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|    Message 81,667 of 81,972    |
|    Daniel70 to Peter Moylan    |
|    Re: Tis the Season    |
|    01 Jan 26 20:27:32    |
      XPost: rec.arts.drwho, alt.usage.english       From: daniel47@nomail.afraid.org              On 31/12/2025 10:37 pm, Peter Moylan wrote:       > 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.              Yeah, back in the day, Wallan would have been 'Country', now it's 'Outer       Suburban'.              > 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.)              RMIT (Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology), was where I got my       Associate Diploma of Engineering (Electronics) in 1990.              Back then, The Army (or RASigs) had a deal with RMIT where, given       recognition of prior learning, we could achieve our ADE(E) in just       twelve (very solid) months study, 9a.m. to 4p.m., five days a week!!              > 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.              I think two of my elder sisters got degrees from Melbourne.              > 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.              (Why does your surname, 'Moylan', ring a bell with me each time I see it??)       --       Daniel70              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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