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...English universities is strikingly illustrated by a set of figures given in the Cambridge Review, relating to Cambridge University. This article states that only 665 students are at present enrolled in the university, as compared with 1,227 at this time last year, and a normal enrollment of about 3,000. The article states further that 1,723 Cambridge men had been put out of action up to January 18. Of these 697 had been killed, 892 wounded, and 134 missing. Among these were many of the most famous of the Cambridge athletes. The total number of Cambridge...
...Since Syria has been isolated by the war the activity of the college has been greatly interfered with, but in spite of unfavorable conditions the enrolment this fall was over 250, and work will undoubtedly be continued, in some degree at least, till normal times return...
...considerable number of distinguished Latin Americans who would be instructing in France and Germany, were it not for the war. If we should begin our reciprocal visits now, a larger number of the southern continent's distinguished educators would come to the United States than when conditions abroad were normal...
...Tuskegee Jubilee Singers, a quintet of minstrels from Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, will give a performance in the Living Room of the Union this evening at 8 o'clock. The program, to be rendered, includes old-fashioned plantation melodies, folk songs and dialect readings. The men, who have traveled over the entire country, singing in the interest of their school, are skilled performers and have been accorded enthusiastic receptions every where they have been. The entertainment tonight will be of especial interest to an American audience...
...under the fear that Radcliffe wished peace-at-any-price are sweetly reassured in an article by "Radcliffe '17," called "What Radcliffe Thinks of Preparedness." Radcliffe wants peace, but--being modernly feminine--is concerned more with study preparation for war than with aiding the Red Cross or advancing the normal social work of women in peace. At least, they tend to refute a fear expressed in the New York Times yesterday that equal suffrage means war in which we will not have a ghost of a chance to succeed. Finally, there appears an article on "Celestial Photography at the Harvard...