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Peter McPhee, Provost of the University of Melbourne; Fulvio Melia, professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Arizona and associate editor of the Astrophysical Journal; Bruce Mitchell, fellow of St Edmund Hall, Oxford; David S. Oderberg, professor of philosophy at the University of Reading
The Baillieu Library is the largest of the eleven branches which constitute the University of Melbourne Library, intended to support education and research in the arts, humanities and social sciences. It is located on the west side of the University's inner city Parkville campus, near the corner of Grattan Street and Royal Parade. [1]
People educated at Trinity College (University of Melbourne) (177 P) Pages in category "University of Melbourne alumni" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 1,605 total.
The original University of Melbourne building, 1857, Victoria Illustrated collection, State Library Victoria. University of Melbourne Botany School in 1958. The University of Melbourne was established following a proposal by the Hugh Childers , the Auditor-General and Finance Minister, in his first Budget Speech on 4 November 1852, who set ...
The Law Library of Melbourne Law School encompasses three floors offering access to a variety of resources including periodicals and law journals. Students can participate in a number of organisations designed to enrich student life.
Inglis completed his Master's degree at the University of Melbourne and his doctorate at the University of Oxford. In 1956 he was appointed as a lecturer to the University of Adelaide. He subsequently became Professor of History at the Australian National University, and the University of Papua New Guinea. [3]
By 1937 she was tutoring English at the University of Melbourne, when a new lectureship in the Department of History was advertised; having been advised by the vice-chancellor Raymond Priestley to acquaint herself with the new professor of history Max Crawford, which she did, with the support of a letter of introduction from her former teacher ...
John Simeon Colebrook Elkington was born on 29 September 1871 at Castlemaine, Victoria, son of John Simeon Elkington and his wife Helen Mary (née Guilfoyle). [2]From 1890 he studied medicine at the University of Melbourne but failed in his examinations.