William Macmahon Ball
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William Macmahon Ball AC (August 29, 1901 - December 26, 1986) was an Australian academic and diplomat. Educated at Caulfield Grammar School and the University of Melbourne, where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree, Ball studied both psychology and political science as a research fellow at Melbourne and the London School of Economics respectively. He then travelled Europe as a Carnegie Travelling Fellow, and during the Munich crisis was the first foreigner allowed by the German Army to visit Sachsenhausen concentration camp in several years.
He was a notable diplomat, working as an advisor to the Australian delegation at the San Francisco conference of the United Nations in 1945, Australian Minister to Japan, and British Commonwealth representative to the Allied Conference.
He would later become a professor of political science at Melbourne University, and was a regular broadcaster on both the ABC and BBC. He was made a Companion of the Order of Australia in 1978 "for service to education and learning particularly in field of political science".[1]
[edit] References
- ^ Australian Honours (2006). BALL, William MacMahon. Retrieved June 12, 2006.]
[edit] External links
- William Macmahon Ball - The University of Melbourne 150 Years: 150 Stories
- Guide to the Papers of William Macmahon Ball - National Library of Australia