The Student's Handbook to the University and Colleges of OxfordClarendon Press, 1873 |
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Page 1
... payment of fees and the retaining of their names on the Register , all persons are members who have taken the degree of Master of Arts , or of Doctor of Civil Law or Medicine ; ( 3 ) The Congregation of the University , which con- sists ...
... payment of fees and the retaining of their names on the Register , all persons are members who have taken the degree of Master of Arts , or of Doctor of Civil Law or Medicine ; ( 3 ) The Congregation of the University , which con- sists ...
Page 3
... payment to share in the educational and social advantages of the College , but who , strictly speaking , are not members of it at all . The Halls , i.e. the Public Halls of the University , differ from the Colleges chiefly in being ...
... payment to share in the educational and social advantages of the College , but who , strictly speaking , are not members of it at all . The Halls , i.e. the Public Halls of the University , differ from the Colleges chiefly in being ...
Page 5
... pay certain fees . 1. APPLICATIONS FOR ADMISSION . - The difficulty of satis- fying the first of these requirements has been considerably lessened by the repeal of the statute which required every Undergraduate member of a College or ...
... pay certain fees . 1. APPLICATIONS FOR ADMISSION . - The difficulty of satis- fying the first of these requirements has been considerably lessened by the repeal of the statute which required every Undergraduate member of a College or ...
Page 14
... pay the requisite fees . They are then addressed in a short Latin formula by the Vice- Chancellor , and receive from him a certificate of Matriculation , together with a copy of the Statutes of the University . From this time they enjoy ...
... pay the requisite fees . They are then addressed in a short Latin formula by the Vice- Chancellor , and receive from him a certificate of Matriculation , together with a copy of the Statutes of the University . From this time they enjoy ...
Page 18
... payments and exemptions from payments will be found in Chapter V. ) At University , special permission must be obtained for residence in lodgings before the completion of twelve Terms ' residence . At Balliol , Undergraduates may choose ...
... payments and exemptions from payments will be found in Chapter V. ) At University , special permission must be obtained for residence in lodgings before the completion of twelve Terms ' residence . At Balliol , Undergraduates may choose ...
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admission-fee admitted Æneid annum awarded Bachelor of Arts Balliol battel Board of Studies Candidates for Honours 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 Demyships Divinity educated election English Euclid Euripides Examination is held Examinations required exceeded Exhibitions Faith and Religion fcap Fellows Fellowships Greek Greek and Latin Hilary Term Holy Orders Honour School inclusive annual value Latin Prose lectures Mathematics matriculation Medicine Michaelmas Term Modern History Museum names Natural Science obtain offer Oxford passed the Examinations Physics Prize Proctor Reading-room Regius Professor regulations reside in lodgings rooms Rudiments of Faith Scholar Scholarships Second Public Examination seek Honours special subjects subjects of examination tenable for five tenable for four Testamur Thirty-nine Articles tion Trinity Term Tutor twelve Terms Unattached Students Undergraduates University Examinations usually Vice-Chancellor viva voce vols
Popular passages
Page 6 - Acoustics. By WF Donkin, MA, FRS, Savilian Professor of Astronomy, Oxford. Crown 8vo. cloth, js. 6d.
Page 12 - 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 182 - 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 5 - MISCELLANEOUS WRITINGS of JOHN CONINGTON, MA late Corpus Professor of Latin in the University of Oxford. Edited by JA SYMONDS, MA With a Memoir by HJS SMITH, MA 2 vols.
Page 131 - 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 129 - Part I. MECHANICS, HYDROSTATICS, and PNEUMATICS. Part II. HEAT. Part III. ELECTRICITY and MAGNETISM. Part IV.
Page 130 - Under the head of Logic, Candidates are recommended to study the following subjects : — The nature and origin of knowledge ; The relation of language to thought ; The history of Logic in Greece to the time of Aristotle inclusive ; The theory of the Syllogism ; Scientific Method, including a comparison of the methods of different sciences, and the principles of historical evidence. Questions will be set in Trendelenburg's Elementa Logices Aristotelese, and in Bacon's Novum Organum, Book I, and Book...
Page 2 - University, as such, holds no entrance examinations. 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 advantages from its membership. A member of any one of the colleges, or of one of the Halls, is, as a matter of course, also a member of the university as soon as he matriculates.
Page 73 - As a general rule, a candidate must be unmarried, he must have passed all the examinations required for the degree of BA...
Page 87 - In the examination for Mathematical Demyships, papers are set in Arithmetic and Algebra, in Pure Geometry, in Trigonometry and the Theory of Equations, and in Analytical Geometry of Two Dimensions. Candidates are also required 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 General Physics, to Chemistry, and to Biology, including Human and Comparative...