12 CEDARVILLE COLLEGE school year, and of the day-to-day activities that seem unimportant but are so pleasant to remember. Chess Club. Newly organized at Cedarville College last year was the Cedarville College Chess Club. Instructed by the experienced players, num– erous beginners become adept at this ancient and international past time. ATHLETICS THE COLLEGE includes health, physical efficiency and recreational activities among the several objectives of higher education. It has therefore made pro– visions for physical education and athletic activities. Physical Education is required of all students during their freshman and sophomore years, unless a student is specifically excused by the faculty or on recommendation of a physician. Activities in these classes are con– fined to calisthenics, group games, relays and related work. Ample facilities have been provided for athletics, including all the in– door and outdoor sports for both men and women. Alford Memorial Gym– nasium houses the indoor sports. The College Field contains a regular gridiron around which a ~ mile track is proposed. An excellent baseball diamond provides ample playing area for this popular spring sport. Ad– jacent to the Gym is the women's athletic field and the community roque court, one of the finest of its kind. Cedarville College maintains intercollegiate athletics competition in football, basketball, baseball, track and tennis. Intramural programs are car– ried on in these activities and in volleyball, ping-pong, tennis, and roque. Cedarville College is a member of the Mid-Ohio Intercollegiate Athletic Conference and the National Association of Intercollegiate Basketball. Ath– letic relations are carried on with the leading colleges in Ohio, Kentucky, Michigan and Indiana. REGULATIONS Supervision of Women. As far as space permits, all women students rooming in Cedarville during the school year are expected to live in Harri– man Hall. If accommodations are not available for all at Harriman Hall, the Dean of Women will assist women students to find rooms in carefully approved private homes. The Housemothers, both in the Dormitory and in private homes where women students may be rooming, cooperate with the Dean of Women in seeing that rules are observed. In the Dormitory, a house-president and a student-government committee assist the Dean and the Housemother. Women students are expected to be in by nine-thirty o'clock P. M. except on Friday, Saturday and Sunday night when they must
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