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Archival description
Admissions
CCA: H/1 · Subfonds · 1631-2019
Part of Clare College - Archive

Includes:
(1) admissions registers, 1631-2019
(2) notes and papers, 1681-1941
(3) school registers, 1962-1970
(4) admissions publications, c.2000
(5) information relating to general applications, c.1999-2013

Admission of women
CCHR/1/2 · File · 2012-2013
Part of Clare College - Historical Reference Collection

Summary of events leading to the admission of women to four previously all male Colleges in 1972. Includes findings from notes made on records held in the Clare archives, 2013; '1972 - a celebration of the admission of female undergraduates' by Michael Smyth. A catalogue of slides used during a presentation at the anniversary dinner held at Churchill College on 20th April 2013; 2 copies of invitations to admission of women events, 2013; the official programme of events.

CCPP/ODELL/8/31 · Item · 1952
Part of Clare College - Personal Papers

Envelope with the typed address label - Professor Noel Odell, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
And ‘My graduation address at V.U.C.’ written in pencil in Odell’s hand writing.

Contains copies of the address given by Odell at the Victoria University College Graduation Ceremony in 1952 and related papers:

(1) manuscript draft of the address written in a black notebook

(2) two typed copies with manuscript corrections

(3) printed booklet, ‘Adventure and Enterprise in Our Time’ by N.E. Odell
Loose letter inside dated 10 Feb 1953 and signed Malcolm Dylan Hutt thanking him for the booklet and mentioning his plans for walking in the hills

(4) Order of Ceremony booklet for the Victoria University College Graduation Ceremony 1952 at which Odell gave the address. Loose inside:

  • Order of procession
  • newspaper cutting about the ceremony
  • loose letter dated 12 Jan 1953 thanking Odell for his graduation address to Wellington and wondering how it was received as Odell spoke to them ‘very straight’.

(5) newspaper cuttings reacting to the address in which he said N.Z. people had a “complacent and lazy” attitude towards life.