Charges and Payments
Tuition, room, and board charges for all students residing at the College are included in
one comprehensive fee. Upon reasonable notice, these charges are subject to
adjustment in accordance with the changing costs of operation. The comprehensive fee
does not include textbooks, supplies, or such personal items as clothing, travel,
amusement, and vacation expenses.
Annual Charge for 1998-1999
Comprehensive Fee $30,070
Calendar of Payments
Upon Acceptance (new students)
$300
March 15 Registration Deposit (returning students)
$250
August 1 Comprehensive Fee, First Billing
$15,035
December 1 Comprehensive Fee, Second Billing
15,035
New students' acceptance of the College's offer of admission is effective upon payment
of the registration deposit of $300. Upon matriculation for the 1998-99 academic year,
$250 of this deposit is credited toward the first bill; the balance of $50 is retained until the
termination of a student's enrollment at the College. The registration deposit of $300 for
students entering in fall 1999 will be held until graduation or withdrawal from the College.
Returning students for the 1998-99 academic year are charged a $250 registration
deposit. The deposit is credited toward the fall 1998 billing. The $250 registration deposit
in March 1999 will be the last registration deposit charged to returning students. The
deposit will be held until graduation or withdrawal from the College.
Campus residence is required of all students not living with their families, except when
special permission to reside elsewhere is granted by the Office of the Dean of Students
or when a student is required by the College to vacate College residences. Students who
do not live on campus may receive a refund, and should consult with the Financial Office
regarding it. All dormitory rooms are equipped with standard furniture; bed linens and
blankets are not provided. The College operates one central dining facility, the Memorial
Commons.
The College requires that all students be covered by adequate insurance in case of
serious emergencies. A $1,000 group accident and sickness insurance policy for the
academic year, including interim vacations, is included in the comprehensive fee cited
above. Detailed information is available at the Health Center (see p. 36).
Students who leave Bates during the course of a semester are required to apply in writing
and complete a leave of absence form or a withdrawal form through the Office of the
Dean of Students. Refunds are issued by request to the Financial Office after a leave or
withdrawal has been granted. Students withdrawing on or before the fiftieth day of a full
semester receive a prorated refund of the annual charge, less residence-hall allocation,
as follows: on or before the first day of classes, 100 percent (less $100); 2-10 days, 90
percent; 11-20 days, 75 percent; 21-30 days, 50 percent; 31-50 days, 25 percent; no
refund after 50 days. In accordance with federal regulations, the first day of the leave or
withdrawal is the date indicated by the student on the leave of absence or withdrawal
form. If no date is stipulated by the student, the first day of the leave or withdrawal is
defined as the last day the student attended any class.
Refunds for students receiving federal aid are allocated first to the federal aid programs
in the following order: Federal Stafford Loan, Federal PLUS Loan, Federal Perkins Loan,
Federal Pell Grant, Federal Supplemental Grants (FSEOG), and other Title IV programs;
any remaining refund balance is distributed to institutional and other aid programs and
then to the family. Repayment of federal aid is computed through a formula contained in
the regulations of the Title IV aid programs.
All student charges must be paid or satisfactory arrangements made with the College
Financial Office before the opening of classes each semester.
Other Charges When Applicable
Off-Campus Study Registration Fee, fall or winter semester
$450
Off-Campus Study Registration Fee, full year
$600
Books, supplies (average annual cost)
$690
Key deposit (refundable upon surrender of keys)
$20
Special students (nondegree candidates)
$800 per course
Auditing (nonmatriculating students)
$100 per course
A few courses require extra fees to cover such items as applied music instructional costs,
studio materials, or laboratory supplies. Courses with extra fees are indicated in
individual course descriptions in the Catalog; the specific amount of the fee, if available,
is also indicated in the course description.
Some Short Term units involve extensive travel off campus, either elsewhere in the
United States or abroad. Additional charges are assessed for these Short Term units, to
cover partially the special cost of transportation, additional facilities, and different
accommodations required by such programs. Extra fees vary with the cost of operating
particular programs. The extra fees charged for off-campus Short Term units are
specified in the Short Term "Schedule of Units," available at the end of the fall semester.
Financial aid is available to qualified students to cover off-campus Short Term unit costs.
Financial Aid
Bates students help in many ways to meet their college costs. Assistance may come from
numerous scholarships, from opportunities for part-time employment, or from student
loans. Frequently the aid that a student receives is in the form of a combination of these
grant and self-help opportunities. In recent years Bates students have received more
than $13.5 million of financial aid annually in the form of scholarships and loans from the
College and from outside sources.
Conditions of Aid. The following conditions pertain to all students applying for
and receiving financial aid.
- Financial aid is granted on the basis of financial need and satisfactory
academic progress by a student toward the bachelor's degree.
- To be considered for financial aid, a student must submit the following forms
each year: the College Scholarship Service (CSS) Financial Aid PROFILE; the Free
Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA); and the Federal Income Tax Returns
of the parents and student.
- To receive aid after the first year, a student must demonstrate satisfactory
campus citizenship, show a continuance of financial need, and meet established
standards of satisfactory progress toward the degree as set forth in the College's
satisfactory academic progress policy.
- Dismissal or suspension for a semester or longer will automatically revoke the
assignment of financial aid.
- Scholarships and loans will be credited in equal amounts to the bills payable
at the beginning of each semester.
- The College reserves the right to adjust its grant-in-aid to a student who
receives additional scholarship assistance from an outside source.
- Students who qualify for scholarship aid during an academic year may apply
for an additional grant if enrollment in a College off-campus course or program
requires an expenditure above the comprehensive fee. Such further aid is granted
to the extent that scholarship funds are available.
- Scholarships are not regarded as loans, but if the recipient should later return
to the College the sum given, the money would be added to the scholarship funds
and be made available to other deserving students.
- Financial aid will not be continued beyond eight semesters unless truly
exceptional circumstances beyond the control of the student develop.
Scholarships
Many individual benefactors of the College have given funds, the income from
which is used for scholarship aid. Other scholarships come from foundations and
from the operating funds of the College. More than 48 percent of Bates students
receive assistance from these sources in varying amounts, depending on need.
Once grant eligibility is determined by the Financial Aid Office, students are
automatically considered for all special College grants or scholarships for which
they may be eligible. Some of these scholarships include, but are not limited to,
the following:
Lillian and Wallace W. Fairbanks '24 Scholarship. The College's largest scholarship
endowment at $3 million, the Fairbanks Fund continues Mr. and Mrs. Fairbanks's
tradition of generosity to needy Bates students. Wallace Fairbanks, a Lewiston
native, was associated with the Massachusetts retail firm of Cherry and Webb from
his graduation until retirement in 1964; the Fairbankses lived in Fall River,
Massachusetts, for sixty years. Grants are made each year for general scholarship
assistance, as directed by the President and Trustees of the College.
Joan Holmes and Ralph T. Perry Scholarship. These are scholarships for women
and men from the state of Maine who have substantial financial need, with
preference given to students who have exhibited perseverance in achieving
academic, extracurricular, or personal goals. The scholarships were given in 1992
by Joan Holmes Perry and Ralph T. Perry, members of the Class of 1951.
Benjamin E. Mays Scholarship. Dr. Mays, Class of 1920, was president of
Morehouse College, where he served more than twenty years. Mays Scholars are
appointed on the basis of scholarship, leadership, and character and hold the
honor for four years.
The Charles Irwin Travelli Fund and Alice S. Ayling Foundation Scholarship.
Annual awards, in varying but substantial amounts, are made by the Travelli Fund
and Ayling Foundation to a group of carefully selected students with extreme
financial need who demonstrate those qualities upon which sound and enduring
American citizenship is built. Students selected are those whose records show
high character and recognized leadership in some organized campus activity that
contributes significantly to the interests of the College as a whole. Students
selected must prove by their grades and class standing their determination to
secure a good education.
The College Key Scholarship. The College Key, the honorary alumni organization,
awards four annual scholarships to qualified undergraduates. Recipients of the
College Key Scholarships are chosen on the basis of character, contribution to
College life, and future promise, as well as financial need.
The Mabel Eaton Scholarship. Endowed by the College Key, in memory of Mabel
Eaton, Class of 1910, College Librarian. The Mabel Eaton Scholarship is given to a
student who has worked in the library.
The Geoffrey Suess Law Traveling Scholarship. This scholarship is awarded
annually on a competitive basis to the student or students most deserving support
for study abroad. Preference is given to underclass students and to prospective
participants in Short Term units offered abroad, and it is supported by a fund
initiated by Mr. and Mrs. George S. Law and the Reverend Gretchen Law-Imperiale
in honor of Geoffrey S. Law, for nine years a professor in the Department of
History.
Other Scholarships. A separate publication of the College cites the almost four
hundred endowed scholarships awarded annually.
Financial-aid grants are often secured from churches, service clubs, fraternal
organizations, women's clubs, and special local and regional foundations.
Students in need of assistance should explore all of these sources in their local
communities or regions.
Loans
Students in colleges throughout the country are investing in their own futures by
borrowing money when necessary to meet college costs.
Two widely used funds are the Federal Perkins Loan and the Federal Stafford Loan
programs. Interested students may secure information about these programs from
secondary-school guidance offices, or from the Bates Financial Aid Office.
Students should also look into the higher-education and assistance programs of
the states in which they reside. Information about these possibilities may be
secured from secondary-school guidance offices or from the Bates Financial Aid
Office.
The College maintains a fund for emergency needs. Such loans must be paid
promptly in accordance with the terms of the notes and therefore should be viewed
only as temporary relief.
Student Employment
The Student Employment Office assists students in finding jobs on campus, off
campus, and in community work-study positions, both during the academic year
and during the summer. Preference is given to students with campus employment
listed as a component of their financial-aid award. Positions range from
lifeguarding at the campus pool to caring for the plants in the biology department
greenhouse and giving presentations in local schools in conjunction with the local
sexual assault crisis center. Jobs offer students the opportunity to earn money
toward tuition or expenses while enjoying an enriching experience and developing
meaningful relationships with coworkers and supervisors. The Student
Employment Office is located at 215 College Street.
Student Research and Service-Learning Grant
Programs
Bates Summer Research Apprenticeships. This program provides stipends and
room-and-board support for students in all disciplines who work directly with
Bates faculty members on intensive research projects during the summer.
Hoffman-Mellon Fund for Student Research. This endowment, established by the
Maximilian E. and Marion O. Hoffman Foundation, with additional support from a
grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, provides room-and-board support
for students in all disciplines conducting individual summer research projects or
assisting a faculty member with his or her research.
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Grants. Major grants to the College from the
Howard Hughes Medical Institute provide funding for a variety of student research
programs in the sciences and mathematics, including Hughes Student Faculty
Research Grants, Hughes Individual Student Research Grants, the Hughes Dental
Scholars Program, Hughes Student Travel Grants, and support for student
research in science during the academic year.
Marshall Undergraduate Scholarship. Established by the George C. Marshall
Foundation, the Marshall Undergraduate Scholarship enables a Bates student to
conduct research in twentieth-century diplomatic or military history, foreign policy,
or international economics at the Marshall Library in Lexington, Virginia.
Merck Fellowships in Biology and Chemistry. Supported by a grant from the Merck
Company Foundation, the Merck Fellowship Program enables three students of
biological chemistry, biology, or chemistry to conduct summer research under the
direction of a Bates faculty member. The fellows also organize a biochemistry
lecture series during the year following their research.
Natt Family Fund in Biology. Established by Robert L. Natt and Helen Natt in honor
of their daughter Beth C. Natt '98, the Natt Family Fund supports student research
in the Department of Biology by providing funds for equipment and supplies, off-
campus travel, and living expenses for student researchers.
Philip J. Otis Fellowships. The Otis Fellowships provide support for several
students each year to conduct substantial off-campus projects (usually during the
Short Term or the summer) that explore an environmental or eco-spiritual topic.
The fellowships are supported by an endowment established by Margaret V. B. and
C. Angus Wurtle in the memory of their son, Philip '95, who died attempting to
rescue a climber on Mount Rainier.
Linda Erickson Rawlings Fund for Student/Faculty Research in Mathematics.
Established by Linda Erickson Rawlings '76, the fund provides support for
exceptional students conducting pre-thesis summer research in mathematics
under the direction of Bates faculty, or assisting a faculty member with his or her
research.
Sargent Student Research Fund. Established by David C. Sargent and Jean T.
Sargent, parents of Anne Sargent '78, the Sargent Fund provides support for
student thesis research in any discipline.
Scher Fellowship Program. Established by Dr. Howard I. Scher '72 and Deborah
Lafer Scher, the Scher Fellowship supports a student interested in a career in
medical science, who studies and conducts research at Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center in New York City.
Sigety Family Fund for Computer Science. Established by C. Birge Sigety '75 in
honor of his family, the Sigety Family Fund supports activities and purchases
dedicated to students' computer science needs.
Dr. Jason M. Tanzer Fund for Student Research in Biology and Chemistry.
Established by Dr. Jason M. Tanzer '59, the Tanzer Fund supports students
conducting research in the biological and chemical sciences.
Stangle Family Fund for Student/Faculty Research in Economics and Law.
Established by Bruce E. Stangle '70 and Emily J. Stangle '72, the Stangle Family
Fund offers support for students to conduct research in economics or law under
the direction of a Bates faculty member, or a research or internship position in a
business, professional association, or government agency that deals with issues
of economics or the law.
Aaron R. Winkler '92 Fund for Student Research in Biology. Established by Robert
O. Winkler and Susan B. Winkler, parents of Aaron R. Winkler '92, the fund
provides support for qualified students to conduct research in the field of biology
under the direction of a faculty member.
Arthur Crafts Service Awards. Established through the bequest of Arthur Crafts,
the Crafts Fund provides grants to qualified students who design a service
internship with a social service organization or who undertake an academic
research project dealing with community issues, whether social, economic,
educational, or cultural.
Vincent Mulford Service Internship and Research Fund. An endowment established
by the Vincent Mulford Foundation provides support for students conducting
summer research projects or service internships with a social service
organization, government agency, or an individual or group dedicated to
addressing the needs of society.
Prizes and Awards
Ralph J. Chances Economics Prize. The prize is awarded annually to an
outstanding senior economics major by the faculty in economics, on the basis of
high academic achievement and interest in the field of economics and is given in
honor of Professor Ralph J. Chances, a member of the Faculty from 1958 to 1988,
by Faculty and alumni of the College.
Geoffrey P. Charde Art Award. Awarded annually by the art history faculty to that
senior student who best exemplifies great promise and a continually developing
interest in the study of art history, the fund providing the award was given by the
family and friends of Geoffrey P. Charde '88 as a memorial to Geoffrey, an art
student who died in 1987 while still an undergraduate at the College.
The College Key Music Award. The award is presented annually to senior men or
women whose services to the musical organizations have been most outstanding.
Charles A. Dana Award. Bates considers the Charles A. Dana award to be one of
the highest honors bestowed upon its students. Dana Scholars are selected from
among students in the first-year class on the basis of leadership potential,
academic excellence and promise, and service to the College community. Each
year up to twenty students are chosen, based upon nominations from Faculty and
student leaders.
Alice Jane Dinsmore Wandke Award. The award is given to a woman in the
sophomore or first-year class who, in the judgment of the Department of English,
excels in creative work in either prose or poetry and it comes from the income of a
fund established by Alfred Wandke and Alfred Dinsmore Wandke as a memorial to
Alice Dinsmore Wandke '08.
William H. Dunham Sr. '32 Literary Award. A prize for a graduating senior English
major who has displayed excellence in the study of English or American literature,
its funding was given in honor of William H. Dunham Sr. '32, member of the Board
of Overseers, 1944 to 1967, and Board of Fellows, 1968 to 1979, by his wife, Mary
Elizabeth Dunham, and by their children, Stella D. Lydon, Thomas B. Dunham,
Mary Ann Dunham, and William H. Dunham Jr. '63, and by their grandchildren.
Forrest K. Garderwine Award for History. Awarded to a junior major who submits
the most promising prospectus for a senior thesis or the most outstanding essay
or paper during his or her junior year, as judged by members of the Department of
History, the Garderwine Award is restricted to topics addressing nineteenth-
century U.S. history, with preference for treatments of the Civil War, including its
origins and aftermath. It was given by Forrest K. Garderwine of Terre Haute,
Indiana.
Harold Norris Goodspeed Jr. '40 Award and the William Hayes Sawyer Jr. '13
Award. These awards are given annually to the senior man and the senior woman
who have rendered the greatest measure of service to the Outing Club and its
activities. They are derived from the income of funds given in memory of 2nd Lt.
Harold Norris Goodspeed Jr. by his fellow employees of the A.C. Lawrence Leather
Company, Peabody, Massachusetts, and of Dr. William Hayes Sawyer, professor of
biology at Bates from 1913 to 1962 and faculty advisor of the Outing Club for
twenty-five years.
Maung Maung Gyi Award for Excellence in Political Science. Presented annually by
the political science faculty to a senior major who has shown excellence in his or
her studies, with preference given for study in comparative politics, the award is
given from a fund endowed by Professor Gyi, member of the Faculty from 1967 to
1988.
Paul Millard Hardy Prize. Each year the Faculty selects a senior who will be
entering a graduate program in medicine, mathematics, or one of the natural
sciences to receive the prize. Through high achievement in the humanities, that
senior must have demonstrated an awareness of their importance to the study of
medicine, mathematics, or the natural sciences. The prize is given by Paul Millard
Hardy, a member of the Class of 1967 and a former member of the Board of
Overseers of the College.
William H. Hartshorn English Literature Prize. The prize is given annually to the
member of the senior class who attained the highest average rank in English
literature during his or her junior and senior years. It derives from the income of a
fund established by Mrs. Minnie Blake Hartshorn in memory of her husband,
William Henry Hartshorn, Class of 1886, for thirty-seven years a member of the
Faculty.
Dale Hatch Award. Created in 1964 in memory of Dale Hatch, Class of 1966, this
award is presented annually to the graduating senior who has demonstrated
outstanding leadership and service for four years in the Robinson Players.
Oren Nelson Hilton Prize. This prize is given to the man or woman adjudged best in
extemporaneous speaking, and it derives from income of a fund established by
Oren Nelson Hilton, Class of 1871.
Louis Jordan Jr. '49 Award. This award is given to the graduating geology major
whose senior thesis is judged most outstanding by the chair of the Department of
Geology.
The Libby Prizes in Public Speech and Debate. The prizes are awarded from the
fund established in the will of Almon Cyrus Libby, Class of 1873, to provide prizes
for excellence in public speaking and debate. They are the Charles Sumner Libby
1876 Prizes, to those two members of the Quimby Debate Council who have
contributed to the debate program at Bates through outstanding service to the
council, and the Almon Cyrus Libby Prize, to the best debater in his or her first
year of competition.
Milton L. Lindholm Scholar-Athlete Awards. Established by the College Club in
honor of Milton L. Lindholm '35, dean of admissions for thirty-two years, the
awards are given annually to the senior male and female athletes with the highest
academic averages.
Benjamin E. Mays '20 Award. This award is given to the senior who most
exemplifies the values of Dr. Benjamin E. Mays '20, in academic excellence, service
to others, and moral leadership. This prize was endowed with a gift from Henry
Louis Gates Jr., a Trustee of the College, and W. E. B. Du Bois Professor of the
Humanities and chair of the Department of Afro-American Studies at Harvard
University.
Ernest P. Muller Prize in History. The prize is presented to the graduating history
major whose senior thesis is judged most outstanding by vote of the history
faculty. The prize is established by history faculty and students in recognition of
Professor Muller's thirty-eight years of teaching and service to the Department of
History and the College.
Henry W. and Raymond S. Oakes Fellowship. The fellowship is awarded to the
best-qualified senior who intends to study law and demonstrates superior
scholarship, aptitude for success at law school, and accomplishment in public
speaking and/or communication skills. The fellowship was established by
Raymond Sylvester Oakes '09, in memory of his father, Henry Walter Oakes, Class
of 1877, a member of the Board of Overseers for thirty-four years.
Irving Cushing Phillips Award. The award is presented to the student who has
made the most progress in debate or public speaking and derives from income of a
fund established by Eva Phillips Lillibridge '04, in memory of her father, Irving
Cushing Phillips, Class of 1876.
Robert Plumb Memorial Award. Given by the Class of 1968 in memory of classmate
Robert W. Plumb, the award is presented to a member of the sophomore class for
achievement in the fields of athletics and academics, participation in Bates
activities, and general Bates spirit.
The Ruggles Scholars Program. Awarded annually to a junior to recognize and
encourage outstanding undergraduate achievement in curricular work broadly
defined, or in a program or activity relevant to education in the liberal arts and
sciences, the program was established by Robert T. and Francine Paré Ruggles,
parents of Anne Ruggles Pariser, M.D. '83.
Senseney Memorial Award. The award is presented to the student who has shown
outstanding creative ability and promise in writing and/or the dramatic arts and
was created by the friends of William Stewart Senseney '49, a member of the
Robinson Players.
Abigail Smith Award. In honor of Mrs. Abigail Smith, dormitory director, 1953 to
1957, the award is presented to the senior man and the senior woman, not
residence coordinators, who have done the most to contribute constructively to
dormitory spirit.
Albion Morse Stevens Award. The awards are given to the man and the woman in
the first-year class who have done the best work in a foreign language from the
income of a fund established in memory of Albion Morse Stevens by his son,
William Bertrand Stevens '06, Episcopal bishop of Los Angeles, 1920 to 1947.
Garold W. Thumm Prize in Political Science. The prize is awarded to that
graduating political-science major whose senior thesis is judged to be the most
outstanding in empirical political science by vote of the faculty of the Department
of Political Science. The thesis should make use of evidence and the scientific
method in a way reflective of Professor Thumm's abiding interest in the study of
political science as an empirical discipline. The prize was created by Edward
Wollenberg '85 in recognition of Professor Thumm's twenty-six years of teaching
and service to the department and the College.
Clair E. Turner Award. Awards are presented to three students who have shown in
the preceding year the greatest forensic ability and integrity in public debate.
Income derives from a fund established by Clair E. Turner '12, Sc.D. '37.
Percy D. Wilkins Mathematics Award. Established in honor of Professor Wilkins, a
member of the Bates Faculty from 1927 to 1968, the award is given to the senior
majoring in mathematics who achieves the highest quality-point ratio in his or her
undergraduate work in mathematics.
Willis Awards. Two awards for excellence in reading from the Bible were
established by Dr. Ellen A. Williamson of Los Angeles, California, in memory of her
father, the Reverend West Gould Willis, Cobb Divinity School, 1871.
Alfred J. Wright Foreign Language Award. The award is given annually to one or
more seniors who have completed outstanding theses in a foreign language and
who are chosen by a committee of foreign language faculty. The award derives
from the income of a fund established by Alfred J. Wright, professor of French,
1956 to 1984.
Gilbert-Townsend Graduate Fellowship. The fellowship is for a senior of
outstanding ability who plans to do graduate work in French language or literature
or in other modern languages or literatures and is from a fund endowed by the
estate of Arthur Forester Gilbert, Class of 1885, and his wife, Blanche Townsend
Gilbert '25, professor of French, 1924 to 1939.
Rodney F. Johonnot Graduate Fellowship. The fellowship is awarded each year at
Commencement to the senior selected by the Faculty as most deserving of aid in
furthering his or her studies in professional or postgraduate work in any college or
university during the next academic year. It was established by Rose Abbott
Johonnot in memory of her husband, Rodney Fuller Johonnot, Class of 1879.
The R. A. F. McDonald Graduate Fellowship. Given by Mabel C. McDonald in
memory of her husband, Robert A. F. McDonald, a member of the Faculty from
1915 to 1948, the fellowship is for a worthy senior for graduate study in the field of
education.
Harriet M. and Fred E. Pomeroy Graduate Fellowship. Designated for recent Bates
graduates who majored in biology or an interdisciplinary program including
biology who plan to enter a Ph.D. or combined Ph.D. and professional program in
the biological sciences, the fellowship is funded through a trust created by Fred E.
Pomeroy, Class of 1899, professor of biology at Bates College, 1899 to 1947.
Pomeroy scholars are asked to deliver the Pomeroy Lecture at Bates College.
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