The Student's Handbook to the University and Colleges of OxfordClarendon Press, 1873 - 184 pages |
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Page 2
... residence at the Uni- versity . In view of this purpose , buildings were ... lodging , and a common chapel . The original purpose has been somewhat ... resident : and the majority of persons on 2 INTRODUCTION . Mathematics (2) Department ...
... residence at the Uni- versity . In view of this purpose , buildings were ... lodging , and a common chapel . The original purpose has been somewhat ... resident : and the majority of persons on 2 INTRODUCTION . Mathematics (2) Department ...
Page 3
... live together under the charge of a Principal , who is responsible for both their discipline and their instruction ... lodging , and to fix their own rate of living . No public provision is made for their instruction , other than that ...
... live together under the charge of a Principal , who is responsible for both their discipline and their instruction ... lodging , and to fix their own rate of living . No public provision is made for their instruction , other than that ...
Page 6
... residence . But although , in most cases , it is still desirable that such notice should be given as early as possible ... reside within the College walls or in lodgings out of College : he must have attained his fifteenth birthday . At ...
... residence . But although , in most cases , it is still desirable that such notice should be given as early as possible ... reside within the College walls or in lodgings out of College : he must have attained his fifteenth birthday . At ...
Page 7
... reside in College unless he desires it ; and the College admits to reside in lodgings as many as reach the required standard in the Examination , if their parents or guardians are willing that they should be admitted on those terms . At ...
... reside in College unless he desires it ; and the College admits to reside in lodgings as many as reach the required standard in the Examination , if their parents or guardians are willing that they should be admitted on those terms . At ...
Page 12
... living in lodgings , and that they are likely to derive educational advantage from becoming matriculated members of ... RESIDENCE . (3) Fees Requirements of the Delegates of Unattached Students.
... living in lodgings , and that they are likely to derive educational advantage from becoming matriculated members of ... RESIDENCE . (3) Fees Requirements of the Delegates of Unattached Students.
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admission-fee admitted Æneid Algebra annum awarded Bachelor of Arts Balliol battel Board of Studies catalogue caution-money certificate Chemistry Christ Church Civil Law Classical cloth collection College or Hall Colleges and Halls degree of B.A. degree of Bachelor Delegates Demyships Divinity educated election Euclid Euripides Examination is held Examinations required exceeded Exeter Exhibitions fcap Fellowships Greek and Latin Hecuba Hilary Term Holy Orders Honour School inclusive annual value Latin Prose lectures Library Lond Mathematics matriculation Medicine Merton Michaelmas Term Modern History Museum Natural Science obtain offer Oxford passed the Examinations persons Physics Prize Proctors Reading-room Regius Professor regulations reside in lodgings rooms Scholars Scholarships Second Public Examination special subjects subjects of examination tenable for five tenable for four Term of residence Testamur Thirty-nine Articles tion Trinity Term Tutor twelve Terms Unattached Students Undergraduates University Examinations usually versity Vice-Chancellor viva voce vols
Popular passages
Page 9 - Persius. The Satires. With a Translation and Commentary. By John Conington, MA, late Corpus Professor of Latin in the University of Oxford. Edited by H. Nettleship, MA Second Edition.
Page 16 - Literature ; and should he never be able to pursue the subject beyond the limits here prescribed, he will have laid the foundation of accurate habits of thought and judgment, which cannot fail of being serviceable to him hereafter. The authors and works selected are such as will best serve to illustrate English Literature in its historical aspect. As ' the eye of history,' without which history cannot be understood, the literature of a nation is the clearest and most intelligible record of its life....
Page 2 - It must, at the same time, be borne in mind, that the developement of the subject can only be found in the full details of chemical science.
Page 117 - Logic and in the first five chapters of Fowler's Elements of Inductive Logic (omitting the sections on Classification, Nomenclature, and Terminology, and the notes appended at the end of each chapter). The subject as thus defined may be studied in the abovenamed works of Fowler, or in Jevons's Elementary Lessons in Logic, or in Mellone's Introductory Text-book of Logic, or in any other works which cover the same ground.
Page 135 - Aphorisms 1-20. Under the head of Political Philosophy, Candidates are recommended to study the following subjects :— The origin and growth of Society; Political institutions and forms of government, with especial reference to the history of Greece and Rome; The sphere and duties of Government; The leading principles of Political Economy.
Page 4 - It is open without respect of birth, age, or creed to all persons who satisfy the appointed officers that they are likely to derive educational advantage from its membership : and, subject only to necessary limitations of academical standing, any person who has been admitted as a member is eligible to compete for all its prizes and distinctions, save only that Degrees in Divinity are conf1ned to members of the Church of England.
Page 10 - A Treatise on the Theory of Determinants and their Applications in Analysis and Geometry. By ROBERT FORSYTH SCOTT, MA, Fellow of St John's College. Demy 8vo.
Page 165 - Counterpoint, in not more than four parts. It is conducted partly viva voce, partly in writing. Those candidates who satisfy the Examiners receive, on application to the Clerk of the Schools, a certificate to that effect. 2. Second Examination. 1. TIME. — The Examination takes place annually in Michaelmas Term, on a day of which notice is given in the University Gazette. 2. CANDIDATES.
Page 133 - Part I. MECHANICS, HYDROSTATICS, and PNEUMATICS. Part II. HEAT. Part III. ELECTRICITY and MAGNETISM. Part IV.
Page 91 - Candidates have also to satisfy the electors of their ability to pass the ordinary Classical Examinations required by the University. y. In the examination for Natural Science Demyships, questions are set relating to...