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©2008
The Walter And Eliza Hall
Institute of Medical Research
Melbourne, Australia
 
Local Time @ WEHI:
08:15AM on Tuesday,
October 7, 2008.
    

The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research (WEHI) was founded in 1915 as a benevolence of the perpetual charitable Walter and Eliza Hall Trust.
"...an Institute as the Southern Hemisphere has never known ...[which] shall above all things devote itself to medical research in a broad and comprehensive spirit"
"... the birthplace of discoveries rendering signal service to mankind in the prevention and removal of disease and the mitigation of suffering"
[Quotes from documents of Sir Harry Allen, Dean of Medicine, University of Melbourne, 1915]



Building Medical Science Newsletter #1
Building Medical Science Newsletter #2
Building Medical Science Newsletter #3



About WEHI ...
The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, located in Parkville, just north of Melbourne's CBD, is one of the world's leading medical research centres. The work of the Institute covers cancer, genetics, malaria, autoimmune diseases, medicinal chemistry, drug discovery and translational research taking scientific discoveries from the laboratory to the clinic. Over many decades, the Institute's advances and discoveries have led to significant benefits for patients around the world. The WEHI Biotechnology Centre, located in the La Trobe University R&D Park, provides laboratories for the commercial incubation of the Institute's discoveries, including the establishment of start-up biotechnology companies.




Employment Opportunities

 6/10/2008

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Employment Opportunity - Research Technician, Autoimmunity & Transplantation Division

 6/10/2008

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Employment Opportunity - Laboratory Technician (FACS)

 1/10/2008

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Employment Opportunity - Microsoft Server Applications Support Engineer

Professor Peter Colman
Wins Victoria Prize

Professor Peter Colman (centre with Professor Suzanne Cory, WEHI Director left, and Mr Gavin Jennings, Victorian Government Minister for Innovation right) has won Victoria's most coveted science award, the Victoria Prize, and Dr Ian Majewski has been awarded a prestigious Victoria Fellowship. Both prizes were presented by the Governor of Victoria, Professor David de Kretser AC, during a celebratory event at Government House on 13 August 2008.[More ...]

WEHI Discovery Tours 2008

The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute would like to extend a very warm welcome to you to visit us and learn more about our research. Regular tours include an opportunity to visit our laboratories and meet some of our staff and researchers. Each tour will focus on different areas of our research including cancer, autoimmune diseases, malaria and immunology. Tour dates this year are 29 July and 23 October and if you would like further details please contact Kristine Ash on 9345 2912. [More ...]

WEHI's Drs Lindeman and Visvader recognised for outstanding breast cancer research

Drs Jane Visvader and Geoff Lindeman, researchers at Melbourne's Walter and Eliza Hall Institute (WEHI) and the Royal Melbourne Hospital, have been presented with the GlaxoSmithKline Award for Research Excellence for their outstanding contribution to breast cancer research. [More ...]



Latest News

16/09/2008

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WEHI’s Kylie Mason is a Young Tall Poppy

26/08/2008

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L’Oreal Fellowship win for WEHI’s Erika Cretney

13/08/2008

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Top Victorian honours for two WEHI scientists

 9/07/2008

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Identifying and disrupting key elements of malaria’s “sticky sack” adhesion strategy

 2/07/2008

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MS drug development agreement based on WEHI’s medicinal chemistry

 4/06/2008

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Insights into cancer earn Premier’s Award Commendation

WEHI's Drew Berry
Launches Apoptosis Animation

WEHI's BAFTA and Emmy Award winning biomedical animator Drew Berry's paper, "Molecular Animation of Cell Death Mediated by the Fas Pathway" is in the April 2007 issue of Science. Web (35MB) and iPod (28MB) versions of the animation described in that paper are available.
     
"Mastery of Disease Through Discovery"

Affiliated with The University of Melbourne and The Royal Melbourne Hospital