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|    Message 81,631 of 82,032    |
|    Peter Moylan to All    |
|    Re: Tis the Season    |
|    31 Dec 25 22:37:47    |
      XPost: rec.arts.drwho, alt.usage.english       From: peter@pmoylan.org              On 31/12/25 21:42, Daniel70 wrote:       > On 30/12/2025 9:46 pm, Peter Moylan wrote:       >> On 30/12/25 19:39, Daniel70 wrote:              >> One of my best friends in high school (Peter Henry) died in       >> Broadford just recently.       >       > Can't say I've ever heard of 'Peter Henry'. Condolenses.              He had a regular program on community radio, but that probably wasn't       visible to many people. And I think the radio station was in Wallan, not       Broadford.              Another of my school friends was from Darraweit Guim, which in those days       was a one-horse town, possibly with two dogs. The horse and one of the       dogs belonged to my friend.              >>>> That's a coincidence. I grew up in Seymour. But I moved to       >>>> Newcastle 57 years ago,       >>       >>> Why??       >>       >> To do a Master's degree; but Newcastle is a nice place, so I never       >> left.       >       > What?? Melbourne, La Trobe, RMIT not good enough for you?? ;-P              In those days (1968) La Trobe university had just opened, and it was not       yet clear that it would amount to anything. RMIT was still a technical       college. (And in fact I taught fourth year mathematics at RMIT, as a casual       lecturer, in the same year as I was doing fourth year engineering at       Melbourne University.)              As for Melbourne ... I didn't as yet know the full story, but as an       undergraduate I could still see that there was no research going on at       all in engineering at Melbourne University. The university was going       into a decline. The medical faculty had expanded to the extent that it       dominated the governance of the university, and all the other faculties       were starved of funding. In engineering, all of the top people had moved       to the "new" university at Monash. Electrical engineering was still able       to put on an undergraduate degree, but only just. Doing a master's there       was out of the question.              As it turned out, I landed on my feet. Newcastle had a new university,       and in some departments (by no means all) had attracted some good       people. As a result, it became one of the top universities in the world       in control and systems theory. It went downhill after I retired, but for       a good long time it was a good place to be.              --       Peter Moylan peter@pmoylan.org http://www.pmoylan.org       Newcastle, NSW              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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