C. SECOND PUBLIC EXAMINATION. [For Dates of the various Examinations see Pages 6 and 7.] i. ADMISSION. [Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. 1. C.] § 1. Of Admission to the Second Public Examination. 1. Except as provided in Tit. VIII. Sect. VIII, Sect. X, and Sect. XII, no member of the University shall be admitted to any part of the Second Public Examination unless he (a) has passed Responsions or is statutably exempt therefrom, or (b) has passed the First Examination for the Degree of Bachelor of Music, and in either case has satisfied the further conditions, if any, which are required by the Statutes relating to the particular School in which he is a Candidate. 2. Persons who are not members of the University may be admitted to the Second Public Examination under the conditions prescribed in Statt. Tit. VIII. ii. THE PARTS OF THE EXAMINATION. § 2. Of the Several Parts of the Second Public Examination. 1. The Second Public Examination shall be conducted by the Public Examiners. It shall consist of an Examination for Candidates who do not seek Honours; of Preliminary Examinations; and of a Final Examination in nine Honour Schools, of which the subjects shall be: (1) Literæ Humaniores. (3) Natural Science. (4) Jurisprudence. (6) Theology. (7) Oriental Studies. English Language and Literature. (9) Modern Languages. 2. Candidates shall be deemed to have passed the Second Public Examination who shall either have obtained Honours in some one of the nine Honour Schools or have passed the Examination appointed for those who do not seek Honours. 3. Every Candidate shall be examined in writing and every Candidate, except in the Honour School of Mathematics, shall be examined viva voce in some part at least of the subjects offered by him. iii. PASS SCHOOL. (i) Statute. [Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. 1. C.] §3. Of the Examination of Candidates who do not seek Honours. 1. The subjects of examination for Candidates who do not seek Honours shall be arranged in five Groups : A. (1) Two Books, either both Greek, or one Greek and one Latin, one of such Books being some portion of a Greek philosophical work, and the other a portion of a Greek or Latin Historian. (2) The whole or some portions of Greek and Roman History. Candidates will be required to show a knowledge of the Political and Descriptive Geography of the periods which they offer. *(3) Classical Sanskrit, including translation into the language and a portion of its Literature. *(4) The Persian language, including translation into the language and a portion of its Literature. *(5) The Arabic language, including translation into the language and a portion of its Literature. *(6) Classical Chinese, including translation into the language and a portion of its Literature. *(7) The Pāli language, including translation into the language and a portion of its Literature. *(8) The Hebrew language, including translation into the language and a portion of its literature. B. (1) Either English History, or a period of English History with specified works from English Literature, or a period of Modern European History, or a period of Indian History; together (in each case) with such Political and Descriptive Geography as is necessary to the understanding of the period of history offered in the Examination. * Candidates intending to offer any of these Groups in Hilary Term, 1916, must give notice to the Assistant Registrar not later than the first Monday of Michaelmas Full Term, 1915 (see p. 51, cl. 14). On the first day of Easter Term, 1916, Subjects 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 will be struck out, and (8) Hebrew will be numbered (3). (2) The French Language, including composition in (4) A branch of Legal study; among the alternatives (5) The German Language, including composition in C. (1)*The Elements of Algebra and Geometrical Trigo nometry. (2) The Elements of Mechanics, Solid and Fluid, treated mathematically. (3) The Elements of Physics. (4) The Elements of Chemistry as included in the Preliminary Examination in the School of Natural Science. (5) The Elements of Zoology and Botany as included in the same Preliminary Examination. (6) The Elements of Rural Economy. D. The Elements of Religious Knowledge, which shall always include (a) Specified portions of the Old and New Testaments, some portion of the New Testament being always offered in the Greek Text. (b) One of the Creeds, with a specified portion of the Thirty-nine Articles agreed upon in the Convocation holden at London in the year 1562. (c) A period of Ecclesiastical History. Some apologetic treatise (or part thereof) to be fixed from time to time by the Board of the Faculty of Theology. Candidates will be required to offer together at the same Examination subject (a), and any two of the three other subjects. 2. Any person who has passed the Second Public Examination may present himself for the examination in any of the Groups enumerated in Clause I above. * See p. 49, cl. 7. 3. Save as aforesaid no Candidate shall be admitted to examination in any of the Groups A. (2), A. (3), A. (4), A. (5), A. (6), A. (7), A. (8), B. (1), B. (3), B. (4), B. (6), C. (1), C. (2), C. (6), and D, unless he has passed the First Public Examination, or is qualified for admission under the provisions of Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. I. cl. 6. Provided that any Candidate who has passed the First Examination for the Degree of Bachelor of Music may offer himself for examination in Group B. (6). 4. The Examinations in C. (1) and in C. (2) shall be conducted by the Examiners appointed to examine in Mathematics in the Preliminary Examination in the School of Natural Science; the Examination in C. (3) shall be conducted by the Examiners appointed to examine in Mechanics and Physics in the same examination, and any Candidate who has satisfied the Examiners in Mechanics and Physics in the said Preliminary Examination shall be held to have satisfied them in C. (3). 5. The Examination in C. (4) shall be the same as the Examination in Subject (3): Chemistry in the Preliminary Examination in the School of Natural Science, and shall be conducted by the same Examiners. Any Candidate who has satisfied the Examiners in one of these Examinations shall be held to have satisfied them in the other also. 6. The Examination in C. (5) shall be the same as the Examination in Subject (4): Zoology and Botany in the Preliminary Examination in the School of Natural Science, and shall be conducted by the same Examiners. Any Candidate who has satisfied the Examiners in one of these Examinations shall be held to have satisfied them in the other also. 7. Any Candidate who has either (a) satisfied the Examiners in Subject 1 (Mathematics) of the Preliminary Examination in the School of Natural Science, or (b) satisfied the Moderators appointed to examine those who seek Honours in Mathematics in the First Public Examination, in accordance with the provisions of Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. 1. D. § 3, cl. 13, shall be deemed to have satisfied the Examiners in C. (1). 8. Each Candidate shall be examined in three of the above subjects, of which one must be either A. (1), or A. (3), or A. (4), or A. (5), or A. (6), or A. (7), or A. (8), or B. (2), or B. (5), and, unless B. (2) or B. (5) be one, not more than two shall be taken from any one Group; and the examination in the three subjects may be passed in separate Terms. 9. Any Candidate who has passed the First Public Examination, and has also either (a) passed the Preliminary Examination in the School of Natural Science, or (b) passed D the Preliminary Examination in Jurisprudence and satisfied the Masters of the Schools in an Additional Subject, offered in accordance with the provisions of Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. I. A. § 5, cl. 3, or passed an examination statutably equivalent thereto, or (c) passed with distinction the Previous Examination in the School of Modern History, shall be deemed to have satisfied the Examiners in two of the above subjects: and any such Candidate shall only be required to satisfy the Examiners in either A. (1), A. (3), A. (4), A. (5), A. (6), A. (7), A. (8), B. (2), or B. (5): provided that no book or subject already offered by him in any part of Responsions or in the Preliminary Examination in Jurisprudence may be offered by him in any part of the First or of the Second Public Examination other than a Final Honour School. The several Boards of Faculties and Boards of Studies shall have power to make such regulations as they shall deem requisite for securing the observance of this provision. 10. A Candidate who (a) has passed the First Public Examination, and (b) either has obtained any of the Diplomas specified in the first part of the schedule to this subsection, or has passed the Second Examination for the Degree of Bachelor of Music, or has obtained both the Certificate in Military History and the Certificate in Tactics issued under the provisions of Statt. Tit. VIII. Sect. XI, shall be deemed to have satisfied the Examiners in two of the above subjects; and any such Candidate shall only be required to satisfy the Examiners in A. (1), A. (3), A. (4), A. (5), A. (6), A. (7), A. (8), B. (2), or B. (5). Provided that before supplicating for the degree of Bachelor of Arts he has notified to the Assistant Registrar the fact of his having obtained such Diploma, or of having passed such Second Examination, and has paid through the Assistant Registrar to the University Chest the sum of two pounds as registration fee. II. A Candidate who (a) has passed the First Public Examination, and (b) has passed (without distinction) the Previous Examination in the School of Modern History, shall be deemed to have satisfied the Examiners in one only of the above subjects; and any such Candidate shall only be required to satisfy the Examiners in two of these subjects, one of them being A. (1), A. (3), A. (4), A. (5), A. (6), A. (7), B. (2), or B. (5), and neither of them being B. (1) or B. (3). 12. A Candidate who (a) has passed the First Public Examination, and (b) either has obtained one or more of the Certificates specified in the second part of the schedule to this subsection, or has passed the First Examination for the Degree |