1927-1928 Academic Catalog

OLLEGIATE DEPARTMENT but not by the third. Upon election to this society the student is pr€– sented wtih a gold pin in the design of a crown similar to that in the s al of the College, and bearing the letters C. C. C. C. The following are members of C. C. C. C.- Elected in 1921, Alice McKibben, Josephine Randall, Thelma D aeon and Lucile Johnson. Elected in 1922, Marion Stormont and Helen Bradfute. Elected in 1923, Earle Collins, Alice Lackey, Marjorie McClel– lan, E. D. McKune, Florence Smith, Ernest Wright, Lucinda Caskey, Hazel Williams, Lulu Murphy, Forrest Nagley, Dorothy Tarr and June Thompson. Elected in 1924, Ruth McPherson, Martha Dean, Dorothy Wilson. Elected in 1925, Sybil Robson, Mae McKay, Mary Webster, Har– riet Shields. Elected in 1926, Helen Iliffe, Eleanor Johnson, Elizabeth Outram, Marvin Williams. Commencement Honors A student who wins eighty per cent. of the maximum number of merit points obtainable in his curriculum will be graduated cum laude, "with praise"; one who wins nin ety per cent of the maximum number obtainable in his curriculum, will be graduated magna cum laude, "with great praise"; and one who wins the maximum number obtainable in his course, will be graduated summa cum laude, "with the highest praise." The maximum number of merit points obtain– able in any curriculum is three times the number of credits or semester-hours required for graduation in that curriculum. Rhodes Scholarship Men who have completed their Sophomore year at Cedarville College are eligible to compete for the Cecil Rhodes Scholarships, tenable for three years at Oxford University, England, with a stipend of $1,500 each year. These scholarships are awarded on the combined basis of character, scholarship, athletics, and leadership in extra-curriculum activities. Further information may be obtained from any member of the Rhodes Scholarship Committee of Selec– tion of Ohio: Chairman, W. 0. Thompson, President Emeritus, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio; Cary R. Alburn, Esq. Atty., Gar– field Bank Building, Cleveland, Ohio; Professor 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 fifty dollars per semester, payable on the opening day. This includes a. tui– tion fee of thirty-five dollars, a contingent fee of ten dollars and an athletic fee of five dollars per semester. The athletic fee sec'ures the right to a ticket of admission to all athletic contests conducted by the colle&'e· The. laboratory fees in elementary chemistry, biology and physics are six dollars per semester. In advanced courses the labor~tory fee is ten dollars per semester. The breakage deposit in chemistry is five dollars per semester. After breakage has been dedu cted, the remainder is returned. The graduation and diploma fee, payable witih tuition fee at t he beginning of the second semester of the last year of the course, PAGE TWENTY-TWO

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