1992-1993 Academic Catalog

Williams Hall Providing classrooms and offices, Williams Hall serves as the home of the academic departments of education and psychology as well as the location of the alumni, planned giving, public relations and student services offices. Named for the late Arthur Williams, popular faculty member and chairman of the Bible department, the second floor features laboratories and computers used in psychology experiments. College Center Providing dining facilities, classrooms, offices, and the computer center, the College Center serves as a focus of student activity on campus. Dining facilities include the cafeteria, a spacious area which serves 21 "all-you-can-eat" meals a week to the more than 1,600 students who live on campus, and the President's Dining Room, a small, formal dining room. This unique room, reputed to be one of the finest of its kind in the state and used extensively by the president, may also be reserved by students who wish to enjoy a formal dining occasion. Offices for the departments of academic records, admissions and financial aid are located on the first floor of this building. Business Administration Building Opened in the fall of 1987 and featuring the latest in instructional technology, the George Milner Business Administration Building contains general classrooms, the career planning and placement center, a microcomputer center, plus offices and classrooms for the department of business administration. Designed like a corporate center and fully computer-supported, this facility is designed to prepare Cedarville students for competent service in the world of business. College Profile 9 Collins Hall Collins Hall houses the counseling center and the academic departments of communication arts and social sciences and history. Renovated in 1987, this building bears the name of the Andrew Collins family, long-time supporters of the College. Science Center The Science Center demonstrates the College's firm commitment to providing top-quality Christian education in the sciences and features one of the largest reflecting telescopes in the state of Ohio. In addition to containing offices for science department faculty, this facility contains several general classrooms. The nineteen laboratories found in this building contain a vast array of scientific equipment utilized by science, mathematics and engineering students to develop their knowledge and skills. A nuclear magnetic resonator, atomic absorption spectrometer, liquid scintillation counter, and gas chromatographs complement the standard analytical equipment utilized by science students. Microcomputers and VAX minicomputer terminals also assist in the scientific study and instruction conducted by the department. A new science facility serving the engineering, nursing, and science departments was completed in 1992. This 68,000 square foot, 3-story academic center contains 12 classrooms, including a 200-seat auditorium; 10 independent study laboratories; 5 conference rooms; 17 discipline-specific laboratories; 40 offices; and several lounges. The building also contains a 34-station microcomputer laboratory and features video and data connectivity in all offices, classrooms, and laboratories. Special features include a 25-station cOmputer-aided design laboratory, an audio-visual learning laboratory, a simulated hospital ward, an engine test cell, and a greenhouse. Science Center

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