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#22
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In message , at 12:02:59 on Sun, 12 Apr
2015, tim..... remarked: My source was a friend, now dead, who was a contemporary at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge with David Owen who lived across the corridor. He said Owen was the exception who had not already done National Service. If American, that's the sort of scandal that sees your political career go down the toilet Someone mentioned study medicine being an exemption, which is what David Owen was doing. -- Roland Perry |
#23
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In message , at 12:21:36 on Sun, 12
Apr 2015, Roland Perry remarked: My source was a friend, now dead, who was a contemporary at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge with David Owen who lived across the corridor. He said Owen was the exception who had not already done National Service. If American, that's the sort of scandal that sees your political career go down the toilet Someone mentioned study medicine being an exemption, which is what David Owen was doing. And he was 21 on 2nd July 1959, about a fortnight after the end of his last term, so would never have been able to vote in Cambridge (even if being student had passed the residence test). -- Roland Perry |
#24
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Roland Perry wrote:
The market is shifting these days for all manner of reasons such that I suspect most would now be caught for everything from four year courses to those taking a year out (now more for raising finances than anything else) to a growth in the mature and postgraduate market. I'd add "taking five years to GCSE" onto that as well. It's two - or are you including every year from the start of secondary? But remember that my original calculation required *at least one* of the three 'delay factors' for a student to be 21 in their final year, and according to Colin, to qualify to vote your birthday would have to be before October, so even then most students wouldn't be eligible. Ah - were students going off to uni at a younger age then? The standard entry these days is 18 or higher. -- My blog: http://adf.ly/4hi4c |
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#26
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#27
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#28
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#29
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In message , at 05:03:27
on Mon, 13 Apr 2015, remarked: Owen was a GP before he was elected to Parliament. Wonkypedia says he was a Registrar at St Thomas's. -- Roland Perry |
#30
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In message , at 11:03:00 on Mon, 13
Apr 2015, Tim Roll-Pickering remarked: Roland Perry wrote: The market is shifting these days for all manner of reasons such that I suspect most would now be caught for everything from four year courses to those taking a year out (now more for raising finances than anything else) to a growth in the mature and postgraduate market. I'd add "taking five years to GCSE" onto that as well. It's two - or are you including every year from the start of secondary? Yes, every year from entry age (nowadays 11). The Direct Grant school I attended had the legacy of a start-at-ten regime, and hence we entered into the second form. We took our O-Levels in the fifth form, after four years. Unless in the slower streams, which is where the "the Remove" (as in 'Bunter of') come in. Pupils in that stream went 2-3-remove-4-5, taking five years. But remember that my original calculation required *at least one* of the three 'delay factors' for a student to be 21 in their final year, and according to Colin, to qualify to vote your birthday would have to be before October, so even then most students wouldn't be eligible. Ah - were students going off to uni at a younger age then? The standard entry these days is 18 or higher. I was only just 18 (like David Owen in fact) having done 4yrs to O-level, two to A-level and then a year spent partly doing the Cambridge Exhibition/Scholarship exams. I wasn't doing the entrance exam because I had applied to one of the approximately third of colleges which had migrated to a regime of offering places based on A-Levels, although the offers didn't come through until some way into Michaelmas term. Those following the path above were in what was called the "7th form", whereas the handful of people re-sitting their A-levels were in the "Third year sixth". Contemporaries who had also been in the non-remove stream (which was three of the five-form-entry) but not applying to Oxbridge, could have been going to University at 17. Most of the 7th form traditionally left at Xmas, which was awkward financially for the school because the numbers for grant-awarding purposes were totted up at some date in the Spring. I was one of I think four who stayed on, and did various 'special projects' one of which was teaching myself to pass the Computer Science A-level which happened to be the first year it was set. The school was keen for the stayers-on to do at least one external exam as a sort of justification. One final wrinkle was that our particular 6th Form concentrated on Maths and Physics, and we took A-Level Maths as a kind of "serious mock" in our Lower 6th year. That's the same age as most children today are doing their GCSE maths. -- Roland Perry |
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