Dust: Magazine of the Mildura Branch University of Melbourne

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    Dust: Magazine of the Mildura Branch, University of Melbourne, Volume 1, December 1947
    University of Melbourne (New Sunraysia Daily, 1947)
    Journal
    The University of Melbourne established a branch residential campus near Mildura in 1947 to cope with the flood of returned World War II service personnel wanting to re-train. Several thousand students, many of them of mature age, did their first year of studies in medicine, engineering, architecture, dental science and, in some cases, science at the campus which boasted its own cinema, post office, hospital, shops, library, sporting grounds and annual magazine, appropriately named Dust. The campus closed at the end of 1949 when the demand for university places declined.
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    Dust: Magazine of the Mildura Branch, University of Melbourne, Volume 2, November 1948
    University of Melbourne (New Sunraysia Daily, 1948)
    Journal
    The University of Melbourne established a branch residential campus near Mildura in 1947 to cope with the flood of returned World War II service personnel wanting to re-train. Several thousand students, many of them of mature age, did their first year of studies in medicine, engineering, architecture, dental science and, in some cases, science at the campus which boasted its own cinema, post office, hospital, shops, library, sporting grounds and annual magazine, appropriately named Dust. The campus closed at the end of 1949 when the demand for university places declined.
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    Dust: Magazine of the Mildura Branch, University of Melbourne, Volume 3, November 1949
    University of Melbourne (New Sunraysia Daily, 1949)
    Journal
    The University of Melbourne established a branch residential campus near Mildura in 1947 to cope with the flood of returned World War II service personnel wanting to re-train. Several thousand students, many of them of mature age, did their first year of studies in medicine, engineering, architecture, dental science and, in some cases, science at the campus which boasted its own cinema, post office, hospital, shops, library, sporting grounds and annual magazine, appropriately named Dust. The campus closed at the end of 1949 when the demand for university places declined.