277

OverviewTranscribeVersionsHelp

Facsimile

Transcription

Status: Complete

274

1869-70

[margin]
Ap. 26, 1870
By Laws
[/margin]

[ex]amination, nor shall any papers which he
may have before given in be sustained. Cases
of this nature shall be reported to the
Senate and the Senate shall deal with them
as very grave offences.

42. If sickness, domestic affliction, or
any other cause beyond one's control prevent
a candidate from appearing at any
examination at which he may have intimated
his intention to appear, he may
be examined afterwards at a time appointed
by the Senate, but he must make application
for this privilege to the Senate in
writing, and produce a satisfactory certificate
that the cause of his absence was
beyond his control.

43. In University Examinations a
Department shall be understood as including
all the subjects belonging to one
Professorship.

45. No information of any kind as
to the results or expected results of any examination
shall be communicated before
the public announcement of them by the authority,
and appointment of the Senate

44. For the information of candidates the
marks allotted to the several Departments
shall be published in the Calendar, and
for the estimating of the value of Papers
received from candidates such a proportion
of the total number for a Department shall
be assigned by the Examiners, subject to the
revision of the Senate; to each subject in
a Department as the relative importance
of the subject may warrant,

Notes and Questions

Nobody has written a note for this page yet

Please sign in to write a note for this page