Costs and Financial Aid
Charges and Payments
Tuition, room, and board charges for all students residing at Bates
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 2009-2010
| Comprehensive Fee |
$51,300 |
Calendar of Payments
| Upon acceptance (new students) |
$300* |
| 1 August Comprehensive Fee, First Billing |
$25,650 |
| 1 December Comprehensive Fee, Second Billing |
$25,650 |
*The payment upon acceptance made by new students to indicate
acceptance of the College's offer of admission is held until
graduation.
A student who enrolls at Bates incurs financial obligation to the
College. Semester invoices and monthly bills are mailed in the
student's
name to the student's home address. A student may elect to have the
bill sent to parents, guardians, grandparents, or others by so
indicating on the Garnet Gateway secure records system. Detailed
account
information is also available online via the Garnet Gateway. Payment
may be made by check or money order payable to
Bates College; Bates does not accept debit cards or credit cards for
payment of the comprehensive fee.
Payment in full for the comprehensive fee is expected by the due
dates indicated above. Monthly bills are due by the 25th of each month.
Students whose accounts are delinquent may become ineligible to
register for classes, receive grades and transcripts, choose campus
housing, receive financial aid for future semesters, return to Bates
for a subsequent semester, or graduate. Bates assesses a late fee (1
percent per month) on balances that remain outstanding after the due
dates. Past-due accounts may also be referred to an outside agency for
collection. In such cases, all costs of collection become the
student's responsibility. Students who
have failed to submit required financial aid forms or have submitted an
appeal remain responsible for making payments by the due date and
accrue late fees on any outstanding balance.
Bates partners with Tuition Management Services (TMS), which offers
students and families a monthly payment plan option rather than
requiring two yearly payments. The plan is interest-free as long as
monthly payments are made on time. Participating students who fail to
make timely payments are assessed a late fee of $25 by TMS. Late fees
(interest on the
outstanding balance) become applicable if a student's relationship with
TMS is breached due to repeated nonpayment. Any balance for the
semester that is left after TMS payments, loans and financial aid are
calculated is due on the payment due date: August 1 for the fall
semester and December 1 for the winter semester.
Students who leave Bates during 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 the
Office of Student Financial Services upon request after a leave or
withdrawal has been granted. Students withdrawing on or before the
fiftieth day, including non-class days, of a full semester receive a prorated refund of the annual
charge, as follows: on or before the first day of classes*, 100
percent; 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. 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 of Title IV Federal Student Financial Aid funds are made
in accordance with federal regulations.
*Note: Some off-campus
study programs have an earlier start date than courses offered on the
Bates campus. When this occurs, the refund schedule begins on the first
day of the off-campus study program.
Other Charges When Applicable
| Off-Campus Study Registration Fee, fall or winter semester (per semester away) |
$1,800 |
| Books, supplies (average annual cost) |
$800 |
| Special students (nondegree candidates) |
$1,350 per course |
| Auditing (nonmatriculating students) |
$325 per course |
A few courses require extra fees to cover such
items as applied music instruction, studio materials, or laboratory
supplies. Extra fees for courses are usually indicated in
individual course descriptions in the catalog; the specific
amount of the fee, when available, is typically indicated in the Schedule of Courses.
Bates does not assess an additional comprehensive fee for Short
Term courses offered on campus. Students who do not attend or who
withdraw from Short Term are not entitled to a reduction in the
comprehensive fee.
Some Short Term courses, referred to as "off-campus extra-cost Short
Term courses," involve extensive travel in the United States or abroad.
Student participants are assessed additional charges that offset some
of the extra costs of transportation, additional services, and
accommodations required by such programs. Extra-cost Short Term course fees are based on the actual operating cost of the program. An estimate
of these fees is included in the Short Term Schedule of Courses,
available at the end of the preceding fall semester. Financial aid is
available to qualified students to help offset the cost of
faculty-approved off-campus Short Term courses, but may not be applied to
Short Term independent study courses (numbered s50). All off-campus extra-cost Short
Term courses require a $500 non-refundable deposit. Students who register
for such a course and then withdraw before its completion are reimbursed
only for those portions of the remaining cost not yet incurred on the
students' behalf, and are not reimbursed for the deposit. Students with
outstanding account balances are ineligible to register and/or receive
financial aid for off-campus extra-cost Short Term courses.
Financial Aid
Bates students receive 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, students
receive aid that combines these grant and self-help opportunities. In
recent years Bates students have received more than $20 million in
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:
1. Financial aid is granted on the basis of demonstrated need as
determined by the Office of Student Financial Services through an
examination of aid applications submitted by students and their
parents. Students must apply for financial aid when they apply for
admission to Bates College. To receive aid after the first year, aided
students 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 (see pages 26–28).
2. To be considered for financial aid, students must indicate on
the admissions application that they will be applying for aid. They
must submit the
following forms each year by the appropriate deadline: the College
Scholarship Service Financial Aid PROFILE, the Free Application for
Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), the federal income tax returns of the
parents and student, and any other materials deemed necessary to
analyze a student's family financial circumstances. Students who do not
submit materials by the deadline may lose their eligibility for Bates
aid.
3. Dismissal or suspension for a semester or longer automatically revokes the assignment of financial aid.
4. Scholarships and loans are credited in equal amounts to the student's account at the beginning of each semester.
5. The College reserves the right to adjust its financial aid award
to a student who receives additional scholarship assistance from an
outside source.
6. Aid is available for the programs listed in the section of the catalog covering off-campus study (see pages 28–31) according to policies that apply to students on campus, up to the
amount the student would receive if he or she were studying on campus.
The need analysis is based on the Bates comprehensive fee for those
programs for which this fee is charged, or on the tuition, room, board,
domestic and international airfare (if applicable), and Bates off-campus
study registration fee for other programs. In both cases, personal and book expenses estimated for the student in
Lewiston are also included. In English-speaking countries, aid is based
on the cost of direct application. Other expenses, such as passports,
visas, immunizations, and extra travel, are the student's responsibility.
7. Students who qualify for scholarship aid during an academic year
may apply for an additional grant if enrollment in an off-campus
extra-cost Short Term course requires expenditure above the comprehensive fee.
Such further aid is granted to the extent that scholarship funds are
available.
8. Financial aid is not continued beyond eight semesters unless
truly exceptional circumstances beyond the control of the student exist.
Veterans Education Programs
The College's degree programs are approved by the Maine State
Approving Agency for Veterans Education Programs for persons eligible
for educational benefits from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
Students who have questions about their eligibility may contact the
Veterans Administration (1-888-442-4551). Students who request veteran's educational assistance are required to have all previous post-secondary
experience evaluated for possible transfer credit in order to be
eligible for benefits. More information is available from the Office of
Student Financial Services.
Scholarships
Many individual benefactors of the College have given funds from
which the income is used for scholarship aid. Other scholarships come
from foundations and from the operating funds of the College. More than
40 percent of Bates students receive assistance from these sources in
varying amounts, depending on need. Once grant eligibility is
determined through normal aid application processes, students are
automatically considered for all special College grants or scholarships
for which they may be eligible. These scholarships include, but are not
limited to, the following:
Lillian and Wallace W. Fairbanks '24 Scholarship.
The College's largest scholarship endowment, the Fairbanks Fund continues Mr. and Mrs. Fairbanks' 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 from Bates until his 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 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, Class of 1951 and Ralph T.
Perry, Class of 1951, and honorary degree recipient in 2009.
Benjamin E. Mays Scholarship. Dr. Mays, Class of
1920 and recipient of an honorary degree in 1947, 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 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 to the student or students most deserving of
support for study abroad. Preference is given to underclass students
and to prospective participants in Short Term courses offered abroad, and
the scholarship 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 College publication cites the almost 400 endowed scholarships awarded annually.
Financial aid grants are often secured from churches, service
clubs, community organizations, and special local and
regional foundations. Students who need assistance should explore all
of these sources in their local communities or regions.
Loans
Students throughout the country invest in their own futures by borrowing money when necessary to meet college costs.
Two widely used federal programs are the Perkins Loan and the
Stafford Loan. Students should also look into the higher education
assistance programs of the states in which they reside. Information
about these possibilities may be secured from secondary school guidance
offices or from the Office of Student Financial Services at Bates.
Student Employment
Bates offers many opportunities for students to earn money and gain
valuable skills through campus and work-study jobs. The Student
Employment Office is a student-managed division of the College's
Department of Human Resources. The office is an intermediary between
student employees and their employers, and is a resource center for
issues concerning student employment. The primary function of the
Student Employment Office is to assist Bates students in securing
on-campus employment by facilitating and regulating the application
process. The office also posts off-campus positions.
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 or artistic projects during the summer.
The Bruce Bouley Fund. This fund, established by
the family of the late Bruce Bouley ’69, supports senior thesis
research in field-based geologic mapping.
Crafts Service Awards. Established
through the bequest of Arthur Crafts, the Crafts Fund provides grants
to students in any discipline who design an academically related
project to help implement service-learning projects or
community-based research projects.
Community-Based Research Fellowships. Created with
support from the National Community-Based Research Networking
Initiative, these summer and/or academic year fellowships connect
students doing academic work in, with, and for the community; engage
fellows in a community of practice where they can test and reflect on
the work of community-based research; provide specialized support as
fellows develop their projects and think about
how they connect to larger academic, personal, and career goals.
Community Work-Study Fellowships. These fellowships
provide federal work-study funds to eligible students who undertake
community-based work with local nonprofit agencies during the academic
year.
The Hamill Family Fund for Student Fieldwork and Research. Given by Oliver L. Hamill, the Hamill Fund provides travel assistance and other support for student research in anthropology.
Harward Summer Student Fellowships. These
fellowships, funded by the Vincent Mulford Foundation, the Class of
2001 Fund, and the Harward Center for Community Partnerships, provide
support for students conducting academically related service-learning
projects with a service agency full time during the summer.
Hoffman Fund for Student Research. This endowment,
established by the Maximilian E. and Marion O. Hoffman Foundation,
provides support for students in all disciplines conducting individual
summer research projects or assisting a faculty member with his or her
research.
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.
Susan Majeski McKnight '70 Fund for Environmental Studies.
This endowed fund, established in the memory of Susan Majeski McKnight
'70, supports students majoring in or studying environmental studies.
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 the relationships of individuals and societies to the
environment. The fellowships are supported by an endowment established
by Margaret V. B. and C. Angus Wurtele in the memory of their son,
Philip '95, who died while attempting to rescue a
climber on Mount Rainier.
Papaioanou Service-Learning Grants. These grants
provide support to students carrying out an academically related
service-learning project in the community during the academic year.
The Anthony B. and Raeflyn R. Pelliccia Fund for Student Research. Established
by Joseph G. Pelliccia, a member of the biology faculty, and his wife,
Patricia A. Pelliccia, to honor his parents, this fund supports student
research in biology as well as student participation in faculty
research in biology.
Phillips Student Fellowships. Funded through an
endowment established by the fourth president of the College, Charles
F. Phillips, and his wife, Evelyn M. Phillips, the fellowships offer
exceptional students the opportunity to conduct a major research,
service-learning, or career discovery project in an international or
cross-cultural setting.
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.
Ruggles Scholars Program. Funded by an endowment
established by Robert T. and Francine Paré Ruggles, parents of Anne
Ruggles Pariser M.D. '83, the Ruggles Scholars Program offers summer
grants for pre-thesis research to exceptional juniors working in the
humanities, the social sciences, or the interdisciplinary programs.
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.
The Ellen Seeling Design Fellowship. Established in memory of Ellen Seeling, professor of theater from 1997 to 2004, this fund supports students who wish to study or undertake a project in design for theater or the fine arts.
Stangle Family Fund for Student/Faculty Research in Economics and Law.
Established by Bruce E. Stangle '70, a Trustee of the College, and
Emily S. 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 to undertake a research or internship position in a
business, professional association, or government agency that deals
with issues of economics or the law.
Summer Community Work-Study Fellowships.
Established to provide federal work-study funds for eligible students
who conduct academically related service-learning projects anywhere in
the United States, with preference given to local projects in Maine.
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.
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.
Prizes and Awards
Professor Leland and Claudina Bechtel Fund Prize. Awarded annually to a student with financial need who has given significant community service to a local nonprofit agency.
Drake R. Bradley Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Research. Established
in 2005 by Drake R. Bradley, a member of the psychology faculty from
1973 to 2003, this award recognizes the graduating senior whose
research thesis is deemed to be the most promising by a committee of
the faculty.
Drake R. Bradley Award in Statistics. This award,
established by J. Michael Chu '80, honors Drake R. Bradley, member of
the psychology faculty from 1973 to 2003, and is given to the
graduating senior whose thesis or senior project best exemplifies the
use of statistical techniques and methodology to address research
questions, or best illustrates the use of analytical of empirical
methods to investigate theoretical issues in applied statistics.
Robert J. Branham Scholars Fund Coach's Debate Prize.
Given in memory of Robert J. Branham, a member of the faculty in
rhetoric and director of debate from 1974 to 1999, this prize honors
individual excellence in debate.
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. Bestowed 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 award is supported by a fund 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.
College Key Music Award. The award is
presented annually to the senior men or women whose services to the
College's musical organizations have been most outstanding.
Charles A. Dana Award. The Charles A. Dana Award
is the highest honor bestowed upon first-year students at Bates. Dana
Scholars are selected from among students in the first-year class on
the basis of their leadership potential, academic excellence and
promise, and service to the College community. Each year up to twenty
students are distinguished with this honor, based upon nominations from
the faculty as well as student leaders. Dana Scholars hold the honor
throughout their college careers.
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.
Gilbert-Townsend Graduate Fellowship. The
fellowship is for a senior of outstanding ability who plans to do
graduate work in the French language or literature or in other modern
languages or literatures. It is derived 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.
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 Politics. Presented
annually by the politics 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.
Andrew Hamill, Class of 2005, Thesis Prize in Anthropology. Awarded
annually to one or more graduating seniors who, by vote of the
anthropology faculty, have demonstrated exceptional achievement in the
senior thesis, this prize was established by Oliver L. Hamill in honor
of his son.
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 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.
Rodney F. Johonnot Graduate Award. The
award is made 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.
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.
Christopher M. Laconi, Class of 2005, Debate Award. Given
by David and Eileen Laconi in honor of their son, the award goes to a
graduating senior who has demonstrated outstanding eloquence in public
debate.
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,
given to those two members of the Quimby Debate Council who have most
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, Class of 1935,
master's degree recipient in 1939, and honorary degree recipient in
2004, who was dean of admissions for thirty-two years. The awards are
given annually to the senior male and senior 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,
H'47, in academic excellence, service to others, and moral leadership.
This prize was endowed with a gift from Henry Louis Gates Jr., a former
Trustee of the College and the W. E. B. Du Bois Professor of the
Humanities at Harvard University.
The R. A. F. McDonald Graduate Award. Given
by Mabel C. McDonald in memory of her husband, Robert A. F. McDonald, a
member of the faculty from 1915 to 1948, the award is for a worthy
senior for graduate study in the field of education.
Robert S. Moyer Prize in Experimental Psychology.
This award is given annually to the graduating major who, by vote of
the faculty of the Department of Psychology, has completed the most
outstanding experimental psychology project for a senior thesis. The
prize is funded by an endowment established by Catherine Lee in honor
of her husband's thirty-two years of teaching and service to Bates.
Robert S. Moyer Prize for the Prevention of Domestic Violence.
Awarded annually to a student in any class or major who has contributed
through service or research to the prevention of domestic violence.
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 was
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.
Myhrman/Swett Award. This award is given
annually to one or more graduating seniors whose thesis in sociology is
deemed the most outstanding by vote of the faculty of the Department of
Sociology. The award was established by Richard Swett in honor of his
parents, Robert B. Swett, Class of 1933, and Muriel Beckman Swett,
Class of 1930; his aunt, Mildred Beckman Myhrman, Class of 1930; and
his uncle, Anders Myhrman.
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,
Class of 1909, in memory of his father, Henry Walter Oakes, Class of
1877, a member of the Board of Overseers for thirty-four years.
Scott Peura Memorial Prize in Chemistry. This
award is given annually to a graduating senior working in chemistry who
exemplifies the scholar-athlete qualities that Scott Peura ’90
embodied. The award is made by faculty members in the Department of
Chemistry, who give preference to chemistry majors who have balanced
academic achievement, thesis research, and participation in varsity
athletics.
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, Class of 1904, in memory of her father, Irving
Cushing Phillips, Class of 1876.
Marcy Plavin Dance Award. Awarded annually to
the senior or seniors who have shown exceptional dedication to and
passion for dance. Created in 2000 by the alumni of the Bates College
Modern Dance Company to honor their friend and mentor, Marcy Plavin,
founder of the College's dance program.
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 from 1899 to 1947.
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. It 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.
Stangle Family Awards in Economics. Established by Bruce E. Stangle ’70, a Trustee of the College, and Emily S. Stangle ’72,
the Stangle Family Awards in Economics honor the junior economics major
with the highest grade point average at the end of the junior year, and
senior economics major whose thesis is judged most outstanding by vote
of the faculty in the Department of Economics.
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,
Class of 1906, Episcopal bishop of Los Angeles, 1920 to 1947.
John Tagliabue Prize for Creative Writing. This prize, named for John Tagliabue, a poet and member of the English faculty
for more than thirty years, honors excellence in creative writing. The
prize is given to a student or students whose work in poetry or prose
is judged the most outstanding by faculty in the Department of English.
Technos International Prize. This
prize is awarded annually to a graduating senior who has shown
outstanding academic performance and a commitment to the cause of
international understanding.
Garold W. Thumm Prize in Politics. The prize is
awarded to that graduating politics major whose senior thesis is judged
to be the most outstanding in empirical politics by vote of the faculty
of the Department of Politics.
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
politics
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.
Richard V. Wagner Prize in Psychology. This award
is given annually to the graduating psychology major who, by vote of
the faculty of the Department of Psychology, has completed the best
thesis or project on issues related to peace, conflict resolution, or
social justice. The prize was established by the psychology faculty in
recognition of Professor Wagner's thirty-four years of teaching and
service to Bates, including twenty-five years as chair of the
department.
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. It comes from the income of a fund established
by Alfred Wandke and Alfred Dinsmore Wandke as a memorial to Alice
Dinsmore Wandke, Class of 1908.
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.
Williams Family Prize. This award was established by the family, friends, and colleagues of Anne D. Williams, Professor Emerita of Economics, in recognition of her service to the economics department and the College from 1981 to 2008. This prize recognizes a junior or senior for outstanding research in population or environmental studies.
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, an 1871 graduate of the College's Cobb Divinity School.
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.