Bibliography for the History of the University of Melbourne: M to Q
Search bibliography alphabetically:
| Author | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|
| MacCallum, Peter | ‘In Retrospect’. In University of Melbourne. Department of Pathology. The Melbourne School of Pathology : Phases and Contrasts. [Parkville, Vic.: The Dept.], 1962. | |
| MacCallum, Peter | Papers. 96 cm. (8 archives boxes, 1 over-sized folio), 1885-1961. | Birth certificate; original testimonials for Rhodes Scholarship 1907; Victorian registration and Royal Army Medical Corps certificate 1915; lectures and reports; correspondence; university papers; collected speeches 1941-1951; talks 1935-1951; notes on overseas medical institutions; Halford oration; medical journal extracts; publications; honours and awards; invitations. MacCallum was born in 1885 and was educated at Canterbury University College in New Zealand and Edinburgh University. In 1915 he enlisted with the Royal Army Medical Corp where he served in Belgium and France as Captain. MacCallum returned to Edinburgh in 1919 where he researched and lectured in Pathology. He was appointed Professor of Pathology at the University of Melbourne in 1925, retiring in 1950. He helped to design the Royal Melbourne Hospital and was instrumental in the establishment of the Cancer Institute. MacCallum was also Executive Chairman of the Anti-Cancer Council of Victoria from 1945 and National Chairman of the Red Cross 1951-1958. |
| MacDonald, R. W. G. and P. Milner | Maritime Research, Design and Development in the Department of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering at the University of Melbourne, Technology Display; No. TD-92/1.: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, 1992. | |
| Macintyre, Stuart | The Discovery of Australian History, 1800-1939. Carlton: Melbourne University Press, 1995. | Co-editor: Julian Thomas. |
| Macintyre, Stuart | A History for a Nation : Ernest Scott and the Making of Australian History. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1994. | After a career as a journalist and member of the Victorian and Commonwealth Hansard staffs, Scott became Professor of History at the University of Melbourne in 1914. His publications included a Life of Flinders (1914), A Short History of Australia (1916), and A History of the University of Melbourne (1936). |
| Macintyre, Stuart | ‘Lawrence Roy Gardiner, 1925/1991’. Australian Historical Association bulletin. no.66/67(March/June 1991). | Obituary. |
| Macintyre, Stuart | ‘Ernest Scott: My history is a romance’. In The Discovery of Australian History 1890/1939. Carlton: Melbourne University Press, 1995. | |
| Macintyre, Stuart | Ormond College Centenary Essays. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1984. | The College was built, by resolution of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Victoria, as a college of residence for students attending the University, and as a theological hall for the training of candidates for the ministry. Bearing the name of its chief benefactor, Francis Ormond, it opened to students in 1881. From 1885, women were permitted to attend tutorials offered by the College, and in 1973 were admitted as residents. |
| Macintyre, Stuart | ‘R.M. Crawford, 1906-1991’. Australian historical studies, no. 98 (1992): 123-25. | Crawford (1906-1991), was educated at Sydney High School, University of Sydney and Balliol College, Oxford University. After graduating with an M A Crawford worked in a series of schools in Australia and England. He returned to Sydney when he was appointed lecturer at Sydney University in 1935. Crawford successfully applied for the prestigious Chair of History at the University of Melbourne in 1937 and proceeded to implement important and enduring changes. With the Spanish Civil War, Crawford became politically active and joined the A.C.C.L. During this period he was embroiled in a series of controversies. In 1942 Crawford was appointed First Secretary to the Soviet Legation in Moscow. After his return to Melbourne in 1944 he resumed teaching and championing civil liberties. Crawford retired from the University of Melbourne in 1970. |
| Macintyre, Stuart | Max Crawford’s School of History : Proceedings of a Symposium Held at the University of Melbourne, 14 December 1998, Melbourne University Conference & Seminar Series; 10. Parkville, Vic.: History Dept. University of Melbourne, 2000. | Edited by Stuart Macintyre and Peter McPhee. |
| Macintyre, Stuart | ‘Ernest Scott: My History is a Romance’. In Stuart Macintyre. Ormond College Centenary Essays. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1984. | |
| Macintyre, Stuart | A Short History of the University of Melbourne. Melbourne: MUP, 2003. | Co-author: Richard Selleck. |
| Macintyre, Stuart | ‘Federation and the University’. Melbourne University magazine. Spring 2000. | |
| Mackie, Jamie | Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 1999. | Mackie was Lecturer and subsequently Reader in the Department of Indonesian and Malaysian Studies at Melbourne University before becoming foundation professor in the Department of Political and Social Change, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University. Interviewer: Charles Coppel for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| MacKay and Potter (Firm) | Proposed Graduate College, University of Melbourne. [Melbourne?: MacKay & Potter?, 1967. 4, [6] leaves. Proposal B, Site considerations and architectural concept. | |
| Mackay, Malcolm George | Interview with Dr Malcolm Mackay, 1984-1986. | Mackay and Ruth Ella. Mackay speak with Bernadette Schedvin of the Australian Parliamentary Library about his family background; childhood; studying at Melbourne University and Edinburgh University; Big Brother Movement; Royal Australian Naval Volunteer Reserve; working as a merchant seaman; minister at Merbein/Wentworth Church; general secretary of the Australian Council for the World Council of Churches; Christian Television Association; Oxford Group, later Moral Rearmament; his wife; Scots Church; Basser College at University of New South Wales; Longreach Oil; 1963 election; parliamentary life; visit to Indonesia; the Party Room; Menzies; Holt; Gorton; McMahon; Gordon Bryant; Fred Cope; Lionel Bowen; Keating; McEwen; Country Party; Vietnam War; inquiries into Voyager disaster; Liberal Reform Group; 1966 visit of President Johnston; 1967 referendum on Aboriginals; Gorton as Prime Minister; Hasluck and Edward St John He then talks about the 1969 election; visit to Indochina; power of the press; McMahon as Prime Minister; Minister for the Navy; Neville Bonner; visit to Japan and Korea; aboriginal tent embassy; Parliamentary Christian Fellowship; defeat in 1972 election; Roger Hicks; Australian Brain Foundation; World Vision. On tapes 21-23, Dr and Mrs Mackay speak about his decision to enter parliament; his image in the press; effect of politics on family life; public functions; and the effect of electoral defeat. Mackay held the seat of Evans, N.S.W. for the Liberal Party from November 1963 to December 1972. He died in 1999. Transcript (454 p.) and index available. Ruth Ella Mackay participated in interview on tapes 21-23. Parliaments Oral History Project is an ongoing project administered by the Australian Parliamentary Library focussing on retired parliamentarians and their political careers. |
| MacNeil, Johanna L. | Harmonising Music Education in the University of Melbourne : Management Issues Pertaining to the Affiliation between the University of Melbourne and the Victorian College of Arts with Particular Attention to the Delivery of Music Education. MBA, University of Melbourne, 1991. | |
| Macqueen, Mary | ‘Living Line’. In The Half-Open Door : Sixteen Modern Australian Women Look at Professional Life and Achievement, edited by Patricia Grimshaw and Lynne Strahan. Sydney, N.S.W.: Hale & Iremonger, 1982. | Macqueen’s artworks are held by most major Australian and many overseas galleries. |
| Maddern, Philippa | St. Hilda’s College: Forerunners and Foundations. Melbourne: St. Hilda’s College, University of Melbourne, 1989. | St Hilda’s College was founded in 1954. |
| Maggs, Albert Hartley | Files Relating to Business and Charitable Interests. 3 archives boxes, 5 over-sized boxes, 1961-1981. | Amnesty International, the Albert Maggs Composition Award (established 1967), St Vincents Institute of Medical Research, the Probation Officers Association of Victoria. Also 3 time-books 1976-1981; petty cash 1964-1976; day repair book 1961-1978; diaries 1968 and 1969; doctors receipts 1973-1975; sales journal 1972-1973; cash receipts 1967-1968; receipts and debtors 1968- 1972; account ledgers. Maggs grew up in Brunswick, one of five children of a shopkeeper. He attended the University High School, worked Colonial Mutual Life Assurance and took an actuarial course before World War II. After some time in the military he was seconded to the Rationing Department. Returning to civilian life he turned his mathematical skills to bookmaking with great success. He was a skilled tennis player and supporter of theatre in many forms. He was a pianist who studied Composition at the Conservatorium. He was an active and generous supporter of numerous organizations and funded a University fund to assist promising composers. |
| Maglen, Krista | ‘Pride and Prejudice: William Alexander Osborne’. In Melbourne University Portraits: They Called It the Shop, edited by Paper-Clip Collective. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1996. | Osborne was Professor of Physiology from 1904 to 1938, and Dean of the Faculty of Medicine after 1929. A noted traveller and broadcaster, he was also a foundation member of Melbourne Rotary. In his retirement Osborne attempted to write his autobiography, but in November 1965 recorded that he would be unable to complete it because of failing vision. |
| Malaena: Black Stools in the Sunset. 1 videocassette (U-matic) (20 min.). [Parkville, Vic.: Centre for the Study of Higher Education University of Melbourne, 1983. | produced by students of Kendall Hall. Comedy about a necrophiliac loose in Werribee. | |
| Maling-Keepes, Jillian, and William Taylor | Consultancy on Future Directions for the Institute of Education : Report. Parkville: University of Melbourne, 1992. | |
| Manion, Margaret M. | Interview with Margaret Manion, Professor Herald of Fine Arts, University of Melbourne, 1979-1995, Emeritus Professor, 1995-, 1997. 4 digital audio tapes (ca. 310 min.) + Accompanying materials: transcript. | Manion was Professor of Fine Arts at the University of Melbourne , then Emeritus Professor. Headed Academic Board for 1987 (first woman);Vice-Chairman 1985-1986. Loreto Order SL, then Chair, appointed March 1979. Manion speaks with Ann Turner of her ancestry and family background, her upbringing in Sydney, boarding school from the age of 5, her education in both humanities and sciences. Sport. Influence of the nuns. Twelve months in Crown Solicitors office. Beginning of Law course at the University of Sydney. Joining Loreto Order age 16. Three years probation at Mary’s Mount Convent in Ballarat. Mary’s Mount environment intellectual, emotional and spiritual. Isolation. Teaching at a south Melbourne primary school after novitiate. Sent by the Order to the University of Melbourne the following year. Honours Arts degree and Diploma of Education. English, history, French, Latin, philosophy, psychology and one Fine Arts subject. Loreto residential college, St Mary’s Hall. Influential leading nuns. Commonwealth scholarship. Bachelor of Education and Masters degree preliminary in Fine Arts. Return to Ballarat as principal of Loreto secondary boarding school. Stayed only one month before taking up a MA scholarship at University of Melbourne. Medieval art history. Research on illuminated manuscripts. Back to Ballarat as principal of Mary’s Mount for five years. Also tutoring at the newly established Catholic teachers college. Ph.D. scholarship to Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, on medieval illuminated manuscripts. Ceased wearing the habit. Fullbright scholarship. Twelve months research in Rome. Travel in Europe. Influential intellectual figures. Encouragement of older nuns. Appointed lecturer, University of Melbourne Fine Arts Department, 1972. Support from senior university staff. Publications medieval book illumination. Head of Department. Appointed to chair Fine Arts 1979. Chaired Academic Board. Deputy Dean and then Dean of Arts Faculty. Pro vice-chancellor. Member of University Council. University administration experiences. Leading Melbourne academics and administrators. Concern for position of women. First woman in a number of university positions. Membership of Victorian Arts Centre Trust, Trustee of national gallery, Victoria, Melbourne University Art Museum, Australia Council, tapestry workshop. Publications. Reflections in the current state and future of Australian universities. Continuing strong Christian commitment. Inquiries to the National Library of Australia. |
| Manion, Margaret M. | Personal Correspondence. 16 archives boxes, 1987-1996. | Arranged in two series: one alphabetical within 6-month or one year periods; the other master files with correspondence filed chronologically Letters of reference, 1989-91, A-Z (1 box) |
| Manion, Margaret M. | Personal Correspondence Files, 1958-1993. 24 cm. 1958-1993. | Personal correspondence files, 1958-1993. Includes Student File 1958-1971, correspondence on her appointment to the Chair and her award of the Order of Australia in 1989. Newspaper and magazine articles about Margaret Manion, 1979-1989. Copy of an address Vasari and the Renaissance, on the occasion of Professor Crawford Jubilee. Marked: Prof. J. Burke?. Copy of an address Vasari and the Renaissance given on the occasion of Professor Crawfords Jubilee. Marked: Prof. J. Burke?. |
| Manion, Margaret | Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 1999. | Interviewer: Patricia Grimshaw for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| Mann, Frederick | Official Opening of the Union House by his excellency, the Lieutenant-governor (Sir Frederick Mann, K.C.M.G.), April 6, 1938. [Melbourne: Melbourne University Union, 1938]. | |
| Marginson, Max. | ‘Max Marginson’. In More Memories of Melbourne University : Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1919, edited by Hume Dow. Melbourne: Hutchinson, 1985. | Marginson’s professional life was spent in the Department of Biochemistry. He was a foundation member of the Australian Biochemical Society and of University House, the University of Melbourne Staff Club. Born in 1928, Marginson died in 2002. |
| Marginson, R. D. | Audio Cassette Tape of the Farewell to Ray and Betty Marginson, Wednesday, 21 December 1988, 5.15. P.M. in the Union Buffet. Audio cassette tape. | Side 1: Speakers David Penington, Sir Douglas Wright, Professor Margaret Manion, Sam Scanlon, and again Sir Douglas Wright. Side 2: Response from Ray and Betty Marginson. |
| Marginson, R. D. | Financial Management in Universities: Overall Financial Planning and Management. Paper presented at the Papers prepared for the Fourth University Administrative Staff Course, [Melbourne] 1972. | |
| Marginson, R. D. | Materials Concerning Various Groups. 32 boxes, 1 Board Mounted Drawing, 1 packet, 1988. | Materials concerning various groups with which Marginson was involved including MMBW, Diamond Valley Hospital, Albert Park Strategic Action Committee, Melbourne Theatre Company and Boobooks. Melbourne Theatre Co. programmes, photograph albums detailing Marginson as chairman of MMBW. University Photographs. Business Council of Australia, presidents file. |
| Marginson, R. D. | MTC Board Papers, etc. 12 archives boxes, 1984-1994. | Melbourne Theatre Company Board papers 1987-1994; Museum of Victoria 1984-1993; Southbank submission 1989; Museum commercial opportunities meeting, correspondence, reports, working papers 1990-1993; Museum of Victoria Council papers 1988-1994; Museum of Victoria Executive Committee 1988- 1994; Museum Development Board 1989-1992; newspaper clippings. |
| Marginson, R. D. | Papers. 49 archives boxes, 1912-1990. | Melbourne University art collection catalogues and correspondence; personal papers; MTC. material; Australian Administrative Staff Association files; PMG and Australia Post files; C.D. Lloyd Trust Committee for Purchase of Art Works files; University and Tertiary Education Policy files and subject notes regarding budgets, finance, economic history, public administration, student issues; Department of Transport files; Commonwealth Tertiary Education Commission publications and other related material; Boobooks papers; AUC submissions. Born in 1923, Marginson was educated at Melbourne High School and the University of Melbourne where he graduated Bachelor of Commerce in 1946. From 1945 to 1950, he worked for the Commonwealth Public Service Department of Transport and PMG Department from 1950 to 1965. In 1966 Marginson was appointed Vice-Principal of the University of Melbourne, responsible for advising and taking executive action in the areas of financial policy, accounting systems and budgets, control of building, maintenance grounds and property. From 1982 he was Chairman of the Melbourne Board of Works. Marginson has been a member of numerous public organisations including Museum of Victoria, Geotrack International, Vice-Chairman of the MTC and member of the Howard Florey Institute. Marginson retired as Vice-Principal in 1988. |
| Marginson, R. D. | Papers. 208 archives boxes, 1965-1979. | Minutes, correspondence and memoranda relating to many branches of University development; Council papers; AUC files; International House files; personal correspondence. |
| Marginson, R. D. | Papers. 16 Archiboxes + 28 archives boxes, 1963-1992. | Papers relating to Chairmanship of the M.M.B.W. including law reform 1983-1989, executive material, activities, treasury, organisation of Melbourne Water 1990-1992; conference material. University of Melbourne papers including correspondence, memorandums, administration, finance committee material, property and buildings; Grimwade estate and Miegunyah; Green Paper and Higher Education papers; CTEC material; Council of Adult Education papers; Geotrack International Board material; MTC minutes, correspondence and notes; printed material; publications; newspaper clippings. |
| Marginson, R. D. | Papers. 9.5 m. 1964-1983. | Administrative Committee Meeting Papers (Staff Appointments Committee 1964-June 1965, Administrative Committee thereafter. 85 vol. Correspondence: Vice-Principals sequence files 1966-March 1983. 63 vol. Personal files. |
| Marginson, R. D. | Personal Papers. 63 archives boxes, 14 volumes, 1967-1990. | Personal papers including: AUC submissions; correspondence; University of Melbourne material; CTEC visits and council material; Australian Administrative Staff College papers 1968-1989; MTC programmes tickets, production details; Melbourne University correspondence and budget material; Eisenhower Fellowship papers; Eisenhower Exchange Fellowship Conference material; University of Melbourne annual reports; Christmas cards; Australia In Facts and Figures Nos. 1-20 (14 volumes) |
| Marginson, R. D. | Recorded Interview. Melbourne. | Interviewer: Peter McPhee for the History of the University Unit.Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| Marginson, R. D. | Recorded Interview. Melbourne. | Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| Marginson, R. D. | Planning for Uncertainty : The University of Melbourne Case Study. [Melbourne]: University of Melbourne, 1973. | By R. D. Marginson, Alan Grenfell Cole and H. Bryce Mortlock |
| Marginson, R. D. | University House Farewell Dinner to Ray and Betty Marginson, 28 September 1988. 1988. | Audio tape of proceedings at the University House Farewell Dinner to Ray and Betty Marginson, 28 September 1988. Speakers are Barrie Davidson, Max Marginson, Frank Strahan, Ray Marginson and Betty Marginson. Jazz by Ray and Betty Stillwater Buoys. |
| Marginson, Simon | Papers. 24 cm. (2 archives boxes), 1966-1976. | Conferences 1971-1976; Council papers 1966-1968; education policy 1970; conference material; travel 1970; administration and policy. Marginson was a student activist and academic in the Centre for the Study of Higher Education, later Professor at Monash University. |
| Marginson, Simon | Papers. 23 archives boxes, 1970-1980. | AUS education information 1975-1980; council papers 1978; AUS constitution and rules 1980; council resolutions and budget 1972-1974; issue of AUS Socialist Worker 1977; press elections 1975. Student and lobby group newspapers including Farrago 1970-9; Lots Wife 1974-80; National Student 1974-80; Rabelais 1974-9; Nucleus 1979; Naked Wasp 1978-9; Rouge 1979; Semper Floreat 1972; Grok 1972; Scoop 1976-7; Free Palestine 1979; Palestine Forum 1977-9; Koori Binac; Women at Work 1976; Right to Choose 1977-9; Black Liberation 1975. |
| Marginson, Simon | Posters. 3 cm. 1970s. | Australian Union of Students posters, advertising rallies, etc. (39). |
| Marginson, Simon | Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 2002. | Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| Marlowe Society | Committee Minutes, December 1956 24 July 1961. 2 cm. 1956-1961. | |
| Marlowe Society | Papers. 1 vol. 1954-1961. | Minute Book, mainly Committee meetings, Dec.1956-24 July 1961, also general meetings, Sept 1954-Sept 1956; copy of constitution at p. 171 |
| Marshall, Christopher | A Deep Sonorous Thing : The Newman College Collection of Art. Melbourne: Newman College, University of Melbourne, 1993. | |
| Marshall Hall, George William Louis | Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1888-1945. | Poems and unfinished essays; published literary works, To Irene, A Book of Canticles, Hymn to Sydney dedicated to Arthur Streeton in his camp at Mossmans Bay, 1897, Hymns Ancient and Modern, 1898, Bianca Capello, a tragedy (verse play), 1905. Correspondence, biographical notes, press cuttings and programmes, chiefly collected for a proposed memorial biography of Marshall-Hall, 1893-1945. Press cuttings, chiefly being criticism of his musical works etc. 188-1893; 7 photographs of Marshall-Hall and others unnamed. Marshall-Hall was appointed the first Ormond Professor of Music for five-year terms in 1890 and 1895 respectively. Publication of his verses, denounced as erotic and atheistic, led to the University Council refusing to renew his appointment in 1900. The Conservatorium of Music he had established in 1895 (the Albert Street Conservatorium and more recently the Melba Conservatorium) continued in competition with that established by the University for his successor. He was re-appointed to the Chair in 1914 but died in the following year. |
| Martin, John Stanley | Augustin Lodewyckx (1876-1964) : Teacher and Scholar, Working Paper / the University of Melbourne. History of the University Project; No. 7. Parkville, Vic.: History of the University Unit Dept. of History University of Melbourne, 2002. | Lodewyckx (1876-1964) was born in Belgium and came to Australia after a career which included teaching French and German in South Africa, and educational administration in the Belgian Congo. Lodewyckx was appointed lecturer in German in 1915 and Associate-Professor in 1922. For the next 25 years he fostered the development of German within the University and the community at large and initiated and supported teaching and research in Dutch, Old Icelandic and Swedish, in some cases. |
| Martin, John Stanley | Papers. 12 cm. 1 archives box, 1987-1991. | Files: German/Science German Reading Course taught by Dr. John S. Martin, 1988-1990 (discontinued by the Russian and Language Studies Department after 1987 and taken up by Germanic Studies). Correspondence, memoranda, exercises etc. 1987-Jan. 1988; Dawkins Report (The Language of Australia; Discussion Paper on an Australian Literacy and Language Policy for the 1990s and response from the language departments. HLC; Horwood Language Centre Review 1991 (Martin on committee); School of Languages Working Party 1991 (Martin convenor). Martin, a graduate of Melbourne, became Lecturer in Swedish in the Department of Germanic Languages in 1969, Senior Lecturer in May 1985 and Reader in July 1992. |
| Martin, John Stanley | The Teaching of Swedish in Melbourne 1977 : Report on the Teaching of Swedish in the Department of Germanic Studies at the University of Melbourne. Melbourne: Dept. of Germanic Studies University of Melbourne, 1977. | |
| Martin, John Stanley | The Teaching of Swedish in Melbourne, 1982 : Report on the Teaching of Swedish in the Department of Germanic Studies at the University of Melbourne. [Melbourne]: Dept. of Germanic Studies University of Melbourne, 1982. | By John Stanley Martin and Lena Bruzaeus. |
| Martin, John Stanley | The Teaching of Swedish in Melbourne; Report on the Teaching of Swedish in the Department of Germanic Studies at the University of Melbourne. [Melbourne,: Swedish Section Dept. of Germanic Studies University of Melbourne, 1971. | By John Stanley Martin and Barbro Sjberg. |
| Martin, Leslie Harold | Post-Graduate Studies in Science and Engineering. Paper presented at the A Symposium on the place of the Australian university in the community, and, Post-graduate studies in Australian universities, [Canberra, A.C.T.] 1955. | |
| Marton, Otti | Theatrical Memorabilia. 7 archives boxes, 1 plastic sleeve (25.5 cm X 41 cm), 1953-1985. | Concert, theatre, ballet and opera programmes; souvenir programme of the Coronation of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, 1953; opera film programmes. Programmes include ABC concerts, Musica Viva, MTC, St Martin’s Theatre, Union Theatre Repertory Co. Melbourne University Marlowe Society and the Melbourne Little Theatre. |
| Martyn, John Robert Charles | Papers Relating to the Establishment of the Teaching of Modern Greek at the University. 7 cm. (1 archives box), 1966-1975. | Papers relating to the establishment of the teaching of Modern Greek at the University including: Correspondence; committee minutes, notes, papers; conference material; copies of Canton News; newscuttings. The teaching of Modern Greek arose from approaches from the Greek community to the Commonwealth Advisory Committee on Advanced Education to have Chairs of Modern Greek created at Australian universities. The University of New England had created on in 1968. Although a Chair was not agreed to at the University of Melbourne, a lectureship was established in the early 1970s. |
| Mason, Shaun | ‘Voices Crying in the Wilderness: The Excluded Medical Students of the 1950s’. In Melbourne University Characters and Controversies, edited by Chiaroscuro: Department of History, University of Melbourne, 2001. | The first application of a quota system in order to cut class sizes in Medicine. |
| Mason, Tim | A History of De Minimis. 40, ii leaves, 1981. | De Minimis was published by Melbourne University Law Students Society 1948-1976 |
| Massey, H. S. W. | ‘T. H. Laby, F.R.S.’ Australian Physicist. v.17 no.11(1980). | |
| Masson, David Orme | Letters. 1 cm. (4 letters), 1927. | Letters from A.C.D. Rivett; Sir James Barrett; J.A. Macfarland; Sir John Monash. Masson was educated at Edinburgh University where he obtained M.A in 1878, B.Sc. in 1880, D.Sc. in 1884. He held a lectureship for one year under William Ramsay at University College, Bristol and Research Fellowship at Edinburgh from 1884 to 1886. In the same year Masson was appointed Professor of Chemistry at the University of Melbourne, holding it until his retirement in 1923. In addition to his university duties, Masson made a significant contribution to the advancement of science, he took a leading part in the foundation of the Advisory Council of Science and Industry (later CSIRO) and at various times presided over a number of national scientific and research organizations. |
| Masson, David Orme | Papers [in the Basser Library Australian Academy of Science.] 8 cm, 1858-1937. | Letters, press cuttings, obituaries, printed testimonials, published poems; manuscripts of published papers; and miscellaneous biographical material. Collection of photographs of Masson, 1893-1933 |
| Masson, David Orme | Papers. 2.5 metres, 1881-1937. | Correspondence 1881-1937; photographs; certificates; medals; objects including Captain Scotts pipe found in his last tent in the Antarctic and presented to Masson by Scotts widow; a decanter holder commemorating the Australian Antarctic Expedition 1914 presented to Masson. |
| Masson, David Orme | ‘The Scope and Aims of Chemical Science and Its Place in the University’. Argus. 24 March 1887. | |
| Matheson, J. A. L. | ‘Engineering in the University’. University gazette v. 4, no. no. 2 (1948): 9-11. | |
| Mathews, Rivkah | ‘Rivkah Mathews’. In More Memories of Melbourne University : Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1919, edited by Hume Dow. Melbourne: Hutchinson, 1985. | Mathews graduated in Arts and worked on Farrago. After work for a socialist youth league and raising a family, she returned to academic life and specialised in education in Medicine, particularly for General Practitioners. |
| Mathews, Rivkah | Problems in the Democratisation of Education for the General Practice of Medicine in Victoria. PhD, La Trobe University, 1985. | |
| Matthaei, Ernst | Papers. 60 archives boxes, 1898-1981. | Papers of Ernst Matthaei including: correspondence; reports; photographs of Ernst and family; slides; Melbourne University Hockey Club material; Faculty workshops correspondence 1937-1968; travel brochures; lecture notes; experiments; purchase journal 1938-1939; publications; other papers concerning his work as microscopist and teacher at the University of Melbourne 1939-1966. Also papers relating to the Ernst Matthaei Memorial Collection of Glass 1939-1966. Ernst Matthaei, 1904-1966, was educated at the University of Jena, Diploma-opticker. Becoming a technical officer for the Zeiss organisation he was their Melbourne technical agent 1929-37. He became a technician at the University of Melbourne and joined the Optical Munitions Panel in 1942 later graduating to a lectureship. His primary research area was fluorescence microscopy. |
| Matthaei, Ernst | Papers, Including Portrait Photograph of Ron Muss, Microscopy Laboratory, 30 Ap. 1964. 10 cm. 1946-1948. | Working notebook of Ernst Matthaei with Professor O. Tiegs on the muscles of insects, 1 Oct. 1946 14 Jan. 1948. Photographs are interspersed, sometimes fixed, sometimes loose. Loose material inside the front cover includes: negative of portrait photograph of Ron Muss, Microscopy Laboratory, 30 Ap. 1964; Photomicrographs, for Mr. I. Price (1) 28 Oct.1964, and others not described; memoranda by Matthaei.; dinner invitation from Grace and Ernst for 26 May 1964 at University House to mark a special occasion. Notebook cover bears University device. |
| Matthaei, Grace | Papers. 60 archives boxes, 1898-1981. | Papers of Matthaei relating to her editing the Royal Society of Victoria Proceedings and teaching English to foreign students at the University of Melbourne. Also including University notebooks 1946-1952; appointment diaries; published and unpublished. Matthaei was a journalist who worked in the Geology Library of the University. She was largely responsible for the exchange arrangements with overseas institutions which laid foundations of a journal collection of national importance. |
| Mathison, G. C. | ‘The Position and Aims of Clinical Research’. Melbourne University Review. v.1 no. 1(1884). | |
| Mauldon, F. R. E. | ‘Sir Douglas Copland and the Foundation of the Economic Society’. Economic record. v.36 no.73(1960). | |
| Maxwell, Ian Ramsay | Maxwell Talking with Gwyn Dow, September 1975, 1966-1976. | Maxwell talks with Gwyneth Dow. (1) Tapes: Two reels (one magnetophonband BASF, one re-recorded by University of Melbourne CHSE). Three lectures on T.S. Eliot: Portrait of a Lady; Gerontion; and Marina & Journey of the Magi, Term I, 1966. (2) Cassettes: Marina & Journey of the Magi; Portrait of a Lady; Gerontion; Ballads c.1976; Maxwell talking with Gwyn Dow, September 1975. Maxwell (1901-1979), was educated at Scotch College, University of Melbourne and Balliol College, Oxford. He lectured at the University of Copenhagen from 1934 to 1936 and the University of Sydney from 1936 to 1945. In the following year Maxwell was appointed Chair of English at the University of Melbourne. He lectured and wrote on Old Norse as well as English, and was made a Chevalier of the Order of the Icelandic Falcon for his services to Old Norse literature in 1966 by the Icelandic government. He retired in 1968. |
| McAuliffe, Chris, Ed. | Treasures of the University of Melbourne: Highlights of the Cultural Collection. Parkville: MUP, 2003. | Co-editor: Peter Yule. |
| McCahon, J. | The Classification of Income and Expenditure at the University of Melbourne. 1972. | 1. Introduction and summary of findings 2. Aspects of university accounting and budgeting 3. Existing classification of accounts 4. Coding structures for a computer system 5. Implementation Appendix. References. |
| McCann, Douglas Andrew | History as Science : Michael White and His Contributions to Cytogenetics and Evolutionary Theory. PhD, University of Melbourne, 1994. | White was Professor of Zoology 1958-1964 and of Genetics 1964-1975. He died in 1983. |
| McCann, Douglas Andrew | The Perspective of the Graduate Bodies. Paper presented at the University government relations, Canberra 1982. | Australian Vice-Chancellors Committee. |
| McCann, Douglas Andrew | The Last of the First : CSIRAC : Australia’s First Computer. Parkville, Vic.: University of Melbourne Dept. of Computer Science and Software Engineering, 2000. | By Douglas Andrew McCann and Peter George Thorne. |
| McCarthy, Gavan | ‘Life in Science: Science Biography and Archival Material’. Voices. v.3 no.1(Autumn 1993). | |
| McCarthy, Helen | ‘David and Goliath: David Yenckens Fight for a Sustainable Future’. In Melbourne University Mosaic: People and Places, edited by Three-Four-Eight. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1998. | Yencken was the founding Chairman of the Australian Heritage Commission, President of the Australian Conservation Foundation and Secretary of the Victorian Department of Environment and Planning 1993-97. |
| McCaughey, J. D. | ‘Francis Ormond: His Contribution to Our Heritage’. Victorian historical journal v. 52, no. no, 4 (1987): 235-47. | Ormond was chief benefactor of Ormond College, which opened to students in 1881. From 1885, women were permitted to attend tutorials offered by the College, and in 1973 were admitted as residents. |
| McCaughey, J. D. | The Perspective of the Graduate Bodies. Paper presented at the Conference of Governing Bodies, Canberra 1983. | |
| McCaughey, Jean | Ronald Frank Henderson 1917-1994 : A Tribute. Melbourne, Vic.: The University of Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, 1997. | By Jean and J. Davis McCaughey. Henderson was head of the Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research at the University, and was instrumental in developing the indicators for the Poverty Line |
| McCrae, Barbara | Interview with Barbara McCrae, 1983. | McCrae speaks with Kathleen Gane of her family background; childhood memories; family life in Kew; living conditions; religion; family values; school memories; university education; memories of the 1930s. Recorded by the Australia 1938 Oral History Project as research for the book Australians 1938 from the series Australians, a historical library. Inquiries to the National Library of Australia. |
| McDonald, John | Renascent Artist. Vogue Living. v.21 no.5(June/July 1987). | Deals with Michael Johnson. |
| McDonald, John | ‘Michael Johnson’. Art and Australia. v.24 no.3(Autumn 1987). | |
| McInnis, Craig | Social Justice Values in University Student Selection : Academic Cultures in the Policy Implementation Process. PhD, University of Melbourne, 1991. | |
| McKay, Elaine M. | ‘John D. Legge and Asian Studies in Australia: All That Has Now Been Quite Transformed’. In David P. Chandler and M. C. Ricklefs, Ed. Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Indonesia: Essays in Honour of Professor J. D. Legge. Clayton: South East Asia Studies, Monash University, 1986. | |
| McKellar, Doris | University Memorabilia. 1915-1919, 1934-1954. Negatives 3 x 5 monochrome | Photographs of University grounds; Engineering School; cloisters; students; University reception; commencement; war memorial service. McKellar studied arts and law from 1915 to 1919, and after graduation took an active interest in the Victorian Women Graduates Association. |
| McKinna, Gervase | ‘Doctor-Sister Mary Glowrey: An Impossible Mission?’ In Melbourne University Mosaic: People and Places, edited by Three-Four-Eight. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1998. | McGlowrey (1887-1957) took her MB in 1910 and MD in 1919. She joined the Society of Jesus, Mary and Joseph in Guntur, India. She was the first doctor to become a Catholic nun. |
| McLennan, Ian | Files Relating to the Engineering Foundation,. 24 cm. (2 archives boxes), 1983-1986. | |
| McLennan, Ian | Papers. 84 cm. (7 archives boxes), 1973 to 1986. | Minutes, correspondence with University of Melbourne Engineering School Foundation; Ian Clunies Ross Memorial Foundation; Queen Elizabeth II Memorial Trust; Australian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy; Royal Agricultural Society of Victoria. McLennan was born in 1909 and educated at Scotch College and the University of Melbourne . He joined Broken Hill Proprietary Co. Ltd. as a cadet engineer in 1933 and retired as Chairman and Director of Administration of the company in 1977. Sir Ian was instrumental in establishing several important mining and scientific research organisations and was a prominent in numerous committees and boards including Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy Henry Jones (IXL) and Elders (IXL). |
| McLennan, Ian | Papers. 24 cm. (2 archives boxes), 1973-1984. | Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy memoranda files 1973-1982; honorary membership committee 1977-1979; general correspondence 1978-1982; conference papers 1978. University of Melbourne Appeal for Music Performing Space 1978. Ian Clunies Ross Memorial Foundation general correspondence 1981-1984. Queen Elizabeth 11 Silver Jubilee Trust correspondence and minutes of meetings 1977-1983. |
| McMahon, Barbara | Papers. 24 cm. (2 archives boxes), 1973-1974. | University of Melbourne Women’s Staff Group general information, policies, newspaper articles, administration, minutes, circulars 1973-1974; UMGSA and MUSA papers, executive motions resolutions 1973-1974; Victorian Committee on Discrimination in Employment and Occupation correspondence 1973-1974; wage structuring material 1973; Melbourne Child Care Advisory Group reports, proposals, children’s commission report, correspondence, newspaper clippings 1973-1974; SRC material 1974; University of Melbourne General Staff Association correspondence, circulars 1974. McMahon chaired the University of Melbourne Women’s Staff Group (concerned with classification and salaries of women on the general staff) and was an Executive member of the Child Care Advisory Group, both formed in 1973. |
| McManus, Frank | ‘Frank McManus’. In Memories of Melbourne University: Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1917, edited by Hume Dow. Richmond, Vic.: Hutchinson of Australia, 1983. | McManus graduated BA, Dip. Ed. from Melbourne and taught in State secondary schools from 1927-49. When the Democratic Labor Party was formed in 1955 he was elected Secretary, serving as a Victorian senator 1956-62 and 1965-74. In 1973-74 he was leader of the DLP in the Senate. |
| McNicoll, Ronald Ramsay | Student Song Book and Collection of Bawdy Songs. 2 bd. vols. (55.0 mm), ca. 1923-ca. 1960. | Two collections of bawdy songs and verses, the first of which circulated, as a collection, at Melbourne University about 1960; the second of which was formed, partly at Duntroon Military College, between 1923 and 1933, and includes some works from 1943. |
| McPhee, Hilary | Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 2001. | McPhee became the inaugural Vice-Chancellors fellow in 1997. She had previously chaired the Australia Council, and, with Diana Gribble, founded McPhee Gribble Publishers. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| McPhee, Peter | Pansy : A Life of Roy Douglas Wright. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1999. | Wright was born 1907 and educated at the Universities of Tasmania and Melbourne. He became Senior Lecturer in Pathology at the University of Melbourne 1934-38 and Professor of Physiology 1939-71, Deputy Chancellor 1972-1980 and Chancellor from 1980. He was medical Director of the Peter MacCallum Clinic 1971-75 and a consultant to the Howard Florey Institute from 1975. He served on various boards and committees during his career. |
| McPhee, Peter | The Politics of Knowledge : Towards a Biography of R.D. (Pansy) Wright, Working Papers / the University of Melbourne. History of the University Project; No. 1. Parkville, Vic.: University of Melbourne History of the University Project, 1995. | |
| McRae, Valda, and University of Melbourne Faculty of Science | Report of the Committee of Review of the School of Chemistry. 5 cm. 1989. | |
| Meabank, Julann Honorah | A Contract with Education : Alice Hoy, 1893-1976. M Ed, University of Melbourne, 1988. | |
| Meabank, Julann Honorah | The Influence of the Ideas of Progressive Education on Teacher Training in Victoria, C.1920 to C.1950. PhD, University of Melbourne, 1996. | |
| Mead, Jenna | ‘The First Stone: Feminism and Non Fiction’. Sydney papers. v.7 no.4(Spring 1995). | |
| Mead, Jenna | ‘Sexual Harassment and Feminism’. Republica. no. 2(1995). | Interviewer: Amanda Lohrey. |
| Medley Hall (University of Melbourne) | Minutes, 1955-72, 1977-78. 10 cm. 1955-1978. | The University assumed responsibility for the student Hostel in 1953. The first Warden was appointed in 1954, and a year later the Hostel was renamed Medley Hall, Sir John Medley. In 1969, terrace No. 52 was purchased and the following year an extension was added, providing accommodation for 57 students. |
| Medley, John Dudley Gibbs | Addresses and Broadcasts, Including Speech Delivered to Meeting of Staff and Students, 30 May 1940. 2 cm. (1 folder 50 pages), 1939-1940. | Annual Commencement Address, 1 April 1939; Anzac Day Address, 25 April 1939; New Education Fellowship Meeting Address, 2 May 1939; Victorian Council for Social Training Address, 10 May 1939; Education in a Democracy at War Address to Education Reform Association, 28 November 1939; Progress in Goodwill Christmas Day Broadcast, 25 December 1939; The World at the Crossroads Good Friday Broadcast 1940; Commencement Address, 13 April 1940; Speech delivered to Meeting of Staff and Students, 30 May 1940; Are We Fighting for Phantoms? Broadcast, 9 June 1940; Merchandised Morale Broadcast, 21 June 1940; Ruthless Optimism Broadcast, 30 June 1940. Medley was born at Oxford, 19 April 1891 and educated at Winchester and New College, Oxford. Elected to a fellowship at Corpus Christi, Cambridge, he chose not to take this up but enlisted in the Welsh Regiment in 1914. He joined the family business of Anthony Gibbs & Sons, London and in 1920 came to Australia to join the Melbourne office of Gibbs, Bright and Co. for whom he became manager of the Adelaide Office, 1922-1924, then manager in Sydney. In 1930 he became headmaster of Tudor House preparatory school at Moss Vale, N.S.W. and in 1938, on the resignation of R.R. Priestley, he became the second salaried Vice-Chancellor of the University of Melbourne. In retirement he filled his time with broadcasting and journalism. He was a writer of satirical light verse. He was a member of the Australian Broadcasting Commission 1942-1960 and Trustee of the National Gallery of Victoria 1941-1958 (Chairman 1951-1958). He was knighted in 1948 and received honorary degrees from Oxford and Melbourne. |
| Medley, John Dudley Gibbs | Satirical Verse. 1 cm. (11 pages and roneoed), 1950. | Some pages initialled by the author. Much of Medleys verse concerns University affairs |
| Medley, John Dudley Gibbs | Stawell Oration Farewell to Academe. 1 cm. (4 pages), 1950. | |
| Medley, John Dudley Gibbs | Papers. 36 cm. (3 archives boxes), 1914-1960. | Addresses and memoranda, 1939-1942; Published addresses, 1940- 1950; broadcast talks, published and unpublished, 1940-1951; Articles and pamphlets, including his popular contributions to the AGE Literary Supplement; manuscript and published poems; biographical notes and obituary, 1950-1951, 1962; scrap-book 1940-1951; photographs. 12 volumes of Lady Emmeline Medleys diaries 1938-1949; Lady Emmeline Medleys reminiscences, 1 volume 1954. |
| Melbourne College of Advanced Education | List of Files Relating to the Melbourne Teachers College Held in the Public Records Office of Victoria..05 cm, 1873-1963. | |
| Melbourne College of Advanced Education | Magazines, etc..60 m. 1913-1989. | Magazines and other publications, programmes, photographs, as listed under the heading Papers considered archival by Gordon Bate. Includes The Education Departments Record of War Service 1914- 1918, 304 pp. with photographs and biographical notes on those who served and other Information. In protective box. On title-page: presented to the Sheep Hills North School (name of School obliterated by paper pasted over it). |
| Melbourne College of Advanced Education | Papers, Including Report on Gryphon Gallery, Prepared for Dr. Barry Sheehan and Members of Council by Ken Scarlett, Director, Gryphon Gallery, July 1984;. 1 cm. 1984-1988. | File containing: Report on Gryphon Gallery, prepared for Barry Sheehan and Members of Council by Ken Scarlett, Director, Gryphon Gallery, July 1984; D.J. Connelly to W. Pye and Vice-Principals, 21 February 1985, announcing a regular monthly bulletin to improve understanding and communication within the College, to be edited by Connelly; MCAE News, Vol.1 No.1, March 1985, subsequently The Gryphon, to Vol.4 No.3 September 1988 (the last with an Errata sheet). |
| Melbourne College of Advanced Education | Photographs. 1980s. Mounted in plastic sleeves in a black loose-leaf binder, unlabelled. | Photographs of buildings, people and activities of the M.C.A.E. These are unidentified but some have a note on the back indicating that they were used in MCAE handbooks, etc. |
| Melbourne College of Advanced Education | Trainee 64; the Annual Magaine of Melbourne Teachers College. Anniversary Issue Commemorating the 75th Year of the College on Its Present Site 1889-1964. Edited by Joan Shannon and Victor E. Fitcher.: Students Representative Council and the Principal and Staff of the Melbourne Teachers College. 1964. | |
| Melbourne College of Advanced Education | Graduation Photographs. 1938-1942. | Photograph of Norman Dudley Goldsworthy, B.Sc. T.P.T.C. 8 March 1942 (graduation); views of the front of the Melbourne Teachers College (8). From separate origins in the 1850s and 60s the Melbourne Teachers College and the Secondary Teachers College amalgamated in 1972 to become the Melbourne College of Advanced Education. Subsequently the MCAE amalgamated with the University of Melbourne on 1 January 1989. |
| Melbourne Dental Students Society | Counter Handbook. [Parkville, Vic.]: The Society, 1994. | |
| Melbourne Equine Research Fund | Annual Report of the Melbourne University Equine Research Fund. [Parkville, Vic.: University of Melbourne], 1986. | |
| Melbourne Medical Students Society | Student Medicine. Vol. Vol. 1, no. 1 (June 1963)-. [Melbourne]: Melbourne University Medical Students Society, 1963. | |
| Melbourne Research and Innovation Office | Research Performance. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Research and Innovation Office, 2000. | |
| Melbourne Teachers College 42 Reunion Committee | Papers Gathered in the Course of Preparing for the 50-Year Reunion for Teacher Trainees Who Were in the College in 1942. 4 cm. 1992. | Newsletter, 8 Mar. 1992, and forms completed by 1942 students, accepting or refusing and supplying names of additional people to contact, married names, addresses. Papers were presented in a loose-leaf folder. |
| Melbourne Theatre Company | Programs, with Review Cuttings Interleaved. 19 items vols, 1999-2000. | |
| Melbourne University Aesthetic Club | Crumpet. Parkville, Vic.?: Melbourne University Aesthetic Club, 1957. | |
| Melbourne University Agricultural Society | Cash Book 1928-1959. 2 cm. 1928-1959. | |
| Melbourne University Agricultural Society | Papers. 12 cm. (one box), 1917-1950. | Constitution, minutes and list of number of members, financial balances, and numbers attending annual dinners (1922-33). |
| Melbourne University Agricultural Students Society | Agros : The Magazine of the Melbourne University Agricultural Students Society. Parkville, Vic: Melbourne University Agricultural Students Society, 1960-76. | Former title: Vulgare. |
| Melbourne University Agricultural Students Society | Forage. Melbourne: Melbourne University Agricultural Students Society, 1977. | |
| Melbourne University Amnesty | M.U. Amnesty Newsletter. Melbourne: Melbourne University Amnesty, 1967-1968. | |
| Melbourne University Amnesty | Newsletter. Melbourne: Melbourne University Amnesty, 1966. | Melbourne University Amnesty newsletter. Later title: M.U. Amnesty newsletter. |
| Melbourne University Arts Association | Present Opinion. Melbourne: Melbourne University Arts Association, 1946. | |
| Melbourne University Atheist Students Society | Children of Paine : The Magazine for Freethinkers Melbourne University Atheist Students Society. Parkville: The Society, 1982. | |
| Melbourne University Australian Labor Party Club | Papers. 24 cm. (2 archives boxes), 1973-1980. | MUALP correspondence; minutes; reports; membership forms and interested in joining lists and questionnaire; financial material 1973-1980. National Council of AAL Students memoranda; correspondence 1977-1979. |
| Melbourne University Australian Labor Party Club | Socialist; Journal of the Melbourne University Australian Labor Party Club. September 1955; July 1956. vols, 1955-1956. | |
| Melbourne University Baseball Club | Minutes. 1 cm. (black exercise book), 1928-1941. | Minutes 28 September 1928 9 October 1940; invitation and liquor license for Dinner for Adelaide Team; report for 1941 season. A baseball club has existed on campus since circa 1908, the present club was founded in 1926. |
| Melbourne University Boat Club | Annual Report and Financial Statement and List of Life Members. 1927-1928. | The club was formed in 1858 by Professor Irving (Classics). |
| Melbourne University Boat Club | Minutes. 2 boxes: one archive, one oversize, 1977-1987. | Two volumes of minutes: 1977-84, 1984-87 |
| Melbourne University Boat Club | Papers. 48 cm. (4 archives boxes), 1889-1962. | Minutes, annual reports, rules and agreements 1889-1962; correspondence 1902-1927. |
| Melbourne University Car Club | Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1962-1978. | The Car Club existed before World War II. The present Club was formed in 1955. Correspondence 1973-1974; timing records 1962-1977; positions 1978. |
| Melbourne University Car Club | Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1958-1968. | Outwards correspondence 1958-19 June 1967; Inwards letters 1958 1967; membership, lists, circulars from other car clubs, minutes of committee meetings, February 1967 May 1968; Constitution (revised, 1965) and Committee membership 1964-1968, general membership 1964. UNICAR; Melbourne University Car Club magazine, March 1965 March 1968. Magazines of other car clubs including that of the University of Adelaide. Competition file 1963-1968. Attendance Books 1963-1966, 1967-1968. |
| Melbourne University Chemical Society | Papers. 24 cm. (2 archives boxes), 1903-1960. | Minutes 1903-1960 with reports and lists of speakers to 1974; unpublished history of the Society The Melbourne University Chemical Society Its History since its Foundations in 1903 by Joan Radford, 1982. |
| Melbourne University Choral Society | Correspondence and Minutes. 2 cm. 1980-1981. | The Society was formed in 1943, with Mr. Dan Hardy as Conductor. An earlier Society had been active from the early years of the century. |
| Melbourne University Choral Society | Melbourne University Choral Society Song Book. Melbourne: Melbourne University Choral Society, 195-? | 1 score ([40] p.); 22 x 28 cm |
| Melbourne University Choral Society | Papers. 48 cm. (4 archives boxes), 1943-1969. | Minutes 1944-1969 (includes report on works performed in 1943); membership records 1957-1968; correspondence concerning engagements 1950-1965; programmes. |
| Melbourne University Commerce Society | The Margin; the Magazine of the Melbourne University Commerce Society, 1926-1948. | The Society, formed in 1925, aimed to promote social activities, and to assist in increasing members; knowledge of matters pertaining to the commerce course (commenced in that year). |
| Melbourne University Commerce Students Society | Counter Hand Book. [Parkville, Vic.: The Society], 1976. | |
| Melbourne University Commerce Students Society | Laissez-Faire Journal. Melbourne: Commerce Students Society, 1971. | |
| Melbourne University Cricket Club | Papers. 6 cm. 1933-1955. | Minute Book, General and Committee, 1933-60; bound volume with interleaved material; MS and TS First entry AGM 28 August 1933 (part of page missing); last entry draft minutes of Committee meeting 7 January 1960; TS copy of Club Constitution attached to last page |
| Melbourne University Department of Biochemistry | Papers. 68 boxes 8.16 m. 1920-1968. | Files relating to W.J. Young’s period of office (examinations, war work, nutrition and vitamin research, staff, thesis reports, 1902- 1942; files from Trikojuss incumbency including correspondence etc. relating to equipment, research interests, staff, and with numerous scientific bodies, University personnel and colleagues elsewhere, 1943-1968. These files are listed in the Australian Science Archives Projects The Papers of Victor Martin Trikojus (1902-1985) Vol.1. |
| Melbourne University Engineering Foundation | Annual Report. [Parkville, Vic.]: The Foundation. | The Foundation was inaugurated at the Centenary of the introduction of the degree course in engineering. |
| Melbourne University Engineering School Centenary Foundation | Progress : The Journal of the Melbourne University Engineering School Centenary Foundation. Vol. Vol. 1 ed. 1 (Sept. 1983)-. Parkville, Vic.: The Foundation, 1983. | |
| Melbourne University Engineering Society | The Varsity Engineer. Vol. No. 1 (1910)-no. 10 (1916). Melbourne: Committee of the Melbourne University Engineering Society, 1910. | |
| Melbourne University Engineering Students Club | Cranks and Nuts. Vol. 1938-1978. [Parkville, Vic.]: The Club, 1938. | |
| Melbourne University Engineering Students Club | Engineering Students Counter Handbook. [Parkville, Vic.]: Melbourne University Engineering Students Club. | |
| Melbourne University Engineering Students Club | Papers. 8 cm. 1957-1958. | |
| Melbourne University Engineering Students Club | Papers. 4 cm. 1936-1980. | Two minute books MUESC 1936-1946 labelled volume 3 1950-1954; Secretarys file 1958-1959; SCIIAS file 1971-1980. |
| Melbourne University Engineering Students Club | Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1947, 1952-1964. | Files regarding Exhibition held for Engineering School fund 1952- 1964 (not 1956); general correspondence; accounts 1947, 1960-1964; Students Curricular Committee Proceedings 1957. |
| Melbourne University Engineering Students Club | Quo Vadis : The Official Magazine of the Melbourne University Engineering Students Club. Vol. May, 1981-. [Parkville, Vic.]: The Club, 1981. | |
| Melbourne University Engineering Students Club | Secretary’s Files. 24 cm. (2 archives boxes), 1937-1954. | |
| Melbourne University Family Club | Melbourne University Family Club Cooperative Newsletter. Parkville, Vic.?: Melbourne University Family Club, 1969. | |
| Melbourne University Film Society | Papers. 2.4 metres, 1948-1971. | The Society was formed in 1948. As well as providing lunch hour and evening screenings, it helped inaugurate the Melbourne Film Festival in 1952 in partnership with the Victorian Federation of Film Societies and the Australian Film Institute. Minutes 1948-1960; correspondence; material from distributors; programmes; posters; accounts. |
| Melbourne University Fine Arts Society | Minutes. 2 cm. vol. foolscap, 1937-1949. | |
| Melbourne University Fine Arts Students Society | Melbourne University Fine Arts Students Society Broadsheet. Vol. 1 (July 1982)-. [Melbourne]: The Society, 1982. | |
| Melbourne University Fine Arts Students Society | Melbourne University Fine Arts Students Society Broadsheet. Vol. 1 (July 1982)-. [Melbourne]: The Society, 1982. | |
| Melbourne University Football Club | 125th Anniversary Dinner Menu, 1859-1984, Held at the Carlton Social Club, Princes Park, Carlton, Wednesday 26 September 1984. Melbourne: Melbourne University Football Club, 1984. | Lists Premierships won since 1906, Metropolitan Amateur Football Association 1906-1907, and Victorian Amateur Football Association 1921-1984; and The Bare Bones of History, 1855-1983. The Melbourne University Football Club is one of the founding clubs of the Victorian Amateur Football Association. The club had played in the Victorian Football league (VFL) before 1914 and later played in the VFL Junior competition. In 1921 it divided into University A (Blues) and University B (Blacks) and joined the newly formed Metropolitan Amateur Football Association (MAFA). The Blacks won the first two premierships in 1921 and 1922 and before the end of the decade won consecutive premierships in 1928 and 1929. The MAFA became the Victorian Amateur Football Association (VAFA) in 1933. The greatest time for the club came with the unparalleled run of flags before and immediately after World War Two (the competition was suspended from 1940 to 1945). |
| Melbourne University Football Club | Papers. 31 archives boxes, 1 volume, 1954-1990. | Correspondence; minute books; executive committee papers; Board of management papers; team committee papers; general secretary papers; membership registers; financial papers including receipts and accounts; annual reports; results; Victorian Amateur Football Association correspondence and reports; Australian Universities Sports Association correspondence and papers; jumpers; publications including Amateur Footballer; photographs. Photograph of the Inter-University Football Team 1906 (members named). |
| Melbourne University Football Club | Papers. 6 cm. 1925-1955. | Minutes, 1 August 1925 14 July 1955. Annual reports are pinned or pasted into volume. Also, transcript by Dr. J. McRae, together with notes and index. 1 vol. |
| Melbourne University Graduates Labor Club | Minutes. 3 cm. 1948. | The Club was established in January 1948 and disbanded in October of the same year. |
| Melbourne University Historical Society | Editorial Material. 48 cm. (4 archives boxes), 1984 to 1985. | Including: Correspondence 1968-1975; minutes 1985; financial material; printed estimates 1985; rejected essays 1979-1980; proofs; photographs; copies of Melbourne Historical Journal Nos. 2 7. The University Historical Society formed in 1893 was later abandoned and founded as the Melbourne University Historical Society in 1914. It was revived in 1983 as the Melbourne University History Society. |
| Melbourne University Historical Society | Editorial Material. 5 archives boxes, 1 packet, 1953-1987. | Editorial material including: Copies of Melbourne Historical Journal no. 2-17; correspondence 1968-1985; minutes 1985; printed estimates 1985; rejected articles 1979-1980; proofs; photographs. |
| Melbourne University Historical Society | Menu for Farewell Dinner to Professor Ernest Scott. 1 item, 1936. | Menu for farewell Dinner to Professor Ernest Scott Oriental Hotel, toast proposers and responders written in pencil. On the back is a photograph of Scott autographed in pencil. |
| Melbourne University Historical Society | Papers. 2 cm. 1914-1934. | Minutes, 27 March 1914 12 July 1934; ledger (general account book) includes lists of financial members, receipts, 1914-1925. |
| Melbourne University Historical Society | Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1914-1934, 1961-1970. | The Melbourne University Historical Society constitution; minutes 1914-1934; account book 1915-1925; copies of the Melbourne Historical Journal No 1. 1961 No. 6 1966, No. 9 1970. |
| Melbourne University Jewish Students Society | MUJSS Muse. Melbourne: The Society, 1970. | |
| Melbourne University Jewish Students Society | Orb : Annual Magazine of Melbourne University Jewish Students Society. Melbourne: The Society, 1969. | |
| Melbourne University Lacrosse Club | Papers. 3 cm. 1911-1939. | Minutes of meetings 1919-1939; annual reports 1925-1939; competition qualifications 1911; list of competitors in Inter-varsity matches 1926. The club was founded in 1883. |
| Melbourne University Lacrosse Club | Melbourne University Lacrosse Club: a Century of Lacrosse, 1883-1983. Melbourne: The Club, 1983. | |
| Melbourne University Law Students Society | Papers. 2 cm. 1964-1970. | Articles, poems and correspondence for the society’s journal De Minimus; manuscript for De Minimus 1970. The Society was formed in 1891 as the Articled Law Clerks Society, becoming the Law Students Society in the following year. |
| Melbourne University magazine | The Melbourne University Magazine: War Memorial Number, July 1920 Compiled by Graduates and Undergraduates of the University under the Direction of the 1919 Magazine Staff. Melbourne: Melbourne University Magazine, 1920. | |
| Melbourne University Medical Society | Chiron : The Newsletter of the Melbourne University Medical Society. Vol. 1983-. Parkville, Vic.: The Society, 1983. | |
| Melbourne University Medical Society | The Melbourne Postcard : The Newsletter of the University of Melbourne Medical Society. Vol. Spring 1997-. Parkville, Vic.: The Society, 1997. | |
| Melbourne University Medical Students Society | Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1880-1944. | Minutes 1880-1888, 1905-1944; roll book and regulations 1880- 1885. The Society, formed in 1880, arranged lectures on medical topics and social functions. Its journal, Speculum (first issue 1884), is the longest-running Melbourne student publication. |
| Melbourne University Medical Students Society | Papers. 1915-1995. | Minutes 1946-1995; cashbooks 1961[or 81?]-1991; Bones book (a register of secondhand materials, mainly bones, being offered for sale by students). |
| Melbourne University Mining and Metallurgy Students Society | Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1932-1961. | Minutes 1932-1961; correspondence. The Society was formed at the suggestion of Professor J. Greenwood (Metallurgy) in 1932. Its object was to hear lectures and papers from students on their vacation experiences. |
| Melbourne University Mountaineering Club | Constitution. [Parkville, Vic], 1975. | |
| Melbourne University Mountaineering Club | Membership List Melbourne University Mountaineering Club. July 1971; Apr. 1972; Sept. 1972; June 1973 vols. Melbourne: Melbourne University Mountaineering Club, 1971. | |
| Melbourne University Mountaineering Club | The Mountaineer. Parkville, Vic.: Melbourne University Mountaineering Club, 1961. | |
| Melbourne University Mountaineering Club | Papers. 2.4 metres (16 archives boxes), 1944-1977. | Minutes; correspondence; reports; membership lists; papers and plans of the Melbourne University Mountaineering Club geodetically-designed hut on the North-West Spur, Mt. Feathertop, Victoria; photographs; history of the Club by David Hogg. |
| Melbourne University Mountaineering Club | Papers. 12 cm. 1 archives box, 1955-1997. | Histories of the Melbourne University Mountaineering Club, November 1997, including an Essay by Ruth Paterson, recollections, the list of MUMC records in the Archives etc.; audiocassette tapes of interviews conducted by Ruth Paterson with one-page introduction. Mountaineering (Journal) 1978-1981, Nos. 1-4, and J.Englands photographs submitted for No.2. MUMC Song Book 1957, 1968, 1973. Licola Bridge Mt. Wellington Mt. Buller via the Snowy Plains, 1955/1956, by June Swinbourne. 31 pp. ts. Photocopy. |
| Melbourne University Musical Society | Programme for Inaugural Concert, Held in Melba Hall, Friday, September 14th, 1923. 1923. | Includes Office-Bearers (Patrons MacFarland and Laver) |
| Melbourne University Overseas Students Service | Voice. Melbourne: The Service. | |
| Melbourne University Parents Group | Minute Books. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1960-1975. | Minute Books (2 vol.): 7 October 1960 9 December 1966; 22 March 1967 26 November 1975. The minutes of the meeting on 26 November 1975 were signed at a meeting on 24 November 1976. |
| Melbourne University Parents Group | Papers. 10cms, 1989-1991. | Committee meeting minutes, including financial reports; Agendas; Members details; subscription information; receipts/petty cash; MUPG Constitution; miscellaneous papers. Melbourne University Parents Group was established in 1960/61 as an enlightened way for relatives and friends to support students of the University. The aims as stated in the constitution were to I). raise funds by annual subscription, donations and additional functions, ii). organise, direct and participate in such activities as are deemed appropriate, and iii). apply funds for such of the purposes of the University of Melbourne. Through social events and catering, at 1991 more than $2000,000 had been raised to fund special projects including student aid, sports medicine equipment and first aid stations. The call for subscriptions proclaims: An ideal way to unobtrusively learn about Melbourne Uni; maintain student contact; meet pleasant parents and support tertiary education. |
| Melbourne University Parents Group | Papers. 26 cm. (2 archives boxes 1 vol. 28x33 cm.), 1959-1994. | Minute books, Committee and Annual General Meetings, 1 Feb. 1983- 8 Nov.1988; 7 February 1989 23 November 1993; Constitution, n.d.; University brochures e.g. Guidelines for auxiliaries, 1980; financial statements 1960-1990, including list of donations 1959-1976; book hand- bound in Australian kangaroo, containing lists of patronesses, office- bearers etc.; correspondence Dec.-Jan. 1994; account book 1975 1993; album of photographs of items donated 1959 1983; three audio tapes, including one recording Kath Sloane on the history of the Group. |
| Melbourne University Part-Time and Mature Age Students Association | Melbourne University Part-Time and Mature Age Students Newsletter. Melbourne: The Association. | |
| Melbourne University Press Staff Photograph, November 1990. 1990. | With key (photocopy of the photograph on which each person is numbered, and list of names against the numbers on a separate sheet). 8 x 10, glossy. The University, dissatisfied with arrangements with booksellers for the supply of books for staff and student use, established the University Press in 1921, commencing operations in 1922, to charged with supplying textbooks, (including second-hand), note-books, stationery and apparatus. It soon served as a circulation library for post-graduate students in Education and included a Post and Telegraph Office among its facilities. In 1923 it published its first book, M. Willards History of the White Australia Policy, with others ready to appear. At first directed by Stanley Addison, Assistant Registrar, with the Librarian Leigh Scott as Secretary, towards the end of 1931 the Presss objects, constitution and methods of control were incorporated in a statute, and in 1932 Frank Wilmot (Furnley Maurice) was appointed Manager under a Board of Management. After Wilmots death in 1940 management passed to Gwyn James. With James, MUP was to abandon its fringe activities to concentrate on the policy of making the press a first rate publishing house in the learned and literary fields. | |
| Melbourne University Press | Catalogue. Carlton, Vic.: MUP. | |
| Melbourne University Press | MUP in the Press. [Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press]. | Collection of photocopied reviews of Melbourne University Press publications. |
| Melbourne University Press | Report Melbourne University Press. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1970-74. | |
| Melbourne University Private | Annual Review. Vol. 2001-. Parkville, Vic.: Melbourne University Private, 2002. | |
| Melbourne University Public Questions Society | Papers. 2 cm. 1921-1931. | Minute Book, 3 August 1922 (Fifth Annual General Meeting) 28 October 1931. Included is the Annual Report for August 1921-August 1922. Both committee and general meetings are recorded. Interleaved: letter from Chas. Silver, pro sec. of the University Labour Club, 19 October 1931, conveying the committees thanks for cooperation during the year; Annual Report of the P.Q.S. for 1930 and. 1931. Quarto exercise-book. The Society was formed in 1918 to discuss questions of contemporary interest, an aim which, in its early years, brought it to the attention of the University authorities. Russia, India, the Pacific Region and the League of Nations were recurring topics, along with housing, unemployment, education, eugenics and other social matters. It held study circles and lectures, the latter given by people prominent in their spheres. |
| Melbourne University Rationalist Society | Melbourne Freethinker; Journal of Melbourne University Rationalist Society, 19. | |
| Melbourne University Regiment | Laying up of Old Queen’s and Regimental Colours, Sunday 16th April, 1967. [Parkville, Vic.: The Regiment, 1967. | In accordance with tradition, the Melbourne University Regiment is laying up its Old colours in a place of safe custody the Shrine of Remembrancep. [1] The Melbourne University Regiment was raised circa 1945 to provide officers for the CMF and in doing so provide military training for undergraduates. The unit was originally organised into full battalion structure. Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, the manning levels fluctuated as the unit played host to the National Service schemes. |
| Melbourne University Research Students Association | Minutes and Correspondence. 48 cm. (4 archives boxes), 1964-1979. | M.U.R.S.A. was founded in 1964 to promote the interests of post-graduate students. In addition to academic and social activities, M.U.R.S.A. actively campaigns for improved conditions for research students. |
| The Melbourne University Review : A Magazine of University Life. Melbourne: William Inglis and Co, 1885-89. | ||
| Melbourne University Rifle Club | Dum Dum. Melbourne, 1978- 1989. | |
| Melbourne University Rifle Club | Papers. 2 cm. 1973-1977. | Constitution; correspondence; club announcements and affiliated club announcements. The Melbourne University Rifles was raised 5 March 1910 to provide military training for members of the University and Public Schools of Melbourne and Geelong. Prior to this, after 1884, the University had provided the base for a company of the Mount Alexander Battalion of Volunteer Rifles. The present unit was raised 1 April 1948. |
| Melbourne University Rifle Club | Papers. 8 archives boxes, 1928-1989. | Minutes, Committee and General, 11 June 1928 31 Mar. 1954; 1970 1982; 9 April 1985 24 July 1987; Constitution 1973 1987; Correspondence 1977-1983; Dum Dum (Magazine) 1978- 1989; Scores 1963-1980s; circulars from other rifle clubs 1972 1983. |
| Melbourne University Rifle Club | Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1969-1980. | Minutes of meetings 1977-1980; results 1974-1980; certificates (blues awarded) 1969; posters; Rifles Associations 1972-1974. |
| Melbourne University Science Club | Science Review, 1946-1963. | The club was formed in 1888 to enable students and University staff to meet for lectures, fieldwork and excursions. |
| Melbourne University Science Students Society | Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1961-1971. | Minutes 1961-1970; copy of Newtrino 1970-1971. The Society continues the work of the Melbourne University Science Club. |
| Melbourne University Science Students Society | The Science Students Society Alternative Handbook. Melbourne: Melbourne University Science Students Society, 1994, 1995. | |
| Melbourne University Seventh Day Adventist Students Society | Flokka: Official Publication of the Melbourne University SDA Students Society and the Monash University SDA Students Society. Melbourne: The Societies, 1976-. | Jointly issued with Monash University Seventh Day Adventist Students Society, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology Seventh Day Adventist Student Society, and Federation of Adventist Tertiary Student Organisations. Cover title. Description based on: Feb. 1976. Some issues are unnumbered and undated. Numbering discontinued with July 1979. |
| Melbourne University Social Studies Society | Self Determination. Melbourne, 1949 | The Foreword explains: Self Determination 1949 is the Melbourne University Social Studies Societys first attempt to publish an annual magazine. Multilith. This issue contains articles by L. Cheesman, Alan McDonald, Maurice Watson and Frances Donovan, Edith Skinner, Sydney Lovibond and Nancye Vercoe. |
| Melbourne University Sports Union | Annual Report 1993. 1 A4 booklet, 1993. | Founded in 1904 to promote all student sporting activities. |
| Melbourne University Sports Union | Papers. 60 cm. (5 archives boxes), 1909-1950. | Registers of members subscription books 1909-1910, 1922-1923; forms showing awards of blues and half-blues 1913-1950; office diary 1939; badges issued books 1919-1931; photographs of various University sporting clubs including M.U. Baseball Club, Australian Universities Hockey Team, M.U. La Crosse Club, M.U. Boxing Club. |
| Melbourne University Sports Union | Papers. 2 metres, 1904-1976. | Minutes, Reports, Rule Books, Cordner Scrap Book; includes material relating to the Recreation Grounds Committee. |
| Melbourne University Sports Union | Papers. 9 metres, 1904-1976. | Minutes 1904-1970; year books and annual reports 1905-1947; rules 1906, 1909, 1911, 1975; accounts 1906-1957, 1964-1967; correspondence 1955-1976; rules and other sporting associations 1901-1913; photographs of teams; blues awards. Beaurepaire Centre Interim House Committee and House Committee: Minutes 1957-1964. |
| Melbourne University Sports Union and Alan McLean | Ernest Cropley, Born 16 November 1914, Died 27 April 1997. A Tribute on Behalf of the University of Melbourne, 1997. | For Memorial Service, 9 May 1997. Cropley was a groundsman May 1934-1993. |
| Melbourne University Sports Union and George Paton | Melbourne University Sports Union Appeal. 12 pp. 1963. | Booklet containing Vice-Chancellor Sir George Paton’s Statement in support of the appeal, the 3-point plan and descriptions with illustrations of the Projects 1-3. Loose inside: leaflet showing names of those associated with the Appeal. |
| Melbourne University Sports Union and University of Melbourne | Recreation Grounds Committee. University Sport, 1978. [Parkville, Vic.]: The Union, 1978. | |
| Melbourne University Squash Club | Papers. 60 cm. (5 archives boxes), 1968-1980. | Minutes 1969-1980; correspondence 1972-1980; sequence file; budgets 1970-1971; circulars 1973-1980; Victorian Squash Racket Association constitution 1977 and 1978; other related papers; Intervarsity squash 1968-1979. |
| Melbourne University Staff Association | Minutes, Correspondence and Reports 1945-1975. 15 archives boxes, 1945-1975. | The Melbourne University Staff Association was formed in 1944 to promote the position of University staff members, in particular their welfare and research interests as well as the development of the University at large. |
| Melbourne University Student Union | Notices of Meetings with Agenda and Distribution Lists. 1 cm. 1990-1991. | The Melbourne University Student Union Inc. was established at the start of 1989, with the merger of the. Melbourne College of Advanced Education, formerly Melbourne State College, formerly Melbourne Teachers College Student Association, Melbourne University Students Representative Council and the Melbourne University Union. |
| Melbourne University Student Union Theatre Department | Advertising Material. 2 cm. 1968-1975. | Advertising posters for theatrical productions; handbills; photographs of MUST productions 1968-1975. |
| Melbourne University Student Union Theatre Department | Papers. 12 archives boxes, 1958-1980. | Scrapbooks, posters, revue advertising shingle, 1958. 2 TV promotional film 1974. Also correspondence; pamphlets; publications. |
| Melbourne University Student Union | Annual Report. [Parkville, Vic.]: The Union. | |
| Melbourne University Student Union | The Melbourne University Student Union Student Survival Guide. Vol. 1994-. [Parkville, Vic.]: Melbourne University Student Union Inc. 1994. | On cover: Quench, wisdom : everything you wanted to know about uni but didnt know who to ask. |
| Melbourne University Student Union | The Melbourne University Student Union Survey, 1989. [Parkville, Vic.]: Melbourne University Student Union Inc, 1989. | |
| Melbourne University Student Union | Thrive : A Magazine for First Year Students at Melbourne Uni Brought to You by Your Student Union. [Parkville, Vic.]: Melbourne University Student Union. | |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Correspondence Meeting Papers 1971-1979. 16 archives boxes, 1971-1979. | Founded in 1907 by a meeting of the Melbourne University Sports Union to relieve it of issues unconnected with sport. It was financed by the sports Union until 1923, the University Union from 1923 until 1949 and then by a separate S.R.C. fee levied on all students. The 30-40 members were elected annually in July, all students being entitled to vote for their faculty or part-time representatives as well as the general ones. Ex-officio members were two undergraduate representatives on the University Council and the editor(s) of Farrago. The S.R.C. published the Melbourne University magazine, the newspaper Farrago, and the Orientation Handbook. It organised events such as Orientation Week, Open Day, Prosh, Commencement and Recovery Balls. It was succeeded by the University of Melbourne Student Union Inc. |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Dissent : A Radical Quarterly. Melbourne, 1961-1978. | |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Melbourne University a Student Report : Memorandum to the Council of the University of Melbourne. Melbourne, 1964. | |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | The Melbourne University magazine. Melbourne: Melbourne University Students Representative Council, 1907-1979. | Some issues have cover title: MUM |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Shop-Soiled : Melbourne University Commencement Magazine. Carlton: Students Representative Council, the University, 1931. | |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Welfare Booklet Melbourne University Students Representative Council, Melbourne University Welfare Book, 1975. | |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council, F. Beighton, and M. OConnell | Student Costs and Incomes. Melbourne: Melbourne University Students Representative Council. 1974. | |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Architecture, Building, Town-Planning. [Parkville, Vic.: Students Representative Council | This is a counter handbook p.2, 1976. |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Arts Counter Handbook. 1975-. | |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Dental Science Counter Hand-Book. [Parkville, Vic.: Students Representative Council University of Melbourne]. | |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Engineering Counter Handbook. [Parkville, Vic.: Melbourne University Engineering Students Club]. | Cover title. On cover of [197-] issue, the word hand is represented by the image of a hand. |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Faculty of Law Counter Handbook. [Parkville, Vic.]: S.R.C. | |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Farrago. Vol. Vol. 1, no. 1 (Apr. 3rd 1925)-. Parkville, Vic.: Students Representative Council University of Melbourne, 1925. | |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | The Geisha : Varsity Theatre Night, Friday, October 6th, 1916, Her Majesty’s Theatre : Students Programme. [Parkville: Students Representative Council University of Melbourne, 1916. | Under the auspices of the Students Representative Council. Profits to the University Red Cross Funds. p.[1] |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Medical Counter Handbook. [Parkville, Vic.: Students Representative Council University of Melbourne]. | Variant title: Medical Students Survival Manual : The Counter Handbook. |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Report on Students and Finance, 1971. | Typescript (photocopy) December 1971 |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Science Counter Handbook. [Parkville, Vic.: Students Representative Council University of Melbourne]. | |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Veterinary Science Counter Handbook. Carlton [Vic.]: B. Bartl on behalf of the S.R.C. Melbourne University. | |
| Melbourne University Students Representative Council | Welfare Booklet. Parkville, Vic.: Melbourne University Students Representative Council. | |
| Melbourne University Survey Camp, Trawool, Victoria, in January 1939. 1939 7 photographic prints and one photocopied sheet | Labelled on the back. Photocopied page from Cranks and Nuts, 1939. |
|
| Melbourne University Tennis Club | Minutes 1891-1940. 12 cm. (1 archives box), | The club commenced in 1880. |
| Melbourne University Tennis Club | Minutes of Annual Meetings. 5 sheets, 1984 1986. | Typed, unsigned copies. |
| Melbourne University Union | Annual Report and Accounts for the Year. [Parkville, Vic.]: The Union. | |
| Melbourne University Union | The Melbourne Graduate. [Parkville, Vic.]: The Union, Vol. 1 No. 1(Aug. 1950)- | Issued 1950-51 by the Graduates Section of the Melbourne University Union; 1952- by the Graduate Union. |
| Melbourne University Union | The Melbourne University Union Handbook. Melbourne: The Union, 1939-1942; 1944-1946). | Later title: Orientation handbook (Melbourne University Students Representative Council). Cover title. |
| Melbourne University Union | The University Review. Melbourne: Melville, Mullen & Slade for the Melbourne University Union, 1890. | Former title: Melbourne University review. |
| Melbourne University Vietnam Moratorium Committee | Ephemera. 2 cm. 1987-1990 | Vietnam Moratorium 20th annual dinner invitations 1990; table allocations; Vietnam reconstruction fund; copy of Vietnam Today, No. 4 1987; media release; extracts from the Peacemaker; broadsheets regarding Anti-Vietnam War movement and earlier peace campaign.. |
| Melbourne University Vietnam Moratorium Committee | Leaflets. 1 cm. 1970. | Leaflet publicising the Moratorium march of 18 September 1970, to be distributed by the Labour Club, the Australia Party Club, the Vietnam Moratorium Committee, and trade unions. Also, copy of Gerard Henderson’s The Vietnam Moratorium: an interpretation based on left-wing sources. |
| Melbourne University War Resisters International | Papers. 6 cm. 1969-1973. | Correspondence, 1969-1972, accounts 1968-1970; mailing list June 1969 in respect of publications. Publications: Aquarius, [1970] (first issue), No.2, May 1970; Hoa Binh; The third force and the struggle for peace in Viet Nam; a report by four Australian university students who recently visited South Vietnam Lynn Arnold, Tony Dalton, Graham Jensen, Michael Hamel-Green).; Pax, No.3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 1973; Vol.2, 1974; two issues n.d.; leaflets. |
| Melbourne University Women Medical Students Society | Papers. 2 cm. 1902-1937. | University of Melbourne Women Medical Students Society minutes 1902-1937; rules; constitution; annual reports 1905-1913, 1920-1937; correspondence 1908-1934. The Melbourne University Women Medical Students Society was formed in 1902. Any female medical student who attended the University was eligible to join. |
| Melbourne University Women’s Athletic Club | Programme of Melbourne University Women’s Athletic Club, Annual Sports Meeting, Wednesday 24 June 1925. one card, 1925. | Printed Programme of Melbourne University Women’s Athletic Club, Annual Sports Meeting, Wednesday 24 June 1925. Includes names of officials presiding at the meeting |
| Melbourne University Women’s Christian Union | Papers. 12 cm. 1896-1933. | Minute Book 19 September 1913 11 July 1933. Meetings recorded are chiefly those of the Executive Committee of the Women’s Christian Union, with some meetings of the Combined Executives (i.e. jointly with the Men’s organization). Scrap book inscribed on fly-leaf: Memorabilia of Women Students Christian Union Melbourne University. This includes sample membership card of the Australasian Student Christian Union, W.S.C.U. Syllabus for 1896 -, newscuttings, letterhead, The Australasian Intercollegian August 1903 and other matter to 1914. Also, Annual Report of M.U. Men’s C.U. for 1908. Combined Executives Minute Book, 25 September 1919 5 September 1923; Annual General Meetings of the Melbourne University Christian Union (Men’s and Women’s Branches Combined), 14 September 1920 25 August 1923 By 1913, the Women’s Students Christian Union was holding some combined meetings with the Men’s Executive. On 19 September 1919 the retiring President, Constance Duncan, reported the adoption of the new Constitution whereby one Christian Union was created in the University with Men’s and Women’s Branches. |
| Melbourne University Women’s Staff Group | File Concerning Activities. 1 cm. 1973. | |
| Melbourne University Women’s Staff Group | Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box) | Agenda and minutes; notes; lists; election material; lists; reclassification and equal pay research, notes, submissions; correspondence; circulars; publicity; U.M.W.S.G./M.U.S.A. submission material. |
| Melbourne University Women’s Swimming Club | Papers. 2 cm. 1932-1950. | Minutes; newspaper clippings; photographs. The club appears to have been formed in 1926, when a Melbourne team completed in an intervarsity competition. |
| Melbourne University Women’s Tennis Club | Minutes. 6 cm. 1893-1942. | Originally the University Women Students Tennis Club. Established in 1890. |
| Melbourne. University. | Official Opening & Inspection of the New School of Geology : By His Excellency the Governor of Victoria Baron Somers , October 11th, 1928. Melbourne: University of Melbourne?, 1928. | |
| Melbourne. University. Educational Research Office | The Use of Vacations and the Structure of the University. Melbourne: Melbourne. University. Educational Research Office, 1968. | |
| Melvin Family | Papers [in the State Library of Victoria]. 33.5 cm, 1879-1927. | Papers, 1914-1927. Including personal correspondence between Jack Melvin, who was killed at Gallipoli in 1915, and his family; correspondence between Mr & Mrs James Melvin and their children Madge and Archie who were travelling overseas; catalogues of Parsons Bros. & Co. 1879-1889; photographs; press cuttings and magazines. |
| Menzies, Robert | Speech by Sir Robert Menzies, Chancellor, University of Melbourne, at the Conference on the Role and Responsibilities of Governing Bodies Dinner Held at University House, ANU on 22 May 1969 [Sound Recording], 1969. | Tape held in the National Library Of Australia. Transcript available (typescript, 6 p.) Recorded at University House, Canberra on 22 May 1969. In this after-dinner speech, Menzies stresses what he sees as the three main functions of universities: through high standards of teaching and learning to produce good citizens, people for the professions, and excellence in research. |
| Merwick, Donna | Dangerous Liaisons : Essays in Honour of Greg Dening, Melbourne University History Monographs; 19. Parkville, Vic.: History Dept. University of Melbourne, 1994. | Dening retired from the Max Crawford Chair in History in 1991. Pages 7-21 contain an interview of Dening by Ivan Brady. |
| Meyer, Georgina | ‘Professor Maurice David Goldman’. In Melbourne University Characters and Controversies, edited by Chiaroscuro: Department of History, University of Melbourne, 2001. | Goldman was a member of the Semitic Studies Department at the University of Melbourne, and active in Jewish affairs. |
| Michell, A. G. M. | Papers [in the Basser Library Australian Aacademy of Science]. 1.5 cm, 1870-1959. | (1) Design for bronze plaque unveiled at Michell Laboratory, Engineering School, University of Melbourne, 9th September 1964 (2) Anthony George Maldon Michell 1870-1959, by T M Cherry. Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society, vol. 8, 1962 (3) Australia’s contributions to marine engineering no. 1. The Michell bearing. Photocopy from unknown source, July 1950 (4) Photograph of Michell Thrust Bearing no. 23 at Michell Laboratory (5) Two unlabelled photographs of Michell bearings (6) Invitation to attend the official opening of the Civil Engineering - Surveying Building at the University of Melbourne on 9th September 1964 Inventor of the Michell Thrust Bearing, a tilting-pad device which made possible much of the modern development of steam and water turbines and of propeller drives for large fast ships, Michell was a consulting engineer based in Melbourne. |
| Michell, Mavis | Interview with Mavis Michell, 1983. | Michell speaks with Bill Tully of her family background; family life in Victoria; family values; school memories; university experiences in Melbourne; politics; lifestyle; employment in Melbourne and at the National Library in Canberra; the National Library its operations and staff during the 1930s; her work and conditions; the local area and community; recreation, social life and entertainment; marriage; childcare and childbirth; family life; home and living conditions; Canberra society; preparing for war; religion; political groups; Australian society; migrants and foreigners. Recording quality varies. Recording is accompanied by photographs. Recorded by the Australia 1938 Oral History Project as research for the book Australians 1938 from the series Australians, a historical library. Inquiries to the National Library of Australia. |
| Millennium Scholars | A Chequered Past: Pieces of Melbourne University, History Student Research Series: 6. Melbourne: University of Melbourne. Department of History, 2000. | |
| Mills, Richard C. | ‘The Story of the Union’. Melbourne University magazine. v. 4 no. 3(1910). | |
| Milner, P. | ‘An Approach to University Training in an Industrial Technology’, Technology Report; No. TR-70/1. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, 1970. | |
| Milner, P. | ‘An Approach to University Training in an Industrial Technology’, Technology Report; No. TR-69/1. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, 1969. | |
| Milner, P. | Assessment of Criteria to Be Used in Determining Future Budgetary Allocations, Technology Note / the University of Melbourne, Department of Mechanical Engineering; No. TN-71/1. [Parkville, Vic.: Dept. of Mechanical Engineering University of Melbourne], 1971. | |
| Milner, P. | The Day the Wheel Fell Apart, Technology Note / the University of Melbourne, Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering; No. TN-87/15. [Parkville, Vic.: Dept. of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering University of Melbourne], 1987. | |
| Milner, P. | Final Year Engineering Design Projects, Technology Note; No. TN-93/41. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, 1993. | |
| Milner, P. | Final Year Research Projects, Technology Note; No. TN-93/40.: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, 1993. | |
| A Funding Request for Marine Engineering Research at the University of Melbourne, Technology Note; No. TN-92/54.: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, 1992. | ||
| Milner, P. | Hot Publicity, Technology Note; No. TN-92/41. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, 1992. | |
| Milner, P. | Industrial Engineering, Technology Note; No. TN-79/2. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, 1979. | |
| Milner, P. | Industry-Related Final Year Engineering Design Projects : 1978-1990, Technology Note; No. TN-90/22. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, 1990. | |
| Milner, P. | Marine Engineering Research at the University of Melbourne, Technology Note; No. TN-92/53.: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, 1992. | |
| Milner, P. | Mechanical and Industrial Engineering : The Vision for the Future, Technology Note : No. TN-87/10-. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, 1987. | |
| Milner, P. | On Departmental Activities, Technology Note; No. TN-83/2. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, 1983. | |
| Milner, P. | On Faculty Budgeting, Technology Report; No. TR-71/7. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, 1971. | |
| Milner, P. | On the Content of Some Subjects in the Mechanical and Industrial Engineering Degree Courses, Technology Note / University of Melbourne, Dept. Of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering; No. TN-89/62. [Parkville, Vic.]: Dept. of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, 1989. | |
| Milner, P. | On the Formation of Policy and Budgets in the Faculty of Engineering, Technology Address / the University of Melbourne, Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering; TA-71/1. [Parkville, Vic.: Dept. of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering University of Melbourne], 1971. | |
| Milner, P. | Research Topics in the Undergraduate Programme for History of Technology, Technology Note; No. TN-93/20. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, 1993. | |
| Milner, P. | Students Involved in Final Year Project Work, Technology Note; No. TN-93/21. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, 1993. | |
| Milner, P. | Studies in Manufacturing Engineering at the University of Melbourne, Technology Note / University of Melbourne. Dept. Of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering; No. TN-87/12. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, 1987. | |
| Milner, P. | Subject Outlines, Technology Note; No. TN-93/47.: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, 1993. | |
| Milner, P. | The Wisdom of the Sages Revisited, Technology Note / the University of Melbourne, Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering; No. TR-87/8. [Parkville, Vic.: Dept. of Mechanical Engineering University of Melbourne], 1987. | |
| Milner, P. | Faculty Policy on Education : 1973/75 Triennium and Beyond, Technology Report; No. TR-71/6. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, 1971. | Co-author: C. J. Pengilley. |
| Milner, P. | On a Philosophy and a Framework for the Education of Professional Engineers, Technology Paper; No. TP-76/1. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, 1976. | Co-author: C. J. Pengilley. |
| Milner, P. | Industrial Engineering at Melbourne, Technology Note; No. TN-80/1. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, 1980. | Co-author: A. E. Samuel. |
| Milner, P. | Mechanical Engineering at Melbourne, Technology Note; No. TN-80/2. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, 1980. | Co-author: A. E. Samuel. |
| Milner, P. | For the Record, Technology Note; No. TN-87/4. [Parkville, Vic.: University of Melbourne Dept. of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, 1987. | |
| Milner, P. | The Wisdom of the Sages, Technology Note / the University of Melbourne. Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering; No. TN-86/12. [Parkville, Vic.: Dept. of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering University of Melbourne], 1986. | |
| Milton, Peter | Papers Relating to the Case of Dr Albert Shulman. 24 cm. 2 Archives boxes, 1969-1980. | Shulman became a Reader in the Department of Pharmacology in 1969. In 1972, to resolve a dispute which had arisen between him and his Head of Department, he was appointed special Reader in Biological Chemistry for a fixed term of three years, with an independent research unit in the Faculty of Medicine. In 1975 he moved to the Women’s Hospital. A graduate of this University, Peter Milton served as an Administrative Officer and Senior Administrative Officer of the University from 1961, and represented the non-academic staff on the University Council from December 1977, until October 1980 when he was elected Labor member for La Trobe in the House of Representatives. |
| Minogue, John | ‘John Minogue’. In More Memories of Melbourne University : Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1919, edited by Hume Dow. Melbourne: Hutchinson, 1985. | Minogue (1909-1989), was a graduate of the University of Melbourne. After two years as a solicitor in Bendigo, he was called to the Victorian Bar in 1939. He served in the army from 1940 to 1946 and was involved in the Australian Military Mission in Washington. Back in civil life, Minogue built successful practice in criminal law. He became Queen’s Counsel in 1957, and was a member of Victorian Bar Council from 1958 to 1962, when he was appointed Judge of the Supreme Court of Papua New Guinea, and later Chief Justice from 1970 to 1974. In 1977, Minogue became Victorian law reform commissioner until his retirement in 1982. |
| Minogue, John | Papers and Memorabilia. 32 archives boxes, 1932-1984. | Includes Melbourne University Boat Club 1932-1947; Melbourne University Rifles and Army files 1937-1951; PNG diaries 1961- 1974; PNG correspondence; Law Reform Commission papers; personal papers 1977-1981; Computer Abuse Investigation 1984; PNG reports; Investigation of Corporate Crime research; objects; certificates; gown and hood; photographs; publications. |
| Mitchell, Colin James | The First-Year Experience : A Study of the First-Year Science Students at the University of Melbourne in 1987 and Their Experience of University. M.S.W. University of Melbourne, 1990. | |
| Mitchell, Olivia | Judge Hickman Molesworth: Judge and Gentleman. In Students, Scholars and Structures: Early Tales from the University of Melbourne, edited by The Special Collection. Melbourne: History Department, University of Melbourne, 2002. | Admitted to the Bar in 1864, Molesworth worked mainly in the Insolvency Court during his career as a judge. He had a remarkable collection of headgear, ranging from Solar topees to deerstalkers and joined in early-morning dingo or kangaroo hunts in the eastern suburbs. |
| Mitchell, Paul W | Hawthorn Leadership Assessment Centre : A Case Study of Assessors Perceptions. M Ed, University of Melbourne, 2001. | |
| Moderate Student Alliance (University of Melbourne) | Insight : Publication of the Moderate Students Alliance. Melbourne: The Alliance, 1980. | |
| Moline, A. P. H. | Autobiographical Notes. 1 cm. 1877-1965. | Autobiographical notes of his life, 1877-1965, concerns his family history, Civil and Mining Engineering course at the University of Melbourne and career as a mining engineer and company director. Born in 1877, Moline enrolled at the University of Melbourne in Civil and Mining Engineering in 1897 and excelled academically and on the sports field. After graduating he worked as a draftsman and surveyor and as a consulting engineer in Queensland, for the Taranaki Company in New Zealand and Mt. Lyell. In 1945, Moline was elected President of the Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy and served until 1960. Arthur Moline continued to work as a consultant- explorer and company director. He died on Christmas Eve in Sydney in 1965. |
| Monash, John, B. A. Smith, Maurice E. Kernot, and George. Kermode | Letter. 7 p. (0.01 cm.), 1920. | Letter to J. A. Smith from John Monash, George Swinburne, Maurice E. Kernot, George Kermode and B. A. Smith concerning an appeal by the University of Melbourne to raise 100,000, 18 October, 1920. |
| Monash University | Postgraduate Academic Psychiatry Program Handbook : M.P.M. Monash University, M.Med. (Psychiatry), University of Melbourne. [Parkville, Vic.]: The Universities. | Co-authors: J. Kulkarni, and University of Melbourne. Department of Psychiatry. |
| Moore, Vera Annie | Photographs and Autographs. 3 cm. 1915. | 1. Set of photographs of Professors and staff 1915, loosely fixed in album, similar to Doris McKellars, but without Laby (Wallace, Scott, Strong, Harrison Moore, Gibson, Orme Masson, Osborne, Allen, Berry, McKellar Stewart, Baldwin Spencer, Maurice Carlton, Skeats, Summers. Duplicates of Strong, Masson and McKellar Stewart.) 2. Two autograph books, one brown, on red, both 11 x 9 cm, containing signatures of Professors and staff. Vera Annie Rosenblum tutored in Philosophy at the University of Melbourne from 1920 to 1923. |
| Moore, William Harrison | Papers. 3.96 m. 1902-1954. | Personal business correspondence 1903-1935; letters of congratulation on becoming C.M.G. in 1917 and K.C.B.E. (?) in 1925; correspondence relating to the British Commonwealth Relations Conference in Toronto, 1933, and to the Bureau of Social and International Affairs, letters from politicians on a variety of matters, 1914-1935; letters relating to the Institute of Pacific Relations, 1929-32, Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1929-1933. Opinions, 1917-1934; papers relating to Moores work at the University: Trinity College, 1933-1935; lecture notes; Brief in the Victoria South Australia Boundary Case, 1911 (Moore counsel for the Victorian Government): correspondence, notes etc.; papers relating to the Australian Constitution 1913-1930; Arbitration and Conciliation, 1915-1925; Financial Policy and the Depression; the League of Nations, 1919-1933; the Australian Institute for the Study of International Affairs, 1931-1950; the Royal Institute of International Affairs 1928-; 1947; the Round Table, 1912-1935. World War I material: conscription 1917, peace proposals, war savings. Business: Edward Dyason’s reports; Robertson & Mullens’ balance sheets etc. 1922-1934; Estate papers to 1954; Boobooks Society, 1902-32. Born in 1867 in London, Harrison Moore spent some time in journalism before proceeding to study law at the Middle Temple, London, and at Cambridge. In 1893 he succeeded Edward Jenks as Professor of Law at the University of Melbourne, and became the third Dean of the Faculty. His interests included the Australian Constitution and the Imperial Federation League, the Round Table and the League of Nations, being prominent in organizing the Victorian branch of the last-mentioned and attending the Conference in Rome in October 1927. He was also a member of the delegation in 1929 and 1930 and was chosen as Australia’s representative at the Imperial Conference. He was President of the Victorian branch of the League of Nations Union, Chairman of the Victorian division of the Royal Institute of International Affairs and as a member of the Executive Committee of the Institute of Pacific Relations led an Australian contingent to the Institutes Conference in Shanghai in November 1931. He was a director of Robertson & Mullens in the 1920s and 1930s. He married Edith aBeckett in 1898 |
| Moore, William Harrison | ‘The Law and Legal Education’. University review. v. 1 no. 2 (1914). | |
| Moorhouse, C. E. | Addresses. 12 cm. 1962-1980. | Educated at the Melbourne Church of England Grammar School and the University of Melbourne, Moorhouse was employed as an assistant engineer by the State Electricity Commission of Victoria, and in 1946 as senior lecturer in Electrical Engineering at this University where he was to be Professor in that department from 1948 until 1976. In 1974 Moorhouse became a member of the Academic Advisory Committee, and in 1976 a member of the Interim Council of Deakin University. He addressed a variety of groups on engineering and related topics. Engineering School. Moorhouse died in 2002 |
| Moorhouse, C. E. | Articles. 8 cm. 1939-1975. | Articles by Moorhouse: Designing Electrical Engineers; The University Teaching Project of the University of Melbourne(with Barbara Falk), 1963. Articles by others including University Teaching: Reality and Change and The Assessment of University Teaching, by Barbara Falk and Kwong Lee Dow; and The Preparation and In Service Training of University Staff. Programme: Getting the Bird, 7th annual Revue by the Students of the University of Melbourne. May 1939. The Conference of Engineering Societies of Western Europe and the United States of America: Report on education and Training of Professional Engineers. 3 vol. Article by Moorhouse Student Myth and Legend, illus. Documents relating to Moorhouses trip to Caracas, Venezuela, 1970 and proposed but postponed trip to the Dominican Republic, 1971.. Articles by Moorhouse and S.A. Prentice: Residential Schools for Professional Engineers 1967, and Power System Schools Adapt to a Changing Technology, 1977. Moorhouse, The Australian Residential Schools in Power System Electrical Engineering, 1975. |
| Moorhouse, C. E. | A Century of Degrees : The Engineering School at the University of Melbourne. Parkville [Vic.]: Faculty of Engineering University of Melbourne, 1989. | |
| Moorhouse, C. E. | Newspaper Cuttings Relating to Professor Moorhouse. 2 cm. 1 folder, after being removed from arch file. 1951-1987. Pasted on brown paper. | Included are a few items from other sources: published addresses; invitations. |
| Moorhouse, C. E. | Papers. 24 cm (2 archives boxes), 1931-1973. | Thirteenth Residential School in Power System Electrical Engineering at the University of Melbourne 5th to 25th February 1978. Sponsored by Electricity supply Association of Australia. Annotations by Moorhouse. Cranks and Nuts; Melbourne University Engineering Students Magazine. 1954. Programmes: University Dinner in the presence of The Visitor ... 14 August 1956; Council Banquet celebrating the Centenary of the ] University of Melbourne, 15 August 1956. Official Opening of the Civil Engineering-Surveying Building, 9th September 1964, and Official Opening of the New Electrical Engineering and Metallurgy Building, 31 October 1973 (programmes), Shop-Soiled; The University Commencement Magazine. 1931. 32 pp. George Cowling (comp.): An English Bibliography; being a short list of books recommended to students of English Language and Literature. M.U.P. 1931. 49 pp. |
| Moorhouse, C. E. | Papers. 12 cms. (1 archives box), 1955-79. | Addresses to students, schools, graduation, radio and other audiences. TS. ms.; Also subject files and notes on Newman College, the University and its role, retirement, the international status of the engineer, computation and V.U.S.E.B. agendas and minutes 1979. |
| Moorhouse, C. E. | Papers. 12 cm. 1938-1979. | Three files compiled by Moorhouse from his papers: Burstall (address by A. Burstall, Notes on engineering Education at Melbourne University, to Engineering Graduates Dinner Club, 2 June 1937, two articles by Burstall in Cranks and Nuts, 1938 and 1939, and notes by. Moorhouse; J.N. Greenwood and Metallurgy (address by Greenwood, Development of the School of Metallurgy ... 1924-65 to Institution of Metallurgists, 23 May 1979, tributes at commemoration service 28 Oct.1981, etc.; other mainly Vasey copies re Engineering. |
| Moorhouse, C. E. | Personal Correspondence, Etc. 2 cm. 1962-1966. | File of personal correspondence 1962-1966; University Centenary Celebrations’ programmes. |
| Moorhouse, C. E. | Press Clippings from the Engineering School Appeal Fund, 1952. 2 cm. 1952. | Press clippings from the Engineering School Appeal Fund, 1952; copy of Moorhouses paper The Design and Implementation of an Electrical Engineering Course 1952 |
| Moorhouse, C. E. | University Teaching Project, 1961-1966 [and Other Papers]. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1867-1923. | Degree certificate of William Edmund Moorhouse, M A, 1 May 1909, embossed seal only - no red cover, in cardboard cylinder. Degree certificates of Charles Alfred Topp, LL.B. 6 April 1869 (seal in good condition in metal container); B A, 3 April 1867 (seal broken in container, but container in better condition with bright surface and ribbon royal blue); M A, 3 April 1869 (seal broken and ribbon badly frayed). Newspaper cutting from Sun News-Pictorial,. 28 May 1923, article on Topp, At Seventy-Six, with photograph. Files (2): University Teaching Project, 1961-1966, containing papers on reform, particularly of Engineering practical work examining, programme of vacation course of lecture discussions for members of the Faculties of Engineering, Physics and Applied Science, June 1962 in the Faculty of Education, notes for meeting called by the Vice-Chancellor on University Education matters, 26 March 1963 talks on teaching methods, educational measurement, etc. and Moorhouses correspondence with. Barbara Falk and others 1962-1966. The Project was was undertaken by the Faculty of Education in Third Term 1961 in response to a request from the Faculty of Engineering [Report, 20/6/62]. |
| Moorhouse, C. E. | The University Teaching Project of the University of Melbourne. The Australian university v. 1, no. no. 3 (1963). | Co-author: Barbara Falk. |
| Morgan, F. C. | [Letter], 1975 June 15, Hereford [to] Sir Clive Hamilton Fitts, Melbourne. [2] leaves, 1975. | Has brief autobiographical details and discusses the donation to the Baillieu Library of the Morgan Collection, a notable collection of European childrens books. |
| Morris, Edward Ellis | ‘The Melbourne University Union’. Argus. 30 May 1884. | |
| Morrison, Sally | ‘Nancy Millis: Microbiology Boots and All’. In On the Edge of Discovery, edited by Farley Kelly. Melbourne: Text Publishing, 1993. | Millis was Professor of Microbiology at the University of Melbourne 1982-1991. She was originally appointed as a lecturer in the department in 1956 following the award of a Fulbright travel grant in 1954. She is one of the pioneers of the study of fermentation technology in Australia. |
| Mortley, Raoul. | ‘The (not-so) Entwined Future of Book Publishing and Technology’. Campus review. v.5 no.45(16/22 Nov 1985). | Paper presented to the Australian Academy of the Humanities Symposium, Canberra, 1995. |
| Mortlock, Bryce. | University of Melbourne Master Plan Report 1991: University of Melbourne, 1991. | |
| Moye, Ros. | ‘The Legendary Barbara Ramsden, Book Editor’. In Melbourne University Mosaic: People and Places, edited by Three-Four-Eight. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1998. | Ramsden (1903-71) joined the staff of the University Library in 1928, and worked at the Melbourne University Press from 1931-67, a period during which MUP established itself as one of principal academic presses of Australia. |
| Mr George Higgins, M.C.E. | Varsity engineer. no. 3(1911). | |
| Muirhead, Anne V. | Reaching out to All Weak and Helpless Things: A Study of Women Students and Graduates from the University of Melbourne 1900-1920. 4th year thesis, University of Melbourne, 1983. | |
| Muirhead, Ed. | Leslie Martin at Melbourne : Profile of a Physics Department (1945-1959). Parkville, Vic.: School of Physics University of Melbourne, 1998. | Martin was Lecturer and Associate Professor in Natural Philosophy, and then Professor of Physics, University of Melbourne 1927-59, Commissioner of the Australian Atomic Energy Commission 1958-68 and Professor of Physics, Military College of Duntroon 1967-70. |
| Muirhead, Ed. | A Man Ahead of His Times : T. H. Laby’s Contribution to Australian Science. Richmond, Vic.: Spectrum Publications, 1996. | Laby (1880-1946) was born in Creswick and educated at the University of Sydney and Cambridge University where he graduated M A Sc.D. and was awarded a Science Research Scholarship and won distinction for research work under Professor Sir Joseph Thomson, the celebrated Nobel Laureate. In 1901 Laby returned to Australia and worked as a Demonstrator of Chemistry at the University of Sydney until his appointment as Professor of Physics at Victoria University College in 1909. In 1915 Laby returned to Melbourne when he became Professor of Natural Philosophy at the University of Melbourne. He subsequently held office in numerous organisations including as a member of the Melbourne University Council (1927-1931); President 1911 and 1928 Section A.A. and N.Z. A. Adv. Sc.; Assessor of the Federation Arbitration Court 1918; member of the Radio Research Board of Australia; Consulting Physicist 1928-1938 Commonwealth Department of Health; First President of the Institute of Physicists Australia; Chairman of the Optical Munitions Panel 1940; Member of the Army Inventions Directorate 1943. Laby retired in 1944. |
| Mullins, Anne | An Education for Life: An Approach to an Ideal. Sir Raymond Priestley and the Idea of the University in the Community, Melbourne 1935-38. 4th year thesis, University of Melbourne, 1982. | Educated at University College, Priestley was appointed geologist to Shackleton’s 1907 to 1909 Antarctic expedition and Scotts expedition 1910 to 1913. After war service where he received the Military Cross, Priestley resumed an academic and administrative career at Cambridge. In 1934 he reluctantly became the first salaried Vice-Chancellor of Melbourne. University Priestley’s main concern was to re-establish adequate funding and community support for the University. Frustrated in his attempts, he became Vice-Chancellor of the University of Birmingham and left Melbourne in 1938. Priestley acted as an adviser to the BBC and after his retirement in 1952 he served as chairman of the royal commission on the civil service and on a series of boards and associations. |
| Mulvaney, D. J. | ‘D.J. Mulvaney’. In The Pastmasters; Eleven Modern Pioneers of Archaeology, 14 pp.: Thames and Hudson, 1989. | |
| Mulvaney, D. J. | Interview with D.J. Mulvaney, Prehistorian, Archaeologist and Academic, Founding Professor of Prehistory, Australian National University from 1971-1985, 1990. | Mulvaney speaks with M. A. (Michael Alexander) Smith of his pioneering archaeological work at Kenniff Cave in central Queensland, how he was introduced into the field of prehistory by John OBrian through Roman archaeology and economic prehistory, granted a PhD scholarship from the ANU to Cambridge to undertake archaeology training, undertook an archaeological survey at Hoxen in 1953, reluctantly returned to Australia and luckily was offered a lectureship at Melbourne University where he later introduced a course on Pacific prehistory in 1957, moved to Canberra in 1965, the problems of discovering significant aboriginal sites, at the end of 1959 Roger Joyce, another Cambridge-trained prehistorian, was doing a survey of aboriginal sites and happened to contact him about a number of potential sites in Queensland, one of which was Kenniff Cave, in August 1960 his expedition was financed by his History Department. no time for on-site inspection but samples were bagged and shipped for later study, the 1962 and 1964 field seasons at Kenniff Cave with the latter involving carbon dating, his particular archaeological techniques for digging and sampling how he managed to obtain 14 radio carbon datings for the Kenniff Cave site which determined an age of 12,000 years old classing the site in the Pleistocene age, the controversy over some of the datings (perhaps 19,000 years old) the significance of Kenniff Cave as the first dated stratified Pleistocene site, subsequent older sites found by the end of the 1960s. Inquiries to the National Library of Australia. |
| Mulvaney, D. J. | Interview with John Mulvaney, Emeritus Professor of Prehistory, 1996. | Interviewer: Peter Biskup. Inquiries to the National Library of Australia. |
| Mulvaney, D. J. | Interview with John Mulvaney, Pre-Historian and Archaeologist, 1988. | Mulvaney speaks with Peter Read of his childhood and family background; visiting historic sites in England during World War II; going to Clare College, Cambridge; Fromms Landing excavations; amateur excavations; depositing findings in museums; aboriginal sites; establishment of pre-history schools; Macassan sites; trip to Ingaladdi; Kintore Cave site; Willeroo Station; obtaining permission to excavate; theory of the spread of technology; human biology; relationship between history and pre-history; Rhys Jones work; archaeology vs anthropology; Man the Hunter Conference; Goulds Yiwara; Bill Wentworths salvage work; archaeologists and contemporary aborigines; Prehistory of Australia; Soejonos visit; setting up the Department. of Prehistory; Institute of Aboriginal Studies; ethics of field behaviour; conserving Australian heritage; conditions at the War Memorial; Heritage Commission; Institute of Aboriginal Studies; archaeologists and aborigines interests. Transcript available from National Library of Australia: (143 leaves). |
| Mulvaney, D. J. | Queen’s College and the Horn Expedition : Science and Liberal Learning, Occasional Paper / Friends of the Library, Queen’s College, University of Melbourne, No. 3. [Parkville, Vic.]: Friends of the Library Queen’s College University of Melbourne, 1995. | |
| Mulvaney, D. J. | So Much That Is New : Baldwin Spencer, 1860-1929, a Biography. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1985. | Co-author: J. H. Calaby Spencer arrived in Australia in 1887 to take up the chair of Professor of Biology, University of Melbourne (1887-1919). He was Honorary Director of the National Museum of Victoria from 1899 and was President of the Royal Society of Victoria in 1904. |
| Mulvaney, D. J. | My Dear Spencer: the Letters of F. J. Gillen to Baldwin Spencer. Melbourne: Hyland House, 1997. | Co-editors: Howard Morphy and Alison Petch. |
| Munn, Ralph | Australian Libraries: a Survey of Conditions and Suggestions for Their Improvement. Adelaide: Libraries Board of South Australia, 1967. | Co-author: Ernest R. Pitt. |
| Murphy, Leonard J. T. | Papers. 12 cm. 1984-1985. | Leonard J.T. Murphy, Sir Douglas Shields (1876-1952); a Forgotten Surgeon. Based on a paper read at a Meeting of the Medical History Society, Australian Medical Association (Victorian Branch) on 2 September 1983. 46 pp. with photograph of Shields and site of his hospital in Seymour. Photocopy of typescript, bound. Copy of Shieldss autobiography and other sources, notes and photographs. Also, items collected for a paper on Patrick Moloney in Occasional Papers on Medical History Australia 1984, including photographs. Photocopy of R.J. Berrys MS. autobiography, Chance and Circumstance, with photocopies of letters from Berry to D. Murray Morton, 13 January and 28 October 1954, mentioning the MS and his inability to have it published. A copy was sent to Morton, who passed it to John Horan, who in turn lent it to Murphy. It covers Berrys life from school days, 1877-1883, to his service as Director of Medical Research in Bristol, and including his period as first Professor of Anatomy at the University of Melbourne, 1906-1929. The last date mentioned is April 1951. |
| Murray, Noel. | Students Seen but Not Heard : Guide to Academic Rights at Melbourne University. Parkville, Vic.: Melbourne University Students Representative Council, 1985. | |
| Murray-Smith, Stephen. | Minutes and Related Papers of University Working Group 1972-1973. 5 archives boxes, 1972-1979. | Minutes and related papers of University Working Group 1972-1973; papers relating to the Australian Film and Television School 1975-79. Murray-Smith taught and wrote on technical education, and edited Overland and Melbourne studies in education. He was a Councillor and member of the Victorian Consultative Panel of the Film and Television School, Sydney. The Working Group was established by Council in 1972 (on the recommendation of the Planning Group) to develop the form, powers and province of a proposed consultative body . |
| Murray-Smith, Stephen | Papers [in the State Library of Victoria]. 83.0 m, 1962-1988 | This collection comprises correspondence, manuscripts, financial records, ephemera, notebooks, journals and assorted publications. Original ms. typescript, printed, press cuttings, photographs, printing blocks. Detailed descriptive list available for reference. This includes a summary of Murray-Smiths life, an overview of the collection and the processing and arrangement of it. |
| Murray-Smith, Stephen | Papers. 108 cm. (9 archives boxes), 1970-1983. | General University files 1970-1983; Melbourne studies in education copy and correspondence 1970-1982. |
| Murray-Smith, Stephen | Papers. 10 cm. 1972-1981. | Files relating to Dip.Ed. Course B Handouts and memoranda 1975- 1976; Promotions Committee 1972-1975; Fink Memorial Committee 1974-1981; Department of Education Committee on Long Range Accommodation needs 1974. |
| Murray-Smith, Stephen | ‘Stephen Murray-Smith’. In Memories of Melbourne University : Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1917, edited by Hume Dow. Richmond, Vic.: Hutchinson of Australia, 1983. | |
| Musgrave, P. W. | From Humanity to Utility : Melbourne University and Public Examinations, 1856-1964. Hawthorn, Vic. Australia: Australian Council for Educational Research, 1992. |
| Author | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Nash, William P | The Marshall-Hall Saga. Melbourne, Innisfallen Press, 1991. | |
| Nanson, Edward John. | Papers. 3 metres (25 archives boxes), 1875-1902. | Housekeeping accounts 1873-1894; examination papers 1874-1900; solutions to matriculation questions in arithmetic and algebra 1857- 1881; pamphlets; University Calendars (Adelaide, Sydney, Cambridge) 1867, 1872, 1880-1891; mathematical texts 1860s-1889; Tasmanian Civil Service Act 1860; Royal Society of Victoria transactions and proceedings 1876-1895 (incomplete); textbooks; Letts Housekeeper and Engagement Books 1881-1882; The Windsor Magazine 1882-1902; Harpers Monthly; pamphlet The Real Value of a Vote... 1900 by Edward Nanson. Born in England in 1850, Nanson entered Trinity College in 1870 and as second wrangler and second Smiths prizeman, he became a fellow of Trinity College in 1874. In the same year he was appointed Professor of Applied Mathematics at the Royal Indian Engineering College, Surrey. After W.P. Wilson died, Nanson was appointed Professor of Mathematics at the University of Melbourne in 1875. Widely known as an electoral reformer, he advocated proportional representation and preferential voting and published a series of pamphlets on the subject. Nanson had a life-appointment but negotiated a pension settlement with the University and retired as Emeritus Professor in 1922. |
| Nanson, Joan | Papers 1883-19 | Certificate of Right of Burial in the St. Kilda General Cemetery, taken out by Edward John Nanson, 7 June 1883 (Church of England, Compartment A, No.107.109. Folder of tables setting out details of various universities in North America (covering governance, administration, size, value of buildings and sites, income, staff, students, library, pay rates, courses etc.), plus 5 pages of Remarks concerning the 16 institutions surveyed, prepared for Vice-Chancellor Raymond Priestley at the time of his visit to North America; the first page has an inscription by him, July 1938, which reads in part A very fine piece of work. I do not remember ever having a better job done for me here or elsewhere . . . I am very grateful for three and a half years loyal help. [This document was appended to Priestley’s Confidential Report to the Council on the Survey of Overseas Universities, Part I - United States and Canada, n.d.]. Photographs. Joan Nanson, daughter of Edward John Nanson, worked as the Vice-Chancellors secretary in the University of Melbourne. |
| Nanson, Joan. | Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 1999. | Nanson worked at the University almost without interruption 1935-1974. She was Secretary to Raymond Priestley, John Medley and the Warden of the Mildura Branch until she became Secretary to successive Deans of Graduate Studies. Recorded for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| Nash, Laurence Langley. | Forward Flows the Time. Melbourne: G.B. Publications, 1960. | Concerns Ridley College. |
| Nash, William P. | The Marshall-Hall Saga : A Brief Glimpse at the Life of the First Ormond Professor, George William Louis Marshall-Hall. Melbourne: Innisfallen Press, 1991. | |
| Nathan, Howard. | Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 2002. | Judge in the Supreme Court of Victoria and President of Temple Beth Israel, previously a teacher, barrister and counsel assisting the Attorney-General. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| National Union of Australian University Students. Education Department | Teaching and Learning in the University. Melbourne: National Union of Australian University Students. Education Dept, 1968. | Co-authors: Barbara Falk, and Tom Roper. |
| Neil A. Webster & Associates | University of Melbourne Burnley Campus, Institute of Land and Food Resources, Formerly Known as the Royal Horticultural Gardens Burnley. 1 map. Eltham, Vic.: Neil A. Webster & Associates, 2001. | |
| Neild, James Edward | ‘A Few Notes on the Early History of the University of Melbourne’. Melbourne University review. v. 7 no. 2(1891). | |
| Neild, James Edward | ‘The Medical School of the Melbourne University’. Australian medical journal. v. 9 no. 5 (1887). | |
| Nelson, Eva | Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 1992. | Nelson (ne Klein) is an applied chemist who worked in the research laboratories of Kodak (Australasia) where she developed a new method of purifying a used solvent. She was also a demonstrator in the Chemistry School. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| Neve, M. Hutton | This Mad Folly: the History of Australia’s Pioneer Women’s Doctors. Sydney: Library of Australian History, 1980. | |
| ‘New Chancellor Sir Edward Woodward’. Gazette. Autumn 1990. | ||
| ‘New Professors’. Melburnian. v. 8 no. 7(1882). | Magazine of Melbourne Grammar School. | |
| Newman College (University of Melbourne). Students Club | Newman Tracts. Parkville: Newman College, University of Melbourne, 1996. | Former title: Vestra |
| Newman College (University of Melbourne). Students Club | Newman : The Annual Magazine of the Newman College Students Club. Parkville: Newman College, University of Melbourne, 1919-[1992]. | Title varies: Newman magazine 1973-1974 Newman College magazine 1965, 1967 Newman College opened in 1918 with 56 students were in residence. Designed by Walter Burley Griffin, Newman College was to consist of four wings, with the Chapel in between. |
| Nicholas, Stephen | ‘The future of economic history in Australia’. Australian economic history review. v.37 no.3(Nov 1997) | |
| Nicholson, J. Flashback | Assemblage : a journal of university events & opinions published by the assembly for members of the university (1985). | |
| Nicholson, Joyce | ‘Destination Uncertain’. In The Half-Open Door : Sixteen Modern Australian Women Look at Professional Life and Achievement, edited by Patricia Grimshaw and Lynne Strahan. Sydney, N.S.W.: Hale & Iremonger, 1982. | Feminist, publisher and author, director of D.W. Thorpe Pty Ltd and Sisters Publishing and founding member of the Women’s Electoral Lobby. |
| Nickson (A.E.H.) | Travelling Scholarship Fund. Papers. 5 cm. 1964-1965. | Report of public meeting, 20 June 1965, at which the establishment of the Fund was announced; list of students who might assist, 1930 onward; 3 books containing names of past students with year of starting at the Conservatorium, 1930-c. 1960; One book containing names, presumably of prospective donors; memo book of rough notes on the Fund. Catalogue of paintings by Sidney Nolan, arranged by Brian Finemore and held at the home of Dr and Mrs Keith Anderson, 3 October 1965. Notices of the University Conservatorium Old Students Association notice of meeting, 27 April 1962, to hear Eric Harrison play certain piano works (notices used as note-paper). Nickson, trained as an organist at the Royal College of Music, London, returned to Melbourne where he became organist at St. Peters Church, Eastern Hill, and soon taught at the University Conservatorium of Music and at the Melbourne Grammar School. He remained at the Conservatorium for 55 years, and received the honorary degree of Doctor of Music in 1959 and became an Honorary Fellow of the Royal College of Music in 1963. After his death on 16 February 1964, friends and pupils formed a committee which called a public meeting on 20 June 1965 to hear announced the establishment of fund for the creation of travelling scholarship in Nickson’s memory. These are the papers of Paddy Dorum (Mrs. I.C. Dorum, Organizing Secretary of the Fund Committee). |
| Nieuwenhuysen, John | ‘Poverty Researcher Fought for Equity: Obituary for Economist Ronald Henderson’. Australian. 5 Jan 1995. |
| Author | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|
| O’Brien, Emily | The Cultural Development of Whitley College, 1955-1968: A Rounded Experience. In A Chequered Past: Pieces of Melbourne University, edited by Millennium Scholars. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 2000. | Whitley College is both a residential college of the University of Melbourne and the Baptist Theological College of Victoria. |
| O’Brien, John M. | ‘Union Strategy and Union democracy in a Decentralised Industrial Relations Environment: The case of the National Tertiary Education Union. Labour & industry. v.9 no.3(April 1999) | |
| O’Dwyer, Kelly | ‘Right Wing Radicals’. In A Chequered Past: Pieces of Melbourne University, edited by Millennium Scholars. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 2000. | |
| O’Grady, Desmond. | Interview with Desmond OGrady, 1992. | O’Grady talks with Peter Coleman about his friendship with Vincent Buckley and Barry Oakley at Melbourne University; family background; effect of Labor Party split in 1950s on family and his involvement with paper, Catholic Worker. He then talks about his trip overseas; experiences in Italy; marriage in 1957 and return to Australia. OGrady then discusses working with Weekend, Observer and the Bulletin as foreign editor, literary editor and red page editor. He left for Italy in 1962 for family reasons and to cover 2nd Vatican Council. OGrady then gives background information on his publications such as his first published book, Eat from Gods Hand and his novel Deschooling Kevin Carew as well as other as yet unpublished works and his writing plans for the future. Corrected transcript available from National Library Of Australia (typescript, 78 leaves). Recorded in Rome. |
| O’Hearn, Dinny | The Role of the University Administrator: What Is a Good University Administrator. Paper presented at the University Administrative Staff Course. [Melbourne] 1972. | O’Hearn was Sub-Dean of the Faculty of Arts and later a literary critic for SBS. |
| O’Neill, Terence | ‘From Martin Boyd to Mrs Stacy Waddy: Confessions of a Literary Sleuth’. Orana. v.24 no.4(Nov 1988). | |
| O’Toole, Peter | ‘Power to the People?: Harry Van Moorst, SDS and Student Activism’. In A Chequered Past: Pieces of Melbourne University, edited by Millennium Scholars. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 2000. | Van Moorst was a founding member of Students for a Democratic Society in 1968 and a prominent student activist. |
| Oeser, Oscar Adolph. | Papers. 55 archives boxes, 1930-1977. | Correspondence; reports by B.F. Skinner 1930-1950; reports by William Stephenson; index cards; lectures 1948-1956; A.B.C. broadcasts 1949-1950; Department of Psychology files; University correspondence; project files; UNESCO study of children 1959; Hansard Parliamentary papers; Rockefeller scholarship papers 1947-1961; Stanford University course guides 1972; New Guinea correspondence and reports; Michigan Psychology programmes 1971. Oeser (1904-83) was born in Pretoria. By the age of 27 he had graduated from four universities at Rhodes, Marburg and Cambridge, and had gained two doctorates in two disciplines, physics and psychology. In 1933 Oeser became Head of the Department in Experimental Psychology at the University of St. Andrews until 1940 when he served in the war as Wing Commander in the RAFVR. After settling in Melbourne, Oeser was appointed Foundation Chair in Psychology at the University where he remained until 1970 when he became Head of the Human Relations Unit at Western Mining. A member and chairman of numerous committees and a prolific researcher, Oeser was always concerned with the conditions of real life. |
| Oeser, Oscar Adolph | Records Relating to the Teaching, Research and Administrative Activities of the Department of Psychology from Its Formation in 1946 to Shortly after His Retirement in 1969. 20 archives boxes (3 metres), 1946-1972. | Records relating to the teaching, research and administrative activities of the Department of Psychology from its formation in 1946 to shortly after his retirement in 1969. Psychological testing material from a number of organisations (some pre-dating his appointment) Examination papers from a range of universities Victorian Group, Australian Branch of the British Psychological Society material. |
| Oeser, Oscar Adolph | A Tribute to Oscar Oeser, 1982. 15 Videocassette Tapes of Interviews with Oeser by Anona Armstrong. | Inquiries to University Archives |
| Old National Museum. Framed photograph. | Donated by the Melbourne solicitor E.G. Rigby, founding president of the Municipal Association | |
| Old Ormond Students Association | Ormond College Endowment Fund. Melbourne, 1958. | |
| Old Ormond Students Association | The Ormond Newsletter. Vol. No.1 (May 1963)-no.46 (Aug. 1988). Parkville, Vic.: Old Ormond Students Association, 1963. | |
| Old Wilson Hall Building. 1944. 1 210 x 160 mm black and white negative | ||
| Opat, Geoffrey | Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 2001. | Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| Ormond College Students Club | The Blue Book. Melbourne: Ormond College Students Club, 1950. | |
| Ormond College Students Club | The Ormond Chronicle. Melbourne: Ormond College, University of Melbourne, 1924; 1938; 1965-1969; 1972-1975. | |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Annual Accounts, Being Statements of Receipts and Payments and Balance Sheets. 24 cm. 2 archives boxes, 1915-1972. | Annual accounts, being Statements of Receipts and Payments and Balance Sheets for the calendar years 1915-1972. The statement for 1944 includes a list of open scholarship and bursary winners for that year. The College was built, by resolution of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Victoria, to serve as a college of residence for students attending the University, and as a theological hall for the training of candidates for the ministry. Bearing the name of its chief benefactor, Francis Ormond, it opened to students in 1881. From 1885, women were admitted as non-resident students and in 1973 were admitted as residents. Alexander Morrison was the Chairman of the Founding Committee and first Chairman of Ormond College. H.W. Barney Allen was a Classics Tutor from 1903 to 1944 and Vice-Master. |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Correspondence to R.D. Rogers. 2 cm. 1914-1916. | |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Entry Forms of College Students. 26 archives boxes, 1889-1978. | Bound in spring-back folders. |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Memorabilia. 1 cm. 1 folder. 1919-1985. | K. A. Lemon to Master including recollections of various Ormond people, 13 July 1981. As above, advising of his removal to retirement village, 30 Oct 1984. As above, providing further reminiscences re. students, 14 October 1985. Includes Melbourne University Athletics Club Annual Sports Meeting Inter-Collegiate Day Programme (Ormond students indicated),17 May 1920. Photo of statue of Ormond, March 1921. Photocopy of Inter-College Tennis Tournament photo, 16 October 1919. Copy of photo of the Ormond College Commencement. 1922. Dinner menu, Hosies Hotel, 19 July1920. Photo of horse tram, 1922 |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Miscellany of Student Material. 24 cm. 2 archives boxes. 1993-1994. | Ormond College Students Club minutes 1994; House Sub-Committee minutes 1993, with other papers concerning catering; menus of dinners, including that of the Ormond College Boat Club, 1994; Ormondiana 1993- 1994; Ormond Chronicle 1949, 1951, 1952, 1957, 1966, 1968, 1972, 1974; 1979-1982; 1986-1989; 1993-1994. These items were collected for the Archives by Michael Gregory, convenor of the Ormond Archives Sub-Committee. They include papers which indicate that he was active in student affairs. |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Ormond College Senior Common Room File. 2 cm. 1982-1985. | Covering John Carrolls Presidency to July 1983, Carrie Moloneys to July 1984, and Carney Fishers thereafter. |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Ormond College Students Club Papers. 2 cm. 1980. | Ormond College Students Club notices; newsletters; Members list; valedictory menu; boat race |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Ormond Women About 1907. 1907. 8x 5 photograph mounted on cardboard, 10x 8. | Names of the 21 women inscribed on the back. |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Papers. 16 metres. 1875-1980. | Correspondence and articles relating to the foundation of the College; Council minutes 1877-1949; documents relating to appointments, buildings and general administration; records of students and student clubs, including the Theological Students Society 1891-1957; files relating to the Old Ormond Students Association; newscuttings; photographs; the Ormond Chronicle 1921-1979; Alexander Morrison: Diaries 1875-1901, correspondence with Francis Ormond 1878-1888; H.W. Barney: correspondence with past students and talks 1903-1944. |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Papers on Alumni. 2 cm. 1 folder, 1984-1986. | 1. Notes on Bearham family of graduates for OCA Newsletter. 2. Notes for OCA Newsletter on Ian Warden Anderson by D. McCaughey, 6 Nov 1985. 3. Article on Jill Nicholson (entered Ormond 1927) Age, 15 Dec 1984. 4. Letter from Ian Burnet (son of Macfarlane Burnet) to D.H. Parker acknowledging letter of condolences, bequest to Ormond and Sir Macfarlanes papers, 17 Nov 1985. 5. Dr. D.H. Parker to Stuart Macintyre 10 Dec 1985. 6. Notes on John Frederick Keayes by N. Travers, 14 Dec 1985. 7. Article by Dr Powell 23 Nov 1985 & Dr McCaughey 25 Jan 1986. The notes in this collection were compiled with the intention of publication in the Ormond College Association Newsletter. Jill Nicholson entered Ormond College in 1927 and subsequently had a distinguished career as the head of the Royal Childrens Hospital team of social workers. The papers of Macfarlane Burnet mentioned are a tiny fraction and relate to his undergraduate days at Ormond; selected for relevance to the Influenza Pandemic of 1919 and including Ormonds reaction to the armistice of 1918, the gas strike and a handwritten note from D.H. Picken to Burnets father regarding the latters hospitalisation in 1919. |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Papers Relating to Financial Matters. 1 cm. 1 envelope, 1861-1888. | Letters: Rev I Hetherington to Dr Alexander Robertson re. build fund, 4 Dec 1861. As above. Cant attend opening service 11 Aug 1862. Rev W Henderson, same apologies, 21 Aug 1862. Rev A Simpson to Robertson acknowledges expenses, 25 Nov 1862. Correspondence and receipts for the Manse building fund from T. Learmonth, J Clow, G Russell and Francis Ormond 10 Dec 1863 - 5 June 1888. Rev Adam Cairns to Craig. McCulloch and Grant desired Manse site available, 3 Mar 1865. Rev Hartie, re. finance, 27 Mar 1867. John Kelman to Jennings, declines offer, 26 Jul 88. A pencilled note with the letters reads culled from receipts ect. The Board of Management at Queenscliffe asked Dr. Close to look at the material in 1985. They might be prized by Queenscliffe congregation for their connection with Rev. James Clow, the history of Queenscliffe and the Presbyterian Church. The collection was sent to Ormond College by Mrs Catherine Stanley, of Kincraig by Kingussie, Scotland, daughter of the Rev. Smith MacBain, Minister at Queenscliffe before the first world war. They relate to the Presbyterian Church there. |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Photographs of Alexander Morrison and Other Family Members. 2 cm. 1903. | Photographs of Alexander Morrison and other family members; address by Dr. Colin MacDonald on Alexander Morrison; list of public school headmasters in Victoria, 1903. [NB these are only rather poor photocopies of photographs, or - in Alexander Morrison’s case, of the well-known oil portrait] |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Senior Common Room Papers. 2cm. 1983. | Carney Fisher Secretary. Includes newspaper article on Douglas Lawrence; financial statement of SCR; Commencement dinner menu; Mid-term notes by R. Jackson, Snr. Tutor; Ted Gotts farewell; Masters note re repellent condition of College after student dinners, and other notices. |
| Ormond College (University of Melbourne) | Ormond College Art Collection, 1881-1991. Parkville, Vic: Ormond College, University of Melbourne, 1991. | Co-authors: Ann Verbeek, and Jane Brian. |
| Orr Case Papers. 5 metres (41 archives boxes), 1955-1967. | 1. Transcript of High Court appeal, S.S. Orr v. the University of Tasmania, 1957. 2. Personal papers of Dr. D.F. Mackay from Melbourne University Staff Association and Federal Council of University Staff Associations of Australia. 3. Transcripts of the Royal Commission of the University of Tasmania 1955, and the correspondence of Professor J.S. Turner (one of the Commissioners). 4. Subject files of Professor R.D. Wright (Orrs next friend in law) from 1957 containing a wide range of correspondence, notes, transcripts legal matter, newspaper clippings, photographs, drafts of W.H.C. Eddys book Orr, 1955-1967. >1. Richard Moulton Eggleston was Chairman of the Victorian Bar Council 1956 to 1958 when the Orr case erupted. 2. Donald Farquhar Mackay, D.Phil. (Oxon) MA was a Senior Lecturer in History, Law School, University of Melbourne in 1960 when he agreed to serve on the Federal Council of University Staff Associations of Australia’s committee of Investigation in to the Orr Case. He took the place of Associate Professor Kathleen Fitzpatrick, who withdrew because of ill health. 3. John Stewart Turner, Ph.D. at the time Professor of Botany at the University of Melbourne, was a member of the 1955 Royal Commission on the University of Tasmania. 4. Roy Douglas Wright, D.Sc. M.B.B.S. was Professor of Physiology at the University of Melbourne. During the period, Wright was active on the executives of both the Melbourne University Staff Association and the F.C.U.S.A.A. Asked by Orr to review the evidence in May 1957, Wright later became Orrs next friend (in law, one who represents any person who is not able to appear sui juris, in a suit at law). |
|
| Osborne, William Alexander | Diaries, Radio Scripts, etc. 17 archives boxes, 1899-1967. | Diaries 1911-1965 (incomplete); family and general correspondence; family and property papers; copies of almost 200 radio scripts; publications; photograph; medals (academic); collection of Stone Age fragments of pottery from Arizona. W.A. Osborne was Professor of Physiology from 1904 to 1938, and Dean of the Faculty of Medicine after 1929. A noted traveller and broadcaster, he was also a foundation member of Melbourne Rotary. In his retirement Osborne attempted to write his autobiography, but in November 1965 recorded that he would be unable to complete it because of failing vision. |
| Osborne, William Alexander | Papers. 3 cm. 1960-. | Autobiography: Folder 1. Holywood: birth, life and practice in Ireland. [34 pp.] Folder 2. {Untitled]: Matriculation 1889, medical course, London studies, Tubingen, Boer War, back to Ireland. Melbourne 1904 -, commenting on the state of the University and on its staff (chiefly the Professors) in his day. [ pp.] Letter, n.d. but written in retirement, on the McClelland Family to which he was related. Publications including his A Primer of Dietetics, 6th ed.1943; German Grammar for Science Students, 1906 (with Ethel); Selected Essays, 1943. |
| Osborne, William Alexander | ‘Research in the Department of Physiology’. University review. v.1 no. 3(1913). | |
| Osborne, William Alexander | William Sutherland: a Biography. Melbourne: Lothian, 1920. | |
| Otway, Kenneth H. | M.U.S.A. File Regarding University of Melbourne Women’s Staff Group. 2 cm. (1 folder), 1973. | The Melbourne University Staff Association was formed in 1944 to promote the position of University staff members, in particular their welfare and research interests as well as the development of the University at large. |
| Otway, Kenneth H. | M.U.S.A. Minutes, Agendas, Memoranda, Correspondence, Circulars. 84 cm. (7 archives boxes), 1957-1975. | M.U.S.A. minutes, agenda, memoranda, correspondence, circulars, 1957-1975; F.A.U.S.A. minutes, agenda, correspondence, conference material 1960-1971. |
| Otway, Kenneth H. | Minutes of Executive Committee. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1983-1984. | August 1983 - May 1984. Melbourne University General Staff Association. |
| Otway, Kenneth H. | Papers. 2 cm. 1963-1975. | Executive minutes 1963-1964; M.U.S.A. minutes, agendas, correspondence 1967-1968; F.A.U.S.A. minutes, agendas, correspondence 1968-1975; general material 1967-1970 |
| Otzen, Roslyn. | Whitley : The Baptist College of Victoria 1891-1991. South Yarra, Vic.: Hyland House, 1991. | |
| ‘Our Illustration - G. B. Halford’. Melbourne University review. v. 2 no. 2(885) | ||
| ‘Our Illustration - William Edward Hearn’. Melbourne University review. v. 2 no. 1(1885). | ||
| Overhead Aerial Photograph of University of Melbourne Campus and Small Parts of Carlton and Parkville. Photograph. 1960? | Black and white print; n.d. Shows new Medical School buildings partly built. Inscribed in blue pencil Ill 14/6 1/16 x 3 1/2 | |
| Overseas Medical Students Society | The Alternative. [Melbourne]: O.M.S.S. |
| Author | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|
| P-E Consulting Group (Australia) | Organisation Structure of the Faculty of Science : Abridged Report. [Melbourne?]: P-E Consulting Group (Australia), 1969. | |
| Packer, J. S. | The First 50 Years : The Department of Electrical & Electronic Engineering, University of Melbourne 1947-1997. Parkville, Vic.: Melbourne University Engineering School Foundation, 1997. | |
| Pakdeethai, Janthorn | The University of Melbourne MMBS 2000 Yearbook. Parkville, Vic.: The University of Melbourne, 2000. | |
| Palmer, Vance | The Economist Lyndhurst Falkiner Giblin. In National Portraits: 25 Australian Lives, 224. Sydney: Angus & Robertson, 1940. | |
| Paper-Clip Collective | Melbourne University Portraits: They Called It the Shop. Parkville, Vic.: Dept. of History University of Melbourne with the assistance of the History of the University Unit, 1996. | |
| Papers Relating to the Orr Case. 10 Archives Boxes, 1950-1960. | Alan Ker Stout (formerly University of Sydney Professor of Philosophy, 1939 - 65), who retired to Sandy Bay, Tasmania and died in the mid-1980s was involved with the Orr case. This included the Australasian Association of Philosophys ban imposed on the University of Tasmania in 1958. The existing Orr Case papers contain correspondence between Stout and R.D. Wright, 1958-65. | |
| Parbery, Douglas | Thirty Years On. Forage 1977- (1992) | |
| Parbery, Douglas | ‘Ethel Irene McLennan 1891/1938: Pioneer Teacher of Mycology and Plant Pathology in Victoria’. Australasian plant pathology. v.18 no.3(Oct 1989). | |
| Parkinson, Charles | ‘Sir William Harrison Moore: A Man of the World’. In A Chequered Past: Pieces of Melbourne University, edited by Millennium Scholars. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 2000. | |
| Parnaby, O. W. | Queen’s College, University of Melbourne : A Centenary History. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press;, 1990. | Queen’s College was founded in 1887 (Founders day) on land granted by the Victorian Government to the Methodist Church. It was named in honour of the Jubilee of Queen Victoria’s reign that was celebrated in that year and opened its doors on March 14th 1888 with 18 students. Its first Master was Edward H. Sugden, who was to hold office for forty years (1888-1928). Queen’s College is a College of the Uniting Church and is affiliated with the University of Melbourne. |
| Pascoe, Gwen | ‘John Stewart Turner: Communicating Conservation’. In Melbourne University Portraits: They Called It the Shop, edited by Paper-Clip Collective. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1996. | Turner, born in Middleborough, U.K. graduated in the Natural Sciences Tripos at Cambridge where in 1936 he also became Doctor of Philosophy. He was in turn Demonstrator and Senior Demonstrator in Botany there but in August 1938 took up an appointment to the University of Melbourne Chair of Botany, following the retirement of A.J. Ewart. Among his major projects were research into the tropic-proofing of optical instruments by a fungicide during World War II, on penicillin and on the physiological processes of plant respiration and fermentation. He was long-time chairman of the Miss M. M. Trust and promoted ecological research. |
| Pascoe, Gwen | ‘The University of Melbourne System Garden: Whose Garden? And Whose System?’ 4th year thesis, History of the University Unit Dept. of History University of Melbourne, 1997. | The System Garden was established in 1856 by Frederick McCoy. |
| Pascoe, Gwen | The University of Melbourne System Garden : Whose Garden? And Whose System? [Parkville, Vic.]: History of the University Unit Dept. of History University of Melbourne, 1999. | |
| Past Graduates & Post-Graduates Society Incorporated | Graduate House: Record of Residents, 1962-84, 1994. | Co-author: W.E.F. Berry. |
| Past Graduates and Post-Graduates Society (University of Melbourne) | Democracy and Dissent - a Defence against Expulsion. [Parkville, Vic.]: The Society, 1993. | |
| Paterson, Barbara | Renegades : Australia’s First Film School : From Swinburne to VCA. Ivanhoe East, Vic.: Helicon Press, 1996. | |
| Paterson + Pettus | ‘Recent & current projects: Paterson + Pettus, landscape architects’. Transition. no.59-60(1998). | |
| Paterson Bros | Photographs. 1890-1912. | |
| Paterson, John | Papers,. 3.22 m, 1960-1984. | Paterson (1942- ) was prominent in the Student Action movement of the 196os and has had a distinguished Public Service career. |
| Paton, Alice | Papers. 24 cm. (2 archives boxes), 1936-1959. | Wife of Vice-Chancellor George Paton. |
| Paton, George | ‘The Modern University and the Community’. IPA review, no. October/December 1959 (1959): 123-28. | |
| Paton, George | ‘Goodbye Mr Chips: Conversation with Sir George Paton’. Law Institute journal. v.58 no.4(April 1984). | |
| Paton, George | Papers. Including Photographs of the University Grounds. 36 cm. 1936-1973. | |
| Paton, George | Papers Relating to the Macgeorge Estate. 10 cm. 1968-1979. | |
| Patrick, Alison | ‘Born Lucky’. In The Half-Open Door : Sixteen Modern Australian Women Look at Professional Life and Achievement, edited by Patricia Grimshaw and Lynne Strahan. Sydney, N.S.W.: Hale & Iremonger, 1982. | Patrick was an historian of the French Revolution. |
| Patterson, John | Papers [in the Noel Butlin Archives, ANU]. 3 cm. 1939-1991. | Personal correspondence; business and academic papers relating to urban planning and management; papers relating to the University of Melbourne Students Representative Council. |
| Pawsey, M. R. | Speech, Taped at His Farewell on Retirement from the University, 15 June 1990. 1990. | |
| Pawsey, M. R. | ‘Building Maintenance, Management and Budgeting’. Journal of tertiary educational administration. v.4(Oct 1982). | Paper presented to the Australian Institute of Tertiary Educational Administrators Conference, 1981. |
| Payne, H. | The Engineering School. University review. v. 1 no. 1(1913). | |
| Pearson, Charles H. | Report on the State of Public Education in Victoria and Suggestions as to the Means of Improving It. Melbourne: Government Printer, 1878. | |
| Pedersen, Vibeke | ‘The Foundation of an Education System for the Colony of Victoria’. In Students, Scholars and Structures: Early Tales from the University of Melbourne, edited by The Special Collection. Melbourne: History Department, University of Melbourne, 2002. | |
| Peel, John Clifford | Memorabilia. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1911-1915. | Corporals Sergeants and Officers School Certificates 1913- 1915; Melbourne University Rifles Platoon and Parade Reports 1915. |
| Peel, Victoria | ‘Sentimental Nostalgia and Cynical Despair: The Effects of Student Role Perception on Expression of Dissent at La Trobe University, Monash University and the University of Melbourne, 1960 to 1972’. 4th year thesis, University of Melbourne, 1984. | |
| Peers, Juliet | Ancient and Modern: Some recently Catalogued G. W. L. Marshall-Hall Material. La Trobe Library journal. v.10 no.39(Autumn 1987). | |
| Penington, D. G. | ‘The Challenge of Change’. Business Council bulletin. no.121(July 1995). | Toast to the Town presented to the Town-Gown Dinner (7th: 1995). |
| Penington, D. G. | ‘As the Dust Settles’. University of Melbourne gazette. Winter 1990. | David Penington, Vice-Chancellor of University of Melbourne, comments on ministerial changes and consequences for higher education. |
| Penington, D. G. | Confidential Records. 17 cms. 1970 - 1993. | Three sealed envelopes and one loose bundle of memoranda and correspondence. Each consists of confidential records regarding amalgamation with the Victorian College of Pharmacy 1990; academic misconduct Veterinary Science; Freedom of Information Inquiries; dismissal of academic staff; and sexual harassment. |
| Penington, D. G. | Education and the Future of Australia : Should We Be Followers of Thomas More or of Adam Smith? : Address Delivered by Professor David Penington, Vice-Chancellor, University of Melbourne, to the National Press Club, Canberra at the Launch of the 1994 Order of Australia Association Media Awards, on 27 July 1994. 1994. 1 digital audio tape (ca. 55 min.) | Penington considers the state of school, university and vocational education in Australia, arguing that educational standards have suffered in a cultural undercurrent of anti-intellectualism, equality and uniformity. Higher standards will be achieved through focussing on the individual talents young people; greater commitment to quality; recognition of diversity; higher status for training; emphasis on internationalism; and stronger commitment to research. Transcript available from National Library Of Australia (typescript, 11 p.) Photographs available. |
| Penington, D. G. | Interview with David Penington, Medical Researcher and Later Vice Chancellor, University of Melbourne, 1988-1995, Director of a Number of Australian Companies Involved in Marketing Medical Research Products, 2000. 2 digital audio tapes (ca. 120 min.) | Summary notes available (3 p.) plus interviewers notes (19 p.) from National Library Of Australia. Penington speaks with Diana Giese of his childhood & family background, his father was a physician at the Royal Melbourne Hospital, his education at Scotch College then University of Melbourne then Oxford University qualifying as a medical practitioner and research in London & Boston, his return to Australia where he undertook full-time medical teaching and research, appointed Professor of Medicine at University of Melbourne in 1970 then from 1978-1986 became the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, University of Melbourne, the oldest medical faculty in Australia, his achievements included opening up access and expanding post-graduate continuing education programs and affiliating with the Ludwig Institute of Cancer Research, in 1986 became the Principal Advisor on Health Policy and Programs to the Victorian Minister of Health, how in 1995 he identified a number of development issues facing public medicine such as ever-improving automated interfaces means more medical services expected but who will pay. Penington speaks of better monitoring of individuals with genetic predisposition to particular disorders can maintain their health, the role of specialist medical practitioners in public hospitals, means of containing costs so that medical treatment is available to all who need it, held the position of Vice-Chancellor, University of Melbourne from 1988-1995 exploring ways of maintaining the independence of the medical profession, his views on tertiary education at this time, from 1982-1987 was Chairman of the AIDS Task Force where he introduced screening of all blood donations in 1985, the differences between the Taskforce and NACAIDS, how their preventive measures resulted in one of the worlds lowest rates of AIDS infectivity, now Chairman of the Victorian Drug Policy Expert Committee, his involvement in public companies to promote medical services such as Cochlear a company developing a bionic ear to be marketed worldwide, and EXGENIX Ltd involved in discovering the genetic basis of common diseases. Penington speaks of his aim to promote a national science policy to expand this countrys research and development activities, a major review of science education to attracted the most talented, setting national goals for key fields such as genetic engineering in the food and health industries, tropical agriculture, marine biology, information technology, biomedicine, and introducing more cash incentives for research, his positive and negative views about our future. |
| Penman, Leigh T. T. | ‘A School of Statesmanship: History and Historians at the University of Melbourne, 1854-1912’. In Students, Scholars and Structures: Early Tales from the University of Melbourne, edited by The Special Collection. Melbourne: History Department, University of Melbourne, 2002. | |
| Pensabene, T. S. | The Rise of the Medical Practitioner in Victoria. Canberra: Australian National University, 1980. | |
| Perry, John William | Papers. 5 cm. (1 archives box), 1917 - 1960. | Birth certificate of J.W. Perry; correspondence; photographs of the University and Ormond College 1937-1939; photograph of Ormond College General Committee 1939 including G.H. Gellie, C.R. Ampt, L.C. White, K.McC Dowding; newspaper cuttings 1956-1960; miscellaneous medical journals including Australian Paediatric Journal, The Medical Journal of Australia; obituaries. Also the Inaugural John Perry Oration 1976. Graduating from the University of Melbourne in 1939 and after two years at the Royal Melbourne Hospital, Perry was appointed Senior Lecturer in Pathology at the University. From 1942 to 1946 he served with the Australian Army Medical Corps. After the war Perry became the first Pathologist to the Clinical Research Unit of the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute prior to his appointment to the Royal Childrens Hospital, where he became Medical Director in 1960. Perry died in 1965. |
| Perry, Warren | Emeritus Professor Richard Herbert Samuel 1900-1983, Head of the Department of Germanic Studies in the University of Melbourne, 1947-67. 1st ed. Eaglemont, Vic.: W. Perry, 1997. | Samuel (1900-83), was educated at Tubingen and Berlin Universities. In 1934 he moved to England and lectured in the German Department at Cambridge University from 1934 to 1940 and Durham University in 1937. After war service in the British Army from 1940 to 1945, Samuel became a Research Department Foreign Officer. In 1947 he was appointed Senior Lecturer in Germanic Languages at the University of Melbourne and then Foundation Professor in 1951 until his retirement in 1968. He was a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities and the Australian College of Education and a Commander of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany. |
| Pescott, R. T. M. | Collections of a Century : The History of the First Hundred Years of the National Museum of Victoria. Melbourne: National Museum of Victoria, 1954. | Co-author: Russell Grimwade. Chronology, p. 173-180. Includes list of Museum staff. Limited edition of 800 copies, 300 of which are for sale, numbered and signed by the author. |
| Phillips, A.A. | ‘A.A. Phillips’. In Memories of Melbourne University : Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1917, edited by Hume Dow. Richmond, Vic.: Hutchinson of Australia, 1983. | Phillips graduated in English Language and Literature in 1922, and after taking a Dip. Ed at Oxford, joined the staff of Wesley College, where he taught from 1925 to 1971. He was a notable commentator on educational and literary matters and published, inter alia, two influential collections of essays: The Australian Tradition (1958) and Responses (1980). |
| Photograph of Melbourne University Women’s Hockey Team, Circa 1910, with Names of Members Signed above or Below Each. 1910 ? | ||
| Photograph of Professor Samuel Louis Goldberg, Taken C. 1958 When He Was About 32 Years of Age. 1 photographic print | A Melbourne graduate, Goldberg was a research scholar and part-time tutor in 1931-1932 and combined part-time tutoring with public accounting throughout the 1930s. After war service he was appointed lecturer in accounting and G.L. Wood Professor of Accounting in 1958. He retired in 1973 but continued to give research seminars in the Department until 1987. He published numerous works on accounting education. He died on 18 October 1997. | |
| Photograph of Women Graduates at the Conferring of Degrees, 23 December 1904. 1904. 1 photographic print. | ||
| Photograph, Tinted, of University Looking South over the Lake to Wilson Hall from Zoology School.1915. | Message on back from Will to Miss J.C. Brotherton, East Perth, W.A. n.d. Post-mark unclear but from the Military Camp Showgrounds. | |
| Photographs. 1934, 1958-1959. 3 Photographs | Photograph of University roofs and Babel; photograph of Sir John MacFarland, Miss Foster and Captain J.K. Davis; photograph of Irvine Masson and J.H. Anderson, Ormond College. | |
| Photographs. 19--. 7 Photographs | Glossy prints of Mr. Justice Isaacs, Sir Edmund Barton, Mr. Justice OConnor, Mr. Justice Higgins, Sir Samuel Griffith, (the last also having a page including photographs of him at various ages to 31). Also, large photograph of Sir William Harrison Moore with Law graduates, (early 1920s?). | |
| Photographs. 1918-1919. 2 Photographs | 1. Photograph taken from the Ormond Tower, 29 March 1919. 2. French Part II, 1918. | |
| Photographs. 1930s-1940s. | Photographs of University grounds; 1930s - Christmas party; cloisters; Natural Philosophy building. | |
| Photographs and Slides. 1978. | Five colour photographs taken from the 12th floor of the Redmond Barry Building, looking north, January 1978. Three colour slides showing Wilson Hall (after the fire) and the Teachers Training College, August 1952 - June 1953. | |
| Photographs of Associate Professor McCartney, J. Youlden and Sir Anthony Brownless. 19--. 5 photographs. | ||
| Photographs of Groups and Individuals in the 1928-1930 Women’s Intervarsity Hockey Team; and of Graduates 1931, Including Elizabeth Pownall. 1928-1931. | 20 photographs, 8 x 6 enlargements of snapshots. Three sheets on which photographed individuals are identified. | |
| Photographs of Students and Staff. 1946-1949. | ||
| Photographs of University Buildings. 19--. 6 negatives | Original Wilson Hall (destroyed by fire January 1952), Union House etc. Built in 1882 with Sir Samuel Wilson’s benefaction, Wilson Hall was the ceremonial centre of the University and was a dominating landmark on the campus. On 25 January 1952, a fire started in the roof. The blaze, watched it is said by ten thousand people, left only parts of the wall standing. A few of the contents were saved. Three days after the fire the Vice-Chancellor in an emergency meeting moved that the Council immediately mount a public appeal to restore Wilson Hall in the same style. Eventually there was little choice and due to limited money the surviving parts of Wilson Hall was demolished and a modern building was erected in its place. |
|
| Photographs of University of Melbourne Mace, Seal, Grant of Arms, Samuel Wilson’s Grants of Knighthood and Arms. 19. 6Photographs | Glossy prints, 7-3/4 x 7 -3/4 (19 x 19 cms.) black & white. Text is legible | |
| Photographs Of: Ormond College, Facade; Ormond College, Back; Newman College, and Tennis Court, Seen from Recreation Ground. 1926-1928. 3 photographic prints. | ||
| Photographs Taken When Sir Robert Menzies Visited the University on 23 October 1975. 1975. 4 Photographs | In a wheel-chair, Menzies was escorted by Sir David Derham, Ray Marginson and other members of staff | |
| Photographs of and by Rosemary Balmford. 1940s. 22 Photographic prints | Photographs taken while she (then Rosemary Norris) and her husband were law students at the University. One photograph including Rosemary Balmford, 7 September 1946; 21 including or taken by Mrs Balmford, being students, grounds and buildings of the University. Also information on separate sheets concerning those individuals appearing in the photographs which was compiled in 1986. | |
| Picken, D. K. | ‘Thomas Howell Laby, 1880-1946’. In Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. v.5(1948). | |
| Pinnock, Robert Denham | Papers on Sporting Clubs. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1869-1876. | Minutes of Melbourne University Cricket Club meetings 1869-1872; accounts 1870; membership and competition material 1868-1870; newspaper cuttings 1871; rules and newspaper cuttings regarding Sydney University Cricket Club 1870-1871; copy of Hampshire Weekly News journal of events during the voyage of the ship Hampshire from London to Melbourne, 20 January 1876 - 16 March 1876. Among the Cricket Club material are letters from G.W. Rusden accepting presidency, and from John Eggleston and M.H. Irving resigning from the committee. The one letter of 1869 is from the Sydney University Club. Melbourne University Athletics Club Rules, ms. n.d. Correspondence includes an approach to the Council to have the University Recreation Ground properly made and enclosed, especially since the institution of annual cricket matches in the previous year (1870) and includes a plan of the Recreation Ground. Melbourne University Athletics Club Rules, ms. n.d. Pinnock entered the University in 1870, studying medicine to the end of third year but completing the course elsewhere (presumably in Britain, as he served as Ships Surgeon on the Hampshire, which left London for Melbourne in December 1875). While a Melbourne student he was Honorary Secretary of the University Cricket Club. |
| Place, Katrina | ‘John O’Brien’. In Melbourne University Portraits: They Called It the Shop, edited by Paper-Clip Collective. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1996. | OBrien lectured at the University of Melbourne from 1934 until his death in 1965, originally in Classics and subsequently in History, where he taught Ancient History. |
| Platt, Austin H. | Old Wilson Hall from South-West. 1930s? Etching | 2 x 10. Signed Austin H. Platt. Numbered 73-125. On back: To Winnie from S.A. Quinlan written in pencil. Light wooden frame, glazed, from which it has been removed. |
| Polmear, I. J. | Citation by Professor I.J. Polmear at the Award of the Degree of Doctor of Engineering Honoris Cause to Emeritus Professor J.N. Greenwood, 3 April 1974..05 cm. 1974. | Copy of Citation by Professor I.J. Polmear at the award of the Degree of Doctor of Engineering Honoris Cause to Emeritus Professor J.N. Greenwood, 3 April 1974. Notes by H.C. Bolton on Greenwood, taken from his ms. autobiography, and copy of reprint by H.C. Bolton, P.P. Phakey and W.A. Rachinger, Historical Metallurgical Puzzle from the Last Years of the Melbourne Ruling Engines, from Materials Forum (1989) 13, pp.273- 278. Greenwood (1894-1981) was born in St. Helen’s, Lancs. and appointed to the new Chair of Metallurgy in 1924, which he held until 1945. In 1946 he was appointed Research Professor of Metallurgy, and from 1957- 1959 was Dean of Applied Science. In 1960 he was appointed to a Personal Chair, retiring in 1964. In 1962 Greenwood participated in the Royal Commission to enquire into the failure of Kings Bridge, Melbourne. |
| Pond, Samuel Austin Frank | Papers. 84 cm. (7 archives boxes), 1914-1971. | Personal papers including school diary 1922; University of Melb. lecture books on French, law and history, timetable 1926, notes, exam papers, economic history supplementary, M.U.R.C. material, M.U.A.C. material, correspondence and newspaper clippings regarding the annual meeting of the Standing Committee of Convocation 1971; memorabilia i.e. badges, souvenirs, ribbons, menus; annual reports 1934-1938; newspapers; publications including Farrago 1925-1931 (incomplete), photographs. Papers relating to Ponds period as Warden of Convocation, 1971-1972. Pond was born in 1905 and educated at the University of Melbourne where he excelled in rifle shooting. After graduating in law, he joined the A.I.F. achieving the rank of Brigade Major. In 1942 Pond was captured in Malaya and for the duration of the war remained a Prisoner-of-war. From 1946 to 1970 he was a partner in the law firm of Whiting & Byrne, a member of the Standing Committee of Convocation University of Melbourne representing Arts for 1946 to 1966 and law graduates 1966 to 1970 and a member of various other committees. |
| Porter, Una Beatrice | Papers. 12 archives boxes, 1900-1996. | Diaries; correspondence; journals; financial papers; addresses; devotional material; papers regarding Moran and Cato; testimonials; publications; photographs; newspaper clippings; tapes Porter (1900-96), was the daughter of F.J. Cato, co-founder of the grocery business Moran and Cato, the first chain of stores of any kind in Australia. Educated at Melbourne Ladies College and the English boarding school Farringtons. With her sisters married and brothers enlisted during the First World War, a close relationship developed between Porter and her father. Both deeply religious and dedicated to philanthropic work, Porter assisted her father in financing hospitals and missions in Arnhem Land, Fiji and India. Motivated by her ill niece, Porter began her studies in medicine at the University of Melbourne in 1933. On completing her degree she continued with studies in psychiatry and became the senior psychiatrist at the Queen Victoria Hospital in 1949. From 1925 Porter became prominent in the Young Women’s Christian Association and was elected vice-president in 1949 and president from 1963 to 1967 and 1971. She married James Porter in 1946. Una Porter was a devoted committee member and from 1936 became a member of the council of Queen’s College at Melbourne University, serving for 28 years. |
| Potter, James | Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 1999. | Recorded for the History of the University Unit. Potter was at various times Reader in Communications, in Electrical Engineering, Dean of Engineering, and University Registrar. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| Potter, James | Papers. 11 boxes (1.5 metres), 1962-1979. | |
| Powell, Susan | ‘Australian Science Archives Project’. National Library of Australia news. v.2 no.3(Dec 1991). | |
| Power, John | Oral History Tapes, 1989. | Thirteen oral history tapes (12 x SA 90, 1 x AD 90) of interview programme designed and administered by Professor John Power and Dr Guinevere Threlkeld, with various other people, principally Professor Sir Roy Douglas Wright. One cassette recording (D90) of handing over ceremony, 6 July 1989. |
| Power, John | Transcripts of Interview Sessions. 12 cm. (one archives box), 1988-1989. | Transcript is paginated from 1 to 385, pp. 1-350 being of interviews 1-6, 1 July 1988-5 April 1989; pp.351-362 are of the handing-over ceremony at the Archives, 6 July 1989; and pp. 363-385 are of an interview with Dr George van Noiten (an undergraduate near- contemporary of R. D. Wright) recorded in Yarrawonga, 28 July 1988. Co-administrator: Guinevere Threlkeld. |
| Powles, M. | Recruiting Honours Students in the Face of High Market Demand for Pass Students : A Case Study, Research Working Paper / Centre for the Study of Higher Education, University of Melbourne; 89.1. Parkville, Vic.: Centre for the Study of Higher Education Dept. of Educational Development and Evaluation University of Melbourne, 1989. | Version of a paper by M. Powles and Kate Patrick, entitled Steps towards postgraduate study, presented at the annual conference of the Higher Education Research and Development Society of Australia, Adelaide, 1-3 July, 1989 |
| Poynter, J. R | Doubts and Certainties : A Life of Alexander Leeper. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1997. | Leeper was born in 1848 and was educated at Trinity College, Dublin where he graduated M A and L.L.D. and was awarded the Vice-Chancellors Prize, First Classical Scholarship Berkley Gold Medal and St. John’s College, Oxford, First-Class. Classical Moderations, exhibitioner and scholar. In 1876, Leeper was appointed Warden at Trinity College, University of Melbourne. He was a member of Melbourne University Council, a Lay Canon of St. Pauls Cathedral, President of the Melb. Public Library the National Gallery and the Classical Association and Vice-President of the Shakespeare Association. Leeper retired as Warden in 1918 and died in 1934. |
| Poynter, J. R. | Russell Grimwade. [Carlton, Vic.]: Melbourne University Press at the Miegunyah Press, 1967. | A graduate in Science (1901), having been a student at Ormond College, Grimwade entered the firm of Felton, Grimwade and Company in 1903 where he was director of the research laboratory. He married Mabel Kelly in 1909, and in 1910 bought Miegunyah, Orrong Road, comprising a house and garden which the Grimwades extended and developed, the formed containing furniture made by Grimwade, who loved both the craft and timber. In 1920 he published An Anathography of the Eucalypts (A. & R.). A philanthropist during his life-time, he and his widow left Miegunyah to the University. The property was later sold to Robert Holmes aCourt |
| Poynter, J. R. | A History of the University of Melbourne, 1935-1975. | |
| Poynter, J. R. | A Place Apart : The University of Melbourne : Decades of Challenge. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1996. | Co-author: Carolyn Rasmussen. |
| Poynter, J.R. | ‘Governing the University of Melbourne’. In Ideas for Histories of Universities in Australia, edited by F. B. Smith, Pamela Crichton and Australian National University. Division of Historical Studies. Canberra: Division of Historical Studies Research School of Social Sciences Australian National University, 1990. | |
| Poynton, John Orde | Notes of Discussion. Melbourne, 1994. | Poynton (1906-2002), was born in London in and educated at Cambridge and Charing Cross Hospital, London. He served as health officer, research officer and pathologist in Malaya and also in the British army. He was in Changi Prisoner of War Camp during the Japanese occupation of Singapore. In 1947 he became lecturer at the University Medical School in Adelaide where he was much involved in the local book world and was chairman of the Friends of the Public Library of South Australia 1955-60. Poynton donated well over 15,000 volumes to the University in a relationship starting with the opening of the Baillieu Library in 1958 which was to last until his death. In 1961 he was appointed Consulting Bibliographer to the University, a role he continued until1974. In 1977, he was conferred with the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws by the University. Interviewer: J. R. Poynter for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| Prentice, Mildred Barnard | Recorded Interview. Melbourne. | Prentice (ne Barnard) worked as a biometrician in the CSIR 1936-194, lectured at Melbourne University and tutored at Women’s College 1941-1956. She was a demonstrator in the Mathematics Department of Queensland University 1956-1970 and lecturer in mathematical statistics 1970 -1978. She chaired the Brisbane Branch of the International Biometrics Society, Australasian Region in 1972. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| Prentiss, Malcolm D. | ‘John Mathew and Presbyterian theological education in Victoria from the 1880s to the 1920s’. Lucas. no.19/20(1996). | Slightly revised version of a paper read to the meeting of the Evangelical History Association of Australia, at Robert Menzies College, Macquarie University, 1995 (Sydney). |
| Pretty, Martin | ‘Edward Jenks: The Newcomer’. In Melbourne University Mosaic: People and Places, edited by Three-Four-Eight. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1998. | Jenks was the first to bear the title of Professor of Law and the second Law Dean. |
| Price, Raymond | ‘The Engineering Library, University of Melbourne: a Brief History’. Australian academic and research libraries. v.17 no.2(June 1986) | |
| Priestley, Marjorie | Not All Students Use the Counselling Service, But They All Have Problems. Parkville, Vic.: University Of Melbourne Student Counselling Service, 1975. | |
| Priestley, Marjorie | ‘Student Views About the Student Counselling Service at the University of Melbourne’. Vestes : the bulletin of the Federal Council of University Staff Associations of Australia, no. no. 2 (1975). | |
| Priestley, Marjorie | Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 1993. | Also interviewed: Robert R. Priestley. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| Priestley, Raymond E. | The Diary of a Vice-Chancellor : University of Melbourne 1935-1938. Edited by Ronald Ridley. Carlton South, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 2002. | Educated at University College, Priestley was appointed geologist to Shackleton’s 1907 to 1909 Antarctic expedition and Scotts expedition 1910 to 1913. After war service where he received the Military Cross, Priestley resumed an academic and administrative career at Cambridge. In 1934 he reluctantly became the first salaried Vice-Chancellor of Melbourne University. Priestley’s main concern was to re-establish adequate funding and community support for the University. Frustrated in his attempts, he became Vice-Chancellor of the University of Birmingham and left Melbourne in 1938. Priestley acted as an adviser to the BBC and after his retirement in 1952 he served as chairman of the royal commission on civil service and on a series of boards and associations. |
| Priestley, Raymond E. | Problems of the English Speaking University World. 2 cm. 1937-1974 | Copy of Wireless memories Round and About the First World War, including an adjutants view of the Wireless Training Centre at Worcester 1915-1917 by Raymond Priestley; letter from Priestley to Newcombe Wright enclosing memories; photograph of Priestley in a group The final reunion and winding up of the Royal Engineers Wireless Association, Worcester; paper Problems of the English Speaking University World by R.E. Priestley, 1937; obituaries and service 1974. |
| Priestley, Raymond E. | Report to University Council of a Survey Made in 1936 of Certain Universities of Britain, United States, Canada and South Africa in Relation to the University of Melbourne and Consequential Observations. 60 cm. (5 archives box), 1936-1938. | Presented to Council in 1938 after Priestley’s resignation. Also J.F. Fosters report and index, 1938. |
| Priestley, Raymond E. | ‘Myself and Life’. In Miscellanea, Raymond Priestley Papers, University of Birmingham Archives. | |
| Priestley, Raymond E | ‘The University Idea’. Australian quarterly. December 1935. | |
| Priestley, Raymond E. | The University and the National Life : Three Addresses to Victorian Political Organizations. [Parkville, Vic.]: Melbourne University Press, 1937. | Foreword by the chancellor, James Barrett. |
| Priestley, Robert R. | The Mental Health of University Students. Melbourne studies in education 1957/58 (1958). | Robert Priestley was educated at Queensland University where he obtained his BA. He was later worked at the University of Melbourne as a student counsellor and was appointed Assistant Dean of Arts from 1967 to 1968. |
| Priestley, Robert R. | Other Aspects of University Administration: Student Services - Welfare and Advisory. Paper presented at the University Administrative Staff Course. [Melbourne] 1971. | |
| Priestley, Robert R. | Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1945-1972. | Reports and publications including Report of work of Guidance Office 1945; Student Health Ass. Univ. College, London 1945-1955; Student Performance at University College, London 1948-1951; University of New England Report of Conference of Student Advisers, 1958; Notes on the Study of Failure in Australian Universities, 1960; Australian Vice-Chancellors Committee Conference on University Education 1960; University Administration in Aust 1972; Secondary Education Today; published addresses by R.R. Priestley; La Trobe University Student Services Committee final report, 1967. |
| Princess Ida Club | Minute Books. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1888-1915. | Minute book containing club rules and reports of meetings July 1888 - April 1894; correspondence 1914-1915. The Club was formed in 1888 to promote the common interests of, and to form a bond of union between the present and past women students. Its activities included social functions, debates, literary discussions. It ceased to exist in 1915, having formed a Committee within the Union to represent the interests of University women. |
| Princess Ida Club | Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1895-1915. | Minutes 1897-1915; reports 1895-1912; club notices 1897-1907; correspondence 1896-1915; membership lists; rules. |
| Professor Manning Clark and Mr. Peter Ryan at the Launch of E.M (Elsie May) Websters Whirlwinds in the Plain.. M.U.P. at the National Press Club, Canberra, 17 April 1980. 1980. Photographic print. | ||
| ‘Prominent Victorians: Professor MCoy, F.R.S’. Leader supplement. 28 May 1881. | ||
| Pugsley, Albert. | Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 1997. | Pugsley is the father of the Australian chick-pea industry. Chick-peas had been tested in Australia in the 1890s, but the $100 million industry was established following trials at the Wagga Wagga Research Institute in 1971, using a number of chick-pea lines from India. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| Puy, Richard | Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1972-1983. | University of Melbourne Orientation Handbook 1973-1977 (complete); alternative and counter handbook for medicine, science, law, arts, dental science, commerce, social work, music, veterinary science, architecture, 1974-1983; University of Melbourne union council guidelines; Melbourne University magazine 1972-1976/77; Melbourne University War Resisters International newsletters; The Impossible Attainment, by Dr Jim Cairns, Chifley Memorial Lecture 1974; The Road to Reform - Labor in Government by the Hon. E.G. Whitlam, Chifley Memorial Lecture 1975. |
| Pybus, Cassandra | Radio Broadcast Interviews with Cassandra Pybus Re Her Book on the Orr Case (Gross Moral Turpitude, 1993). 2 audiocassettes (1 x C60, 1 x C90) | 1. With Tim Bowden, That’s History Programme, ABC, 12 February 1993; 2. With Rosemary Sorenson, Books and Writing Programme, ABC, 21 February 1993. 1993. |
| Author | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Quantock, Rod | Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 2001. | Actor/comedian Rod Quantock is known for his performances on Melbourne trams and his 2002 show Boredom Protection. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen. Inquiries to the History of the University Office. |
| Queen’s College (University of Melbourne) Library. Friends of the Library. | Remembering Sugden : A Tribute to the Rev. Dr. E. H. Sugden : Papers Presented at Queen’s College on 2 July, 1995, Occasional Paper / Friends of Queen’s College Library: No. 5. [Parkville, Vic.]: Friends of Queen’s College Library, 1996. | Sugden was the first Master of Queen’s College and held the position for 40 years. His collection of 18th century books, bequeathed to the College, is of international importance. He was also an accomplished musician. |
| Quinn, A. C. | Use of Personal Computers within the Graduate School of Management. MBA, University of Melbourne, 1985. |