No 74, 23 June 1981, 1737
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THE BIG Massey Celebrates 50 Its 2014 Jubilee
Massey News from Massey University I Issue 26 I October 2013 www.definingnz.com THE BIG Massey celebrates 50 its 2014 Jubilee THE ENGINE OF THE NEW NEW ZEALAND STARTERS CHRONICLES Timelines and images from Massey’s history. 4 The question of quicksilver Why is mercury a liquid? Einstein’s theory of 17 Origins: 1913 to 1927 general relativity. The idea of a North Island-based agricultural college. 6 More than academic As part of a 200-level Global Health paper, 18 Laying the foundations: 1927 to 1964 students travel to Alice Springs via Sydney, Foundation, depression, war and Queensland and the Northern Territory. rejuvenation. 8 To be a pilgrim 22 The rise of the multidisciplinary A social anthropologist investigates the university: 1964 to 1990 enduring appeal of the Himalayas for Growth, social turbulence and consolidation. seekers of all descriptions. 30 Becoming multicampus: 1990 to 1999 New Zealand’s national university. FEATURES 38 A university for a new millennium: 2000 to 2014 12 The way we were The engine of the new New Zealand. A new book charts the eventful life of CHAFF, 1934-2011, Massey’s former student Contents newspaper. 16 Keeping the presses rolling CHAFF may be gone, but its successor, the magazine MASSIVE, marches on. Cover image: A composite of the main building (now the Sir Website: www.definingnz.com Geoffrey Peren Building) in 1961 and more modern images. Editor: Malcolm Wood [email protected] The photograph being held up against the backdrop is itself Writers: Kelly Burns, Bonnie Etherington, Bryan Gibson, Michele Hollis, Paul Mulrooney, Sidah Russell, Sarah Wilcox, a composite of dignitaries gathered at the official opening Malcolm Wood, Sonia Yoshioka Braid of Massey Agricultural College in 1928 and the main building Design: Grant Bunyan during its pre-creeper-clad days in the early 1930s. -
Massey Celebrates Its 2014 Jubilee
Massey celebrates its 2014 Jubilee + CHAFF remembered + Precision agriculture + Inside Oracle Team USA THE ENGINE www.definingnz.com OF THE NEW NEW ZEALAND | Massey University | January 2013 | MASSEY | 1 STARTERS CHRONICLES Timelines and images from Massey’s history. 10 Blessed are the cheesemakers Meet Michael Matsis, the man behind gourmet 19 Origins: 1913 to 1927 cheese company Zany Zeus. The idea of a North Island-based agricultural 12 To be a pilgrim college. A social anthropologist investigates the enduring appeal of the Himalayas for seekers 20 Laying the foundations: 1927 to 1964 of all descriptions. Foundation, depression, war and rejuvenation. Contents 13 Eruptions to order 24 The rise of the multidisciplinary How to create a pyroclastic flow without a university: 1964 to 1990 volcano. Growth, social turbulence and consolidation. 14 The question of quicksilver Why is mercury a liquid? It’s all to do with 32 Becoming multicampus: 1990 to 1999 New Zealand’s national university. Einstein’s theory of general relativity. 38 A university for a new millennium: 2000 to 2014 FEATURES The engine of the new New Zealand. 15 The way we were A new book charts the eventful life of CHAFF, 1934-2011, Massey’s student newspaper. 40 Precisely right Professor of Precision Agriculture Ian Yule and engineer-entrepreneurs Stu Bradbury and George Ricketts. 52 Catching some wind Joe Spooner was one of the crew on the victorious America’s Cup contender in 2013. Website: definingnz.com Editor: Malcolm Wood [email protected] Writers: Kelly Burns, Bonnie Etherington, Michele Hollis, Jennifer Little, Paul Mulrooney, Bevan Rapson, Sidah Russell, Massey is Sarah Wilcox, Malcolm Wood, Sonia Yoshioka Braid published Photography: Mark Coote, David Wiltshire annually by Massey University, Cover: Wellington campus graduation parade, 2013 Private Bag Thanks to: Louis Changuion, Mason Durie, James Gardiner, 11-222, Palmerston Lucy Marsden, Jeannette McKinnon, Kerry Taylor, Ian Watson North 4442, Design: Grant Bunyan New Zealand. -
New Zealand Gazette Registered Engineers
No.11 SUPPLEMENT TO TIIE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE OF THURSDAY, 14 FEBRUARY 1980 Published by Authority WELLINGTON, FRIDAY, 15 FEBRUARY 1980 ANNUAL LIST of REGISTERED ENGINEERS 354 THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE No.11 Annual List of Registered Engineen PuRsuANT to section 4 of the Engineers Re · tration Amendment Act 1944, publication is given to this list of Registered Engineers whose Annual Practising Certificates are current until 3f5Maleh 1980. Dated at Wellington this 17th day of January, 1980. W. L. YOUNG, Minister of Works and Development. ENGINEERS REGISTRATION BOARD OF NEW ZEALAND LlsT OF REGISTERED ENGINEERS AS AT 31 AUGUST 1979 AND ExPIRINo 31 MARcH 1980 Explanation The list is in two parts as follows: Part A-Giving those registered by eumioation or by "recognised certificate" under one of the following subsections of the 192A Act: 6. (1) (a)-Registration by virtueof boktinga "recognised certificate" in the fonnof a Diploma of CorporateMembership of an Institution recognised by the Board, and of having had not less than three yean' experience in the practice of engineering. 6. (1) (c)-Registration by virtue of a pass in examinations approved by the Board (being the full corporate membership examinations of a recognised Institution or equivalent exempting examinations) and also of having had not less than three years' experience in the practice of engineering. Part B--GiYing those reaistered under one of the fo~ subsections, now expired, of the 192A Act or amendments: Section 6. (i) (b) of the 192A Act, wbicll provided for regilmltion during the first period of operation of the 192A Act of a person who had then attained the age of 25 yean and had been engaged during a period ol not less than m: yean before the COIDJIICJKeDlel of the Act in the acquisition of ~ knowledge, or in the practice of · · in a JllllllDer satirlactory to the Board, and who made application for registration within 12 months after the commencement of~ Section 7 of the 1944 amendment whid1 provided for the registration of . -
Massey Commemorative Issue Massey Commemorative
MASSEY COMMEMORATIVE ISSUE MASSEY COMMEMORATIVE Manawatu Journal Of History, MASSEY COMMEMORATIVE ISSUE, 2014 Cover illustration: The Manawatu Flows On, 1993. John Bevan Ford. Collection of Massey University Library. Reproduced by permission. John Bevan Ford (1930-2005) was born in Christchurch. His mother was of Ngati Raukawa ki Kapiti ancestry and his father of English/German descent. He lived in the Manawatu from 1974, when he came to work at Massey University. John was a full time painter for the last twenty years of his life. This painting has its origins in an invitation to travel to the Netherlands, with a series of works commemorating, and giving a Ma-ori perspective on, the anniversary of Dutch explorer Abel Tasman’s arrival in New Zealand in 1642. The artist has used a pen loaded with liquid acrylics, on watercolour paper. The taniko border of the cloak above the land signifi es mana, and that the land is a land of distinction; the fl oating threads emanating from the sacred upper edges of the cloak symbolise the local people’s whakapapa (genealogy), and show that the space above the land is an active space. Below, the Manawatu River fl ows out of Te Apiti, the Manawatu Gorge, and meanders across the plains. The scroll-like fi gure above the gorge represents the region’s fi rst navigator, the pre-Ma-ori taniwha (spirit) Okatia, who became a totara tree and carved out the path of the river on his way from the Wairarapa, east of the ranges, to the west coast. The canoe of the next navigator, Kupe, can be seen to the left of Okatia. -
Honouring Richie
Issue 53 • January 2021 PO BOX 77-002 MT ALBERT AUCKLAND 1350 • PH: 09 846 4509 • WWW.MTALBERTHISTORICALSOCIETY.ORG.NZ Honouring Richie: Richmond Newman Afford 1922–2020 Richie Afford was presented with a Paraphrasing Ewen Cameron in the Certificate of Life Membership at the ABS Journal of November 2020: 44 2014 Mount Albert Historical Society of Richie’s pressed herbarium specimens Christmas Function on 29 November. were held in the Auckland Museum He was a member of the inaugural herbarium. Two thirds of them were committee for the society in 2006 collected in National Park in 1933, and generously donated significant when he was only 10–11 years old. funds to assist in its setup and get the They were collected during summer writing of Mount Albert Then and Now school holidays, no doubt with Uncle underway. He continued to be a strong John. and active supporter of MAHS, and In 1937 Lucy Cranwell signed Richie was regularly attending meetings up up to membership of the newly-formed until COVID-19 intervened in 2020. Auckland Botanical Society, when We will miss him. he was a 14-year-old Mount Albert In June of 2020 I talked with Richie Grammar School boy. Richie Afford, with one of the trees he at his home in Mount Albert Road planted at Gribblehirst Park in 1938. In 1932 she established the annual for a couple of hours. It was amazing Cheeseman Memorial Prize Native Richie’s writing group at U3A had to listen to a man in his late 90s speak Flower Show, in which Richie and suggested he do this, and it was with with such clarity and enthusiasm about Uncle John were involved from 1934 some diffidence that he asked if I his life, and his continued interest in to 1937. -
'A Civilising Mission'
‘A CIVILISING MISSION’ New Zealanders and the Rhodes Scholarship 1904–2004 A National Library Gallery Exhibition Supported by Rhodes House, Oxford ‘A CIVILISING MISSION’ New Zealanders and the Rhodes Scholarship 1904–2004 Introduction ‘A Civilising Mission’ introduces a representative group of New Zealand Rhodes scholars chosen from each of the decades since the Scholarship’s inauguration. Founded on the vision and benefaction of Cecil Rhodes, the scholarship provides for 87 scholars each year selected from 14 countries to attend Oxford University. Three of these places are allocated to New Zealand. This exhibition marks the centenary of the Rhodes scholarship in New Zealand, and makes the point that although grand utopian visions are seldom realised, investment in education will always pay off. New Zealand Rhodes scholars have made their contribution in many and various ways and in the process conferred real worth and advantage on New Zealand. The exhibition title comes from an essay written by James Bertram, a 1932 Rhodes scholar. He wrote of New Zealand Rhodes scholars: ‘wherever they have worked, from Moscow to Ibadan, they have carried something of New Zealand and of Oxford with them; and this should, in the end, have been a civilising mission’. Acknowledgements The task of putting this exhibition together was a complex one, and it owes We are grateful to the following for providing information, images and much to the willing assistance and support of a large number of people and objects: New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee, Archives New Zealand, organisations. The Library especially acknowledges a generous grant from Sound Archives Nga Taonga Korero, New Zealand Television Archive, the Rhodes Trust that has permitted us to employ additional research and University of Auckland, University of Otago Magazine, New Zealand Herald, to develop a design concept that will make it possible to tour the exhibition The Dominion Post, ABC Australia, Olympic Museum, the Beaglehole Room to other university centres in New Zealand.