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The Alpha Phi Quarterly (Volume 21)

The Alpha Phi Quarterly (Volume 21)

Paperback

General Education

Currently unavailable to order

ISBN10: 1153875365
ISBN13: 9781153875363
Publisher: General Books
Pages: 214
Weight: 0.70
Height: 0.48 Width: 9.01 Depth: 5.98
Language: English
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1908. Excerpt: ... GENERAL COLLEGE NOTES President Roosevelt has presented Bowdoin chapter of Alpha Delta Phi a large framed portrait of himself. Upon the portrait are the words: Yours in Alpha Delta Phi, Theodore Roosevelt, June, 1908, Harvard, '80. The legislature of Ohio has passed a law abolishing high school fraternities.--Crescent. Bryn Mawr has established a scholarship for the girl who has shown throughout her four years in college in the highest degree the qualities of joyousness, high courage, fortitude and faithfulness, in memory of May Helen Ritchie, for many years secretary of the college.--Anchora of Delta Gamma. Iowa State University has an enrollment of seven hundred and forty-five women, and four sororities. In an address before the Association of Collegiate Alumnae, at Boston, President Van Hise (Wisconsin University) presents the following interesting facts: In seven out of thirteen state universities the women outnumber the men in the college of liberal arts, and in three institutions, they are nearly twice as numerous as the men. In thirteen state universities the women constitute 52.07 per cent, of the students in the college of liberal arts. The total number of women attending all educational colleges and technical schools in the United States in 1904, according to the report of the United States commissioner of education, was 45,692, whereas the total number of women in women's colleges was only 27,233. It is therefore clear that if opportunities for higher education are to be open to women, co-education must be maintained, or, if abandoned, povision must be made for a large number of first-class women's colleges. He further states that under existing conditions a large number of men fail to take certain courses they had planned for owing to the ...

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