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Showing posts with label Kelvin Grove Teachers College. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kelvin Grove Teachers College. Show all posts

Sunday, July 28, 2019

That Moon Landing...

All the 50th Anniversary celebrations etc of the first manned lunar landing are now behind us but I thought I’d write a post about ‘what I was doing when Neil Armstrong was the first person to step on the moon’s surface’. 
I was a student at teachers college in 1969. It was almost the end of lunch time and my friends and I noticed that the televisions ( black and white of course) from the science block were being brought out of the classrooms. The TVs were set up around the open space of the quadrangle and we were encouraged to find a spot to stand and view history in the making. 

The fact that this event from so far away, in space no less, and we could watch it happening, was amazing and despite the grainy nature of the film, we were all enthralled. I remember becoming a bit anxious as Armstrong got nearer to actually putting a foot on the moon’s surface. Despite the lunar module sitting in a stable manner on the surface, I had this irrational idea that when Armstrong stepped down, he would fall into a big hole...a bit like quicksand. I remember my relief when that didn’t happen! 
But the best was yet to come for those hundreds of college students there that day...

When the TV coverage was finished, the college Principal Mr Growder, spoke to us all over the PA reminding us of the momentous event we’d seen...and then gave us all the afternoon off. Being let off attending lectures was unheard of usually and I can still remember how we grabbed our bags/briefcases and surged out the gates and down Victoria Park Rd; all in high spirits. ๐Ÿ˜€๐Ÿ˜†
That college is now part of the Queensland University of Technology ( QUT) but that quadrangle is still there although quite beautifully landscaped these days, as these photos from the website show...




3 sides of that quadrangle were surrounded by the beautiful A block...possibly heritage listed these days?
The front view... 


The evening paper, the Telegraph had the following headlines that afternoon...


Now apparently I’m not the only one who imagined ( wrongly as it happens) that the moon’s surface was a bit unstable. I found a cartoon online which shows two astronauts sunk up to their chins in the surface of the moon. To use this cartoon on my blog would cost me €40 so here’s a link instead ๐Ÿ˜„. 
here
It was years later that I heard all those conspiracy theories that what the world watched that July Day was all a hoax...staged by Hollywood...pllleeeaaase...really??? And of course the 50th Anniversary prompted dozens of memes about this purported hoax...


Or what about this one from last year? ๐Ÿ˜‰


My favourite Moon Landing meme is this next one...


So do you remember the moon landing in 1969? 

Saturday, May 4, 2019

Another Easter; another time

Firstly thank you for all the lovely comments on my previous post on Easter this year.
For some reason this year, my thoughts went back to an Easter long passed. But first a bit of background so I will digress from Easter for a while. 
It was 1971 and in the previous December I had graduated as a teacher. 
I even have a few photos from that graduation night...in my little bedroom getting ready. My long hair has been teased and combed and pinned into curls at the back of my head by the hairdresser in the shop on the main road in our suburb.
Note the cretonne curtains and the vase of daisies on the dressing table...we always had vases of homegrown flowers in my childhood home. 


1971 was the first graduating class ever, where long white dresses weren’t mandatory for the female students...so I made a frock in apricot fabric with a gold braid trim...
This photo shows my mum and I all dressed ready to head off to the Festival Hall...and the cretonne curtains in our lounge room. ๐Ÿ˜‰


After the graduation ceremony, there was the graduation ball at Cloudland...a big night! 
Next day all students gathered in the old Assembly Hall at our Teachers’ College. 
I took this photo before the ceremony started. I’d been looking for this photo for years as the present day university on the site of the old teachers college is always asking for old photos. Amazingly I came across the photo just the other day! 



The occasion was when we were to be given our postings. In those ‘Olden Days’ all of us students were on teaching scholarships and we were guaranteed a job at the end of our course. How lucky were we? 
The next photo is of my friend Linda and I, waiting for the ceremony to begin where we would learn of our first posting.


( I was posted to my local primary school where I had been a student 7 years before and Linda was posted to an Ipswich school where her dad was headmaster.) 
So late in January 1971 I started work as a teacher on probation with a Grade 5 class. 
After a few weeks I decided I didn’t really like the job. By today’s standards, the children were angels but there were 38 of them in my class. If the other Grade 5 teacher was away, ( and this older woman seemed to have a lot of ill health ๐Ÿคจ), I would be expected to open the door between classes and teach both classes, so just under 80 students...unheard of later in my career! 
There were 3 of us graduates appointed to the school that year and as well as our daily program, the headmaster instructed us to write full notes of all lessons in the 5 hours of teaching time. 
So I soon got a bit disillusioned ( and tired) so to keep myself going, I promised myself that if I still hated the job by Easter I would leave even though breaking the bond (2 years service) meant all the scholarship money had to be repaid. Each day as I marked the class roll, I’d count the number of days left before Easter. 
Finally Easter arrived and I was looking forward to that 4 day break. I had bought an Empisal brand sewing machine with one of my first pays as a teacher. 
Here’s an image of that model that I found on the Net.


I spent the weekend cutting out garments and sewing them up...it was so therapeutic. That, plus the fact that mum kept up a supply of toasted hot cross buns and chocolate eggs, my mood lightened. I no longer wanted to walk out on my job and indeed went back with a metaphorical spring in my step. 
And for some reason my thoughts this year turned to that Easter from long ago. 
I didn’t think there were any photos showing that first sewing machine, but when sorting through old photos of their dad for my daughters, I found this one...
There on the right just a glimpse in its plastic case...


I only kept it for 3 years. Its tension problems got to annoy me, so in 1974, Ellie the Elna became my new machine. Still have her and use her despite having  a much newer Janome.