✨ Education and Marine Notices
May 16.] THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE. 1353
Branch of Friendly Society registered.
Friendly Societies Department,
Wellington, 11th May, 1935.
THE Loyal Rangitaiki Lodge, No. 9704, with registered office at Edgecumbe, Bay of Plenty, is registered as a branch of the Auckland District of the New Zealand Branch of the Manchester Unity Independent Order of Oddfellows Friendly Society, under the Friendly Societies Act, 1909, this 11th day of May, 1935.
R. WITHEFORD,
Registrar of Friendly Societies.
Special Books in English Language and Literature for the Training College Entrance Examination.
Education Department,
Wellington, 10th May, 1935.
IN pursuance of regulations under the Education Act, 1914, notice is hereby given that for the Training College Entrance Examination of November, 1936, the special books of which a knowledge will be required in English Language and Literature will be as follows:—
Plays—
Macbeth (Shakespeare).
The Silver Box (Galsworthy).
Poetry—
Poets and Poetry (Senior Book III), Lay. Macmillan and Co.
I’Allegro (Milton).
Il Penseroso (Milton).
Novels—
Lorna Doone (Blackmore).
Under the Greenwood Tree (Hardy).
The Roll Call of Honour (Quiller-Couch). Nelson and Sons.
N. T. LAMBOURNE, Director of Education.
Special Books in Languages and Literature for the Teachers’ Class C Certificate Examinations of August, 1936 and 1937.
Education Department,
Wellington, 10th May, 1935.
IN pursuance of regulations under the Education Act, 1914, notice is hereby given that at the Teachers’ Class C Certificate Examinations of August, 1936 and 1937, respectively, the special books of which a knowledge will be required will be as follows:—
(a) AUGUST, 1936.
ENGLISH.—Candidates will be required to give evidence of a competent knowledge of the principles of English composition, and display ability to write good English. They must also show satisfactory knowledge of English literature based upon a general survey from 1759 to the present day. This survey shall include (1) a study of the principal literary movements and their leaders; (2) a short treatment of the origin and development of the drama; (3) the evolution of the English novel; (4) the main streams of romantic and classical poetry; (5) acquaintance with modern poetry. Candidates are also required to know something of the broad principles on which children’s literature should be selected and studied.
A reasonable knowledge showing only appreciation of the structure and characterization in the following works by the authors named will be required:—
General Literature.—Chaucer, “Prologue to the Canterbury Tales”; Shakespeare, “Macbeth,” “Twelfth Night”; Milton, “Paradise Lost, Book I”; Bunyan, “Pilgrim’s Progress”; Goldsmith, Essays Nos. 25, 26, and 97, in “Citizen of the World”; Wordsworth, “Ode on Immortality,” “Lines above Tintern Abbey,” “The Reaper,” “To Milton”; Tennyson, “Lotus Eaters,” “Morte D’Arthur”; Browning, “Abt. Vogler,” “Rabbi Ben Ezra.”
Drama.—Shakespeare, as above; Goldsmith, “She Stoops to Conquer”; Shaw, “You Never Can tell.”
Novels.—C. Bronte, “Jane Eyre”; Jane Austen, “Pride and Prejudice”; Sir Walter Scott, “Guy Mannering”; Walpole, “The Cathedral”; Conrad, “Lord Jim.”
Modern Poetry.—A selection from the works of the following as contained in the “Golden Treasury of Modern Lyrics, Part II”: Davies, Flecker, Kipling, Meynell, Thompson, Yeats.
Latin.—Cicero, “Pro Lege Manilia, pro Archia”; Virgil, “Georgic IV.”
French.—V. Hugo, “Hernani”; R. Bazin, “La Terre qui meurt”; Molière, “Tartuffe.”
G
(b) AUGUST, 1937.
General Literature.—Spenser, “Faery Queene, Book I”; Shakespeare, “Midsummer Night’s Dream,” “Julius Caesar”; Milton, “Paradise Lost, Book IV”; Defoe, “Journal of the Plague Year”; Blake’s “Songs of Innocence”; Johnson, Essays Nos. 51, 157, and 181 in “The Rambler”; Coleridge, “Ancient Mariner,” “Christabel”; Keats, Selection from “Endymion,” “To a Nightingale,” “On a Grecian Urn,” “To Autumn”; Shelley, “Adonais,” “To a Skylark,” “To the West Wind,” “To the Night,” “A Dream of the Unknown.”
Drama.—Shakespeare, as above; Sheridan “The Rivals”; Barrie, “Mary Rose.”
Novels.—George Eliot, “Adam Bede”; Thackeray, “Esmond”; Dickens, “David Copperfield”; Hardy, “Under the Greenwood Tree”; Galsworthy, “The Man of Property.”
Modern Poetry.—A selection from the works of the following as contained in the “Golden Treasury of Modern Lyrics, Part II”: Bridges, Brooke, De La Mare, Hardy, Masefield, Newbolt.
Latin.—Cicero, Letters (Prichard and Bernard, 1 to 24 inclusive); Virgil, “Aeneid IV.”
French.—Balzac, “Le Médecin de Campagne” (Pitt Press); A. Daudet, “Tartarin sur les Alpes”; Racine, “Athalie.”
N. T. LAMBOURNE, Director of Education.
Notice to Mariners No. 15 of 1935.
Marine Department,
Wellington, N.Z., 15th May, 1935.
ADMIRALTY PUBLICATIONS.
THE following publications have been issued by the Hydrographer and may be obtained at the Auckland, Wellington, Lyttelton, and Dunedin Mercantile Marine Offices:—
A new edition of chart No. 2521, Tauranga Harbour, dated 18/1/35, with the soundings entirely amended and given in fathoms and feet, high-water line amended in places; new compasses and general amendments.
A new copy of Chart No. 2183, Nelson Anchorages, with large corrections, dated 16/11/34. The corrections include amendments to depths in approaches, in Main channel, and in the harbour, and new magnetic compass.
Supplement No. 3 to the New Zealand Pilot, tenth edition, corrected to 17/11/34.
The issue of the above publications cancels existing copies.
J. B. CAMPBELL, Secretary.
Notice to Mariners No. 16 of 1935.
Marine Department,
Wellington, N.Z., 15th May, 1935.
NEW ZEALAND.—NORTH ISLAND.—AUCKLAND HARBOUR.
Rangitoto Channel: Rough Rock Beacon.
Previous Notice: No. 9 of 1935 hereby cancelled.
Position: Lat. 36° 49’ S., long. 174° 49’ E. (approx.).
Details: The beacon has been re-erected.
Charts affected: 1970—1896.
Publications: New Zealand Pilot, 1930, page 159; New Zealand Nautical Almanac and Tide-tables, page 190.
L. B. CAMPBELL, Secretary.
(M. 3/3/115.)
Notice to Mariners No. 17 of 1935.
Marine Department,
Wellington, N.Z., 15th May, 1935.
NEW ZEALAND.—NORTH ISLAND.—HAURAKI GULF.
Naming of Channels.
MARINERS are hereby advised that the following names have been adopted for passages leading to Hauraki Gulf and the passage between Rakino Island and Motutapu. The passage with Moko Hinou and Little Barrier Islands on the eastern side, and Maro Tiri Islands and Rodney Point on the western side has been named Jellicoe Channel.
The north-eastern passage with Great Barrier Island on the eastern side and Moko Hinou and Little Barrier Islands on the western side has been named Craddock Channel.
The passage between Rakino Island and Motutapu has been named Rakino Channel.
L. B. CAMPBELL, Secretary.
(M. 6/2/76.)
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VUW Te Waharoa —
NZ Gazette 1935, No 36
NZLII —
NZ Gazette 1935, No 36
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🏥 Registration of Friendly Society Branch
🏥 Health & Social Welfare11 May 1935
Friendly Societies, Registration, Edgecumbe, Bay of Plenty
- R. Witheford, Registrar of Friendly Societies
🎓 Special Books for Training College Entrance Examination
🎓 Education, Culture & Science10 May 1935
Training College, Entrance Examination, English Literature, November 1936
- N. T. Lambourne, Director of Education
🎓 Special Books for Teachers’ Class C Certificate Examinations
🎓 Education, Culture & Science10 May 1935
Teachers’ Class C Certificate, Examinations, English Literature, Latin, French, August 1936, August 1937
- N. T. Lambourne, Director of Education
🚂 Notice to Mariners No. 15 of 1935
🚂 Transport & Communications15 May 1935
Admiralty Publications, Tauranga Harbour, Nelson Anchorages, New Zealand Pilot
- J. B. Campbell, Secretary
🚂 Notice to Mariners No. 16 of 1935
🚂 Transport & Communications15 May 1935
Rangitoto Channel, Rough Rock Beacon, Auckland Harbour
- L. B. Campbell, Secretary
🚂 Notice to Mariners No. 17 of 1935
🚂 Transport & Communications15 May 1935
Hauraki Gulf, Jellicoe Channel, Craddock Channel, Rakino Channel
- L. B. Campbell, Secretary