1924-1925 Academic Catalog

COLLEGIATE DEPARTMENT combined basis of .cqaracter, scholarsh~p, athlet.ics, and leadershi.P in extra-curriculum activities. Further mformation may be obtamed from any member ?f the Rhod~s Scholarship Committee o! Selec– tion of Ohio: Chairman, President W. 0. Thompson, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio; Cary R.. Alburn, Esq., Attorney, G~r– field Bank Building, Cleveland, Ohio; P~ofessor B. E. Schmitt, Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio; Professor H. B. Eng– lish Antioch College Yellow Springs, Ohio; Secretary, Professor Leigh Alexander, 111' S. Cedar Ave., Oberlin, Ohio. RATES AND TUITION The fee for instruction in the collegiate department is thirty dollars per semester, payable on the opening day. This includes a tuition fee of fifteen dollars, a contingent fee of ten dollars, and an athletic fee of five dollars per semester. The athletic fee secures the right to a ticket of admission to all athletic contests conducted by the college. The laboratory fees in elementary chemistry, biology and physics are six dollars per semester. In advanced courses the laboratory fee is ten dollars per semester. The breakage deposit in chemistry is five dollars per semester. After breakage has been deducted, the remainder is returned. The graduation and diploma fee, payable witJh tuition fee at the beginning of the second semester of the last year of the course, is five dollars to those taking the degree of Bachelor of Arts, or Bachelor of Science. No rebate of laboratory, contingent or athletic fees will be granted. In case a student is compelled by sickness or other unavoidable circumstances to leave the College before the middle of the semester, a rebate of one-half of the tuition fee will be granted. Otherwise no rebate will be granted. EXPENSES Expenses at Cedarville are probably as low as can be found anywhere in the United States, and are much lower than in many places. Expenses for clothing, laundry and sundries vary greatly with the individual, who can, therefore, better estimate them for himself. College fees, boarding, room rent, and cost of text-books vary with the locality. Consequently, the following estimates are based upon these items. In the years in which science courses are taken, from ten to twenty dollars must be added for laboratory fees, and from three to ten dollars for breakage in courses in chemistry. SUMMARY OF EXPENS.ES FOR A YEAR (Estimated) i~~ti~ ~ontingent and Athletic Fees .................................... $ 0 S ...: ............................................................................... . Room. Rent, mcluding light and heat, $2.00 per week Boarding, $4.25 per week ........................................................ .. 60.00 15.00 72.00 153.00 Total .............................................................................. $300.00 OPPORTUNITIES FOR SELF-HELP t trr~nfements ~ave been ma-de by which a limited number of s u en . rom a distance, properly recommended ma be iven work sufficient to defray at least a part of their expense:. scifolar- P AGE TWENTY-FOUR

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