Information on combining the course for Bachelor of Arts (Ordinary Degree) with the course for Bachelor of Laws will be found on p. Candidates for the Ordinary Degree or the Honors Degree must consult the Sub-Dean of the Faculty of Arts, Miss I.
Single Subjects
Due to the greater accuracy of the University's records, at the end of the first term, each student will have to fill out a special application form for re-enrolment, from which he will announce the subjects he intends to study in the rest of the year.
External Studies
A student who does not wish to continue with his or her course must notify student records in writing immediately. Domestic students taking a degree course must attend the Registrar's Office to sign the Matriculation Roll before entering first year examinations.
Evening Lectures
Fees
For the Honors degree at the School of Mathematics, students, including Physics Part I, Chemistry Part I and Physics Part II, pay an annual fee of £90 (as for Science) in the first two years; and in the third year pays an annual sum of L42, and in the fourth year pays the difference between the sum paid in the first three years and two hundred and fifty-five pounds. An applicant who has completed the course for the degree with distinction, but has failed to secure a place on the class list at the final examination, will pay the fourth year fee again if they repeat the year's work or an additional fee of f 15 before taking part in the final exam at the same school again.
Scholarships, Bursaries, Prizes and Financial Assistance The Commonwealth Scholarship Scheme
Mature scholars and scholars receiving a living allowance may be employed during term only with the permission of the Department of Education. Upon completion of the degree courses, students will take the first year of the course for the Bachelor of Education degree.
Post-graduate Studies
The application must be accompanied by documentation of the student's ability and full details of his financial position. The value of the scholarship, which is normally awarded for two years, is fА700 per year.
UND ERGRADUATE g
Most of the books recommended for study or reference are in the main reading room. Each book in the Library has a number as indicated in the catalog in the Inquiry Room to the right of the entrance hall.
Lending Library for Country Students
The Library Rules are displayed in the entrance hall and are also distributed in folder form.
Examinations
Graduation
The Union
Every Saturday night in the first and second term, a social evening known as "Union Night" is held in the Union House.
Student Facilities
Student Guidance
Overseas Students
Appointments Board
The Colleges of the University
The university rates mentioned above do not include tuition fees, which must be paid to the colleges themselves. For further information about the Colleges, please refer to the sections in the University Calendar and the Heads of Colleges.
Diary
REGULATIONS
Candidates for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts must. after matriculating, pursue their studies in the case of the Ordinary Degree
THE ORDINARY DEGREE
- A candidate must pass at the Annual Examinations in at least ten subjects in such manner as to comply with the following
- A major consists of three subjects, approved bý the Faculty as affording a continuous and progressive course of study, passed in three
- No candidate may receive credit for more than four subjects passed at any one examination
- The subjects of the course for the Ordinary Degree are those included in the following table
- GROUP 2 (a) History
- Except with the special permission of the Faculty no candidate may proceed to any of the subjects set out in the following table with-
- Except by special permission of the Faculty, a candidate begin- ning the course after December 31st, 1944, must pass the eight subjects
- Where an honour examination is provided in any subject of the course for the Ordinary Degree, a candidate may enter for and be
- In any subject of the course for the Ordinary Degree which is not a subject of the course for the Degree with Honours the Faculty
The subjects for the ordinary degree are those contained in the following table: contained in the following table:. With the special permission of the Head of Department, a student may take English Part III as the second part of a major or sub-major.
DEGREE WITH HONOURS
- Classical Philology B. History
- Philosophy
- Mathematics
- English Language and Literature F. French Language and Literature
- Economics I. Political Science
- Mathematical Statistics
- The subjects of the course must be passed in accordance with Section 5 hereof so far as it is applicable and in accordance with such
- The Faculty may direct in the case of any subject or part of a subject that the Final Examination shall be held at the same time as the
- In addition to the Class Lists for the Final Examination in each Honour School there shall be a separate Class List for the Final
- No candidate may be placed in the Class List at the Final Examination more than twice in the same School or Combined Honour
- A candidate who has failed to obtain a place in the Class List at any Examination
- Where a candidate desires to abandon the course for the Degree with Honours and to proceed with the course for the Ordinary Degree
- A candidate for the Ordinary Degree may after completing his First Year apply to be approved under Section 13 (a) hereof as a
- A person who has obtained the Ordinary Degree may with approval of the Faculty be admitted as a candidate for the Degree with
- A candidate who has been placed in the Class List at the Final Examination in any School or Combined Honour Course may subse-
- The following Exhibitions may be awarded annually on the work of the year
- At the Final Examination there shall be the following Scholar- ships
- The payment of one-third of the value of each of the above Scholarships except the Dixson Research Scholarship in Mathematics
- Except with the approval of the Faculty no Scholarship in any Honour School at the Final Examination shall be awarded except to a
- Candidates for the Degree of Master of Arts shall either (a) have completed the course for the Degree of Bachelor of
- The preliminary examination for candidates who are Bachelors of Arts (Ordinary Degree) shall be determined by the Head (or
- Candidates must enter their names with the Registrar not later than the end of the third week of the first term of the year in which
- Candidates shall pursue advanced studies and enter for exam- ination in one, or, with the approval of the Faculty, in two of the fol-
- Candidates shall pursue their advanced studies through not less than one academic year, provided that if any candidate be engaged
- The examination in each School shall be prescribed by the Professorial Board in the Details of Subjects, may be either wholly or in
- Candidates who satisfy the examiners will be classified either as having passed or as having been awarded First Class or Second
- Candidates who have fulfilled the conditions prescribed and are Bachelors of Arts of not less than one year's standing may be admitted
- Notwithstanding any Statute or Regulation to the contrary, candidates who at or before the examination held in the fourth term
- A Bachelor of Arts may at any time after seven years from the completion of his course for that degree become a candidate for the
- If the Faculty is satisfied that a graduate in some other Faculty has had an adequate training in letters the Faculty may at any time after
- Every candidate must submit for examination an original work*
- A candidate shall not submit for examination work in respect of which a degree has been awarded in any University, or, without per-
- If the principal work submitted by a successful candidate has not been published the Degree shall not be conferred until it has been
- Candidates who have fulfilled the prescribed conditions may be admitted to the degree of Doctor of Letters
- A candidate for the Diploma in Journalism shall pursue his studies for at least two years after admission to the course
- The Board of Studies in Journalism may admit to the course any candidate who
- A candidate must pass at the Annual Examinations in the fol- lowing subjects in an order approved by the Board of Studies in Jour-
- Rhetoric or English Part I or Modern English 2. Economics A
- Political Science A 4. Journalism
- Law affecting Journalism
- British History or Modern History or Economic History Part I or International Relations
- Elementary Jurisprudence and Constitutional Law or Aus- tralian History or English Part II or Fine Arts or
- A candidate who has fulfilled the requirements of Section 3 and has produced evidence that he has had three years' journalistic experi-
- A graduate in any faculty whose course of study is approved by the Board may on completing such further work as the Board shall
Except with the approval of the faculty, these scholarships will only be awarded to a candidate placed in the first class. Subject to the approval of the Faculty, no exhibition will be awarded in any subject, except to a candidate placed in the First Class in that subject.
III IV
IIIB (P) III (H)
Syriao
Iц (P and H)
BAChiELOR OF ARTS (ORDINARY DEGREE)
APPROVAL OF COURSES
2nd Major: Social Organization A, Social History, Australian History or Psychology Part I, Psychology Part IIA, Psychology Part IIIA. Psychology Part I 2nd part of 1st Major Philosophy Part I 2nd part of 2nd Major Social organization A Social biology.
GROUP 1
Combined courses have been approved for the Honors Degree in the Schools of History, Philosophy and Psychology and the Diploma in Social Studies. Details of a combined course, for the Honors Degree in the German Language School and the Social Studies Diploma, can be obtained from the Department of Social Studies or the Associate Dean of the Faculty of Arts.
GREEK PART II A course of three lectures per week throughout the year
GREEK PART III A course of four lectures per week throughout the year
LATIN PART I
LATIN PART II A course of three lectures per week throughout the year
LATIN PART III A course of four lectures per week throughout the year
FRENCH SUBJECTS
FRENCH SPECIAL COURSE
FRENCH PART IA
Note: For section (i) of the syllabus, first-hand knowledge from representative writers is expected during the exam. Students should therefore read the following works (in the original French):. 1) Or Stendhal - La Chartreuse de Parme or Le Rouge et le noir.
FRENCH PARTI
Four of the following (but no more than two works by one author): Corneille, P.-Le Cid, Polyeucte, L'Illusion comique. Bonnefon, P.—Montaigne et ses amis. and others) - The great literary salons (XVIIth and XVIIIth centuries).
FRENCH PART III
This course will look at the Renaissance and its influence; the importance of classicism; the collapse of religious belief in the XVIII. century and the rise of scientific thought. Main currents of the 19th century and their philosophical background (influence of Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Darwin, etc.).
GERMAN SPECIAL COURSE
GERMAN PART IA
GERMAN PART I
National students should contact the head of the Germanic languages department at the beginning of the academic year. They must provide proof of the progress of their work during the year.
GERMAN PART III
DUTCH PART I
DUTCH PART II
DUTCH PART III
HEBREW PART IA
HEBREW PART I
For the above, any edition of the Hebrew Masoretic texts of the Bible will be adequate.
HEBREW PART II
The first article on unseen prose, prescribed prophetic texts, translations from English, the second on questions of history and archaeology, prescribed poetry, translation into Hebrew, literature.
HEBREW PART III
ARABIC PART I
ARABIC PART II
ARABIC PART III
RUSSIAN PART I
Selected poems by Zhukovsky, Pushkin, Lermontov, Tyutchev, Fet, A. Tolstoy, Koltsov and Nekrasov will be published by the department. Classwork, both oral and written, is taken into account when determining the result of the exam.
RUSSIAN PART III
Class work, both oral and written, will be taken into account in determining exam results. pod гed.)-Sovremenny russky yazyk. Students are asked to submit essays, which will be discussed in class, or (with external students) by correspondence.
RHETORIC
ENGLISH PART II
ENGLISH PART III
Students must submit an essay not exceeding 5,000 words to be submitted to the Secretary of the English Department not later than Friday, July 5, 1957. The subject of the essay should be selected from a list of subjects which may be obtained from the Secretary at the beginning of the year.
FINE ARTS A
Students taking Fine Arts A as a Second or Third Year subject will be directed to undertake more specialized studies within the range of the syllabus. Students taking Fine Arts B as a Second or Third Year subject will be directed to undertake more specialized studies within the range of the syllabus.
MUSIC A
BRITISH HISTORY
R.—Constitutional Documents of the Reign of lames I. W.—Left Wing Democracy in the English Civil War. The social and economic history of the United States from the American Revolution, together with some consideration of American policy in the Pacific.
MODERN HISTORY
Birley, R.—Speeches and Documents in American History, 4 vols. eds.)-Life and Selected Writings of Thomas Jefferson. L.-Woodrow Wilson and the progressive era. W.-U.S. Hands O8 Far East Policy: A History of the Monroe Doctrine.
AUSTRALIAN HISTORY
ANCIENT HISTORY PART I
SOCIAL HISTORY
ECONOMICS A
This will be taken into account at the Annual Examination, and failure to submit written work may result in exclusion from the Annual Examination.
ECONOMICS B
Section (i) Nature and Scope of Economics; consumption theory; welfare economics, economic planning;
STATISTICAL METHOD
PUBLIC FINANCE
ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY PART I
ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY PART II
ECONOMIC HISTORY PART I
ECONOMIC HISTORY PART II
POLITICAL SCIENCE A
POLITICAL SCIENCE B
A study of modern government in the United States of America, the Soviet Union, Germany, and Japan.
POLITICAL SCIENCE C
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
A Preliminary Survey
The foreign policy of the USSR satellites and allies; Russian imperialism. the relationship between Russian foreign policy and communism as a world movement; communist theory and Russian practice; changes in Russia's approach since 1955. The United Nations as a security organisation: the aims and principles of the Charter; the veto; relations between the Security Council and the Assembly.
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY
LOGIC
ETHICS
A study of the most important currents of thought concerning the state from the Middle Ages to the present, with a clearer understanding of political philosophies and ideologies in our own time. Country students must enroll at the start of the academic year and will receive information and advice on essay work.
PROBLEMS OF PHILOSOPHY
HISTORY OF GREEK PHILOSOPHY
The following books, relevant to Mathematics studies, are suitable for reading during the summer holidays. In addition, references to books dealing specifically with each year's work will be found in the individual topic details.
PURE MATHEMATICS PART I
The first paper will test candidates' knowledge of the work covered by the standard course and will be taken by all students, regardless of whether they have attended the standard or higher course. Honors may be awarded to candidates who have done very well in the examinations, regardless of which part of the second assignment they have chosen;.
PURE MATHEMATICS PART II—COURSE A
The second paper, which is also taken by all students, will consist of two alternative sections, one on the work of the Standard Course and the other on that of the Higher Course.
PURE MATHEMATICS PART II—COURSE В
Awards can be given to candidates who did very well in the exams, regardless of which part of the second part they chose;. but the award of first-class honors will be confined to those who have shown superior ability in the work of the higher course. Rational, directed and real numbers. iii) Elements of number theory. iv) Elements of Probability and Statistics.
PURE MATHEMATICS PART III—COURSE A
PURE MATHEMATICS PART III-COURSE В
GENERAL MATHEMATICS
It is intended that the later parts of the syllabus will demonstrate as many applications as possible of the earlier parts, so that the student can see a number of elementary mathematical methods in action. Development and application of the principles of mechanics of a particle and of a system of particles.
APPLIED MATHEMATICS PART I
APPLIED MATHEMATICS PART II
THEORY OF STATISTICS PART I
Introduction to the calculus of variations. iii) and (iv) Synge and Griffith—Principles of Mechanics. In the above course, a knowledge of mathematics is assumed at the level of Pure Mathematics Part I.
THEORY OF STATISTICS PART II
Three hours per week, on problems and calculations related to the course of lectures and involving the use of calculators, both hand-operated and electric. Honors candidates will be required to show in both laboratory notebooks and examination papers a wider and more detailed knowledge than Pass candidates.
PSYCHOLOGY PART IIA ( Psychological Development)
Books recommended for additional reading and reference are listed in the Department of Psychology General Handbook. Excellent candidates will be required to achieve a higher standard in their course work and in examinations, and to show evidence of wide reading and critical thinking.
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
All students take Part A of this course in the first half of the year, then either Part В or Part C in the second half. Honors candidates will be expected to achieve a higher standard throughout their course and in the examination.
PSYCHOLOGY PART II В
Honors candidates are expected to achieve a higher standard throughout the course and in examinations.
PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
PSYCHOLOGY PART IIIA
Honorary candidates must demonstrate a broader and more detailed knowledge than Pass candidates in both lab notebooks and exam papers.
CRIMINOLOGY
A small research project on a psychological topic of the student's choice, involving a minimum of fifty hours. Students must submit an essay on a subject to be prescribed during the second semester.
HISTORY AND METHODS OF SCIENCE A
The course presupposes an introduction to the principles and methods of the natural sciences and is intended to deepen the understanding of the relationships of science to history and philosophy. Naturalistic, idealistic and teleological explanation in Biology. v) The place of Mathematics and the development of logical rigor.
CHEMISTRY PART IA
The syllabus covers the fundamental principles of chemistry, and their application to the systematic chemistry of the elements.
CHR І IS ТRY PART IB
Sketches of the development of the frog and bird, and of the fetal membranes in tvfammalia. A 3-hour practical test, for Pass and Honors combined, may, at the discretion of the examiners, replace or supplement the terminal tests.
GEOLOGY PARТ I
The information thus obtained determines whether a candidate passes or fails the practical work and is taken into account in awarding Honors in the Annual Examination.
GEOGRAPHY
The course is designed as a general introduction to Geography with special emphasis on method and on the physical aspects of the subject. The practical work carried out during the year will be assessed as part of the Annual Examination.
DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF ARTS (DEGREE
A course of three lectures and three hours of practical work per week throughout the year, together with excursions.
KITH HONOURS)
In the case of subjects for which no special details are published, the Syllabus for the Degree with Honours will be the sane as that for the
SCHOOL OF CLASSICAL STUDIES
A student who has not attempted to follow Honors Latin Part I, but wishes to enroll in the Honor School at the end of the First year, must submit a special request to the faculty (via the Subdean). The School of Classical Studies final examination takes place in two parts, part I at the end of the third year, part II at the end of the fourth year.
GREEK PARTI
GREEK PART II
LATIN PART II
GREEK PART III
LATIN PART III
Special Study: A more advanced verse composition or a special "final" study prescribed by the professor according to the plan laid down in Greek Part III.
GREEK PART IV
LATIN PART IV
COMPARATIVE PHILOLOGY This subject will be offered again in 1958 with a revised syllabus
В. SCHOOL OF HISTORY
Fourth Year: (a) Theory and Method of History. a) Students who have completed the first year must be approved by the Faculty of Arts as candidates for an honors degree before they enroll in the second year of the Honors School. The essay must be completed and submitted on the first day of the third term.
BRITISH HISTORY
Candidates who during their Second Year have made satisfactory progress in the History subjects of this year will be admitted to the Third Year of the School without formal examination in these subjects. Candidates whose progress in these subjects during the first two terms is not considered satisfactory for this purpose will be notified at the end of the second term that they must sit an Annual Examination at the end of the Second Year. d) The final exam is divided into two parts.
ANCIENT HISTORY FART I
ANCIENT HISTORY PART II
O.U.P.) substitute would be
A selection of subjects for careful study will be made each year from the following or similar subjects: The Renaissance state - city-state and nation-state;. Throughout, attention will be given to the problem of freedom as it was stated and understood at that time.
GENERAL HISTORY PART II
GENERAL HISTORY PART III
GENERAL HISTORY PART IV
THEORY. AND METHOD OF HISTORY
Such students will be required to sit and gain Honors in the Honors special paper in Part I of Philosophy at the end of their Second Year. At the end of this year there will be an exam in the subjects of Philosophy, at the Honors standard.
PHILOSOPHY PART I
A combined course for the Diploma program in the School of Philosophy and the Diploma program in Social Studies has been approved.
ЕTHICS
HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY (HONOURS, GREEK)
HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY (HONOURS, KANT) (4th YEAR)
The purpose of this course is to examine the three main points of view represented in contemporary political thought by first looking at current expressions of these points of view and then proceeding to trace them to their roots in the history of political theory. Contemporary statements about these positions, in addition to those given below, will be indicated and considered during the course.
CONTEMPORARY PHILOSOPHY PART I One lecture-discussion class per week throughout the year
AESTHETICS
PHILOSOPHICAL YSYC:HOLOGY
SCHOOL OF М IATHEмATICS
Logic or Physics Part II or Theory of Statistics Part I Third Year: Pure Mathematics Part III. The tests in pure mathematics part III and applied mathematics part III (two tasks in each), held at the end of the third year, count as the first part of the final examination.
PURE MАТHE МАТICS PART I
As prescribed for Pure Mathematics Part III, Course A (Ordinary Degree), without lectures. a) Recommended for introductory reading, especially for those students hoping to qualify for admission to the Honors School, even if they attended standard class lectures in Pure Mathematics, Part I:.
PURE MATHEMATICS PART III
Knowledge of matura work in both these subjects will be assumed in the lectures. The first paper will test candidates' knowledge of the work covered in the standard grade lectures, and will be taken by all students, whether they have taken the standard course or the higher grade course.
APPLIED MATHEMATICS PART II
APPLIED MATHEMATICS PART III
APPLIED MATHEMATICS PART IV
PHYSICS PART II
SCHOOL OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
English Language and Literature Part I English Literature Part II, III and IV English Language Part II, III and IV. In their second year they will take English Literature Part II, English Language Part II, in which subjects they are to be classified, and the remaining additional subject.
P ART I Literary Theory and Criticism
In their first year, candidates will take English Language and Literature Part I and one of the two additional subjects. In their second year they will take English Language Part II and a test in Elementary Old Norse.
ENGLISH LANGUAGE PART II
ENGLISH LITERATURE PART III
ENGLISH LANGUAGE -PART III
ENGLISH LITERATURE PART IV
ENGLISH LANGUAGE PART IV
SCHOOL OF FRENCH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE 1. The course for the Degree with Honours in the School of French
To continue to the third year, they must be "recommended to continue" at the end of the second year. The final examination in the School of French Language and Literature will be based on recorded third and fourth year classwork and on the following set of tests:.
FRENCH PARTI
FRENCH PART II
Literature XVII. or XVIII. centuries and Special Literary Studies will be tested with essays in the second year.
FRENCH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE PART I A course of two lectures per week throughout the year
FRENCH PART III
FRENCH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE PART II
FRENCH PART IV
FRENCH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE PART III
SCHOOL 0F GERMANIC LANGUAGES
A student who has completed the first year of the course for the ordinary degree and has passed German Part I and Dutch Part I may, with the permission of the Faculty, enter the Honors School. Students taking course A will be examined in the Annual Examination at the end of the Second Year only in Dutch Part II, and those taking course В only in German Part II.
GERMAN PART I
Before the end of the third semester, a thesis in German or Dutch of at least 5,000 words on an approved subject must be submitted.
GERMAN PART II
For the above (vi), material and bibliography will be provided by the teacher of the subject. Candidates must prepare under the tutor's guidance for their major essay, which forms part of the school's final examination.
ADVANCED MIDDLE HIGH GERMAN (SCHOOL OF GERMANIC LANGUAGES, COURSE A)
GERMAN PART IV
The examinations take into account the quality of the candidate's work throughout the course. A lecture on the history of the Dutch language for which the following book is prescribed:.
DUTCH PART IV
Candidates are expected to prepare under the lecturer's guidance for their main essay which forms part of the School's final examination.
GERMANIC PHILOLOGY
OLD NORSE
SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS
In his first year, a candidate must take the Honors Courses in Economic History Part I, and Economics Part I and the first of the additional set of courses. In their third year, candidates must take economics part III and the third part of the additional set of subjects.
ECONOMIC HISTORY PART I
In the second year, candidates must pass II. part of economics, statistical methods and the second part of an additional sequence of subjects. Before the end of the third year, candidates must choose a subject for the essay required as part of the final examination.
ECONOMIC HISTORY PARTII
ECONOMICS PART I
ECONOMICS PART II
ECONOMICS PART III
ECONOMICS PART IV
SvggAvus: The Nature and Methods of Economics; theory of capital and economic development; distribution theory and welfare economics.
HISTORY OF ECONOMIC THEORY
MATHEMATICAL ECONOMICS
SCHOOL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
- A more detailed study of certain selected topics arising from the Pass Course including : (a) the problems entailed in the objec-
Third year: (a) Political Science C (ions), (b) International Relations (ions), (c) completed course in one other subject. The final exam at the Faculty of Political Science will be divided into two parts as follows: taken at the third-year epd) (1) Political Science I3.
POLITICAL SCIENCE В
State Economic Planning
A more detailed study of certain selected topics arising from the Pass Course, including: (a) the problems involved in the objective Pass Course, including: (a) the problems involved in the objective study of political questions; (b) the reason and intellectual background of the development of democratic ideas; an examination of traditional democratic assumptions in the light of alternative viewpoints; the impact of twentieth-century economic and social changes on democratic institutions and ideas.
POLITICAL SCIENCE D A course of two weekly seminars throughout the year
SCHOOL OF SEMITIC STUDIES
A student who has completed the first year of the Ordinary Degree course and passed Hebrew Part I and Arabic Part I may enter the Honor School with permission from the Faculty. In their fourth year, candidates take the Honors courses in Hebrew Part IV and Ethiopian, if not taken in the third year, and Comparative Grammar of the Semitic Languages.
HEBREW PART IV
ETHIOPIC
BIBLICAL ARCHAEOLOGY
К . SCHOOL OF PSYCHOLOGY
A candidate will be admitted to the 3rd year if he has passed three psychology subjects and has been classified in at least one of these and has passed the subjects in subsection A candidate will be admitted to the final year if he has passed in five psychological subjects and has been classified in at least two of these, including.
PSYCHOLOGY PART I
PSYCHOLOGY PART IIA
Honors candidates will be expected to demonstrate a wider and more detailed knowledge than pass candidates in both the examination and the practical paper.
PSYCHOLOGY PART IIB
PSYCHOLOGY PART IV
SCHOOL OF 1'IATHEIATICAL STATISTICS 1. The Honour School of Mathematical Statistics comprises the following
In their third year, candidates will take the courses in Pure Mathematics Part III, Theory of Statistics Part II, and one of Economics A, Psychology Part I, Logic. In their fourth year, candidates will take the courses in Pure Mathematics Part IV, and Theory of Statistics Part III.
INTRODUCTION TO GENETICAL TERMINOLOGY
The work done in the study of the special subject, referred to in the preceding section, and the practical work done in the Statistical Laboratory, will be taken into account when determining the Class List.
THEORY OF STATISTICS PART I
THEORY OF STATISTICS PART II •
SCHOOL OF RUSSIAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
A student who has completed the first year of the course for the ordinary degree and has passed Russian Part I may, with the permission of the faculty. In their second year, candidates will take the Honors courses in Russian Part II and Modern History, unless another subject is specially approved by the Head of Department.
RUSSIAN PART I
Studies in the style of the most important authors of the twentieth century. ii) Literature: 1. Russian literature in the second half of the 19th century, with special emphasis on the works of Dostoyevsky.
RUSSIAN PART II
Holiday Reading.—Reading suggestions for Special Literary Stud) will be posted on the Modern Languages notice board. Candidates will be required to submit essays and other assignments from this part during the year instead of the annual exam.
RUSSIAN PART III LANGUAGE
RUSSIAN PART III LITERATURE
RUSSIAN PART IV. LANGUAGE
RUSSIAN PART IV LITERATURE