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Show 18 WEBER ACADEMY Lecture Course. The lecture course of the Academy is now far beyond the experimental stage, having passed through its tenth successful year. From a very modest beginning it has grown to be the foremost lecture course of the west. Students' Expenses. Tuition is free. An entrance fee of $10, payable in advance, is charged all students. Laboratory fees: Chemistry $2.00 Physiology $2.00 Physics 2.00 Domestic Science 2.00 Botany 2.00 Domestic Arts 2.00 Zoology 2.00 Manual Training 4.00 Students pursuing the commercial courses will be charged ten dollars extra. Students not registered for the commercial course may take typewriting on the payment of an extra fee of five dollars. After a student has once registered he will be held responsible for the payment of all fees, even though he change his course or discontinue. Mid-year students will be charged one-half the entrance fee. A fee of three dollars will be charged for the diploma issued by the Academy for the completion of any of the four-year courses. A fee of one dollar will be charged for the certificate issued for the completion of a two-year course. WEBER ACADEMY 19 These fees in all cases are payable in advance. All the students of the Academy are held responsible for any injury done by them to its property. Board and lodging can be obtained at from three to five dollars per week. By students' renting rooms and boarding themselves, these expenses may be reduced. On application to the secretary, students may obtain permits to purchase student tickets at half price on the Rapid Transit car lines for use in passing to and from school. Admission. The Academy is open to students of both sexes and all nationalities and religious denominations. Candidates for admission must be of good moral character, must furnish evidence of honorable dismissal from the school they last attended, and must signify their intention to keep themselves in harmony with the spirit and teachings of the institution. The use of profanity, tobacco or intoxicating liquor, the attendance at pool rooms or public dance halls, or the excessive indulgence in any similar form of amusement is not in keeping with the spirit of the institution and may bar a student from entrance or cause his dismissal. Students are admitted at any time, but it is to their advantage to enter at the beginning of the academic year. The entrance requirements may be satisfied by the presentation of certificates or by examination, as follows: |