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Persons admitted to Titular Degrees pay no fee.

Candidates for degrees conferred in their absence pay £5 in addition to the ordinary fee.

Candidates for degrees whose supplicat is sent in after the time allowed by the Senate pay £1 in addition to the ordinary fee.

The fees for the incorporation of a Graduate from Oxford or Dublin are the fee for matriculation, and that for the degree to which the candidate is admitted.

Time of coming into operation.

A fee of Twenty-five shillings for each Part

of the Previous Examination;

the same on re-admission.

The same for the General

The Syndicate further recommend that the above Regulations with the exception of Regulations 4, 6, 7 and 9 take effect at once: that Regulation 4 come into operation on the first day of the Lent Term of 1885; and that Regulations 6, 7 and 9 come into operation on the first day of the Easter Term of 1887.

Previous General and Special Examination Fees.

Grace 6 Feb. 1873.

1. Every Student shall be required, before admission to examination in the Greek Gospel, the Latin set subject, and the Greek set subject of the Previous Examination, or in the Latin set subject and the respective alternative papers for the Greek Gospel and the Greek set subject, to pay the sum of Twenty-five Shillings to the common Chest; and before admission to examination in Paley's Evidences and the Mathematical subjects of the Previous Examination, every Student shall be required to pay the sum of Twenty-five Shillings to the common Chest'.

2. Students shall be required to pay the said sum to Twenty-five Shillings to the common Chest again on each occasion of their re-admission to examination in either of the aforesaid Parts of the Previous Examination.

3. Every Student shall be required, before admission to Examination, the General Examination for the Ordinary B.A. Degree, to pay the sum of Twenty-five Shillings to the common Chest: and Students, who have undergone the examination and have

1 By Graces of 19 April, 1877, and 17 May, 1877, these fees must be paid in the first Term by Undergraduates who hold certificates excusing them from either Part of the Previous Examination. See pages 271, 277, 285.

admission.

not been approved by the Examiners, shall be required to pay and on re-
the said sum of Twenty-five Shillings again on each occasion
of their admission to examination at the said Examination.

Grace 3 May, 1877.

That in lieu of the fee of £3. 3s. payable to the Registrary for the Professorial certificate, a fee of the same amount be paid to the Common Chest by every Student, before he is admitted for the first time to any of the Special Examinations for the B.A. Degree; and that any Student who has paid the fee of £3. 3s. for the Professorial certificate be exempt from the fee for admission to any of the Special Examinations.

Note, that in and after Easter Term 1887 this payment is to be £2. 2s. Od. on each admission to a Special Examination.

£33, for the Special

Examination.

Nov. 20, 1862.

3. Fees for Professors' Lectures.

1. Placeat vobis ut relatio Syndicorum de Feodis quibusdam e Lectoribus solvendis data 1m0. Novembris, 1862, suffragiis vestris comprobetur.

The Syndicate appointed March 27, 1862, to draw up a table of Fees to be paid to certain of the Professors by Students attending their Lectures, ......... report (Nov. 1862):

That, having consulted the several Professors named below with reference to the fees for attendance at their Lectures, they recommend that these Professors be authorized to receive Fees from Students according to the following Table.........

£ 8.

The Professor of Anatomy for a Course on Human Anatomy...... 5 5
on Comparative Anatomy

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The Plumian Professor.
The Jacksonian Professor
The Lucasian Professor

The Lowndean Professor
The Professor of Botany
The Professor of Chemistry

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Sadlerian
Professor.

2.

Placeat vobis ut audientes lectiones Professoris Mathematices Sadleriani idem feodum solvant quod ii qui Professoris Plumiani vel Lowndeani lectiones audiunt, unam videlicet libram et unum solidum pro unaquaque serie lectionum.

3. For Fees for attending Lectures of other Professors, see the Regulations affecting the several Professors.

Oct. 29,

1863.

STATUTE B. CHAPTER I.

FOR CONTRIBUTIONS OF COLLEGES FOR
UNIVERSITY PURPOSES.

STATUTE B. CHAPTER II.

FOR THE COMMON UNIVERSITY FUND.

Report 5 Dec. 1883. Graces 13 Dec. 1883.

THE FINANCIAL BOARD beg leave to report to the SENATE as follows:

Professors.

The General Board of Studies have communicated to the Financial Board the following resolution passed at their meeting held on November 26, 1883;

"That while the General Board of Studies assume as they did in their first Report that the additional expenditure for Professors arising under the new statutes will as a general rule be charged on the Common University Fund, they think that the question as to whether there should be any exceptions to this rule and as to the time at which any such expenses should be first charged on the Common University Fund may be best considered by the Financial Board. They therefore leave it to the Financial Board to recommend whatever Graces may be necessary for providing for these charges."

ORDINATIONES

20

The General Board of Studies in their Report dated June 11, 1883, referred to in the preceding resolution, after enumerating certain charges amounting to £4360, stated as follows (Reporter, June 13, 1883, pages 854-5),

"In addition to these sums, the following charges upon the Common University Fund will have to be made: Additional Income for new Professor of Anatomy...... £258 for Plumian Professor

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Professor of Physiology..

Professor of Pathology.

(or £600, if a Fellow of a College)

Professor of Logic and Mental Philosophy.......

(or £500, if a Fellow of a College)."

£200 ?

... £600

£800

£700

Of these sums the first mentioned three only have become charges upon the income of the University. Since however the publication of the Report of the General Board of Studies above referred to, the election of the Knightbridge Professor of Moral Philosophy has created a further annual charge upon the funds of the University amounting at present to £358.

With regard to the Professorship of Anatomy the Board are of opinion that the stipend of £300, which by Grace of the Senate of May 30, 1861 was paid to the Professor of Anatomy, and which was continued by Grace of the Senate of Feb. 8, 1866 to his immediate successor Dr Humphry, together with a sum in lieu of the share of the Professorial Fund paid to the late Professor of Anatomy, should be paid as heretofore to the present Professor of Anatomy from the Chest, and that the additional sum required to provide the statutable stipend should be charged to the Common University Fund.

With regard to the Plumian Professorship, the Board are of opinion that no part of the stipend of the Professor excepting that portion which he receives as one of the Beneficiaries of the Sadlerian Trust in conformity with the provisions of Grace No. 1 of Nov. 24, 1881, should be charged upon the Chest, and that the sum required in addition to the special endowments of the Professorship to provide the statutable stipend should be charged to the Common University Fund.

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