Obrázky na stránke
PDF
ePub

IX. COBDEN PRIZES. [Political Economy.]

In addition to the sum of £1,500 in aid of the endowment of the Chair of Political Economy, a further sum of £442 has been placed at the disposal of the College by the Cobden Memorial Committee, for the endowment of money prizes, to be offered in each session to such teachers or assistant teachers in schools deriving support from public contributions, if any, or failing such then to such other students at the College as shall pass the best examination in Political Economy or connected subjects.

Two prizes of the value of £10 and £5 respectively are offered to be competed for accordingly at the Sessional Examinations of the Evening classes in March, 1873.

FIRST PRIZEMEN.

1867. William Ford. 1868. John Stratton.

1869. Richard Burrows.

1870. (Not awarded.)

1871. John S. Lilley.

1872. Joseph Foy.

SECOND PRIZEMEN.

1867. John Smith.
1868. James Scotson.
1869. (Not awarded.)
1870. Samuel Bewsher.
1871. Thomas Grindle.
1872. John Baxter.

Extra Cobden Prizes, competed for by members of the Pupil Teachers' class of Political Economy, have been awarded as follows:

[blocks in formation]

Two prizes of £3 and £2 are offered to be competed for in 1873 by members of the same class.

X. GRAMMAR SCHOOL SCHOLARSHIPS.

Annual value, £15.

Three Scholarships, each tenable for three years, have been founded for better enabling scholars of the Manchester Free Grammar School, entering as students at Owens College, to defray the expenses of such studentship.

One Scholarship is open for competition annually by scholars of the Manchester Free Grammar School, being not less than 15, nor more than 21, years of age, and who have been pupils in the School within two years next before the examination. The subjects and times of examination are as follows:

Friday, 4th October, 10-1, Classics.

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

2-5, Physical Science. Saturday, 5th October 10-1, Mathematics.

Candidates must satisfy the Examiners in two at least of these three subjects.

The Electors are the Principal of the College, the High Master of the Grammar School, and the Recorder of the City of Manchester, or any two of them.

CONDITIONS OF TENURE.-Every person taking a Scholarship must, within one calendar month after the award, and before he will be entitled to the first yearly payment on account of the Scholarship, enter himself as a Regular Student of Owens College. He must continue as such student during his tenure of the Scholarship; and must, before he shall be entitled to any further payment, produce a certificate from the Principal of Owens College, dated not more than twenty-one days next before the receipt thereof, of his having satisfactorily prosecuted his studies at the College up to the date of the certificate.

The Scholar proceeding to Owens College must enter to one of the prescribed regular courses of study there, viz. : either of general literature and science, of theoretical and applied science, or of Civil and Mechanical Engineering, with such modifications as to the classes to be attended as the Principal may sanction.

1862. Richard Cobden Phillips.

1863. Hugh Walter Boddy. 1864. Edward Boutflower. 1866. Charles Hughes.

SCHOLARS.

1867. Richard Muilman Chiswell,
1868. John Edward Halliday.
1869. Ernest Radford.

1870. Walter Hughes.

UNENDOWED EXHIBITIONS AND PRIZES. NOTE.-Victoria (Classics), Wellington (Greek Testament), and Dalton Chemical Prizes were competed for up to the year 1866, and Dalton Chemical Exhibitions up to 1870. Particulars and lists of the Prizemen are given in the Calen-. dars for those years. The offer of these Prizes and Exhibitions is now discontinued, and the following Entrance Exhibitions are offered in their place: but as they are not founded on any permanent endowment, the offer of them in future years is discretionary.

I. VICTORIA ENTRANCE EXHIBITION [Classics].

One of the value of £15, tenable for one year. The examination will be held on the 4th of October, 1872. Subjects:-Translation into English from the Greek and

Latin authors usually read in schools-Greek and Latin Grammar-Simple Latin Composition.

Should the holder of this Exhibition acquit himself well in Classics at the June examinations, he will be allowed to attend the Greek and Latin classes, free of fee, for a second session.

[blocks in formation]

II. DALTON MATHEMATICAL ENTRANCE EXHIBITION. One of the value of £15, tenable for one year, but renewable for one year further on condition that the holder acquit himself at the June examination to the satisfaction of the Senate. The examination will be held on the 5th of October, 1872. Subjects: Plane Geometry (Euclid I-IV., or the subjects thereof); Arithmetic (including the Theory of Arithmetic); Elementary Algebra. EXHIBITIONERS.

Alfred Hopkinson.

1866 Charles Hughes."

Arthur Nevill.

Charles Henry Carlisle.*

1867 John Henry Poynting.
Henry Spenser Wilkinson,
Arthur Walton Fuller,
Thomas Carnelley.

1868

[blocks in formation]

III. EXTRA ENTRANCE EXHIBITION.

One of the value of £15, tenable for one year. The examination will be held on the 4th and 5th of October, 1872. Subjects: The same as for the Victoria and Dalton Mathematical Exhibitions. This Exhibition will be awarded on the aggregate results of the two examinations.

EXHIBITIONER.

1870. William Pearson Yates.

IV. WELLINGTON ENTRANCE EXHIBITION.
[Greek New Testament.]

One of the value of £15, tenable for one year. The examination will be held on the 7th of October, 1872. Subjects:-The Gospels of St. Matthew and St. John.

(Walter Hughes.*

1870 Alfred Hawkins Jones.

EXHIBITIONERS.
1871. Henry Gibson Smith.

V. OXFORD LOCAL EXAMINATIONS ENTRANCE EXHIBITIONS. Two Exhibitions entitling the holders to enter one of

*These candidates resigned their Exhibitions upon being elected to others according to the regulation prescribed for such cases.

e

the Regular Courses at the College in the session 1872-3, without payment of the lecture fees, and renewable for two sessions further, on condition that the holders acquit themselves in the June examinations of each year to the satisfaction of the Senate, are offered :-one, to the best qualified among the Senior, and one to the best qualified among the Junior, candidates among those who shall have gained a place in the First Division at the Oxford Local Examinations held in Manchester in June, 1872. The Exhibitioners must have attained the age of 14 years, and will be required to pay the College Admission Fee£1. ls., and if a Laboratory course be taken, the special fees for that course.

SENIOR EXHIBITIONERS.

1868, Charles Magnus Leudesdorf.

1870. William Annacker. JUNIOR EXHIBITIONERS.

1867. Charles Henry Carlisle. 1868. Edwin Jackson,

1869. Thomas Ambler Garratt.

VI.

CAMBRIDGE

1870. Charles Robinson.
1871. John Love.

LOCAL EXAMINATIONS ENTRANCE
EXHIBITIONS.

Two Exhibitions entitling to the same privileges, and on the same conditions (see V.), are offered to the best qualified among the Senior and Junior candidates at the Cambridge examinations for boys, held in Manchester in December, 1872.

N.B.-The foregoing Exhibitions are open to the competition of persons not previously students of the College, and being not less than 15 nor more than 18 years of age. Candidates are requested to call on the Principal, on Wednesday, the 2nd of October, 1872.

Candidates, before they can be permitted to compete, must declare that it is their intention, if successful, to fulfil the conditions of tenure;-if otherwise eligible, they may compete for all or any of the foregoing Entrance Exhibitions, (I.-VI.) but more than one cannot be held by the same person, nor can a Grammar School or Gilchrist Scholar hold any of the College Entrance Exhibitions. The successful competitors for the Victoria and Wellington Exhibitions will be required to enter as Regular Students in Arts, and those for the Dalton and Extra Exhibitions as Regular Students, either in Arts or Science, in the Session 1872-3,

VII. GILCHRIST ENTRANCE SCHOLARSHIPS.

Instituted by the Trustees of the Gilchrist Educational Trust, in connexion with the Owens College.

A Scholarship of the value of £50 per annum, or Two Scholarships, each of the value of £25 per annum, tenable for three years, will be annually awarded by competitive examination, under the following conditions :

1. Each candidate must apply to the Principal of the College, on or before the 1st of June in each year, and must submit to him a certificate of age, and satisfactory testimonials to character.

2. Each candidate must show that he will have completed his sixteenth year on or before the last Monday of the same month of June; and his age on that day must not exceed twenty years.

3. Candidates approved by the Principal shall present themselves at the Midsummer Matriculation Examination of the University of London, and the Scholarship of £50 per annum will be awarded to the candidate who shall stand highest at that Examination, provided that he pass in the Honours Division.

4. If no candidate should pass in the Honours Division, a Scholarship of £25 per annum will be awarded to each of the two candidates who shall stand highest in the First Division.

5. Every Scholar shall attend in each session at least Three Courses of Lectures in the College, to be selected by himself (provided that the total number of lectures in such courses averages twelve lectures per week throughout the session), unless permitted by the Council to spend his third session at some other College.

6. Every Scholar shall present, on applying for each half-yearly instalment of his Scholarship (which will be payable on the first days of January and July), a certificate from the Principal of the College that his conduct has been good, and that he is pursuing his studies with a view to graduation in the University of London.

7. Every scholar shall present himself at the First Examination in one of the four Faculties of the University of London at an interval of not more than two Academical years from his election, unless excused from doing so by the Gilchrist Trustees; and if he do not so present himself

« PredošláPokračovať »