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Vice-Chancellor's Teaching Excellence Awards winners, VC's Awards 2014
Vice-Chancellor's Teaching Excellence Award winners with VC Linda Kristjanson (fifth right). From left to right: Leon Sterling, Michael Gilding, Shannon Notley, Alex Maritz, Gianni Renda, Sally McArthur, Paul Stoddart, Ajay Kapoor, The 2014 Vice-Chancellor's Awards were held at the Hawthorn Arts Centre, Burwood Road, Hawthorn, 1 December 2014
Terry McEvoy and colleague receive Vice-Chancellor's Award from Linda Kristjanson, VC's Awards 2014
Terry McEvoy (left) and colleague receive Vice-Chancellor's Teaching Excellence Award (Vocational Education). The 2014 Vice-Chancellor's Awards were held at the Hawthorn Arts Centre, Burwood Road, Hawthorn, 1 December 2014
Christine Thong, Paivi Oinonen and Anita Kocsis, VC's Awards 2013
Christine Thong (left), Paivi Oinonen (centre) and Anita Kocsis (right) from the Swinburne Design Factory Team receive Vice-Chancellor's Global Initiatives Award for providing an avenue for interdisciplinary problem solving across a global network of universities, expanding global research and creating outstanding global learning opportunities for our students. The 2013 Vice-Chancellor's Awards where held at the Hawthorn Arts Centre, Burwood Road, Hawthorn, 11 December 2013
John Fecondo and Ashley Mansell
John Fecondo, Chemistry Lecturer, Faculty of Applied Science and Ashley Mansell, 1994
Kissing galaxies
This image originally appeared in the 2015 Research student photography and image competition held to celebrate National Science Week (Aug 15-23). Blurb: "Once upon a time, there were two young galaxies. They lived far away from each other and they felt very lonely. They were both floating in the empty, cold, and dark space, looking at each other from a very long distance, unable to communicate. Then, one day, something happened. They realised they were slowly getting closer and closer. Suddenly they were not sad anymore! When they became close enough, they started talking to each other. "What's happening to us?", said one to the other. "It's Gravity!", replied the second, "the gravitational attraction is pulling us and will eventually make us collide". They couldn't be happier than that. When they finally had their first encounter, they experienced their first "cosmic" kiss. Someone said they looked like two kissing seahorses. Last night I had a dream: our own Galaxy, the Milky Way, was colliding with the Andromeda Galaxy. During the collision, the stars of our Galaxy mixed up with the stars of Andromeda. Our Sun, orbited by its eight planets, came very close to one of the Andromeda's stars, orbited by its seven planets. One of these seven planets was inhabited by a form of intelligent life. One of the aliens took his spacecraft, landed on the Earth, came to me and gave me my first "galactic" kiss. Then I woke up.
Construction of sails for Open Day 2013
Construction of shade sails for Open Day 2013, Hawthorn Campus, 4 August 2013. Photograph originally appeared on Swinburne social media channels
Balloons in Atrium, Open Day 2013
Red, black and white balloons in Atrium, Hawthorn Campus, Open Day 2013, Hawthorn Campus, 4 August 2013. Photograph originally appeared on Swinburne social media channels
Wind tunnel components under construction
Wind tunnel components under construction, Engineering building, 1971
Croydon Campus library, colour
Embed code: <img src="http://images.swinburne.edu.au/bitstream/1111.1/6353/1/campus001_col_200x200.jpg" border="0" alt="Croydon Campus library"