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Music Department

Students who are candidates for a degree in the music depart-
ment pay the matriculation fee of......
Students in the music department taking studies in other
departments of the University pay the "incidental" fee
each semester....

They also, if not matriculated, pay, each semester, the tuition
fee of

$10 00

12 00

7 50

Students not enrolled in other departments, and so not paying the "incidental" fee, pay special music fees as follows:

Piano, organ, or voice, two lessons a week, each semester.. $32 50 Same, one lesson a week....

19 50

Violin or other stringed instrument, two lessons a week, each

semester

.....

26 50

Same, one lesson a week.....

14 50

These students may enter classes in Physical Training (see p. 294 on paying, each semester...

5.00

Students regularly enrolled and paying the "incidental" fee in other departments pay music fees as follows:

Piano, organ, or voice, two lessons a week, each semester.. $25 00
Same, one lesson a week....

Violin or other stringed instrument, two lessons a week..
Same, one lesson a week...

All students in harmony, counterpoint, fugue, etc., in classes
not to exceed four, pay, each semester.

15.00

19 00

10 50

9.00

No deduction is made on account of absence in any course, except in case of protracted illness.

Students can rent pianos for practice by applying to the head of the music department.

After September, 1901, matriculated students, residents of Illinois, will not be required to pay extra fees for instruction in music.

College of Law

Students of the College of Law, upon satisfying the require

ments for admission, pay the matriculation fee of...... $10 00 Tuition fee, each semester....

25 00

Students conditioned on entrance requirements pay, each

semester, an additional fee of......

7 50

College of Medicine

Matriculation fee, paid each year...

General ticket, each term...

Laboratory deposit (for material and breakages, balance returned)

Maternity hospital fee, payable once during senior year.

Tuition fee, each year......

School of Pharmacy

Laboratory deposit, each year.

Preparatory School

$ 5 00

55 00

IO 00 IO 00

$75 00

5 00

All pupils in the Preparatory School pay, each semester, an

"incidental" fee of...

Also a tuition fee of.......

12 00

7 50

ALL BILLS due the University must be paid within ten days after the student enters classes.

NECESSARY EXPENSES

The following are, for students attending at Urbana, estimated average annual expenses, exclusive of books, clothing, railroad fare, laboratory fees, if any, and small miscellaneous needs:

*Semester fees

Room rent for each student. (two in room)..
Table board in boarding houses and clubs.
Fuel and Light

Washing

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Total

$159 00 to $233 00

Board and room in private houses, per week........

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CAUTION TO PARENTS-STUDENTS' FUNDS

The Business Manager will receive on deposit any funds. parents may entrust to him to meet the expenses of their sons and daughters. No greater error can be committed than to send young people from home with large amounts of spending money, and without the authoritative care of some prudent friend. Half the dissipation in colleges springs from excessive allowances of money.

*Students of law and music, and pupils of the Preparatory School, must make needed changes in the amount given for "Semester fees.'

PREPARATORY SCHOOL

INSTRUCTORS

EDWARD G. HOWE, B.S., Principal, Natural Science.
LILLIE ADELLE CLENDENIN, English.

CLARENCE W. ALVORD, A.B., History.
JAMES W. BUCHANAN, Geometry and Physics.
JOHN E. MILLER, A.B., Greek and Latin.

LEWIS A. ROBINSON, A.B., Algebra.

This school is for young men and women whose home schools do meet the entrance requirements of the University; or who, on account of advanced age or prolonged absence from school, are out of touch with the high school.. It prepares its pupils for admission to the freshman class of the University. (See p. 42.)

ADMISSION

Candidates for admission must be at least fifteen years of age. Those. of age may enter such classes as they are prepared for without examination. All under twenty-one years of age, except those coming from accredited schools (see p. 42), must pass a satisfactory examination in the following subjects:

I. ARITHMETIC.-A thorough knowledge is required of fundamental operations, simple and denominate numbers, the metric system of weights and measures, common and decimal fractions, practical measurements, percentage, ratio and proportion.

2. ENGLISH.-The examination is intended to test the student's vocabulary, and his knowledge of grammar.

3. GEOGRAPHY.-An accurate knowledge of physical configuration, political divisions, and important centers of population, is required.

4. HISTORY.-As a foundation in this subject, a knowledge of the early settlement of North America, and of the growth and development of the United States, is required. A knowledge of the nature and operation of the forces active in American life is desired, rather than the memorization of isolated dates and names.

ENTRANCE should be made at the opening of a semester, but applicants will be admitted at other times on presenting proofs that they are prepared to pursue the selected subjects. Examinations will be held in the rooms of the school, September 11 to 14, 1901, and January 31 and February 1, 1902. Examinations on these dates are free, but for special examinations at other times a fee of $3.00 may be charged.

EXAMINATIONS FOR ENTRANCE may be conducted in Illinois by county superintendents of schools in the same manner as for teachers' certificates, and their favorable reports will be accepted. First or second grade teachers' certificates from superintendents of Illinois will be taken for the same purpose.

ADMISSION FROM ACCREDITED SCHOOLS. On the written recommendation of their principals, students from the accredited schools of the University may be admitted without entrance examinations and credit will be allowed for all equivalent work already done. Blanks for such recommendations will be sent on application.

REGULATIONS

Reports regarding all students are sent at the close of each semester.

The calendar of the Preparatory School is the same as that of the University.

For information about fees and expenses, see page 296. For special information with regard to the Preparatory School, address Principal of Preparatory School, Urbana, Illinois.

LIST OF STUDENTS

TECHNOLOGICAL, SCIENTIFIC, AGRICULTURAL, AND

LITERARY DEPARTMENTS

GRADUATE SCHOOL

Alvord, Clarence Walworth, A.B., (Williams Coll.), 1891, Urbana, History.

*Barclay, Thomas, B.S., 1891, Aurora, Smelting and Refining Processes of the United States; Geology of Ore Deposits. Bigelow, Mary Constance, A.B., 1899, Champaign, Mathematics. Black, Alice Mary, Champaign, Latin.

*Brown, Walter Burroughs, B.S., 1897, Buffalo, N. Y., Chemistry. Busey, Frank Lyman, M.E., 1898, Urbana, Mechanical Engineering. *Clarke, Edwin Besançon, B.S., 1891, Chicago, Architecture. *Clifford, Charles Luther, B.S., 1899, Serena, Electrical Engineering. *Clinton, George Perkins, M.S., 1894, Urbana, Botany.

Coar, Henry Livingston, A.M., (Harvard Univ.), 1894, Urbana, Mathematics.

Craig, Wallace, B.S., 1898, Chicago, Zoology.

Dewey, James Ansel, M.S., 1898, Urbana, Botany and Bacteriology, *Dillon, William Wagner, A.B., 1898, Sheldon, History.

*DuBois, Alexander Dawes, B.S., 1899, Springfield, Electrical Engineering.

Eckles, Harry Edward, B.S., 1898, New Castle, Pa., Civil Engineering.

Fay, John Carl, A.B., (Berea Coll.), 1899, Champaign, Mathematics and Chemistry.

*Fischer, Louis Engelmann, B.S., 1898, Mascoutah, Municipal and Sanitary Engineering.

Fraser, Wilber John, B.S., 1893, Champaign, Agriculture.
Frazey, Alice Belle, A.B., 1898, Urbana, English.

Gagnier, Edward Duscharm, B.S., (Mich. Agrl. Coll.), 1899, Champaign, Mechanical Engineering.

*Gerber, Winfred Dean, B.S., 1899, Rockford, Municipal and Sanitary Engineering.

Gordon, Joseph Hinckley, Vandalia, Economics.

*Grimes, George Lyman, B.S., 1897, Ann Arbor, Mich., Mechanical Engineering.

Hall, Elizabeth T., A.B., 1900, Urbana, Latin.

*Herwig, John Newton, B.S., 1899. Mason City, Mechanical Engineering.

* In absentia, see p. 280.

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