SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM.
SCHOLARSHIP AT A UNIVERSITY. • GIFT OF CANTERBURY JOURNALIST. By Telegraph.—Press Association. Christchurch, Last Night. Mr. Robert Bell, a well-known Canterbury newspaper proprietor and Journalist, has written to the chairman of the Board of Governors of Canterbury College stnting that as he believes a university training of journalists would greatly assist in maintaining the bljft standard of journalism, he proposed to place tinder the control of the Board a sum of £3,000 for the purpose of main* taining a scholar at a School of Journalism in connection with Canterbury College.
The conditions of the gift are that the Board shall initiate lectures in practical journalism and lav down a course m journalism. The scholarship shall bo awarded on the results of the junior university scholarship examinations, and the candidates shall bo sonsookr k daughters of men or women who have been associated with the production of newspapers in New Zealand, either at tiro 4 prietors or as employees on a regular staff. The (scholarship shall be tenable at Canterbury College and the holder shall take a course in journalism.
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Taranaki Daily News, 17 January 1920, Page 4
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181SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM. Taranaki Daily News, 17 January 1920, Page 4
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