Word: students
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...addition to a variety of courses in the subjects mentioned above, the resources of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences may be drawn upon for advanced instruction in such fields as geography, mathematics, or engineering, whenever these subjects are shown to have an important bearing on the student's ultimate line of business. Courses in French, German, and Spanish Correspondence will be offered with the special object of enabling graduates of the School to read and write letters in these languages and to understand the accepted forms of business correspondence. Students who pass in the first year's work...
...most important features of the School will be the practical work required of each student in the summer. The object of this work will be two-fold, first, to teach the students from practical experience and observation the elements of business that cannot be taught in the class-room, and secondly, to bring them in contact with the men with whom their life work is to be done. Incidentally the summer work will be useful in accustoming every student to the rough work and routine through which, if at all, his university training may enable him to rise. The School...
...Stillman Infirmary will open tomorrow morning, and will be conducted on the same plan as last year. In return for an annual payment of four dollars, which is charged on the term-bills of students, any student is admitted to the Infirmary on the order of a physician, and is given, without further charge, a bed in a ward, board, and ordinary nursing, for a period not exceeding two weeks during the academic year. A charge of two dollars will be made for each day the patient remains in the Infirmary after the allotted time of two weeks...
...student who is doing less than full work is required to present at the Bursar's Office, at the beginning of the academic year, a certificate from the Dean stating the course he is taking; and he is not permitted to attend courses not included in the certificate. The fee for a half-course alone is thirty dollars; for a whole course, forty-five dollars; for two half-courses, fifty dollars; for a whole course and a half-course, seventy dollars; and for three half-courses seventy-five dollars...
...student whose dues to the University remain unpaid on the day fixed for their payment is excluded from all privileges as a student, until his financial relations with the University have been arranged satisfactorily to the Bursar; and if he neither pays his dues nor makes arrangement with the Bursar for their postponement within three days after the day fixed for their payment, he is required to pay a fee of ten dollars before resuming his standing in the University...