1891-92. Visitor. the Council

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

1891-92. Visitor. the Council 1891-92. VISITOR. HIB BXCBLLENCY THE GOVERNOR. THE COUNCIL. CHANCELLOR. • ANTHONY COLUNG BROWNLESS, C.M.G., M.D, LL.D. 16th Jane, 1866. VICE-CHANCELLOR. t« THE HON. JOHN MADDEN, B.A, LUD. 24th January, 1891. t MARTIN HOWY IRVING, MX 6th April, 1876. t ALEXANDER MORRISON, MX, LL.D. 4th July, 1878. t ROBERT LEWIS JOHN ELLERY, C.M.G., F.R.S., P.RXS. 24th Feb­ ruary, 1880. t GERALD HENRY FETHERSTON, M.D. 1st March, 1881. t MR. JUSTICE A'BECKETT. 10th January, 1887. t HENRY BOURNES HIGGINS, MX, LL.R 3rd May, 1887. t THOMAS FRANCIS BRIDE, LL.D. 7th Jane, 1887. t THE BIGHT REV. THE BISHOP OF MELBOURNE. 6th July, 1887. t ROBERT MURRAY SMITH, C.M.O. 32nd November, 1887. tJOHN QRICE, B.A., LL.B. 8th May, 1888. t» MR. JUSTICE WEBB. 2nd February, 1889. t SAMUEL DOUGAN BIRD, MJ). 7th March, 1889. t MR. JUSTICE HODGES, B.A. 85th Jane, 1889. t CHARLES ALFRED TOPP, MA., LLB. 23rd Jane, 1890. tc JAMES ROBERTSON, MX, M.D. 9th August, 1890. t WILLIAM THWAITES, MX, C.E. 21at October, 1890. U JOHN HENRY MACFARLAND, MX 10th April, 1891. t< ANDREW HARPER, MX S7th April, 1891. • Appointed by the Governor-in-Council. t Elected by the Senate. a First elected, 8th April, 1879. b First elected, 20th December, 1883. c First elected, 21st July, 1886. d First elected, 23rd March, 1886. e First elected, 6tb April, 1886. THE SENATE. 35 THE SENATE. WARDEN—THOMAS PATRICK McINEBNEY, MX, LL.D. Doctors of Laws.—(19.) 6 HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE DUKE OF EDINBURGH 1868 12 BOWEN, SIR GEORGE FERGUSON . 1876 16 BRIDE, THOMAS FRANCIS 1879 26 BROWNLESS, ANTHONY COLLING (ChanceUor) 1888 20 CROWTHER, GEORGE HENRY 1884 10 OIBTON, ROBERT.. 1873 25 GREEN, ARTHUR VINCENT 1887 14 HODGSON, RICHARD 1878 23 LAURIE, HENRY .. 1886 9 MADDEN, JOHN (Vice-Chancellor) , 1869 24 MCARTHUR, ALEXANDER 1887 18 MCINERNEY, THOMAS PATRICE (Warden) 1883 13 MORRISON, ALEXANDER . 1877 19 FHILF, RICHARD .. 1883 17 QUICK, JOHN 1882 22 ROSEBY, THOMAS 1886 27 SPRIGG, JAMBS GORDON . 1888 31 WILSON, JOHN PUHVE8 1886 28 WOLLASTON, HARRY NEWTON PHILLIPS Doctors of Medicine.—(85.) 63 ADDISON, GEORGE 1872 71 ALLEN, HARRY BROOKES 1878 104 ANDERSON, EUGENE WILTON 1888 115 ANDREWS, WILLIAM 1889 68 ANNAND, GEORGE 187S 79 ARMSTRONG, WILLIAM .. 1883 110 ASTLES, HARVEY EUSTACE 1888 21 ATKINSON, HARRY LEIGH 1863 87 BAGE, CHARLES 1884 102 BARRETT, JAMES WILLIAM 1887 119 BEAN, HAROLD KNOWLES 1889 74 BEANEY, JAMES GEORGE 1879 88 BENNIE, PETER BRUCE .. 1884 19 BIRD, SAMUEL DOUGAN .. 1862 127 BOYD, JAMBS 1891 124 BOYD, WILUAM ROBERT 1891 76 BROWNING, JOHN HENRY 1880 1 BROWNLESS, ANTHONY COLLING (Chancellor) 1836 36 THE SENATE. 99 CONNOR, SAMUEL 1886 76 COX, JAMES 1880 26 OHOSLAND, GEORGE 1883 13 CUTTS, WILLIAM HENRY 1869 108 DAISH, WILLIAM CHRISTIAN 1838 123 DBANE, CHARLES MASLEN 1891 31, DICK, THOMAS THOMSON 1864 39 FETHERSTON, GERALD HENRY 1864 116 FETHERSTON, RICHARD HERBERT JOSEPH 1889 106 FLETCHER, ARTHUR AUGUSTUS 1888 103 FLETT, WILLIAM SIMPSON 1837 93 FLORANCE, JAMES WILLIAM 1886 67 FULTON, JOHN 1869 73 OALBRAITH, JAMES 1879 16 GRAHAM, GEORGE 1863 107 GRANT, DAVID .. 1888 ' 136 GRBSSWELL, DAN ASTLEY 1891 27 HALFORD, GEORGE BRITTON 1863 69 HEADLEY, WALTER BALLS 1876 77 HEFFERNAN, EDWARD BONAVENTURE 1880 108'HENRY, LOUIS 1888 64 HLNCHCLIFF, EDWIN 1872 109 HOWARD, GEORGE THOMAS 1888 16 HUDSON, ROBERT FA WELL 1860 90 HUTCHINSON, BENJAMIN CLAY 1884 66 JACKSON, JAMES .. 1868 72 JAMIESON, JAMES 1878 136 JOHNSON, FREDERICK MILLER 1891 33 JONAS30N, HERMANN .. 1864 61 LAWRENCE, OCTAVIUS VERNON 1871 84 LE FEYRE, GEORGE 1883 84 UUENFELD, BERNHABD 1864 1888 113 MAGAREY, SYLVANUS JAMES 1891 122 MAUDSLEY, HENRY CARR 1862 17 MCCARTHY/CHARLES 1883 86 McKENNA, JEREMIAH 188S 93 MOORE, WILLIAM .. 1886 96 MORRISON, WILLIAM - 1888 114 MULLEN, WILLIAM LOWELL 1864 SO NBILD, JAMES EDWARD .. 1888 Ill NICHOLSON, JOHN 1886 101 OCHILTREE, EDWARD GRAHAM 1886 94 OWEN, FREDERICK JAMES 1866 39 PATERSON, ALEXANDER STUART 1867 43 PLUMMER, ANDREW 1884 91 POULTON, BENJAMIN . .. , 1886 97 PRENDERGAST, JAMES JOSEPH THE SENATE. 37 82 ROWAN, THOMAS.. 1883 117 RUDDLE, REGINALD GEORGE 1889 63 SEMPLE, WILLIAM HENRY 1867 64 SINGLETON, JOHN 1868 62 SMITH, CHARLES 1871 89 SPRINGTHORPE, JOHN WILLIAM 1884 131 STAWELL, RICHARD RAWDON 1890 98 STEWART, ROBERT 1886 65 STUHT, THOMAS JAMES .. 1868 37 TALBOT, ROBERT 1864 67 TASSELL, ROBERT 1878 38 TURNER, WILLIAM 1866 81 WALSH, WILLIAM BUTLER 1883 78 WHITAKER, JOSEPH 1881 118 WILKINSON, WILLIAM CAMAC 1888 83 WILLIAMS, DAVID JOHN .. 1882 70 WILLIAMS, JOHN.. 1876 118 WOOD, ARTHUR JEFFREYS 1889 120 WOOD, WILUAM ATKINSON 1890 68 WUTH, ERNEST MAGNUS I860 Doctor of Music.—(i.) 1 TORRANCE, GEORGE WILLIAM .. 1879 Doctors of Science.— (a.) MASSON, DAVID ORME 1887 M'COY, FREDERICK 1887 Masters of Arts.—(289.) 236 ABRAHAMS, JOSEPH 1886 263 ADAMSON, LAURENCE ARTHUR 1686 182 AITCHISON, RODERICK 1382 808 ALBI8TON, ARTHUR EDWARD .. 1889 270 ALSTON, ARTHUR 1887 290 ANGWIN, STUART LETCHER 1888 160 ANGWIN, THOMAS BRITTON .. 1880 197 ARMSTRONG, THOMAS HENRY .. 1883 144 BACKHOUSE, EDWARD LITTLEJOHN 1877 218 BACKHOUSE, SAMUEL BURDER .. 1885 367 BAGE, CHARLES 1887 268 BARKER, WALTER HERBERT .. 1887 827 BARNARD, ROBERT JAMES ALLMAN 1890 259 BARNETT, ERNEST JUDD 1887 38 THE SENATE. 243 BARROWCLOUGH, ALFRED ERNEST 833 BASTOW, ARTHUR HENRY 1890 266 BEARHAM, GEORGE 1887 161 BENJAMIN, RAPHAEL .. 1879 280 BENNIE, ALEXANDER BRUCE 1888 110 BENNIE, PETER BRUCE 1874 210 BERRY, DIOBY MARSH 1884 266 BOOTH, FREDERICK ARTHUR .. 1887 287 BOTHBOYD, THOMAS WILLIAM 1888 240 BOWDITCH, WILLIAM LAMPREY 1886 116 BOWEN, SIR GEORGE FERGUSON 1874 69 BRODRIBB, THOMAS 1867 104 BROMBY, EDWARD HIPPIUS 1878 316 BROOKE, WARREN AUBBR 1884 105 BROWN, ANDREW 1873 186 BROWN, GILBERT WILSON 1882 326 BRUNT, WILLIAM EGBERT 1890 165 BUDD, RICHARD HALE 1881 171 BULEY, ARTHUR ALFRED 1881 121 BURKE, RICHARD GEORGE 1876 97 BUTLER, GEORGE WILLIAM GILLAM .. 1872 • 117 CAMERON, DONALD 1874 814 CAMERON, DONALD ALLAN 1889 178 CAMPBELL, ARCHIBALD HENRY 1881 279 CAMPBELL, DAVID 1888 69 CANTERBURY, VISCOUNT 1867 829 CANTOR, JOSEPH SAMUEL 1890 294 CAVANAGH, WILLIAM 1888 289 CHAPMAN, ROBERT WILLIAM .. 1888 25 CHASE. SEPTIMUS LLOYD 1864 4 CHILDERS, HUGH CULLING EARDLEY 1866 227 CHURCH, HUBERT DAY 1886 98 CLEZY, JAMES 1872 318 COLUNS, JOSEPH THOMAS ... 1889 838 COLVIN, BAZBT DAVID 1890 228 COOPER, EDWARD AUGUSTUS .... 18«6 264 COOPER, HENRY EDWARD 1887 834 CORNWALL, WALTON EMERSON 1890 169 CORR, JOHN BEFOBD 1881 873 COWLB, FEUX CECIL 1888 243 CRAIG, ANDREW WILUAM 1886 147 CRAIG, JOHN THOMAS 1878 86 CRAIG, ROBERT .. 1866 46 CRESSWELL, ARTHUR WILLIAM . 1867 163 CROWTHER, GEORGE HENRY .. , 1879 73 CURLEWIS, ALFRED CLARIBEUX , 1868 260 CUSSEN, LEO FINN BERNARD .. 1887 THE SENATE. 39 261 DAVTES, JOHN GEORGE 1887 863 DAVIS, HENRY PATRICK 1891 337 DAWSON. ALEXANDER LEITH HALKETT 1890 333 DEAN, ALFRED .. 1886 99 DICKINSON, RIVERS BEACHCROFT 1872 48 D0B80N, PRANK STANLEY 1867 274 DRAKE, FRANCIS JOHN .. 1888 187 DUFFY, FRANK GAVAN.. 1883 976 DUNKLEY, HENRY WILLIAM 1888: 177 DUTTON, WILLIAM HENRY 1881 ".266 DYRING, CARL PETER WILHELM 1887 183 EDDY, FREDERICK 1883 111 ELKINGTON, JOHN SIMEON 1874 836 ELLIOTT, RICHARD THOMAS .. 1890 249 EVANS, ALFRED JAMES .. 1886 79 EVANS, OOWEN EDWARD 1868 188 FELLOWS, WALTER 1877 222 FERGUS, ROBERT MORRISON. .. 1886 174 FIDD1AN, SAMUEL 1881 108 FINN, PETER THOMAS 1874 119 FLEETWOOD, THOMAS FALKNER 1876 7 FLETCHER, WILLIAM HOBY ... 1867 83 FRANCIS, JOHN PATTERSON EMILLIUS 1869 269 FREYEB, JOHN KENNEDY 1887 139 GARBUTT, JOHN 1877 283 GATES, WILUAM FLEMING 1888 233 OAULT, EDWARD LESUE 1886 179 GILLIES, WILLIAM 1881 266 GOB, FIELD FLOWERS .. 1887 118 GOLDSTRAW, FRANK 1874 148 GOODMAN, GEORGE 1877 198 GREEN, ARTHUR VINCENT 1883 S54 GROOM, UTTLETON ERNEST .. 1891 230 GUEST, WILLIAM CAMPBELL .. 1«86 1867 70 GUINNESS, WILLIAM NEWTON .. 1876 183 HACKETT, JOHN WINTHBOP .. 1888 296 HALL, ALFRED SMITH .. 1888 276 HALL, THOMAS SERGEANT 1667 64 TTAT.T., WILLIAM 1866 17 HALLETT, JOHN REVANS 1878 146 HARPER, ANDREW .1890 380 HARSE, WALTER THOMAS 1889 316 HART, ALEXANDER JAMES 1889 269 BART, JOHN STEPHEN .. 1881 172 HAYES, ROBERT EDWARD 1876 126 HENDERSON, WILLIAM PHILF .. 1889 309 HEWISON, JOSEPH HENRY 40 THE SENATE. 137 HIGGINS, HENRY BOURNES 1876 26 HIGINBOTHAM, GEORGE 1864 129 HODGSON, RICHARD 1876 123 HOLLAND, JAMES 1876. 339 HOLUDGE, DAVID HENRY 1890 140 HOLMES, WILLIAM TOPE 1877 167 HOLROYD, EDWARD DUNDAS 1881 109 HOOD, JOSEPH HENRY .. 1874 223 HORNE, GEORGE .. 1886 192 HOWARD, DOUGLAS 1888 74 HUTCHISON, WILUAM BROWN 1868 81 ICK, THOMAS EDWIN .. 1869 IRVINE, WDLLIAM HILL .. 1882 IRVING, EDWARD HAMILTON 1884 71 IRVING, MARTIN HOWY 186T 181 JAMIESON, JAMES 1881 343 JENKINS, DANIEL EDWARD 1890 148 JOHNSTON, WILUAM EDWARD 1878 84. JOHNSTONE, JOHN 1869 263 JUUUS, CHURCHILL 1887 200 KEARNEY, BLFRIC LEOFWLN 1863 297 KEEP, ERNEST EDWARD 1888 234 KELLAWAY, ALFRED CHARLES 1886 244 KELSO, EDGAR WILLIAM 1886 342 KENNY, THOMAS IRWIN 1890 38 KERNOT, WILLIAM CHARLES 1866 170 LAING, JAMBS EDGAR 1881 293 LAING, JOHN WILLIAM 1388 164 LAMBIE, JAMES 1889 32 LANGTREB, HENRY 1866 136 LEEFER, ALEXANDER 1876 340 UVLNGSTONE, JAMES 1890 317 LONG, CHARLES RICHARD 1889 184 LOUGHRBY, BERNARD .. 1882 305 LOVE, ERNEST FREDERICK JOHN 1889 201 LUCAS, ARTHUR HENRY SHAKSPERE 1888 S28 LYLE, THOMAS RANKEN 1890 257 LYNCH, ARTHUR ALFRED 1887 MACARTNEY, HUSSEY BURGH (DEAN) 1864 38 MACARTNEY, HUSSEY BURGH ,. 1883 206 MACDBBMOTT, TOWN8END 1867 62 MACFARLAND, JOHN HENRY .. 1881 176 MACGILUVRAY, PAUL HOWARD 1867 61 MACKEY, JOHN' EMANUEL 1889 300 1867 67 MACRAE, JOHN 1887 268 MACULLY, ALEXANDER 1879 168 MADDEN, WYNDHAM MONSON .. THE SENATE. 41 319 MABDEN, JOHN 1886 261 MARRIOTT, JOHN THOMAS 1886 263 MARTYN, JOHN 1887 MASSON,
Recommended publications
  • Compassion and Courage
    Compassion and courage Australian doctors and dentists in the Great War Medical History Museum, University of Melbourne War has long brought about great change and discovery in medicine and dentistry, due mainly to necessity and the urgency and severity of the injuries, disease and other hardships confronting patients and practitioners. Much of this innovation has taken place in the field, in makeshift hospitals, under conditions of poor Compassion hygiene and with inadequate equipment and supplies. During World War I, servicemen lived in appalling conditions in the trenches and were and subjected to the effects of horrific new weapons courage such as mustard gas. Doctors and dentists fought a courageous battle against the havoc caused by AUSTRALIAN DOCTORS AND DENTISTS war wounds, poor sanitation and disease. IN THE REAT AR Compassion and courage: Australian doctors G W and dentists in the Great War explores the physical injury, disease, chemical warfare and psychological trauma of World War I, the personnel involved and the resulting medical and dental breakthroughs. The book and exhibition draw upon the museums, archives and library of the University of Melbourne, as well as public and private collections in Australia and internationally, Edited by and bring together the research of historians, doctors, dentists, curators and other experts. Jacqueline Healy Front cover (left to right): Lafayette-Sarony, Sir James Barrett, 1919; cat. 247: Yvonne Rosetti, Captain Arthur Poole Lawrence, 1919; cat. 43: [Algernon] Darge, Dr Gordon Clunes McKay Mathison, 1914. Medical History Museum Back cover: cat. 19: Memorial plaque for Captain Melville Rule Hughes, 1922. University of Melbourne Inside front cover: cat.
    [Show full text]
  • Pathology in Germany
    INTERNATIONAL PATHOLOGY (ISSN 0020-8205) Vol 56 No 1 2016 published quarterly by the International Academy of Pathology. Circulation 23,000 worldwide. IAP WEBSITE Pathology in Germany http://www.iaphomepage.org PRESIDENT ologne is the host city of the International Con- These mutated genes are called ‘driver mutations.’ Eduardo Santini-Araurjo, Cgress of the IAP Sept 26-30, 2016. The motto The team is trying to see whether the various varie- Chair Professor, Department of Pathology, for the Congress is ‘Predictive Pathology - Guiding ties of lung tumour that can be identified in H&E School of Medicine, and Monitoring Therapy’ sections, have specific patterns of ‘driver mutations.’ University of Buenos Aires, Argentina The Institute for Pathology in Cologne epitomises Pharmaceutical companies are keen to find such E mail: [email protected] this motto. The current Head of the Institute is Pro- ‘driver mutations’ so that they can try to manufac- SECRETARY fessor Reinhard Buttner. His Institute is responsible ture specific chemotherapeutic agents with which to Ray McMahon for a busy routine Anatomical Pathology Service treat the tumours. This is aiming to produce ‘per- Consultant Pathologist, Manchester Royal Infirmary sonalised’ therapy for patients with these tumours. Manchester Medical School with about 40,000 surgical specimens and 20,000 Manchester, UK consultations each year, and a post mortem service Commercially these tests would cost about $7,000 email:[email protected] that has 150 postmortems annually. (As is happening but because the Pharmaceutical companies are fund- www.iapcentral.org elsewhere in the world this number is falling rapidly.) ing the research, the tests are presently free to patients.
    [Show full text]
  • 3 Researchers and Coranderrk
    3 Researchers and Coranderrk Coranderrk was an important focus of research for anthropologists, archaeologists, naturalists, historians and others with an interest in Australian Aboriginal people. Lydon (2005: 170) describes researchers treating Coranderrk as ‘a kind of ethno- logical archive’. Cawte (1986: 36) has argued that there was a strand of colonial thought – which may be characterised as imperialist, self-congratulatory, and social Darwinist – that regarded Australia as an ‘evolutionary museum in which the primi- tive and civilised races could be studied side by side – at least while the remnants of the former survived’. This chapter considers contributions from six researchers – E.H. Giglioli, H.N. Moseley, C.J.D. Charnay, Rev. J. Mathew, L.W.G. Büchner, and Professor F.R. von Luschan – and a 1921 comment from a primary school teacher, named J.M. Provan, who was concerned about the impact the proposed closure of Coranderrk would have on the ability to conduct research into Aboriginal people. Ethel Shaw (1949: 29–30) has discussed the interaction of Aboriginal residents and researchers, explaining the need for a nuanced understanding of the research setting: The Aborigine does not tell everything; he has learnt to keep silent on some aspects of his life. There is not a tribe in Australia which does not know about the whites and their ideas on certain subjects. News passes quickly from one tribe to another, and they are quick to mislead the inquirer if it suits their purpose. Mr. Howitt, Mr. Matthews, and others, who made a study of the Aborigines, often visited Coranderrk, and were given much assistance by Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • 2018 Annual Report 0 | P a G E
    GTAC in focus 2018 Annual Report 0 | P a g e GTAC in focus Our Mission CONTENTS To excite Victorian students and teachers in GTAC in focus STEM by providing equitable access to leading About GTAC 2 life science expertise, practices and Year at a glance 3 technologies Directors message 4 Our specialty 5 Our Vision GTAC scientist mentors 6 Victorian students inspired by STEM through Expanding our specialist capability innovation in Life Science education Launching a new focus area: 8 Digital technologies A new School-Industry Our Values 9 partnership with CSL Limited Innovative thinking Victorian students performing 10 High expectations of selves and real research others Collaborations with STEM Critical reflection and continuous research and education 11 improvement institutions GTAC Advisory Board 12 Inclusive and encouraging learning environments Equitable access to GTAC programs Positive communication, collaboration Student and teacher 14 and consideration of ideas participation Residential Indigenous Science Sharing our joy and wonder of the life 15 sciences Experience A remarkable virtual learning 16 environment Strategic priorities Innovations in Professional 17 Learning Inspire students and teachers in STEM through exposure to contemporary Providing quality programs life sciences What students tell us about 20 Sustain an environment that supports their GTAC experience Teacher evaluation of student innovation in life science education in 21 programs STEM Enable increased reach and impact on Centre operations student outcomes in STEM, with a Centre organisation 24 particular focus on equity for Operating statement 25 disadvantaged students We acknowledge the traditional owners and custodians of the land on which our Centre is located, the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin nation, and pay our respects to their elders past and present.
    [Show full text]
  • Dear Panel Coordinator Please See Attached Correspondence on Behalf
    From: [email protected] To: Colin Charman; Robyn Hellman Cc: [email protected] Subject: Fw: Amendment C258 to the Melbourne Planning Scheme (2851191)[NRF-APAC.FID1915362] - Norton Rose Fulbright #2 Date: Monday, 30 July 2018 5:52:23 PM Attachments: ATT00001.gif ATT00002.gif ATT00003.gif ATT00004.gif ATT00005.gif ATT00006.gif img-730161518-0001.pdf Regards, Adrian Williams| Planning Panels Victoria Planning | Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning Level 5, 1 Spring Street, Melbourne VIC 3000 T: 03 8392 5116 | E: [email protected] ----- Forwarded by Adrian Williams/Person/VICGOV1 on 30/07/2018 05:50 PM ----- From: "Vilagosh, Victoria" <[email protected]> To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, Cc: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]"
    [Show full text]
  • The St Vincent's Hospital Clinical School
    MAGAZINE THE ST VINCENT'S HOSPITAL CLINICAL SCHOOL A Personal Reflection BY BRYAN EGAN MB BS 1949 BOUT MIDDAY ON the first Mother Berchmans took the day of a new term in the hint. She persuaded the medical A mid 1940s, twenty or so staff to agree to changes in bed allocation and, moving faster than students walked across from the could any hospital with a University of Melbourne to St management committee, had an Vincent's Hospital. They were amended application before the soberly excited because they had Faculty on 24 February, offering to a boundary to cross. They were reduce gynaecology beds in favour about to become clinical students of medical beds and to build new in a hospital, on their first day in pathology facilities.' The Faculty the then Division III of the course. was won over a year later when it Smallest of the general had seen the new pathology department plans and in April teaching hospitals, St Vincent's 1909 recommended recognition of had placed no obstacles in their the St Vincent's Clinical School, SISTER MARY BERCHMANS DALY. Photo SVHA way—it could not afford to turn subject to conditions about the away the qualified. In any case, `pathological department' and its the greater number of the group had given little thought to any activities and, importantly, to conditions about the appointment other choice. As Catholics they had more or less automatically of medical staff.' These provisions (involving University enrolled at St Vincent's after passing third year examinations. representation on an electoral college for medical Most knew little about the Hospital that had beckoned them in appointments) were approved by both parties and the their pre-clinical years, but there were a number who, while not agreement was signed on 23 June 1909.6 For the University, the method of appointing medical staff Catholics, had actively chosen St Vincent's because of family was crucial.
    [Show full text]
  • Bodies of Evidence Bodies of Evidence
    SPOTLIGHT ON MALAYSIA SPOTLIGHT ON MALAYSIA TEACHING STANDARDS: UP TO THE MARK? TEACHING STANDARDS: TEACHING STANDARDS: UP TO THE MARK? TEACHING STANDARDS: Bodies of Evidence Bodies of Evidence TECTING OUR PRECIOUS PATHOLOGY SPECIMENS OUR PRECIOUS PATHOLOGY TECTING O PROTECTING OUR PRECIOUS PATHOLOGY SPECIMENS PROTECTING OUR PRECIOUS PATHOLOGY PR Autumn 2007 | Issue #11 (inc. gst) $7.50 PathWay Autumn 2007 - Issue #11 Bodies of Evidence: PROTECTING OUR PRECIOUS PATHOLOGY SPECIMENS TEACHING STANDARDS: UP TO THE MARK? SPOTLIGHT ON MALAYSIA PRINTPOST APPROVED PP60630100114 People you can count on. People Solutions you need. DADE BEHRING 18-20 Orion Road Lane Cove NSW 2066 9429 6600 02 Tel www.dadebehring.com Dade Behring is the world’s largest diagnostic company devoted solely to serving largest Dade Behring is the world’s Devoted to helping you support your patients. the needs of clinical laboratories. and development of new test in research Our commitment to you is reflected in providing reflected of disease states. It’s a range across and new markers programs people you are We support – every minute of every day. the best around-the-clock can count on with solutions you need. Solutions that can equip your lab for a fully automated future. QAP ad 14/11/05 5:45 PM Page 1 IMMUNOHAEMATOLOGY Not just Quality Assurance! A resource for the Pathology community RCPA Quality Assurance Programs— RCPA Quality Assurance more than just broad range, world class, Programs are offered in the accredited external quality assurance following disciplines: programs. RCPA QAP offer educational support for your quality initiatives: Anatomical Pathology Benchmarking in Pathology z Seminars Chemical Pathology z Workshops Cytopathology z Forums Haematology z Educational supplements Immunology library Microbiology z Educational exercises “ Decrease human intervention.
    [Show full text]
  • Appendix 3 (A) Early Members of Comunn Na Feinne – 1856-1860 - from the Carmichael Notes
    Appendix 3 (a) Early Members of Comunn na Feinne – 1856-1860 - from the Carmichael Notes. Archibald Douglas James D. Rankin, of Brougham Place – Wine and Spirit Merchants. Also Tea, Sugar, Provisions. Dougal Rankin, of Brougham Place – Wine and Spirit Merchants, Tobacco and Cigars. Robert A. McInnes, School Teacher Alexander McInnes, School Teacher, the Gaelic School, La Trobe Terrace. Charles Bowie Dawson, Prop., Prince of Wales Hotel, Ryrie Street. William Rae, Prop. Argyll Hotel, Western Highway (now Aberdeen Street) Alexander McKenzie, Chairman of the Barrabool Hills Road Board. Donal Cameron, “Farmer”, Little River. William McNab, Secretary Barrabool Hills Roads Board, Road Engineers’ Department. Hector Munro, Engineer. John Clark, Teesdale (Farmer?) William Fraser, Secretary, Geelong Race Club. Thomas Brown, Printers, Booksellers and Stationery. John Riddoch, Wholesale Grocer and Wine and Spirit Merchant – Office, James St., John Hedrick, Shipping Agent and Firm of Wool Brokers – Office, James St., Charles Anderson, “Squatter” Duncan McNicol, Manager for Niel Black, Glenormiston Station. William Clarkson, Wholesale and Retail Seedsman and Florist, Colonial Seed Store, 8 Great Ryrie Street, West Geelong. John MacIntosh Robert de Bruce Johnstone, Saddler, Great Malop Street Robert Shirra, “Draper” Glasgow House James Munro, Engineer James M. Anderson, Draper, 14 Malop Street – Sold out to Robert Shirra April, 1867. William Ashmore, General Furnishing Warehouse and Manufacturer 125 Moorabool Street, Geelong. Andrew Lowe, Retail Butcher – Cnr Moorabool and Malop Streets opposite the Farmer Arms Hotel. Charles Ross, Builder in Geelong Donald Scott, Wholesale and Retail Timber Merchant, Corio Street, West Angus MacCallum, Draper, Tartan House, Market Square Peter Skirving, Draper, Glasgow House 15 Malop Street, later Edinburgh House, 56 Moorabool Street, Geelong.
    [Show full text]
  • ACNS 2018 Proceedings
    CONFERENCE MELBOURNE 2018 CONFERENCE SPONSORS GOLD SPONSOR SILVER SPONSOR BRONZE SPONSORS Cover image: Melbourne skyline the Rialto Observatory on Collins Street (by David Iliff, CC BY-SA 3.0). -2- CONTENTS Andreas Horn (CC BY-SA 4.0) 14 16 WORKSHOPS KEYNOTES The conference is preceded by a range of technical and ECR work- The program showcases three keynote addresses, plus a special shops from Tuesday 20th to Thursday 22nd November. keynote from the ACNS Young Investigator Awardees. Sebastiaan ter Burg (CC BY 2.0) 22 25 SYMPOSIA CONFERENCE SCHEDULE ACNS2018 features four symposia, spanning genetics, multivariate A complete timetable of ACNS2018 including talk and poster ses- pattern analysis, prediction, and interdisciplinary approaches. sions, symposia, social events and more. 4 Welcome from the organisers 12 Social events The University of Melbourne is proud to host ACNS2018 at Information on the welcome reception, conference dinner, Parkville Campus. ECR mixer and fun run. 5 Committees 19 Awards Members of the Local Organising Committe for ACNS2018, Recipients of the ACNS Young Investigator, ACNS Emerging student volunteers, and the ACNS Executive Committee. Researcher, and Student Travel Awards. 7 Attendee information 30 Posters Instructions for connecting to wifi on campus, and guide- List of presentations at the poster sessions in the Melbourne lines for giving a talk and presenting a poster. School of Design. 9 Venue maps 36 Abstracts Maps of the conference venues, the University of Mel- Collected abstracts for all open talks, fast talks and posters bourne, and the Parkville precinct. presented at ACNS2018. -3- WELCOME from the organisers MSD BUILDING EXTERIOR speakers and colleagues.
    [Show full text]
  • Finding Sir Redmond Barry Evidence of Zealous and Distinguished Labours Jason Benjamin
    Finding Sir Redmond Barry Evidence of zealous and distinguished labours Jason Benjamin There are few who could claim looms large in the university’s early to have had such a fundamental history. He stamped his strongly held influence on the development of opinions on all aspects of the early Victoria’s cultural, educational and university, from its curriculum to its legal landscape as Sir Redmond Barry infrastructure. Barry’s enthusiasm, (1813–1880).1 A visionary with a dedication and hard work over the passion for the arts and learning, 27 years he served as chancellor were Barry was instrumental in establishing instrumental in building the strong some of Victoria’s most important foundations upon which today’s institutions, including the University university now stands. It is fitting then of Melbourne, the Melbourne Public that within the cultural collections Library (now the State Library of of the university can be found much Victoria) and the National Gallery evidence of Barry’s contribution to of Victoria. his adopted home. Archives, books, June 2013 witnessed the Barry was born in Ballyclough in furniture, artworks and other personal bicentenary of Barry’s birth. The County Cork, Ireland, in 1813, the objects give us an important glimpse occasion was marked by a number of third son of a well-established Anglo- of the man Barry was. events, public lectures and exhibitions Norman family.2 He graduated The University of Melbourne was organised by the University of from Trinity College, Dublin, with founded by an Act of the Victorian Melbourne, the State Library of a Bachelor of Arts in 1837 and was Parliament in January 1853.
    [Show full text]
  • 'Not Man, but Man-Like': Early 20Th-Century Anthropological
    ‘Not man, but man-like’ Early 20th-century anthropological plaster casts in the Harry Brookes Allen Museum of Anatomy and Pathology Rohan Long Throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, the study of human evolution was the subject of intense interest, and controversy, in the Anatomy Department of the University of Melbourne. The department’s first professor, George Britton Halford (1824–1910), rejected outright the notion of human evolution, and directed various academic skirmishes at T.H. Huxley, the most public contemporary advocate for the theory of evolution. Later, in the 1930s, the Anatomy Department was helmed by Frederic Wood Jones (1879–1954), an unorthodox thinker who accepted the basics of human descent from earlier primates, but rejected the idea that chimpanzees and gorillas are our closest relatives, favouring instead the tarsier—a large-eyed insectivore from Asia. In his ‘Lines of demarcation’ between man, gorilla, & macaque of 1864,1 Halford dryly presented tables comparing the measurements of various bones of the three species, intended to illustrate humanity’s fundamental difference from the apes. Macaques (Macaca sp.) are small monkeys, amenable to captivity, and the professor was able to procure at least two for dissections he did himself.2 The gorilla measurements, however, were mostly derived from published data obtained first-hand by Richard Owen, Huxley, and French zoologist Georges Louis Duvernoy. On at least one occasion Halford was able to borrow some primate specimens from the National Museum of Victoria, then located on the university campus.3 The museum’s and other great apes were scarce for decades afterwards. director at the time was Professor Frederick McCoy, Prehistoric human fossils were even rarer.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Date | 5/25/16 4:59 AM Brought to You by | Federation University Australia/Feduni Authenticated Download Date | 5/25/16 4:59 AM Ian D
    COPYRIGHT NOTICE FedUni ResearchOnline http://researchonline.federation.edu.au This is the published version of: Clark, I. (2015) 'A peep at the Blacks': A history of tourism at Coranderrk Aboriginal Station, 1863-1924. Warsaw: De Gruyter Open. Copyright © 2015 Clark. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by- nc-nd/3.0/), which permits restricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. Commercial use is not permitted and modified material cannot be distributed. Ian D. Clark ‘A peep at the Blacks’: A History of Tourism at Coranderrk Aboriginal Station, 1863–1924 Brought to you by | Federation University Australia/FedUni Authenticated Download Date | 5/25/16 4:59 AM Brought to you by | Federation University Australia/FedUni Authenticated Download Date | 5/25/16 4:59 AM Ian D. Clark ‘A peep at the Blacks’ A History of Tourism at Coranderrk Aboriginal Station, 1863–1924 Managing Editor: Jan Barabach Associate Editor: Lucrezia Lopez Brought to you by | Federation University Australia/FedUni Authenticated Download Date | 5/25/16 4:59 AM Published by De Gruyter Open Ltd, Warsaw/Berlin Part of Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 license, which means that the text may be used for non-commercial purposes, provided credit is given to the author. For details go to http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/. © 2015 Ian D. Clark ISBN: 978-3-11-046823-6 e-ISBN: 978-3-11-046824-3 Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek.
    [Show full text]