Mike,
Thanks for coming up with the name. When I was typing that post earlier today, I could see the face and couldn't recall the name.
Percy Beames, who was then sports editor of "The Age" told me some years later that Jack Galbally was approached by members of the Government to put the Bill forward in the Upper House.
The Government, and particularly Rylah, thought it had no chance of getting passed, and consequencly got the shock of their political lives when enough members crossed the floor to support Galbally's bill.
It should not have come as surprise though, as Lindsay Thompson and Jack Rossiter amongst others were very keen golfers, and were reportedly disturbed at the government's actions in the land grab.
As for the membership at Metro at the time. many had good connections with the government and were therefore confident of dissuasion through private negotiations.
As they were to find out, the deal had already been done before they were even informed of the fact, and despite protestations, which for a very conservative club were quite extraordinary at the time, the vandalism by the government took its due course.
Now it is not politicians that we have to worry about, it is the age-old urge of man to leave his imprimatur on the world.
It would seem that almost every era has had the urge to build a monument to itself, be it a new clubhouse, new green contours, new holes, new tees, trees planted/cut down, bunkers dug/bunkers filled in et al. Some of the work would have been commendable and necessary, but much of it has been ego-driven.
Most of Melbourne's sandbelt courses require nothing more than custodial prudence, something that is lamentedly deficient in a number of golf clubs in the present era.