Yan Zhuang
16 December 2015Authors
University Square Being Redeveloped
University Square, the prominent garden and thoroughfare, located between Grattan Street and the Law School, is currently in the process of being redeveloped in an association between the University, the City of Melbourne, and the Victorian Government.
University Agrees to Meeting with Student Activists About Lockheed Martin
From 7:30am on Wednesday, 11 July, students from the campus-based activist group Lockout Lockheed chained themselves to concrete-filled barrels to prevent staff, including Chancellery, the top tier leadership of the University, from entering their offices in Raymond Priestley.
“What Kind of ‘Diversity’?”: Mixed Feelings Over Respect and Diversity Week Merger
The University of Melbourne’s decision to combine Respect Week and Diversity Week this year has garnered mixed reactions from students.
Welcome to Farrago’s coverage of the Batman by-election.
Over three days, FFMU launched a series of public actions pressuring the University to divest.
Budget promises steady science funding; Chris Pyne carps on about innovation
Funding for science is set to remain steady in the near future.
Some shake-up in social services
The Turnbull Coalition government’s Federal Budget argues that unemployment is set to decline.
University Concedes to Fossil Free MU
FIGHT FOR YOUR RIGHT (TO STUDY)
Rather than just being on the defensive, he says, students are now able to push for improvements to higher education funding.
And as I stood there, I thought to myself, ‘Gee, wouldn’t it be nice if someone wrote about how to dispute a myki fine in Farrago?’.
An open letter to Four Corners
A while back, you aired a program presenting all the ways international students are ostensibly lowering the standards of Australian universities.
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University Agrees to Meeting with Student Activists About Lockheed Martin
From 7:30am on Wednesday, 11 July, students from the campus-based activist group Lockout Lockheed chained themselves to concrete-filled barrels to prevent staff, including Chancellery, the top tier leadership of the University, from entering their offices in Raymond Priestley.
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