29 October 2000

The Governor of Queensland, His Excellency Major General Peter Arnison, AO will announce the 2001 Queensland Rhodes Scholar at around 5.15-5.30pm on Tuesday, October 31 at The University of Queensland.

The selection committee will interview four short-listed candidates before choosing the one who will take up the scholarship at Oxford University in September 2001.

The Queensland Rhodes Scholar will join five winners from the other states and three from Australia-at-Large.

This year the selection committee received 20 applications for the scholarship.

NOTE TO NEWS EDITORS AND CHIEFS OF STAFF

The successful candidate for 2001 will be available after the announcement for photographs and interviews in the foyer of Level 4 of the Brian Wilson Chancellery, next to the J.D. Story Building, on the University's St Lucia campus. To access the Chancellery, enter via the J.D. Story Building, take the lift to level four, and walk across the link bridge.

Parking will be available in the Mansfield Place carpark, adjacent to the J.D. Story Building, with access through the boom gates. Please use the boom gate intercom to request access.

For more information, contact Douglas Porter, Honorary Secretary of the Queensland Rhodes Scholarship Selection Committee (telephone 3365 1311).

Background to Rhodes Scholarships

Rhodes Scholarships, founded in 1902 under the will of the late Cecil John Rhodes, are tenable at Oxford University for an initial two years, with the possibility of a third. Candidates must be between 19 and 25 years old and citizens of the country from which they are selected.

Scholarships are assigned annually in Australia, Canada, India, Jamaica, New Zealand, Zambia, Zimbabwe, South Africa, the United States, Germany, British Caribbean, Malaysia, Singapore, Pakistan, Kenya and Hong Kong.

Australia receives nine - one for each state and three for Australia-at-large.

Since the scheme began, about 500 Rhodes Scholars have been selected. Women became eligible in 1972.

The first Rhodes Scholarship awarded in Queensland was won in 1904 by Arthur Stanley Roe, five years before an Act of Parliament was passed to set up the University of Queensland.

The qualities set out by the late Cecil Rhodes for those seeking Rhodes Scholarships include academic and intellectual excellence, integrity of character, respect for fellow beings and a capacity for leadership. Sporting prowess is an advantage, but not a necessity.