GENERAL INFORMATION 25

DORMITORIES FOR WOMEN

In Chadbourne Hall, accommodating 125 women, and Barnard Hall,
accommodating 150 women, each room is provided with dresser, rocker, cot,
bookshelves, rug, and study table, lamp, and chair. During the regular
school years, students are expected to provide towels, sheets, pillow cases,
blankets, and couch covers. During the summer session, sheets, pillow
cases, counterpanes, and two light-weight cotton blankets are furnished,
but towels are not.

Women living in the dormitories are under the immediate charge of
the hostesses of the halls and are subject to the rules of the Women’s Self-
Government Association of the University.

The rent for the school year of a single room in either Chadbourne or
Barnard Hall is $160; of a room accommodating two, $130 per person; of
two rooms en suite accommodating two, $160 per person. A few single
rooms on the fifth floor of Barnard Hall are rented for $180 per student.
Residents of Chadbourne and Barnard Halls are required to take their
meals in the hall in which they reside. In addition, there are accommoda-
tions in the dining rooms for a number of other women students. The
price of board has been fixed at $250 for the academic year, including the
time from the beginning of classes in September to the last day of exami-
nations in June, exclusive of Christmas and spring recesses.

DORMITORIES FOR MEN

Tripp and Adams Halls, modern fireproof buildings situated on the
lake shore, are each designed to house about 250 men. Each hall is a quad-
rangle divided into houses accommodating about thirty men; each house
is thus an independent unit with its own entrance, social rooms, toilet and
shower facilities. This arrangement of units enables the men to become
banded together in a congenial comradeship for social purposes and for
participation in intramural athletic tournaments. The rooms are furnished |
in a comfortable and sturdy masculine style with chiffonier, bed, study table, |
lamp, and chair, bookshelves, arm chair, rug, waste-basket, and curtains.
Bed linen, a bed cover, and two wool blankets are supplied and laundered by
the University, but students are expected to furnish towels and to provide
for their personal laundry.
Residents are subject to the regulations of the Men’s Dormitory Asso-
ciation, a self-governing body, and are expected to cheerfully comply with
the requirements and obligations of this association, including the payment
of the semester dues of $5. There are very definite regulations governing
quiet hours and conduct at social functions and in the dining halls. The
university rules applying to all organized groups are in effect and enforced
in the dormitories. A group leader known as the dormitory fellow: has«
immediate charge of the men in his unit; his office is to give counsel and °
help in building up a strong social organization, and to aid the men ‘in
profitably pursuing their college careers. 1
The rent of a single room for the academic year is $160; of a double’
room $130 per person; of three-window end rooms, $180; and of two-window
corner rooms, $170. There is only a very limited number of double rooms,
Residents of the men’s dormitories are required to take their meals in the
adjacent refectory, in which there are also accommodations for a number
of other men students. Board has been fixed at $260 for the academic
year, including the time from the beginning of classes in September to
the last day of examinations in June, exclusive of Christmas and spring

recesses.