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Untitled - eCommons@Cornell - Cornell University

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PAYMENTS TO THE UNIVERSITY<br />

TUITION<br />

The <strong>University</strong> charges tuition fees. The rates in 1924-25 were as follows:<br />

For the regular year:<br />

In the College of Arts and Sciences, three hundred dollars;<br />

In the College of Law, two hundred dollars;<br />

In the College of Architecture, three hundred dollars;<br />

In the Veterinary College, two hundred dollars;<br />

In the College of Agriculture, two hundred dollars;<br />

In the College of Engineering, three hundred dollars;<br />

In the College of Home Economics, two hundred dollars;<br />

In the Medical College, three hundred dollars;<br />

In the Graduate School, seventy-five dollars;<br />

For the Summer Session, fifty dollars;<br />

For the Summer School in Agriculture, fifty dollars;<br />

For the Winter Courses in Agriculture, twenty-five dollars.<br />

Tuition and other fees become due when the student registers. The <strong>University</strong><br />

allows twenty days of grace after the last registration day of each term of the<br />

regular session, and five days of grace after the first registration day of the Winter<br />

Courses and the Summer Session. The last day of grace is generally printed on<br />

the registration coupon which the student is required to present at the Treasurer's<br />

office. Any student who fails to pay his tuition charges, other fees, and other in<br />

debtedness to the <strong>University</strong>, or who, if entitled to free tuition, fails to claim it<br />

at the Treasurer's office and to pay his fees and other indebtedness, within the<br />

prescribed period of grace, is thereby dropped from the <strong>University</strong> unless the<br />

Treasurer has granted him an extension of time to complete payment. The<br />

Treasurer is permitted to grant such an extension when, in his judgment, the<br />

circumstances of a particular case warrant his doing so. For any such extension<br />

the student is assessed a fee of $5 for the first week and $2 additional for each<br />

subsequent week in which the whole or any part of the debt remains unpaid,<br />

but the assessment in any case is not more than $15. The assessment may be<br />

waived in any instance for reasons satisfactory to the Comptroller and the Regis<br />

trar,<br />

when such reasons are set forth in a written statement.<br />

If a student withdraw from any of the colleges of the <strong>University</strong> at Ithaca,<br />

the Treasurer may refund a part of the tuition fee or cancel a part of the obligation<br />

that the student has incurred for tuition, provided the reason for the withdrawal<br />

be stated in writing and be satisfactory to the Comptroller and the Registrar.<br />

In such any case, the amount that the student owes the <strong>University</strong> for tuition is<br />

computed in the appropriate one of the following ways: For any of the short<br />

summer courses, twenty-five per cent of the term's tuition for each week or<br />

fraction of a week between the first registration day and the date of his certificate<br />

of withdrawal as issued by his college; for the regular first or second term of the<br />

<strong>University</strong> at Ithaca, or for the winter course of the College of Agriculture, ten<br />

per cent of the term's tuition for each week or fraction of a week between the first<br />

registration day and the date of his certificate of withdrawal as issued by his<br />

college. In the Medical College in New York City there is no provision for re<br />

funding or rebating the fees on account of a student's withdrawal.<br />

Any tuition or other fee may be changed by the Board of Trustees to take<br />

effect at any time without previous notice.<br />

CERTAIN CLASSES OF STUDENTS ENTITLED TO FREE TUITION<br />

Tuition is free to the students who hold the State Scholarships in <strong>Cornell</strong><br />

<strong>University</strong> provided for by Section 1037 of the New York State Education Law<br />

of 1910.<br />

Students pursuing full, special, or short courses in the New York State Veter<br />

or the New York<br />

inary College, the New York State College of Agriculture,<br />

State College of Home Economics (except the course in Hotel Administration),<br />

108

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