etc.) 50 Financial and semi-legal (abstracter, banker, broker, cashier, real estate dealer, etc.) 87 Miscellaneous 73 Railroading 35 Agriculturists 301 Skilled laborers 76 Unskilled laborers 27 Retired or "no occupation" 20 Occupation not given 53 Engin. Agric. Music Law Library Total 99 7i 23 37 57 228 75 83 7i 35 142 120 43 18 58 98 18 17 27 4 12 117 27 58 36 16 409 35 14 7 6 1 17 6 15 10 4 2 20 6 1 S 11 2 4 27 6 6 2 6 2 3 1 10 1 1 2 S 449 140 4i 102 129 680 162 251 189 93 909 244 92 49 *33 Total .1374 1 160 879 88 126 36 3663 Detailed Statement of Occupations L. A. & S. Engin. Agric Music Law Library Total Professions — Clergyman 39 12 13 Physician 59 24 27 Dentist 763 Journalist 1 Lawyer — Judge 4 1 5 Attorney 46 7,7 30 17 8l 114 1 10 134 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 79 Table 17 (Continued) OCCUPATIONS OF STUDENTS' PARENTS AND GUARDIANS L. A. & S. Engin. Agric. Music Law Library Total Librarian 1 i 2 Teacher — University president 1 1 University teacher ... 10 2 3 ^ > 17 Normal school pres. 1 1 County supt 3 5 1 4 7 City superintendent. 1 1 High School prin.... 6 4 1 11 High school teacher 20 7 12 1 1 41 Physical director 2 2 Officer U. S. army 2 1 2 5 Officer U. S. navy 1 1 Scientific Professions — Ceramist 1 1 Chemist 3 1 1 5 Engineer (civil, elect., mech., etc.) 18 55 13 1 2 89 Pharmacist 21 13 4 2 40 Veterinary surgeon 2 2 1 5 Artistic Professions — Actor 1 1 Architect 6 18 4 1 29 Artist 1 3 1 5 Author 1 1 Musician 1 1 2 4 Sculptor 1 1 Government Service — Foreign gov'nm't official 1 2 3 United States officials and employees — Clerk, U. S. court 1 1 Commissioner (not classified) 1 1 Consul 1 1 Immigration officer... 1 1 Interstate commerce commissioner 2 2 Land office employee 1 1 Pension examiner 1 1 Postoffice employees- Postmaster 6 3 2 1 1 13 Postoffice clerk 1 1 Ry. mail clerk 2 2 2 6 Mail carrier, city 7 4 2 13 Mail carr'r,R.F.D. 1 1 Revenue collector ... 3 1 4 U. S. Official (not classified) 3 2 1 6 80 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 17 (Continued) OCCUPATIONS OF STUDENTS' PARENTS AND GUARDIANS L. A. & S. Engin. Agric. Music Law Library Total State officials — Bank examiner 1 — — Civil serv. comm'r_ 1 Drainage comm'r 2 Fin. committeeman-. 1 State official (not classified) 1 Tax expert 1 Warden (not classi- County officials and em- ployees — Clerk, county court- 1 2 3 County official (not classified) 1 1 2 Sheriff 1 1 2 Treasurer 3 1 4 Township official — Justice of the peace 1 1 City officials and em- ployees — Clerk _... _ 2 1 3 Engineer 1 _.... 1 Fire marshal 1 1 Fireman _ 161 8 Police officer 451 ...... 1 11 Superintendent of public works 2 2 Treasurer _ 1 _.... — 1 Business : Manufacturing — Baker 2 1 — 3 Brewer 422 — — 8 Cigar manufacturer 1 2 1 1 — 5 Confectioner ._ 3 1 _.... _.... — 4 Manufacturer (not clas- sified) _ _ _ 33 40 7 1 4 __ 85 Miller 2 1 1 ...... 1 _..- 5 Oil producer „_ _ 1 . — 1 Printer and binder 8 9 ...... — — 17 Wool manufacturer 1 — ...._ I Business: Mercantile — Book dealer _ 1 — — — — — 1 Bottle dealer _ _ 1 — — 1 Butcher _ „ 852 _.._ ..._ 15 Buyer „ 1 — ...... — 1 Caterer 1 1 2 Charcoal dealer I 1 Coal dealer 2 2 4 Commission merchant 3641 14 Commercial traveler 66 38 24 4 132 Cotton merchant 1 — . 1 Credit man I 2 I 4 Dry goods merchant 3 6 I to Furniture denier 3 3 1 7 Grain merchanl i<> 12 7 2 1 41 Grocer i-' 10 7 - — 1 I 1 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 8l Table 17 (Continued) OCCUPATIONS OF STUDENTS' PARENTS AND GUARDIANS L. A. & S. Engin. Agric. Music Law Library Total Hardware dealer 19 12 5 2 1 ...... 39 Harness dealer 3 — — 3 Ice dealer - 2 1 — — 3 Importer „ — 1 — — 1 Iron dealer — — 1 — — ...... 1 Jeweler 11 4 2 1 — 18 Liquor dealer 741 — 12 Live stock dealer 679 ...... 1 1 24 Lumber merchant _ 27 17 6 5 ...... ...._ 55 Merchant (not classified) 103 78 39 4 9 233 Milliner ill — — — 3 Monument dealer _ _ ill — — 3 Music dealer 1 I — — — 2 Phosphate dealer ...... 1 ...... . — 1 Restauranteur 1 _.... — ...... 1 Shoe merchant 2 ...... ...... 2 Tea merchant 1 — ...... . — ...... 1 Tobacco dealer 1 — . — . — 1 Wholesaler 1 1 ...... — 2 Business Managers — Advertising manager 1 1 ...... 2 Contractor 19 57 14 3 3 — 96 Editor and publisher 19 5 6 2 32 Electric road, manager _ 2 ...... 2 Elevator Co., manager..- 1 1 Hotel manager 1 1 ...... ...... 2 Hotel proprietor 441 ...... . 9 Manager (not classified) 4 3 4 1 1 13 Office manager „ 1 ...... 1 Telephone Co., manager 1 . ...... 1 Theater manager _ _.. 2 1 ...... ...... 3 Business: Financial and Semi-Legal — Abstractor _ _ 2 ...._ 2 Accountant _. 3 7 1 1 12 Auditor _..._ 4 5 3 12 Banker 22 26 15 7 6 76 Broker 9 3 4 J J 7 Capitalist 1 1 1 3 Cashier 632 1 12 Collection agent 1 2 3 Purchasing agent 1 1 ...... 2 Real estate and loan agent 38 38 31 2 2 ...... 11 1 Treasurer _ 1 1 Business : Miscellaneous — Agent (not classified) 1 ...... ...... 1 2 Auctioneer _.. _.. 1 _._. ...... 1 Bookkeeper ...._ „ 3 4 3 - 10 Business (not classified) 35 27 18 2 1 93 Clerk (not classified) 4 12 3 1 ...... 20 Detective I ...... 1 Insurance agent 15 10 9 1 ._... 1 36 Laundryman _ _ 2 1 . 3 Photographer 3 1 _.... 116 Steamship captain 1 2 3 Undertaker _.. 822 ...... 12 Y. M. C. A. secretary 1 1 „.... ...... 2 82 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 17 (Continued) OCCUPATIONS OF STUDENTS' PARENTS AND GUARDIANS L. A. & S. Engin. Agric. Music Law Library Total Railroad Officials and Employees — Auditor 1 — — 1 Chief engineer _ 1 . . . 1 Claim agent 1 ...._ 1 Conductor 5631 1 5 Dining service 1 . . _ 1 Division engineer 1 ...... 1 Employees (not classi- fied 19 13 10 1 3 46 Inspector 1 1 1 — 3 Locomotive engineer 3 5 1 _.... 1 10 Master mechanic 2 1 3 President 1 — ...... ...... 1 Right of way agent 1 1 Road master 2 ...... 2 Station agent 411 6 Train dispatcher 1 1 Agriculturists — Farmer 298 139 399 20 27 10 893 Dairyman 1 1 2 Florist _ 119 11 Poultryman I 2 _.... 3 Skilled Laborers — Barber 7 5 1 1 1 15 Blacksmith 732 12 Cabinet maker 2 2 4 Carpenter _ 16 26 7 2 1 52 Chef 1 3 4 Cigar packer 1 ...... 1 Clock inspector 1 1 Engraver 1 1 Horse trainer 1 1 Linesman, telephone company 2 2 Lithographer 1 1 1 3 Mason 2 10 ...... 12 Mechanic 14 29 7 2 52 Miner 7 7 1 4 19 Optician 2 1 3 Painter and decorator 1 6 1 8 Paper hanger 1 1 Pattern maker 1 ...... 1 Piano tuner 1 1 2 Plumber 2 2 4 Saw maker 1 1 Ship carpenter 1 I Shoemaker 1 3 4 Sign writer 1 T Tailor 648 t8 Telegrapher 222 6 Tinner 4 2 6 Upholsterer 2 2 Watchmaker 2 3 5 Window dresser UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 83 Table 17 (Continued) OCCUPATIONS OF STUDENTS' PARENTS AND GUARDIANS Unskilled Laborers — Expressman 241 ...... 7 Hotel porter 1 1 Janitor 1 1 1 1 4 Laborer 20 35 11 3 1 70 Liveryman 311 2 7 Teamster 2 ...... 2 Watchman 1 ...... 1 Retired or "no occupa- tion" 20 18 7 2 2 49 Occupation not Given 53 58 6 5 6 5 133 TOTAL 1374 1 160 879 88 126 36 3663 8 4 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Figure 12 OCCUPATIONS OF STUDENTS' PARENTS AND GUARDIANS Undergraduate Students at Urbana, 1912-13 (Total, 3663) UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 85 Table 18 RELIGIOUS AFFILIATIONS OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS 1912-13 (Churches Arranged Alphabetically) African Methodist — 2 Agnostic - - - - - - — ! American Reform _ - — 3 Baptist _ - --- - 228 Bethany Union 3 Chinese Christian - - 1 Christian - - 239 Christian Science 39 Confucianism _ _ ~ 1 Congregational 264 Dutch Reformed 4 English Lutheran ~ 14 Episcopalian 195 Evangelical ~ - — 14 Free Baptist „ 2 Free Methodist _ - - ~ - 3 German Evangelical _.._ _ 13 German Lutheran 31 Graeco-Russian State Church _ 1 Hinduism __ _. „ _„ 6 Jewish _„ „ _ _ 47 Liberalist „ _ _ _ _ _ 3 Lutheran _ _ _ _ _ _ _ „ „ _ 105 Mennonite ~ „ _ 4 Methodist „ _ 907 Pilgrim Congregation 1 Presbyterian _ _ _ 617 "Protestant" (no denomination given) 24 Quaker _ _ „_ 3 Roman Catholic „ _. _. _ 214 St. Paul's Reformed _ _ 1 Seventh Day Adventist _ _ _.. 1 Swedenborgian (Church of the New Jerusalem) „. 3 Swedish Lutheran „ „ _ _ 6 Swedish Mission Church ..„ 1 "Undenominational" _ _ 2 Unitarian _. _ _ _ 64 United Brethren 19 United Presbyterian _ 11 Universalist _ _ _ _ 38 Wesleyan Methodist Episcopal „ 1 None (students stating explicitly that they have no religious affiliation )_ 117 Question as to religious affiliation unanswered 410 Total . „..._ _ 3663 86 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 19 AGES OF STUDENTS, SEPTEMBER 1, 1912 Average Ages: Undergraduate Schools and Colleges Seniors Enroll. A v. Age Literature and Arts Men 57 Women 73 Total 1 30 Science M en „ _ 7 1 Women _ 1 8 Total 89 Engineering Men 124 Women _ Total 124 Agriculture Men 93 Women 1 o Total 103 Music Men 2 Women _ 3 23.20 23.28 23.24 23-34 24.23 23-52 23-14 23-14 24.67 23-79 24.58 23-34 23.67 Juniors Enroll. Av. Age 77 IOO 177 55 18 73 259 259 115 21 136 Total 5 23.54 7 Summary by Classes — Undergraduate Schools and Colleges Men 347 23.60 506 Women „ 104 23.50 146 Total 45i 23-57 652 21.85 22.36 22.14 22.15 25-32 22.93 22.22 22.22 22.37 21.94 22.30 24 .21 24 .21 21 •97 22 ■75 22.14 Average Ages: Professional and Graduate Schools (College of Law, Library School, Graduate School) College of Law Men Library School Men _ Women Total Graduate School Men Women Total Third Year Enroll. Av. Age 29 23.09 Second Year Enroll. Av. Age 27 16 id Men \\ omen General Averages for the University I-'m;c»i 1 m 1 N 1 Jl68 ' 83 I J3.l6 29.27 29.27 AVKKAUI V.l 21.84 J J. 70 Total .|(X>J UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 87 Table 19 AGES OF STUDENTS, SEPTEMBER 1, 1912 Average Ages: Undergraduate Schools and Colleges Sophomores Enroll. Av. Age Fresh Enroll. MEN Av. Age Specials Enroll. Av. Age Totals Enroll. Av. Age 76 97 20.58 20.82 20.71 246 178 424 18.66 20.40 19-39 6 16 29-54 25.04 26.26 462 464 20.21 21.52 173 22 926 20.87 68 13 21.00 21.69 21. 11 174 26 20.04 21.56 20.24 3 2 25.86 21.84 24.25 371 77 448 21.21 23.09 81 200 5 21-53 240 21.61 21.61 524 I 525 20.38 19.16 20.37 12 26.33 26.33 ii59 1 21.31 19.16 240 12 1160 21.31 140 20 21.32 22.02 21.41 273 43 20.40 20.55 20.42 149 15 21.62 29.41 22.33 770 109 21.61 24.20 160 316 164 879 21.93 1 6 21.84 20.33 20.55 1 35 21.00 21-34 21-33 33 25-53 25-53 4 84 22.38 22.43 7 36 33 88 22.42 525 136 21.30 21.06 1218 283 19.99 20.64 170 66 22.32 26.18 2766 735 21.20 22.18 661 21.25 1501 20.11 236 23.40 3501 21.40 First Year Ernoll. Av. Age 62 2 18 20 Average Ages: Professional and Graduate Schools (College of Law, Library School, Graduate School) Specials Totals Enroll. Av. Age 21.51 30-33 26.72 27.08 8 25-71 Enroll. Av. Age 126 22.49 2 34 30-33 27.92 36 28.05 274 65 28.OO 27.48 339 27.90 88 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 19 (Continued) AGES OF STUDENTS, SEPTEMBER 1, 1912 Distribution of Ages by Classes, Undergraduate Colleges Age Seniors Juniors in Years Men Wom. Total Men Wom. Total 44 — 39 - -• - — 38 - - - 1 1 - 37 - - •■• -•• - 36 2 1 3 _ .._ 35 -•- 1 3 4 - 34 3 — 3 - • 1 1 33 - 1 1 2 __.. 2 2 32 - - — 3 4 7 224 31 — 22 213 30 - _ - 314 224 29 --- 3 14 7 4 11 28 _ „. 6 4 10 3 4 7 27 _ _..... 11 ...... 11 6 4 10 26 9 7 16 10 6 16 25 _ 18 6 24 12 8 20 24 51 13 64 33 13 46 23 - - - 66 13 79 71 6 77 22 77 18 95 113 22 135 21 82 30 112 131 35 166 20 34 12 46 104 34 138 19 3 2 5 33 14 47 18 6 4 10 17 16 _ Totals 376 120 496 535 164 609 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 89 Table 19 (Continued) AGES OF STUDENTS, SEPTEMBER 1, 1912 Distribution of Ages by Classes, Undergraduate Colleges Sophomores Freshmen Specials Totals Men Wom. Total Men Wom. Total Men Wom. Total Men Wom. I Total 1 ■•- I I I I I 1 1 1 I I I I I I I I 2 I I 3 2 1 I I I 1 ...... 2 2 2 2 I I I I I 2 3 — I I I I I 3 I 1 4 I I I I 2 3 3 4 1 7 4 I I I I 2 3 I 4 6 5 11 I 2 3 2 I 3 1 I 9 9 18 2 2 1 3 4 5 6 11 1 1 2 6 I 7 6 6 18 5 23 4 1 5 3 2 5 1 4 5 18 12 30 4 1 5 3 4 7 3 1 4 19 14 33 5 2 7 7 1 8 4 3 7 33 10 43 4 1 5 18 7 25 3 6 9 44 27 7i 6 3 9 13 6 19 8 6 14 57 29 86 16 3 19 20 5 25 9 2 n 129 36 165 3i 5 36 27 17 44 11 8 19 206 49 255 61 9 7o 105 10 115 17 9 26 373 68 441 122 21 143 168 27 195 32 12 44 535 125 660 134 37 171 241 40 281 27 2 29 54o 125 665 93 29 122 285 68 353 25 2 27 439 "5 554 36 20 56 286 69 355 19 19 347 93 440 3 1 4 78 20 98 5 5 86 21 107 1 1 14 3 17 15 3 18 525 136 661 1280 283 1563 178 66 244 2894 769 3663 90 REPORT OF REGISTRAR o m H O 0} &>■£> CO I rH 05 fe 13 C/2 o> ■ HI I7TL o 1 ,m m WBMmMm^^Jtom )CO 581 QO S ^o c^ t- > 10 s a OIOQ to :to C" » « a ■ CO ICvJ a> 8! PART THREE. DEGREES Part Three shows the number and kinds of degrees conferred during the biennium and the geographical distribution of the recipients of these degrees. ■-&* Degrees Conferred, 1912, 1913 Tables 20 and 21 (pages 93 and 94) are summaries of the degrees given at the Forty-first Annual Commencement, June 12, 1912, and the Forty-second Annual Commencement, June 11, 1913. The University at the present time offers courses leading to 18 differ- ent degrees: 3 baccalaureate degrees, strictly so-called, A.B., B.S. (in liberal arts, in engineering, and in agriculture), and B.Mus. ; 2 degrees in law, LL.B. and J.D. ; the degree in library science, B.L.S. ; 4 degrees in medicine, dentistry, and pharmacy, M.D., D.D.S., Ph.G., and Ph.C. ; and 8 graduate degrees — 3 master's degrees, A.M., M.S., and M.Arch. ; 4 profes- sional second degrees in engineering, A.E., C.E., E.E., and M.E. ; and the doctorate, Ph.D. All of these degrees were conferred during the biennium except the M.Arch. and the A.E. The College of Dentistry having been closed June 30, 1912, and not reopened until October, 1913, no degrees in dentistry were given in 1913. From 1876 to 1895 the degree of Bachelor of Literature (B.L.) was regularly given to students who completed a course in liberal arts which did not include Greek. In 1913 it was conferred again, for the first time since 1895, upon a student of the class of 1885 who completed the last required course a few days after the commencement of her senior year and had never actually taken her degree. Besides the degrees in course, the degree of Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, was conferred in 1912 upon Dr. Thomas Jonathan Burrill, Emeritus Professor of Botany and late Vice-President of the University, and Dr. Samuel Walker Shattuck, Emeritus Professor of Mathematics and late Comptroller. The graduating class of 1913 was smaller by 16 students than the class of 1912. This falling off was due to the dropping out of the College of Dentistry, which had 36 graduates in 1912, and to the smaller number of degrees in medicine — 130 in 1913 as against 145 in 1912. There was an increase of 38 in the number of graduates in the colleges and schools at Urbana — 5.9 per cent. Looking at individual departments, we find that the largest increase was in the College of Agriculture, which graduated 27 more students in 1913 than in 1912 — a jump of 39.7 per cent. The next largest gain was in the number of master's degrees ; the number conferred in 1913 was larger by 22 than the number in 1912. The percentage in this case is 25.8. In 9i g2 REPORT OF REGISTRAR percentage increase, however, no other department can compare with the School of Music, which had 7 graduates in 1913 against 2 in 1912 — a gain of 250 per cent ! The only large falling off at Urhana was in the College of Engineering, which recommended 16 fewer students for its degree in the second year of the biennium than in the first year — a loss of 8.2 per cent. The number of A.B. degrees conferred in 1913 was less by 5 than the number for 1912. The number of doctorates was exactly the same for the two years (20) ; likewise the number of degrees in law (26) ; and there was a variation of one only in the number of pharma- ceutical degrees— 37 in 1912, 36 in 1913. Geographical Distribution of Degrees Of the degrees granted by the University in the departments at Ur- bana during the biennium, 1005 were conferred upon citizens of Illinois (see tables 22 and 23, pages 95 and 100) . Eighty-nine out of the 102 counties of the State — all but 13 counties — were represented by graduates during the two years; 73 counties were represented in 1912, 78 in 1913, 62 in both years. The following counties — 23 in number — had 10 or more citizens in the graduating classes of the two years : Adams n McDonough _ 12 Champaign 209 McHenry _ 10 Christian 10 McLean „ 22 Cook _ 199 Macon _ 10 Edgar _ 1 1 Madison 1 1 Hancock 10 Peoria _ 19 Iroquois _ 16 St. Clair 14 Kane 29 Sangamon 19 Knox _ „ 10 Tazewell _ 14 LaSalle 22 Vermilion 23 Lee _ _.. 11 Whiteside 12 Livingston _ „ 1 1 Twenty-eight states other than Illinois were represented in the graduating class of each of the two years under consideration — in most cases by only one, two, or three students. Twenty states wore repre- sented in both years, while in each class there were students from 8 states not represented in the other class; the total number of states other than Illinois represented during the biennium was therefore 36. Indiana had, in both years, nearly twice as many recipients of degrees as any other one state besides Illinois — 23 graduates in each year. In 1912, Iowa, with 13, was the only other state to have as many as 10 graduates. In 1913, Iowa had 14, Wisconsin 12, and Missouri and Ohio each 10 Four students from the Insular Possessions of the United Slates received degrees during the biennium — 2 Filipinos and 2 Porto llieans. The two graduating classes contained 50 foreign students, nearly half of tliem (21 ) from ( 'hina —chiefly, of course, students sent to America by the Chinese government out of the Indemnity fond. The remaining 2!) foreign graduates were distributed as follows: from Japan, 10; from Canada, 5; from India and Mexico, 3 each; from Cuba and Norway, 2 each ; from Argentina, Hah, Soulh Africa, and Uruguay, 1 each, UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 93 Table 20 DEGREES CONFERRED, 1912 Honorary Degrees LL.D Degrees in the Graduate School A.M 46 M.S 39 C.E 3 E.E 1 M.E 4 Ph.D 20 Total 113 Baccalaureate Degrees A.B., College of Literature and Arts 164 A.B., College of Science 44 B.S., College of Science 20 B.S., College of Engineering. 195 B.S., College of Agriculture 68 B.Mus., School of Music 2 Total 493 Degrees in Law LL.B 25 J-D 1 Total 26 Degrees in Library Science B.L.S 12 Degrees in Medicine M.D Total, Colleges and Schools in Urbana _ 644 145 Degrees in Dentistry D.D.S 36 Degrees in Pharmacy Ph.G 34 Ph-C 3 Total 37 Total, Departments in Chicago 218 TOTAL, ALL DEPARTMENTS 864 94 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 21 DEGREES CONFERRED, 1913 Degrees in the Graduate School A.M _ — 54 M.S _ - - _ _ 53 C.E _ _ 5 E.E _. 5 M.E _ _ _ 2 Ph.D _ _ 20 Total 139 Baccalaureate Degrees A.B., College of Literature and Arts 137 B.L., College of Literature and Arts „ 1 A.B., College of Science 66 B.S., College of Science 24 B.S., College of Engineering „ 179 B.S., College of Agriculture _ 95 B.Mus., School of Music _ 7 Total 509 Degrees in Law LL.B _ 23 J-D - 3 Total 26 Degrees in Library Science B.L.S 8 Total, Colleges and Schools in Urbana 682 Degrees in Medicine M.D 130 Degrees in Pharmacy Ph.G 33 Ph.C 3 Total 36 Total, Departments in Chicagp „ 166 TOTAL, ALL DEPARTMENTS 848 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 95 Table 22 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF DEGREES CONFERRED JUNE 12, 1912 (Colleges and Schools at Urbana) Summary Degrees Illinois - 500 States other than Illinois 126 Insular Possessions of the United States _.. 3 Foreign Countries _ 15 Total _ _ 644 Counties in Illinois County Degrees County Degrees Adams 5 Alexander 4 Boone 3 B rown 4 Carroll 5 Cass 4 Champaign 1 29 Christian 6 Clark 2 Cook 89 Crawford 1 DeKalb 1 DeWitt 1 Du Page 3 Edgar 8 Edwards 1 Fayette 2 Ford 4 Fulton 2 Greene 5 Grundy 6 Hancock 5 Henry _ 2 Iroquois 4 Jackson 2 Jasper 1 Jersey 1 Jo Daviess 3 Kane 1 3 Kankakee _ 3 Knox _ „ 4 Lake 2 La Salle _ 1 1 Lawrence I Lee _ 6 Livingston 7 Logan 3 Total, Illinois McDonough _ 6 McHenry 7 McLean 10 Macon 4 Macoupin 2 Madison 3 Marion „ 4 Mason _ 1 Marshall „ _ 2 Massac 2 Menard 2 Mercer 3 Montgomery 4 Morgan 4 Moultrie 4 Ogle 1 Peoria 7 Perry I Piatt _ 6 Pike 4 Putnam 2 Richland _ 3 Rock Island 8 St. Clair _ 9 Saline „.. 2 Sangamon 7 Shelby 2 Stark _._ 1 Stephenson 3 Tazewell „ 5 Vermilion „ 8 White 2 Whiteside _ 6 Will _ 3 Winnebago 5 Woodford 4 .500 96 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 22 (Continued) GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF DEGREES CONFERRED JUNE 12, 1912 States other than Illinois Degrees Alabama _ _ __ _ 2 Arkansas _ _ „ _ _..._ 1 California _ ^ 2 Colorado __ 8 Indiana _ _ _ „ 23 Iowa _ _ „ _ _ 13 Kentucky 1 Louisiana _ _ _ _ 2 Massachusetts _ _ _ 4 Michigan _ _ „ 9 Minnesota _ _ _ _ _ 3 Mississippi _ 1 Missouri _ _ _ _ _ 9 Montana - - - 3 New Hampshire _ _ 1 New Jersey _ _ „ _ 1 New York _ _ _ 7 North Carolina _ _ _ — 1 North Dakota - _ _ 3 Ohio - _ _ _ -...._ _ 5 Oklahoma _ 1 Pennsylvania _ _ _ — 5 South Dakota _ __ 3 Texas __ _ 2 Washington „._ _ _ _ _ -... 2 Wisconsin _ 4 Total, States other than Illinois 126 Insular Possessions Porto Rico - _ - 2 Philippines _ - 1 Total, Insular Possessions 3 Foreign Countries Argentina I Canada - - - China - 3 Cuba - ' India 2 Japan 4 Mexico I Total, Foreign Countries T 5 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 97 Figure 14 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF DEGREES, 1912 Counties in Illinois (Total, 500) 9« REPORT OF REGISTRAR UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 99 o CM OS 02 w H P Fh o o I— I Eh PQ n Eh 02 o X p* < o H ■sn CO c3 ■fa O Eh 100 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 23 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF DEGREES CONFERRED JUNE 11, 1913 (Colleges and Schools at Urbana) Summary Degrees Illinois _ 505 States other than Illinois..- _ 141 Insular Possessions of the United States 1 Foreign Countries 35 Total _ ...682 Counties in Illinois County Degrees County Degrees Adams 6 Bond „... 1 Boone _ 5 Bureau „... 4 Cass 2 Champaign 80 Christian 4 Clark I Clay _ 1 Clinton 1 Coles 5 Cook 110 Cr aw f o rd _ 2 Cumberland 1 DeKalb 6 DeWitt _ _ 4 Douglas _ 4 Du Page 6 Edgar 3 Ford 2 Fulton 7 Greene 4 Grundy 2 Hancock 5 Henderson 1 Henry 5 Iroquois 1 2 Jackson 3 Jo Daviess 2 Kane 1 6 Kankakee 4 Kendall 1 K nox 6 I ,ake 1 1 .;i Salle 1 1 l .awrence 3 I •<•<• 5 I .ivingston 4 Logan - McDonough _ „ 6 McHenry _ 3 McLean _ 1 2 Macon 6 Macoupin _„ _ 4 Madison __ 8 M ar ion „ 4 Mason 2 Menard _ „ _ 1 Mercer 2 Monroe „ 1 Montgomery 2 Morgan „ 3 Moultrie 4 Ogle - 3 Peoria _ 1 2 Piatt - — 2 Pike - 5 Randolph 2 Richland _ — 4 Rock Island — 1 St. Clair _ 5 Saline 2 Sangamon 1 2 Schuyler _ 1 Scott 1 Shelby _ 4 Stark' 1 Stephenson 2 Tazewell Q Vermilion 1 5 Warren 3 1 2 6 4 .; Washington White Whiteside W ill Williamson Winnebago Woodford Total. Illinois UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS IOI Figure 17 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF DEGREES, 1913 Counties in Illinois (Total, 505) .JoDwess "jStePhenson[; '" 2. 1 L._ (nefegc Boonej M c Henry Carroll _0 \/hitesid . — _ Lee /-. __L 1 i Mercer 2. Lak DeKalb 1 Kane 1 1 .. 1 ni.D 16 I DuF i? iWrren V ! h k>«7t r ^fti 6. j Ffeoria 3. j i «. Woodford 1 ^Hancock JM c -Donoughl Fulton 5. i 6 ■ ! 7 McLean 12 _J 2. ._.... J Kanfe L ± Livingston 4 •i j ] Ingots j i Schuyler UYV— i Adams 6. impair Tazewell Mason '— ^!, Logan r i Menard | 2. Cass 1 X r-J^i ■ , !SanqarrionS^i6 J~r ■ • ■'."■■^■■•■■> ■ 1 Pike \5cottLMorqoni tt j L_^ e LlCSH | Edgar , 5 \ I i 3 \ Christian H£4>j/Cole5 / ' 4 ' J\J 5. Browtr- "T Maco/T! 2. .1 L .§1 Greene j j I r J.'SB6lby b~V _ H Clark \| A. ri Macoupirl Montgomery _ M , CumberiEnd , feO r J V l. Bond Modison i 1 6. i— ~ ■H cuata L 'I ! Marion- St Clair, [(Monroe ,2. Wayne .± Washington jjefton i C^ t- 1 - — I \a I — . ! Perr V UZKZ'lHamilton! White is.nv U ' 7 ■ — riLi Q j — Jacks^njuT^ jWilliamsoij Sajjne 1__-J_ 3 2 Gollatiri Union I Johnson p °P e jo 1 L?_ i_Q j 0- ~ ■& ^fWaski jMassdt-. « iHondirp 102 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 23 (Continued) GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF DEGREES CONFERRED Arkansas California Colorado Georgia Idaho Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Missouri Nebraska New York North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania .. South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Virginia West Virginia Wisconsin JUNE 11, 1913 States other than Illinois Degrees 7 6 1 3 23 14 7 3 1 4 8 6 10 2 5 1 10 2 1 3 1 1 3 2 1 3 12 Total, States other than Illinois .141 Insular Possessions Philippine Islands _._ Total, Insular Possessions Foreign Countries Canada China Cuba India Italy Japan Mexico Norway South Africa i '1 uguay Total, Foreign Countries 3 18 1 1 1 6 2 1 1 1 35 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS I03 CO tH m C5 H Q Ph O 00 o M I— I 13 CO Eh 02 • rH d d o O d be ■f-H 0) o Ph •c d c3 Eft O c3 02 T3 •l-t d P 0) H CM CO «o ■*» O EH PART FOUR. THE FACULTY Part Four contains summaries of the membership of the University faculty for the two years of the biennium. There is added a table show- ing the total number in the faculty for each year of the University's his- tory, 1868-1913. Number in the Faculty, 1911-12, 1912-13 Tables 25 and 26 (pages 110-111) show the number in the faculty for each year, distributed by colleges and schools, by ranks, and by sexes. In tables 27 and 28 (pages 112-113 and 114-115), the same figures are further analyzed, for the undergraduate colleges at Urbana, by depart- ments. It should perhaps be noted that no undergraduate student assistants are counted in these tabulations. The total membership of the faculty in the second year of the bien- nium (587) was larger than the total membership for the first year (583) by only 4 persons. The smallness of this difference results from the dropping out for the second year of the College of Dentistry, which had in 1911-12 a faculty of 21 ; and from a decrease in the size of the faculty of the College of Medicine, which numbered but 133 in 1912-13 as against 144 in 1911-12. The faculty of the School of Pharmacy remained the same for the two years (8). The number of teachers in the departments at Urbana increased from 410 in 1911-12 to 446 in 1912-13—8.7 per cent. The greater part of this increase is found, naturally, in those col- leges which experienced the largest growth in number of students during the same period, namely, the College of Agriculture, which added 17 teachers for 1912-13, and the College of Science, which added 10 teachers. (For the parallel figures concerning the increase in the number of students by colleges, see Part One, page 7.) The College of Literature and Arts had 1 more teacher in the second year of the biennium than in the first year; the College of Engineering 3 more teachers; the Library School 4 more (3 of them, however, special lecturers, giving only a limited amount of instruction) ; and the depart- ment of physical training 2 more. No increases were made in the staff of the School of Music or in the department of military science; and the College of Law had only 7 teachers in 1912-13 as against 8 in 1911-12. Further comparisons, by departments, may be made from Tables 27 and 28 (pages 112-113 and 114-115). It will be seen that the variations from the one year to the other are in the main small. The following departments had an increase of 3 or more in their staffs for the second year : 1911-12 1912-13 English 28 31 Botany 12 15 Chemistry 43 49 Zoology 13 16 Animal husbandry 10 18 Horticulture 9 14 105 I06 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Using the figures for 1912-13, the thirty-eight departments com- prized in the four undergraduate colleges at Urbana may be summarized according to size of staff as follows: No. of departments with i- 5 teachers 15 No. of departments with 6-10 teachers _ _ 8 No. of departments with 11-15 teachers _ 8 No. of departments with more than 15 teachers __ _ _ 7 38 The seven departments which, in 1912-13, had more than 15 teachers were : chemistry, 49 ; English, 31 ; mathematics and mechanical engineer- ing, each 21; animal husbandry, 18; zoology and agronomy, each 16. The eight departments which, in the same year, had from 11 to 15 teachers were: botany, 15; horticulture, 14; physics, 13; Germanic languages and architecture, each 12 ; economics, dairy husbandry, and household science, each 11. The departments of history, civil engineering, electrical engi- neering, and theoretical and applied mechanics numbered 10 each in their staffs (1912-13). The distribution of the membership of the faculty by ranks may be summarized as follows, using the figures for 1912-13 (from Table 26, pages 110-111). DISTRIBUTION OF FACULTY BY RANKS, 1912-13 DEPARTMENTS DEPARTMENTS ALL AT URBANA IN CHICAGO DEPARTMENTS Professors 71 42 113 Associate professors 10 11 21 Assistant professors 60 20 80 Associates 39 — 39 Instructors 119 58 177 Assistants 105 9 114 Graduate assistants 25 — 25 Special lecturers 17 1 18 Totals 446 141 587 From the foregoing table it appears that 15.9 per cent of the teaching staff at Urbana held (in 1912-13) the rank of professor; 13.4 per cent that of assistant professor; 26.6 per cent, instructor; 23.5 per cent, as- Sistant; 20.4 per cent, other ranks. The first four ranks, professor, associate professor, assistant pro- fessor, and associate, which are commonly thought of as constituting the permanent faculty (although associates are appointed for two years only, and most assistant professors for limited terms of two, three, or live years), numbered, in the departments at I'rhana. in 1912-13, 150 out of 446 88.6 per cent- No associates have been appointed in the departments in Chicago, The three professorial ranks in these departments in L912-18 numbered 72 out of 1 11 — 51.0 per cent. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 10/ The number of women in the faculty remained practically the same during the biennium : 1911-12: 54 at Urbana, 12 in Chicago— total, 66 1912-13: 57 at Urbana, 10 in Chicago— total, 67 The following figures, extracted from Tables 25-28 (pages 110-115), show the distribution of the women members of the faculty by depart- ments : WOMEN MEMBERS OF FACULTY BY DEPARTMENTS 1911-12 1912-13 Art and design 2 2 English _ _ 9 6 Germanic languages _ 1 1 Romance languages 1 — History 1 1 Philosophy — 1 Botany 4 3 Zoology _ 3 5 Chemistry 2 I Total, Arts and Sciences 23 20 Agricultural extension — 1 Household science 9 11 Music 5 4 Library science 13 16 Physical training 4 5 Medicine 12 10 Totals 66 67 The 54 women teachers at Urbana in 1911-12 included 2 of profes- sorial rank, 4 assistant professors, and 3 associates ; and the correspond- ing number of women for 1912-13, 57, included 2 of professorial rank, 2 assistant professors, and 2 associates; the remaining women teachers in both years belonging to the ranks in which the appointments are annual. In the College of Medicine the number of women in the higher ranks was relatively larger in both years; 3 professors, 1 associate professor, and 2 assistant professors out of 12 women teachers in 1911-12; and 3 professors and 2 assistant professors out of 10 women in 1912-13. Number in the Faculty, 1868-1913 Table 29 (page 116), which gives the total membership of the faculty for each year since the opening of the University in 1868, is reprinted from President James's Biennial Report of the University in the Illinois School Report for 1908-1910 ( page 564 ) . This table should be studied together with Table 9 (page 24), which shows the total enrollment of students year by year from 1868 to 1913. See also the discussion of Table 9 on page 10. For the instruction of its 77 students during the short spring term of 1868 the Illinois Industrial University provided 4 teachers, including, of course, the Regent, who was Professor of Philosophy. 108 REPORT OF REGISTRAR For the first full school year, 1868-69, there were 11 teachers for 128 students ; for the second full year, 19 teachers for 180 students. The same number of instructors, 19, taught the 278 students of 1870-71 ; but 5 more, making a faculty of 24, were added for 1871-72. This addition was timely, since the student enrollment jumped from 278 in 1870-71 to 381 in 1871-72. Thus in the first five years of the University's history the faculty increased in size by 500 per cent. The number of teachers was, however, to remain in the twenties or lower thirties for nearly two decades. In 1889-90 there were still only 32 in the University faculty, with a student body of 469. But about the middle of the eighties a rapid growth in numbers be- gan. In 1885-86 there were only 332 students enrolled in the newly christened University of Illinois* — nearly 50 students fewer than in 1871-72 (381) ; and the faculty numbered only 29 — less by 1 than the number for 1874-75. But every year of the decade which began in 1886- 87 marked a substantial gain in the number of students, which in 1895-96 reached 855. During the first half of this decade the increasing number of students does not seem to have affected the size of the faculty. In 1889-90, the number of teachers (32) had increased but 3 over the num- ber in the faculty five years before, altho the student body was larger by 41.2 per cent. But for 1890-91 7 additional instructors were employed, and the growth of the faculty from this point on was rapid. By 1895-96 the number of teachers was 84. Then came the annexations of 1896 and 1897 — the School of Phar- macy, the Library School, and the College of Medicine, — with the estab- lishment of the School of Music and the College of Law. From 1895-96 to 1897-98 the student body increased from 855 to 1582 and the faculty from 84 to 184. The growth of the faculty from 1897-98 to date has been relatively steady; the larger gains coming, for obvious reasons, in alternate years— the years immediately following the biennial sessions of the General Assembly. The two largest gains for single years occurred in 1901-02 and 1905-06 — gains of 55 and 58 teachers respectively. •The ad providing for the change of name wa< approved June io. 1885. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS IO9 Table 24 NUMBER IN THE FACULTY: SUMMARY, 1911-12, 1912-13 1911-12 1912-13 Officers of Instruction Men Women Total Men Women Total Professors 125 5 130 108 5 113 Associate Professors 21 1 22 21 21 Assistant Professors 71 6 Jj 76 4 80 Associates 2>7 3 4° 37 2 39 Instructors 155 22 177 156 21 177 Assistants 86 18 104 95 19 114 Graduate assistants 15 1 16 21 4 25 Special Lecturers 7 10 17 6 12 18 Total 517 66 583 520 67 587 Officers of Administration 37 2 39 37 4 41 Library Staff 8 26 34 8 29 37 Total 562 94 656 565 100 665 Duplication 27 3 3° 2 4 3 2 7 NET TOTAL 535 91 626 541 97 638 no REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 25 NUMBER IN THE FACULTY: BY COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS 1911-12 Colleges and Schools Literature and Arts Science _ 12 Engineering 14 Agriculture _ 14 Music Law Library _ _... Military science Physical training .... Professors Men Wom. 20 Totals in Chicagp 56 TOTALS IN UNIVERSITY.. Totals at Urbana 69 2 Medicine 41 3 Dentistry _ 13 Pharmacy 2 Associate Professors Men Wom. 6 4 Assistant Professors Men Wom. 16 14 15 7 2 I 2 I 2 II 6 4 56 13 2 10 15 Associates Men Wom. 1 1 10 I 8 8 2 37 •125 21 7i 37 Table 26 NUMBER IN THE FACULTY: BY COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS 1912-13 Colleges and Schools Professors Men Wom. Literature and Arts 22 Science 10 Engineering 15 Agriculture __ 12 1 Music ..._ 1 Law 6 Library I Military science 1 Physical training 1 I Totals at Urbana 69 Medicine 37 Pharmacy 2 Totals in Chicago 39 TOTALS IN UNIVERSITY^. 108 Associate Professors Men Wom. Assistant Professors Men Wom. Associates Men Wom 6 4 17 14 9 10 10 II II 16 9 1 1 58 16 t8 21 8 10 37 37 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS III Table 25 NUMBER IN THE FACULTY: BY COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS 1911-12 Graduate Special Instructors Assistants Assistants Lecturers Totals Men WOM. Men WOM. Men Wom. Men Wom. Men Wom. T'tl. 13 6 15 8 2 83 14 97 13 1 36 6 15 I 104 9 113 45 II 93 93 13 4 7 50 9 59 4 5 6 5 11 1 8 8 — 1 4 10 6 1 13 19 1 3 1 1 2 5 4 9 92 18 70 16 15 I 6 10 356 54 410 60 4 12 2 132 12 144 2 2 21 21 1 2 1 8 8 63 4 16 2 1 161 12 173 155 22 86 18 15 1 7 10 517 66 583 Table 26 NUMBER IN THE FACULTY: BY COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS 1912-13 Graduate Special Instructors Assi: 5TANTS Assistants Lecturers Totals Men Wom. Men Wom. Men Wom. Men Wom. Men Wom. T'tl. 15 4 18 7 87 II 98 18 1 37 4 21 4 114 9 123 41 16 96 96 19 5 14 3 64 12 76 5 4 7 4 II 7 7 1 2 1 5 12 7 16 23 1 1 3 1 2 3 6 5 11 102 17 87 18 21 4 5 12 389 57 446 53 4 6 1 123 10 133 1 2 1 8 8 54 4 8 1 1 131 10 141 !5 6 21 95 19 21 4 6 12 52O 67 587 112 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 27 NUMBER IN THE FACULTY: BY DEPARTMENTS, 1911-12 In the Undergraduate Colleges at Urbana College and Department Professors Men Wom. Literature and Arts Art and design _ Classics 2 Economics 3 Education 1 English 4 Germanic languages 1 History 2 Philosophy 2 Political science 2 Psychology 1 Romance languages 1 Sociology 1 Totals, L. and A.... 20 Science Astronomy Botany 1 Ceramics 1 Chemistry 4 Entomology 1 Geology 1 Mathematics 3 Physiology Zoology 1 Totals, Science 12 Engineering Architecture 4 Civil Engineering 1 Drawing, gen. eng Electrical eng 2 Mechanical eng 2 Mechanics, T. & A Mining engineering 1 Mun. and san. eng. 1 Physics 1 Railway engineering 2 Totals, Rng'ng 14 Agriculture Agricultural exten Agronomy 5 Animal husbandry ... 2 Dairy husbandry 1 1 [orticulture 4 1 tousehold science 1 Thremmatology 1 Veterinary science ... I Totals, /h/riciilliirr i.| 1 Music 1 Military science 1 1 'b it al li .lining 1 I /"/ ILS 63 ~~2~ Associate Professors Men Wom. Assistant Professors Men Wom. 16 I I 14 I 2 15 Associates Men Wom. II IO I I I 1 1 53 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS II3 Table 27 NUMBER IN THE FACULTY: BY DEPARTMENTS, 1911-12 In the Undergraduate Colleges at Urbana Graduate Special Instructors Assistants Assistants Lecturers Totals Men WOM. Men WOM. Men Wom. Men WOM. Men Wom. Ttl. I 2 2 2 4 5 5 2 2 11 11 I 3 3 3 2 3 7 19 9 28 4 I 3 I 12 I 13 3 1 9 I 10 1 1 3 4 4 3 4 4 1 I 3 9 I 10. 1 2 2 13 6 15 8 2 83 14 97 1 1 3 3 1 4 4 8 4 12 — 4 6 6 4 I 11 14 4i 2 43 ..... 2 5 5 1 3 7 7 5 6 21 21 1 1 3 3 ..... 4 2 I I 10 3 13 13 I 36 6 15 I 104 9 113 5 1 12 12 9 13 13 4 1 6 6 4 1 10 10 11 4 19 19 7 10 10 — 2 3 2 3 5 4 14 14 4 4 45 11 1 93 3 93 3 6 2 15 15 1 1 10 10 3 3 11 11 3 9 9 ..... 4 9 9 1 1 1 1 13 4 7 50 9 59 4 5 6 1 5 11 1 3 1 1 2 5 4 9 91 17 70 16 15 1 2 342 4i 383 H4 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 28 NUMBER IN THE FACULTY: BY DEPARTMENTS, 1912-13 In the Undergraduate Colleges at Urbana College and Department Professors Men Wom. Literature and Arts Art and design Classics 2 Economics 4 Education 2 English 4 Germanic languages 1 History 2 Philosophy 2 Political science 2 Psychology 1 Romance languages 1 Sociology 1 Totals, L. and A. 22 Science Astronomy Botany 1 Ceramics Chemistry 3 Entomology 1 Geology 1 Mathematics 3 Physiology Zoology 1 Totals, Science 10 Engineering Architecture 4 Civil engineering ... 1 Drawing, gen. eng Electrical eng 2 Mechanical eng 3 Mechanics, T. & A Mining engineering 1 Mun. and san. eng. 1 Physics 1 Railway eng 2 Totals, Eng 15 Agriculture Agricultural ext Agronomy 5 Animal husbandry ... 2 Dairy husbandry 1 I I viticulture 3 I [ousehold science Veterinary science ... 1 Totals, Agric 12 Music 1 Military science 1 Physical training 1 TOTALS, UNDER GR WV 11 /■ CO! LEGES Associate Professors Men Wom. I I 1 2 I 1 1 2 ~~ 4 ~ 10 Assistant Professors Men Wom. I I 3 1 4 3 1 1 2 1 2 3 2 1 3 1 1 "14" 17 3 3 1 2 1 4 2 16 2 4 3 1 1 Associates Men Wom. I 2 I I I 2 I ~g ~ 1 1 4 3 1 10 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 4 3 2 1 2 10 57 37 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 1 15 Table 28 NUMBER IN THE FACULTY: BY DEPARTMENTS, 1912-13 In the Undergraduate Colleges at Urbana Graduate Special Instructors Assistants Assistants Lecturers Totals Men Wom. Men Wom. Men Wom. Men Wom. Men Wom. Ttl. I 2 2 2 4 5 5 1 3 11 11 1 4 4 61 85 25 6 31 41 2 11 1 12 2 1 1 9 1 10 1 2 1 3 4 4 2 2 1 3 10 10 2 2 15 4 18 7 87 11 98 1 2 2 1 4 3 3 12 3 15 ■••■ 3 4 4 8 1 15 15 48 1 49 2 5 5 1 4 8 8 5 6 21 21 2 3 3 3 1 3 4 11 5 16 18 1 37 4 21 4 114 9 123 7 12 12 5 10 10 4 2 7 7 5 10 10 9 8 21 21 7 — 10 10 1 -••- 1 4 4 - 3 3 2 5 13 13 1 6 6 41 16 96 96 2 1 4 1 5 6 1 16 16 3 -■■ 6 18 18 3 5 11 11 7 14 14 5 2 11 11 •- 1 1 19 5 14 3 64 12 76 5 4 7 4 11 ••■• 1 1 3 1 2 3 ...._ 6 5 11 101 1 5 87 17 21 4 375 41 416 Il6 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 29 NUMBER IN THE FACULTY BY YEARS, 1868-1913 Year Faculty 1808 _ 4 1868-69 II 1869-70 _ 19 1870-71 _ 19 1871-72 _ _ „ 24 1872-73 _ _ 25 1873-74 25 1874-75 30 1875-76 - 27 1876-77 - 36 1877-78 29 1878-79 33 1879-80 30 1880-81 28 1881-82 26 1882-83 _ 24 1883-84 25 1884-85 27 1885-86 29 1886-87 29 1887-88 29 1888-89 3° 1889-90 32 1890-91 39 1891-92 43 1892-93 - 48 1893-94 67 1894-95 80 1895-96 84 1896-97 170 1897-98 184 1898-99 194 1899-1900 229 1900-01 242 1901-02 297 1902-03 316 1903-04 35i 1904-05 350 1905-06 408 1906-07 442 1907-08 4-2 1908-09 497 1909-10 538 1910-11 555 19 ' r - 1 2 583 1912-13 587 PART FIVE. COURSES OFFERED Part Five contains tabulations showing the number of courses offered in the colleges and schools at Urbana during the biennium. Courses Offered, 1911-12, 1912-13 Tables 30 and 31 (pages 120 and 122) summarize the courses of instruction which are listed in the "General Description of Courses" in the Annual Registers of 1911-12 and 1912-13 as having been offered in those years. It should be noted that courses listed in the two Registers but marked "Not given in" — the year in question, are not counted in these tables, which are designed to show only courses actually taught. Perhaps it should be added that the courses so designated do not by any means represent obsolete material or mere "paper" announcements. They are in most cases advanced courses which are regularly given in alternate years or once in three years, in accordance with departmental schedules carefully planned to insure that every student likely to be interested shall have an opportunity to get the work at a suitable point in his course. The number of such courses listed in the Register for 1911-12 was 69 (44 open to undergraduate students, 25 for graduates only). The corre- sponding number for 1912-13 was 73 (41 open to undergraduates, 32 for graduates alone). Attention should also be called emphatically to the fact that these figures do not afford a basis for a comparison of the "amounts of instruc- tion" given by the several departments, for the reason that each course listed in the Register is counted simply as one course, without discrimi- nation as to whether it was a one-hour course (meeting only once a week for a semester of eighteen weeks) or a two-hour, or three-hour, or four- hour, or five-hour course (meeting two, or three, or four, or five times a week for the same period) ; and without discrimination also between one- semester and two-semester courses. These tables serve, however, to indicate, more or less imperfectly, the scope of the work of the several departments and colleges and of the institution as a whole, and it is hoped that this point may be of interest. The total number of courses offered in the departments at Urbana in 1911-12 was 959; in 1912-13, 981. Of the 959 courses given in 1911-12, 759 were open to undergraduates, while 200 were courses for graduate students only. In 1912-13, the courses for undergraduates numbered 775 out of 981, the graduate courses 206. As will be evident from the small difference in the grand totals, there was but slight variation in the number of courses offered by single depart- ments from one year of the biennium to the other — in most cases a matter of one or two courses only. The following departments offered as many as 5 courses more in 1912-13 than in 1911-12. 1911-12 1912-13 English 46 51 Political science 16 21 Physics 19 26 Chemistry 60 71 117 Il8 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Music is credited with 37 courses in 1912-13 as against 27 in 1911-12; but this increase in offerings is apparent rather than real, resulting from the fact that certain work which had been given for some years was in 1912-13 differentiated into a larger number of courses for purposes of more accurate record. The number of courses offered in liberal arts and sciences (among which physics, altho administered by the College of Engineering, is here included) increased from 540 in 1911-12 to 565 in 1912-13. On the other hand, there was a slight decrease from the first to the second year of the biennium in the number of courses offered in engineering subjects — 192 in 1911-12, 184 in 1912-13; and likewise in agricultural subjects— 115 in 1911-12, 110 in 1912-13. The following figures, extracted from Tables 30 and 31 (pages 120- 122), show the distribution of the courses in liberal arts and sciences among the several subject groups : 1911-12 1912-13 Art and design _ _ 13 13 Language and literature (classics, Romance languages, Ger- manic languages, English) 145 149 Political and social sciences (history, economics, political sci- ence, sociology) 96 101 Philosophical subjects (philosophy, psychology, education) 42 40 Mathematics 34 31 Physical sciences (astronomy, geology, physics, chemistry) 118 139 Biological sciences (zoology, botany, entomology, physiology) 73 73 Ceramics 19 J 9 Totals 540 565 Courses Offered, Summer Sessions of 1912, 1913 Tables 32 and 33 (pages 124 and 125) show the number of courses offered by the several departments in the two Summer Sessions of the biennium. The total number of courses offered in the summer of 1912 was 139 ; in the summer of 1913, 167. Of the 139 courses of 1912, 117 were offered for undergraduate credit only; 14, while listed as advanced undergraduate courses, were open to graduate students also for credit ; and 8 were for graduates only. In 1913, 135 out of the 167 courses were exclusively undergraduate, 24 were open to both advanced undergraduates and graduates, and 8 required graduate status for admission. There was thus an increase for the second summer of 28 in the num- ber of undergraduate courses, and an increase of 10 in the number of eourxeN offered for graduate credit. The number of departments represented in the Summer Session was the same for both years — 2(! ; and the departments themselves were the same, except that geology, which was represented in 1912 by two courses in physiography, offered no work in 1913, and household science, which was not able to give summer work in 1912 because of changes being made in the quarters of the department ( incident to the erection of the addition to (he \\ r oin:iirs Building), offered 6 courses in 1913. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS II9 In the main, of course, the offerings of individual departments show little variation from the one year to the other. The notable increases for the second year were in education and psychology (grouped together as one department for their summer work) — 11 courses in 1912, 18 in 1913; and in chemistry — 17 courses in 1912, 24 in 1913. Physical training, which offered 5 courses in 1912, offered 1 only in 1913. The following figures from Tables 32 and 33 (pages 124 and 125) show the distribution of summer courses among the several subject groups : 1912 1913 Art and design 2 2 Language and literature (Latin, French, German, English) 33 36 Political and social sciences (history, economics, political sci- ence, sociology ) 12 17 Education and psychology 11 18 Mathematics 9 10 Physical sciences (physics, chemistry, physiography) 29 35 Biological sciences (zoology, botany, entomology) 10 13 Engineering subjects (general engineering drawing, manual training, mechanical engineering, mechanics) 12 12 Agriculture 5 8 Household science 5 Music 5 3 Library science 6 7 Physical training _ 5 1 Totals 139 167 120 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 30 COURSES OFFERED, 1911-12 Colleges and Schools at Urbana Undergraduate Departments Courses Liberal Arts and Sciences Art and design _ 13 Language and literature: Classics : Greek 1 1 Latin 14 Total 25 Romance languages : French 7 Italian 2 Spanish 6 Total 1 5 Germanic languages : German 2 1 Scandinavian 6 Total 27 English : English literature 19 Rhetoric 9 Public speaking 5 Total 33 Total, language and literature 100 Political and social sciences: History 17 Economics 27 Accountancy 7 Political science 14 Sociology 10 Total, political and social sciences 75 Philosophical subjects: Philosophy 12 Psychology 7 Education 15 Total, philosophical subjects 34 Mathematics 22 Physical sciences: Astronomy 8 ( reol< igy - 25 Physics 13 Chemistry .}-> Total, physical sciences 88 Graduate Courses Total — 13 4 15 7 21 11 36 4 II 2 2 8 6 21 12 33 3 9 15 42 13 32 9 •— 5 13 46 45 145 8 25 9 36 7 2 16 2 12 21 96 3 15 4 1 1 I 16 8 l- I a 34 1 5 30 <> 10 [8 (HI 30 ti8 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 121 Table 30 (Continued) COURSES OFFERED, 1911-12 Colleges and Schools at Urbana Undergraduate Graduate Departments Biological sciences: Zoology Botany Entomology Physiology Courses Total, biological sciences- Ceramics _ 50 15 Total, liberal arts and sciences. 397 Engineering Architecture Drawing, general engineering Civil engineering Electrical engineering Mechanical engineering Mechanics, Theoretical and applied- Mining engineering Municipal and sanitary engineering. Railway engineering 33 2 23 19 29 11 11 Total, engineering courses 154 Agriculture Agronomy Horticulture (including floriculture and landscape gardening) Animal husbandry Dairy husbandry Veterinary science Thremmatology Agricultural extension Total, agricultural courses Household science 21 34 23 11 4 2 3 98 16 Law Law .. Music Music Total, College of Agriculture 114 32 27 Library Library science Military Science ... Physical Training 24 3 Courses 23 4 143 38 5 5 4 3 17 2 19 Total 18 10 28 15 7 22 11 6 4 2 15 8 73 19 540 39 2 27 27 34 16 14 11 22 192 26 39 27 14 4 2 3 115 18 133 32 27 24 3 8 TO TALS 759 200 959 122 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 31 COURSES OFFERED, 1912-13 Colleges and Schools at Urbana Undergraduate Graduate Departments Courses Courses Liberal Arts and Sciences Art and design 13 Language and literature: Classics — Greek 12 3 Latin 14 8 Total 26 11 Romance languages : French _ 10 6 Italian 2 Spanish 4 Total 16 6 Germanic languages : German 21 9 Scandinavian 4 5 Total 25 14 English : English literature 23 15 Rhetoric _ 9 Public speaking 4 Total 36 15 Total, language and literature 103 46 Political and social sciences: History 20 6 Economics 27 7 Accountancy 7 Political science 16 5 Sociology 1 o 3 Total, political and social sciences 80 21 Philosophical subjects: Philosophy 9 3 Psychology 7 3 Education 14 4 Total, philosophical subjects 30 10 Mathematics 20 1 1 Physical sciences: A st ronomy 8 1 I leology 26 7 i Miysics I () 7 Chemistry |j i 25 Total, physical sciences 00 jo Total 13 15 22 37 16 2 4 22 30 9 39 33 9 4 51 M9 26 34 7 21 13 101 12 10 18 40 SI 9 33 7i 139 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS I2J Table 31 (Continued) COURSES OFFERED, 1912-13 Colleges and Schools at Urbana Departments Biological sciences: Zoology Botany Entomology Physiology Undergraduate Courses 19 13 6 Total, biological sciences- Ceramics 52 15 Total, liberal arts and sciences 412 Engineering Architecture Drawing, general engineering Civil engineering Electrical engineering Mechanical engineering Mechanics, Theoretical and applied Mining engineering Municipal and sanitary engineering Railway engineering Total, engineering courses 148 Agriculture Agronomy Horticulture (including floriculture and landscape gardening) Animal husbandry Farm management Dairy husbandry Veterinary science Agricultural extension Total, agricultural courses Household science 20 95 16 Total, College of Agriculture in Law Law Music Music 32 37 Library Library science 24 Military Science 3 Physical Training 8 Graduate Courses IO 5 4 2 21 4 153 36 15 2 17 Total. 29 18 18 8 73 ICy 565. 31 6 37 2 2 23 3 26 19 8 27 28 5 33 7 5 12 12 2 14 8 3 11 18 4 22 184 24 34 22 5 4 39 26 1 1 12 2 14 3 3 3 3 no 18 128 32 37 24 3 8 TO TALS „ 775 206 981 124 REPORT OF REGISTRAR Table 32 COURSES OFFERED, SUMMER SESSION OF 1912 Graduate Liberal Arts and Sciences Art and design Language and literature French German Latin English English literature Rhetoric _ Public speaking Undergraduate For Under- Open to graduates only graduates Total, English 14 Total, lang. and lit 28 Political and social sciences History Economics Accountancy Political science Sociology Total, pol. and soc. sci. 10 Education and psychology Mathematics Physical sciences Physics Chemistry 12 Physiography 2 Total, physical sciences Biological sciences Zoology Botany Entomology 22 3 2 3 Total, biol. sciences.. 8 Total, lib. arts and sciences 84 Engineering Drawing, general eng Manual training Mechanical engineering Mechanics Total, engineering Agriculture Music Library science Physical training 12 S 5 6 5 14 Total 4 8 4 11 3 3 17 33 3 3 1 3 2 12 11 9 10 17 2 29 3 4 3 10 106 2 2 3 5 u 5 5 6 5 TOTAL >'7 14 139 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 125 Table 33 COURSES OFFERED, SUMMER SESSION OF 1913 Undergraduate Graduate Total For Under- Open to Liberal Arts and Sciences graduates only Graduates Art and design Language and literature French 4 1 5 German 8 . — 8 Latin 4 1 5 English English literature 8 3 1 12 Rhetoric 3 3 Public speaking 3 3 Total, English 14 3 1 Total, language and literature 30 5 1 36 Poetical and social sciences History 4 1 1 6 Economics 4 4 Accountancy 1 1 Political Science 2 2 Sociology 3 1 4 Total, pol. and soc. sci. Education and psychology 12 Mathematics Physical sciences Physics Chemistry 15 14 2 1 17 12 5 1 18 8 2 10 9 1 1 11 15 8 1 24 Total, physical sciences 24 9 2 35 Biological sciences Zoology 3 1 1 5 Botany 3 2 5 Entomology 3 3 Total, biol. sciences 9 1 3 13 Total, lib. arts and sciences 99 24 8 131 Engineering Drawing, general eng 2 ...._ 2 Manual training 2 . 2 Mechanical engineering 3 3 Mechanics 5 5 Total, engineering 12 12 Agriculture 8 8 Household science 5 5 3 Music 3 science 7 training 1 TOTAL 135 24 8 167 Library science 7 . 7 Physical training 1 1 INDEX A.B.Degrees conferred, 92, 93, 94 held by students, 37, 71, 74 Academies foreign countries, 62, 70 Illinois, 58, 66 Insular Possessions, 70 other states, 61, 68 Academy, U. of I., 10 Accountancy, courses offered, 120, 122, 124, 125 Accredited high schools, intrants from, 35, 56, 63 Adams county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 33, 41, 48 A.E. degrees held by students, 37, 71, 74 Africa degrees, 92, 102 students from, 46, 54, 62, 70 Ages of students, 39, 86 Agricultural and mechanical colleges, graduates of, 36 Agricultural extension courses offered, 121, 123 faculty, 107, 112, 114 Agriculture, College of ages of students, 86 occupations of students' parents, 78 courses offered, 118, 119, 121, 123, 124, 125 degrees, 91, 93, 94 enrollment, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 18, 19, 21 1890-1913, 26, 28, 30, 32 faculty, 105, 110, 112, 114 general course, enrollment, 14, 16, 18 percentage of loss, 9 Agriculture, general, women in, 9 Agriculturists, see occupations Agronomy courses offered, 121, 123 faculty, 106, 112, 114 Alabama students from, 44, 52, 59, 61, 68 degrees, 96 Alexander county degrees, 95 students from, 41, 48 A.M. degrees conferred, 93, 94 held by students, 37, 71, 74 Animal husbandry courses offered, 121, 123 faculty, 105, 106, 112, 114 Architecture courses offered, 121, 123 enrollment, 8, 14, 16, 18 faculty, 106, 112, 114 women in, 9 Architectural engineering course, enrollment, 8, 14, 16, 18 Argentina degrees, 92, 96 students, from, 46, 54, 62, 70 Arizona, students from, 44, 52, 59, 68 Arkansas degrees, 96, 102 students from,' 44, 52, 59, 66, 68 Armenia, students from, 46, 54 Art and design courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 enrollment, 1890-1909, 26, 28, 30 faculty, 107, 112, 114 Artistic professions, see occupations Asia, students from, 46, 54 Astronomy courses offered, 118, 120, 122 faculty, 112, 114 Australia, students from, 46 Austria, students from, 46, 54 Baccalaureate degrees, 91, 93, 94 held by students, 37, 71, 74 B.C.E., degrees held by students, 37, 71, 74 B.D., degrees held by students, 37, 71, 74 Biological sciences, courses offered, 118, 119, 121, 123, 124, 125 Biological station, enrollment, 29 B.L. degree, 91, 94 B.L.S. degrees conferred, 93, 94 held by students, 37, 71, 74 Bohemia, students from, 54 Bond county degrees, 100 students from, 41, 48 Boone county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 41, 48 Botany courses offered, 118, 119, 121, 123, 124, 125 faculty, 105, 106, 107, 112, 114 Brazil, students from, 54, 70 British Guiana, students from, 46 Brown county degrees, 95 students from, 41, 48 B.S. degrees conferred, 93, 94 held by students, 37, 71, 74 Bulgaria, students from, 54 Bureau county degrees, 100 students from, 33, 41, 48 Burrill, Dr. Thomas J., 91 Business, see occupations Business courses enrollment, 8, 14, 16, 18 organization, 10 women in, 9 Business management, see occupations Calhoun county California degrees, 96, 102 students from, 33, 41, 44, 48, 52, 59, 61, 66, 68 Canada degrees, 92, 96, 102 students from, 34, 46, 54 Carroll county degrees, 95 students from, 41, 48 Cass county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 41, 48 C.B. degrees held by students, 37, 71, 74 C.E. degrees held by students, 37, 71, 74 Central America, students from, 46 Ceramic engineering, enrollment, 8, 14, 16, 18 Ceramics enrollment, 8, 14, 16, 18 courses offered, 118, 121, 123 Champaign county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 33, 41, 48 Chemical engineering course, enrollment, 8, 14, 16, 18 Chemistry courses offered, 117, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 enrollment, 8, 14, 16, 18 faculty, 105, 106, 107, 112, 114 women in, 9 China degrees, 92, 96, 102 students from, 34, 46, 54, 62, 70 Christian county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 41, 48 Civil engineering courses offered, 121, 123 enrollment, 14, 16, 18 faculty, 106, 112, 114 Clark county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 41, 48 127 128 INDEX Classes ages of students by, 86, 88 comparative enrollment, 19 Classes and courses, enrollment by, 14, 16 Classics courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 faculty, 112, 114 Clay county degrees, 100 students from, 41, 48 Clinton county degrees, 100 students from, 41, 48 Coles county degrees, 100 students from, 41, 48 Colleges enrollment by, 11, 12, 13 enrollment, 1890-1913, 26, 32 Colleges and Universities Illinois, intrants from, 35, 59, 66 foreign countries, intrants from, 36, 61, 62, 70 other states, intrants from, 36, 61, 68 Colorado degrees, 96, 102 students from, 44, 52, 59, 61, 66, 69 Comparative enrollment by classes, 19 by courses, 18 Composition of student body (Part Two), 33, 90 Composition of undergraduate colleges, 121 Connecticut, students from, 44, 52, 69 Contents, table of, 5 Cook county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 33, 41, 48 Costa Rica, students from, 46 Counties in Illinois degrees, 95, 100 students from, 33, 41, 43, 48, 51 Courses, comparative enrollment, 8, 18 Courses and classes, enrollment by, 14, 16 Courses offered, (Part Five) 117, 125. Crawford county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 41 48 Cuba degrees, 92, 96, 102 students from, 46, 54 Cumberland county degrees, 100 students from, 41, 48 Cunningham, H. E., 3 Dairy Husbandry courses offered, 121, 123 faculty, 106, 112, 114 Degrees, enumeration, 91 summary, 91, 93, 94 geographical distribution, 92, 95, 100 held by students classification, 37 classification of institutions, 36 parentage of, 36, 71, 74 DeKalb county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 41, 48 Delaware, 34, 44, 52 Denmark, students from, 54 Dentistry, College of degrees, 91, 93 enrollment, 7. 11. 12, 14, 20 1901 1913, 29-31 faculty, 105, no organisation, 10 women in. 9 Detailed statement "f enrollment, 14, 16 DeWltl county degrees. 95, 100 BtudtntS from, 41, 48 District "f Columbia, students from, it, S3, 59, 61, (.(.. 69 Doctors' degrees held by students, 37 Douglas county degrees, 100 students from, 41, 48 Drawing, General engineering courses offered, 119, 121, 123, 124, 125 faculty, 112, 114 DuPage county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 41, 48 Economics courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 faculty, 106, 112, 114 Edgar county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 33, 41, 48 Education courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 faculty, 112, 114 Edwards county degrees, 95 students from, 41, 48 E.E. degrees conferred, 93, 94 held by students, 37, 71, 74 Effingham county, students from, 41, 48 Egypt, students from, 46 Electrical engineering enrollment, 14, 16, 18 courses offered, 121, 123 faculty of, 106, 112, 114 Engineering, College of ages of students, 86 courses offered, 118, 119, 121, 123, 124, 125 degrees, 92, 93, 94 enrollment, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 19, 21 1890-1913, 26, 28, 30, 32 faculty, 105, 110, 112, 114 occupations of students' parents, 78 percentage of loss, 9 Engineering, professional degrees held by students, 37 England, students from, 62 English courses offered, 117, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124. 125 faculty, 105, 106, 107, 112, 114 Enrollment by colleges, 11, 12, 13 1890-1913, 26, 32 increase in, 1868-1913, 10, 25, 25, 26 largest, 10 Part One, 7-32 percentage of men and women, 8 total. 1868-1913, 24, 25 Entomology courses offered, 118, ll'>, 121, 123. 124. 125 faculty, 112, 114 Europe, students from, 46. 54 Faculty, (Part Four), 105-116 Fayette county degrees, 95 students from, 41. 48 Financial and semilegal business, .err occupations Floriculture, courses offered. 121, 123 Florida, students from. 44. 52 Ford county degrees. "5. 100 students from, 41. 48 Foreign countries degrees, Q 2 intrants from. 56. 6/?. 63. 70 students from. 34. 41. 46. 48, 54 Franklin county, students from. 41, 48 French, course-* offered. 119, 120, 1". 124, 123 (.<■■(• bIm Romanes languages) Freshman class anes of students, 87 enrollment, 13, 17. \o Fulton county decrees, "5. 100 Students from. 33. 41. 48 INDEX I29 Gain or loss of students by colleges, 7 Gallatin county, students from, 41, 49 Geographical distribution degrees, 92, 95, 100 students, 33, 34, 41, 48 Geology courses offered, 118, 120, 122 faculty, 112, 114 Georgia degrees, 102 students from, 44, 52 Germanic languages courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 faculty, 106, 107, 112, 114 Germany, students from, 46, 54, 64 Government service, see occupations Graduates, college or university, enrollment of, 36, 71, 74 Graduate School ages of students, 86 enrollment, 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 20 1890-1913, 26, 28, 30, 32 organization, 10 parentage of degrees, 36, 71, 74 Great Britain, students from, 46, 54 Greece, students from, 46, 54 Greene county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 41, 49 Greek, courses offered, 120, 122 {see also Classics) Growth, 1868-1913, 10, 24, 25, 26 Grundy county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 41, 49 Hamilton county, students from, 33, 41, 49 Hancock county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 41, 49 Hardin county, students from, 33, 41, 49 Hawaii, students from, 46, 54 Henderson county degrees, 100 students from, 41, 49 Henry county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 41, 49 High schools, accredited Illinois, 56, 63 intrants from, 35, 56, 63 in other states, intrants from, 36, 59, 66 History courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 faculty, 106, 107, 112, 114 Holland, students from, 46, 54 Honorary degrees, 91, 93 Horticulture courses offered, 121, 123 faculty, 105, 106, 112, 114 Household science courses offered, 119, 121, 123, 124, 125 enrollment, 8, 14, 16, 18 1890-1905, 26, 28 faculty, 106, 107, 112, 114 Idaho degrees, 102 students from, 44, 52, 66, 69 Illinois accredited high schools, 35, 56, 63 proportion of students from, 33, 41, 43, 48, 51 students from, 41, 48 Increase in enrollment, 1868-1913, 10, 24, 25, 26 India degrees, 92, 96, 102 students from, 34, 46, 54, 62, 70 Indiana degrees, 92, 96, 102 students from, 34, 44, 52, 59, 61, 66, 68, 69 Insular Possessions degrees, 92 students from, 34, 41, 46, 48, 54 Intrants, scholastic distribution of, 34, 56, 63 Iowa degrees, 92, 96, 102 students from, 34, 44, 52, 60, 61, 67, 69 Iroquois county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 33, 41, 49 Italian, courses offered, 120, 122 (see also Romance languages) Italy degrees, 92, 102 students from, 46, 54 Jackson county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 41, 49 James, President Edmund J., 3, 107 Japan degrees, 92, 96, 102 students from, 34, 46, 54, 62, 70 Jasper county degrees, 95 students from, 41, 49 J. D. degrees conferred, 93, 94 held by students, 37, 71, 74 Jefferson county, students from, 41, 49 Jersey county degrees, 95 students from, 41, 49 Jo Daviess county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 41, 49 Johnson county, students from, 41, 49 Junior class ages of students, 86 enrollment, 14, 16, 19 Kane county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 33, 41, 49 Kankakee county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 41, 49 Kansas degrees, 96, 102 students from, 44, 52, 60, 61, 67, 68, > Kendall county degrees, 100 students from, 41, 49 Kentucky degrees, 96, 102 students from, 44, 52, 60, 67, 68, 69 Knox county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 41, 49 Korea, students from, 46 Lake county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 49 Landscape gardening, courses offered, 121, 123 Languages and literature, courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 La Salle county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 33, 42, 49 Latin, courses offered, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 (see also Classics) Law, College of ages of students, 86 courses offered, 121, 123 degrees in, 92, 93, 94 enrollment, 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 20, 21 1897-1913, 26, 28, 30, 32 faculty, 105, 110 occupation of students' parents, 78 organization, 10 percentage of loss, 9 Lawrence county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 49 130 INDEX Lee county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 42, 49 Liberal Arts and Sciences college of, 8 courses offered, 117, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 Library School courses offered, 119, 121, 123, 124, 125 degrees, 93, 94 enrollment, 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 20 1897-1913, 26, 28, '30, 32 faculty, 105, 107, 110 occupations of students' parents, 78 organization, 10 women in, 9 Literature and Arts, College of ages of students, 86 enrollment, 7, 11, 13, 14, 16, 18, 19, 21 1890-1913, 26, 28, 30, 32 by courses, 8, 18 faculty, 105, 110, 112, 114 general course, enrollment, 8, 14, 16, 18 occupations of students' parents, 78 percentage of loss, 9 percentages of men and women, 8 Livingston county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 42, 49 LL.B. degrees conferred, 93, 94 held by students, 37, 71, 74 LL.D. degrees conferred, 91, 93 Logan county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 49 Loss or gain of students by colleges, 7 Loss, percentage of, 1911-12 to 1912-13, 9, 22, 23 Louisiana degrees, 96 students from, 44, 52, 60, 67 McConn, C. M., 3 McDonough county degrees 92, 95, 100 students from, 42, 49 McHenry county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 42, 49 McLean county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 33, 42, 49 Macon county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 42, 49 Macoupin county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 49 Madison county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 33, 42, 49 Maine, students from, 34, 44, 52 Manual training, courses offered, 119, 124, 125 Manufacturing business, see occupations Marion county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 49 Marshall county degrees, 95 students from, 42, 49 Maryland degrees, 102 •tudentl from, 44, 52, 60, 61, 67, 68, 69 Muon county degrees. 95, 100 ■tudentl frinn, 42, 49 ■ i ibc county degrees, 93 ■.in. I. iii'. It. .in. 42, 49 [i ichu ■'■iii . '".. 102 .in. I. hi ■ 1 1. .in, 44, 52. 60, 61, (>7, (.8, 69 Masters' degrees conferred, 91, 93, 94 held by students, 37, 71, 74 Mathematics courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 faculty, 106, 112, 114 Mechanical engineering courses offered, 119, 121, 123, 124, 125 enrollment, 14, 16, 18 faculty, 106, 112, 114 Mechanics, Theoretical and applied courses offered, 119, 121, 123, 124, 125 faculty, 106, 112, 114 M.E. degrees conferred, 93, 94 held by students, 37, 71, 74 Medicine, College of degrees conferred, 93, 94 held by students, 37, 73, 76 enrollment, 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 20 1897-1913, 27,29, 31 faculty, 105, 107, 119 organization, 10 parentage of degrees held by students, 73, 77 women in, 14, 16 Medicine, course preparatory to, enrollment, 8, 14, 16, 18 Men and women, percentages of, 8 Menard county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 49 Mercantile business, see occupations Mercer county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 49 Mexico degrees, 92, 96, 102 students from, 34, 46, 54, 70 Michigan degrees, 96, 102 students from, 44, 52, 60, 62, 67, 68, 69 Military science courses offered, 119, 121, 123 faculty, 105, 110, 112, 114 Mining engineering courses offered, 121, 123 enrollment, 8, 14, 16, 18 Minnesota degrees, 96, 102 students from, 44, 52, 60, 61, 62, 67, 68, 69 Mississippi degrees, 96 students from, 44, 52, 60, 68, 69 Missouri degrees, 92, 96, 102 students from, 34, 44, 52, 60, 61, 62, 67, 68, 69 Monroe county degrees, 100 students from, 42, 49 Montana degrees, 96 students from, 44, 52. 60, 61 Montgomery county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 49 Morgan county degrees, 95, 100 students from. 42. 4"> Moultrie county degrees. 95, 100 students from, 42. 4° MS. degraea conferred, ".'. °4 held bj students, 37. "l, 74 Municipal ami sanitary engineering courses offend, 121. 1 .'.< enrollment, 14. 16, 18 faculty, 112. iii Music, School Of .iki-s of students, B6 courses offered, 11s. 119, 180, 111, 12.'. 124. Iti desire*. 92, '».'. 94 INDEX 131 Music, School of (Continued) enrollment, 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 18, 19, 21 1890-1913, 26, 28, 30, 32 faculty, 105, 107, 110, 112, 114 occupations of students' parents, 78 organization, 10 percentage of loss, 9 Nebraska degrees, 96, 102 students from, 44, 52, 60, 62, 67, 69 Nevada, students from, 44, 52, 60, 69 New Hampshire degrees, 96 students from, 44, 52, 61 New Jersey degrees, 96 students from, 44, 52, 60, 62, 67, 68 New Mexico, students from, 44, 52, 60, 67 New York degrees, 96, 102 students from, 44, 52, 60, 61, 62, 67, 68, 69 Normal schools, intrants from foreign countries, 36, 70 Illinois, 35, 59, 66 other states, 36, 61, 68 North America, students from, 46, 54 North Carolina degrees, 96 students from, 34, 44, 52 North Dakota degrees, 96, 102 students from, 44, 52, 60, 62, 68, 69 Norway degrees, 92, 96, 102 students from, 46, 54 Occupations of parents and guardians of students, 37, 78 Oceania, students from, 46, 54 Ogle county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 50 Ohio degrees, 92, 96, 102 students from, 44, 52, 60, 61, 62, 68, 69 Oklahoma degrees, 96, 102 students from, 44, 52, 60, 61, 62, 68 Orange Free State, students from, 46 Orange River Colony, students from, 54 Oregon degrees, 102 students from, 44, 52, 69 Parents of students, occupations, 37, 78 Pennsylvania degrees, 96, 102 students from, 44, 52, 61, 62, 68, 69 Peoria county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 33, 42, 50 Percentages graduated, returned, not returned, 22, 23 Percentage of loss, 1911-12 to 1912-13, 9, 22 Perry county degrees, 95 students from, 42, 50 Peru, students from, 46, 54, 62, 70 Pharmacy, School of degrees in, 92, 93, 94 enrollment, 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 20 1896-1913, 27, 29, 31 faculty, 105, 110 organization, 10 women in, 9 Ph.B. degrees held by students, 37, 71, 74 Ph.C. degrees conferred, 93, 94 Ph.D. degrees conferred, 92, 93, 94 held by students, 37, 71, 74 Ph.G. degrees conferred, 93, 94 held by students, 37, 71 Philippine Islands degrees, 92, 96, 102 students from, 46, 54, 70 Philosophical subjects, courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 123, 125 Philosophy courses offered, 118, 120, 122 faculty, 107, 112, 114 Ph.M. degrees held by students, 37, 74 Physical sciences, courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 Physical training courses offered, 118, 121, 123, 124, 125 faculty, 105, 107, 110, 112, 114 Physics courses offered, 117, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 faculty, 106, 112, 114 Physiography, courses offered, 119, 124, 125 Physiology courses offered, 118, 121, 123 faculty, 112, 114 Piatt county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 50 Pike county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 50 Political and social sciences, courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 Political science courses offered, 117, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 12S faculty, 112, 114 Pope county, students from, 33, 42, 50 Porto Rico degrees, 92, 96 students from, 46, 54 Preparatory students, enrollment 1890-1911, 27, 29, 31 Private schools Illinois, intrants from, 35, 58, 66 other states, intrants from, 36, 60, 68 Professions, see occupations Psychology courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 faculty, 112, 114 Public speaking, courses offered, 120, 122, 124, 125 Pulaski county, students from, 42, 50 Putnam county degrees, 95 students from, 42, 50 Railroading, see occupations Railway engineering courses offered, 121, 123 enrollment, 14, 16, 18 faculty, 112, 114 Randolph county degrees, 100 students from, 42, 50 Religious affiliations of students, 38, 85 Rhetoric, courses offered, 120, 122, 124, 125 Rhode Island, students from, 44, 52, 62 Richland county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 50 Rock Island degrees, 95, 100 students from, 33, 42, 50 Romance languages courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 faculty, 107, 112, 114 Russia, students from, 46, 54 St. Clair county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 33, 42, 50 Saline county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 50 Sangamon county degrees, 92, 95, 100 students from, 33, 42, SO 132 INDEX Scandinavian, courses offered, 120, 122 Schools from which intrants came, 34, 56, 63 Schuyler county degrees; 100 students from, 42, 50 Science, College of ages of students, 86 enrollment, 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 18, 19, 21 by courses, 8, 14, 16, 18 1890-1913, 26, 28, 30, 32 occupations of students' parents, 78 percentage of loss, 9 percentage of men and women, 9 Scientific professions, see occupations Scott county degrees, 100 students from, 42, 50 Secondary schools in foreign countries, intrants from, 36, 62, 70 Senior class, ages of students, 86 enrollment, 14, 16, 19 Sbattuck, Dr. Samuel W., 91 Shelby county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 50 Skilled laborers, see occupations Smith, I. M., 3 Social and political sciences, courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 Sociology courses offered, 118, 119, 120, 122, 124, 125 faculty, 112, 114 Sophomore class ages of students, 87 enrollment, 15, 17, 19 South Africa degrees, 92, 102 students from, 46, 54, 62, 70 South America, students from, 46, 54 South Carolina, students from, 44, 52 South Dakota degrees, 96, 102 students from, 44, 52, 60, 68, 69 Spanish, courses offered, 120, 122 (see also Romance languages) Special students ages, 87 enrollment, 15, 17, 19 Stark county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 50 States other than Illinois intrants from, 56, 59, 63, 66 students from, 34, 41, 44, 48, 52 State universities, graduates of, 36 Stephenson county degrees, 95, 100 students from, 42, 50 Students enrollment, 7-32 geographical distribution, 33, 34, 41, 48 Summary of enrollment by colleges, 11 Summer Session courses offered, 118, 119, 124, 125 enrollment, 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 20 1894-1913, 26, 28, 30 organization, 10 Sweden, students from, 54 Switzerland, students from, 54 Syria, students from, 46, 70 Tazewell county decrees. 92, 95, 100 ■tudentl from, 33, 42, 50 Tennessee degree*, 102 ■tudentl from, 44, 52, 61, <>*, (>'>