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DOCTOR OF LETTERS OR OF SCIENCE.

(The presentation is by the Regius Professor of Greek and by
the Sedleian Professor of Natural Philosophy respectively.)

1. Standing, Published Works, &c. See Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. IV. § 7 (p. 198, &c.).

2. Fees. The University Fee is £25.

IV. DEGREES IN LAW.

(The presentation is by the Regius Professor of Civil Law.)

BACHELOR OF CIVIL LAW.

1. Standing. As for the degree of Master of Arts.

2. Certificates. None are required, except from those who matriculated previously to Michaelmas Term, 1887. These must produce the Certificate of the Examiners for the degree of Bachelor of Civil Law.

3. Fees. The University Fee is £8.

DOCTOR OF CIVIL LAW.

1. Standing, Dissertation, &c. See Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. v. § 4 (p. 205). 2. Fees. The University Fee is £40.

V, VI, VII.

DEGREES IN MEDICINE AND SURGERY. (The presentation is by the Regius Professor of Medicine.)

BACHELOR OF MEDICINE.

1. Standing. See Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. vi. § 1 (p. 208).

2. Certificates. None are required, except from those who matriculated previously to Michaelmas Term, 1887. These must produce Certificates of having passed the Second Examination for the degree.

3. Fees. The University Fee is £14.

BACHELOR OF SURGERY.

See Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. vII. § 2 (p. 215).

MASTER OF SURGERY.

1. Standing. As for Masters of Arts.

2. Certificates. None are required, except from those who matriculated previously to Michaelmas Term, 1887. These must produce Certificates of having passed the Examination for the degree (p. 215).

3. Fees. The University Fee is 12, unless the Candidate has been admitted to the Degree of Master of Arts, in which case there is no Fec.

DOCTOR OF MEDICINE.

1. Standing, Dissertation, &c. See Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. vi. § 5 (p. 214). 2. Fees. The University Fee is £25.

VIII. DEGREES IN THEOLOGY.

(The presentation is by the Regius Professor of Divinity.)

BACHELOR OF DIVINITY.

1. Standing, Dissertation, &c. See Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. x. §§ 1, 2 (p. 244).

2. Certificates. Letters of Orders (ibid. § 2, cl. 3, P. 244).

3. Fees. The University Fee is £14.

Accumulation of Degrees. Statt. Tit. XI. Sect. II. § 2, cl. 6.

DOCTOR OF DIVINITY.

1. Standing, Dissertation, &c. See Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. x. §§ 3, 4 (p. 245).

2. Fees. The University Fee is £40.

DEGREES CONFERRED IN ABSENCE.

Under Statt. Tit. IX. Sect. v. cl. 1, the Degree of Bachelor of Arts, of Bachelor of Letters, or of Bachelor of Science may be conferred upon a person who is not present to receive the degree, if he satisfies the following conditions:

(a) He must be resident abroad.

(b) He must obtain the grace of his College or Hall, or if a Non-Collegiate Student, of the Delegacy of Non-Collegiate Students, and he must have satisfied all other statutory conditions precedent to the degree for which he desires to supplicate.

(c) He must apply, through the Society to which he belongs, to the Hebdomadal Council for leave to supplicate in absence, and must satisfy the Hebdomadal Council (i) that he has not had a reasonable opportunity of taking the degree in person, (ii) that the taking of the degree is a matter of urgent importance to him.

(d) The application must be made not more than six calendar months after the degree day next following the day on which he became qualified to supplicate for the degree.

(e) The Society shall at the same time notify the Proctors of the application.

(f) If Council approves the application, its approval shall be forthwith published in the usual manner.

(g) He shall be at liberty to supplicate for the degree on any degree day being not less than seven days nor more than two calendar months after the day on which the approval of the Council has been published as aforesaid.

Under Statt. Tit. IX. Sect. v. cl. 2, the Degree of Doctor of Letters or Science, of Master of Arts, of Bachelor or Doctor of Medicine, of Bachelor or Doctor of Civil Law, of Bachelor or Doctor of Divinity, may be conferred upon person who is not present to receive the degree, if he satisfies the following conditions:

(a) He must be resident abroad, holding an office, ecclesiastical, civil or military, or occuped in a business or profession, or in the pursuit of study or research.

(b) He must have satisfied all statutory conditions precedent to the degree for which he desires to supplicate, except such as require the public reading of any Dissertation or Exposition. In case he desires to proceed to the degree of Bachelor or Doctor of Divinity, Doctor of Civil Law or Doctor of Medicine, he shall transmit to the Regius Professor of the Faculty the exercises required for such degree, and his sufficient performance of the same must be attested by a certificate from the Regius Professor, to be supplied to the Registrar.

(c) He must obtain the grace of his College or Hall, or if a NonCollegiate Student, of the Delegacy of Non-Collegiate Students; and the Dean of his College or the Censor of Non-Collegiate Students, or the Deputy of the Dean or Censor, must supplicate for the grace of the Ancient House of Congregation.

(d) He must produce testimonials as to character and conduct satisfactory to the Vice-Chancellor and Proctors 1.

(e) If he desires to supplicate for the Degree of Bachelor of Divinity or Doctor of Divinity, he must offer to the Vice-Chancellor sufficient evidence of his subscription to the declaration required by Statute.

Fees.-The University fees are those shown under the several Degrees on the preceding pages with an Additional fee of £5.

The Vice-Chancellor and Proctors have given notice that the 'testimonials as to character and conduct' to be produced by Candidates must include evidence from some ecclesiastical, civil, or military official, or other person in a responsible position, resident abroad in the same locality as the Candidate. Testimonials must be transmitted by the College or Hall of the Candidate, or by the Censor of Non-Collegiate Students, to the Junior Proctor.

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II.

NOTICES OF THE SUBJECTS ANNOUNCED FOR UNIVERSITY PRIZES AND SCHOLARSHIPS IN THE YEAR 1913-1914.

(Other information can be obtained from the University Calendar.)

N.B.-Candidates for University Scholarships or Prizes are reminded that they are not eligible unless their names are at the time actually on the books of some College or Hall, or of the Delegacy of Non-Collegiate Students.

All compositions are left with the Registrar, and can be received from him at the University Registry within the space of one year. If not claimed within that time, they will be destroyed.

I. SCHOLARSHIPS.

The following notices have been published. For most other Scholarships the subjects are not specified from year to year.

ABBOTT SCHOLARSHIP.

Candidates must be sons of Clergymen of the Church of England who stand in need of assistance to enable them to obtain a University Education, and, if members of the University, Undergraduates who have not exceeded their third Term of Residence.

One Scholarship of the value of £80 per annum tenable for three years, is awarded annually in Easter Term.

The subjects of examination are for 1914, Mathematics; for 1915, Classics.

DENYER AND JOHNSON JUNIOR SCHOLARSHIP.

The Board of the Faculty of Theology has appointed the following subjects of examination for the Denyer and Johnson Junior Scholarship in 1914

Christianity and the Social Virtues.

1. Deuteronomy and Hosea.

2. St. Matthew v-vii, Acts xv, Ephesians.

3. Seneca, Epistolæ Morales Lib. IV, Dialogus ad Gallionem de vita beata. 4. Minucius Felix, Octavius.

5. St. Augustine, De Civitate Dei, iv, v, xi, xix.

6. Butler, Sermons.

F. D. Maurice, The Conscience.

Ottley, Christian Ideas and Ideals.

Harnack, Expansion of Christianity, vol. I, bk. ii, cs. 1-4, 6, 7.

PUSEY AND ELLERTON HEBREW SCHOLARSHIPS.

Notice is given that an Examination for two Scholarships will be holden at the Schools on Tuesday, October 14, 1913, and following days, commencing at 9.30 A.M.

Candidates are requested to call on the Regius Professor of Hebrew at Christ Church, on Saturday, October 11, between Noon and I P.M., bringing with them certificates of their age, of their University standing, and of the consent of the Head of their College or Hall, or of the Censor of Non-Collegiate Students. Candidates not resident may send their names and certificates by letter.

Candidates for these Scholarships will be examined in passages set from the following portions of the Old Testament: Pentateuch, Psalms i-lxxii, Isaiah xl-lxvi. Papers will be given as hitherto in Composition, Grammar, and Miscellaneous Questions.

There will also be set questions involving an elementary knowledge of Arabic, with passages for translation from the Arabic version of Jonah (published in Dr. Wright's Book of Jonah in Four Oriental Versions, Williams and Norgate, 1857).

CHARLES OLDHAM SCHOLARSHIP, 1913.

The Board of Management of the Charles Oldham Scholarship give notice that the subject of the Examination for the Scholarship in 1913 will be―The works of Shakespeare, with a special study of the Histories.

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The following subjects are proposed for the Chancellor's Prizes for 1914

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The first of the above subjects is intended for those members of the University who, on the thirty-first day of March, 1914, shall then have exceeded four but not completed seven years, the second for those who shall not have completed seven years, and the third for those who shall not have exceeded four years, from their Matriculation.

The length of the Essays should not exceed 30-35 printed pages, allowing about 360 words to each such printed page. The Latin Verse should not exceed 250 lines.

It is recommended that the compositions should, if possible, be typewritten; or, at any rate, not in the competitor's own handwriting. Candidates are not restricted to the use of Hexameters, but are at liberty to use any metre which they think suitable to their subject.

2. Sir Roger Newdigate's.

For the best composition in English Verse, by any Undergraduate who, on the day above specified, shall not have exceeded four years from his Matriculation.

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