Search found 182 matches
- Wed Jan 29, 2020 1:01 pm
- Forum: Stories, Reminiscing & Teacher/Pupil Memories
- Topic: Milk
- Replies: 28
- Views: 28935
Re: Milk
... to clean up afterwards. They disposed of the unused milk, after setting aside enough for the monitors' late night coffee and cocoa drinking, then placed the crates and empty bottles outside the back of the house for pick-up. "Setting aside": we couldn't keep the bottles back, so, in C...
- Tue Jan 28, 2020 11:52 pm
- Forum: Stories, Reminiscing & Teacher/Pupil Memories
- Topic: Milk
- Replies: 28
- Views: 28935
Re: Milk
What I remember from 1954-62 in Col A is a crate of milk in 1/3 pint bottles appearing in the dayroom at morning break every day. After PT (for that's what we had to do in morning break in those days) everybody could help themself to a bottle, and those who liked it would drink it on the spot. At th...
- Thu Aug 01, 2019 12:29 am
- Forum: Looking for....
- Topic: James Peto
- Replies: 4
- Views: 8806
Re: James Peto
I've just spotted huntertitus' post from 2013 and I think I can explain the Morton Peto family vault.It will be the family of Sir Samuel Morton Peto https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morton_Peto , 1st Baronet (4 August 1809 – 13 November 1889). He began as an apprentice bricklayer, made an distinguished...
- Tue Jul 30, 2019 10:23 pm
- Forum: General Chat - CH Stuff
- Topic: The moon landing at CH
- Replies: 27
- Views: 8464
Re: The moon landing at CH
What struck me at the time was how briefly public interest lasted. There was quite good TV coverage of the second landing, and the drama of Apollo XIII gripped the world, but subsequent moon landings got less and less press and TV attention. I remember feeling disappointed, but most people seemed to...
- Tue Jul 30, 2019 3:27 pm
- Forum: General Chat - CH Stuff
- Topic: The moon landing at CH
- Replies: 27
- Views: 8464
Re: The moon landing at CH
The Apollo XI anniversary has got me thinking about how primitive all the technologies were fifty years ago. For that first moon landing, we (living in Edinburgh) borrowed a black-and-white TV from a friend. Not having a TV of our own was not particularly eccentric in 1969. We stayed up all night to...
- Wed Jan 23, 2019 6:05 pm
- Forum: Coleridge Photos
- Topic: Col A - is this 1960?
- Replies: 19
- Views: 15221
Re: Col A - is this 1960?
Thankyou, Michael - your logic agrees with mine: this must be summer 1960. But what stirred this topic up from the mud at the bottom of the duckpond of memory, where it has lain undisturbed since a bit of discussion in 2016?
- Thu Dec 13, 2018 5:08 pm
- Forum: General Chat - Non CH
- Topic: Politics
- Replies: 624
- Views: 275623
Re: Politics
Teresa May's "deal" involves the idea of a frictionless border between Northern Ireland and (the Republic of) Ireland. That's a border between the European Customs Union and a territory outside the customs union. A lot of people (but not everyone who matters) seem to believe that a frictio...
- Wed May 10, 2017 10:34 am
- Forum: General Chat - CH Stuff
- Topic: Threads being moved
- Replies: 19
- Views: 8312
Re: Threads being moved
Bingo! Congratulations eucsgmrc. Perhaps you too were taught by The Oil, ... I wasn't, in fact. He left after my first year, and Seaman took over. Apart from maths, I was not particularly bright - happy to be average at most subjects - and I was notably incompetent at practical stuff. What has surp...
- Tue May 09, 2017 7:14 pm
- Forum: General Chat - CH Stuff
- Topic: Threads being moved
- Replies: 19
- Views: 8312
Re: Threads being moved
Now what about the same sign ( ^ ) when it is placed under the line of letters, meaning that something written above the line must be inserted? What is this sign called and why? That's a caret. "Caret" is Latin for "it lacks". But nothing is simple. In some technical contexts th...
- Sat Apr 22, 2017 8:51 pm
- Forum: General Chat - CH Stuff
- Topic: Time to bring back Kiff Bowls?
- Replies: 19
- Views: 7573
Re: Time to bring back Kiff Bowls?
,,, BUT, after a few days there started to be examples of spontaneous explosion by these mugs - a sudden bang and instant disintegration - always when empty. Although the mugs disintegrated it was not dangerous as the bits were all smooth edged. My memory is a little different, as memories tend to ...
- Mon Apr 03, 2017 1:58 pm
- Forum: General Chat - CH Stuff
- Topic: Memorable Sermons
- Replies: 30
- Views: 12892
Re: Memorable Sermons
... the Coleridge A tradition that reading the valley of dry bones passage at evening duty was hysterically funny? Of course, it was absolutely taboo for any member of the house actually to laugh (or even smirk), otherwise the mighty wrath of Kit Aitken would descend. Consequently it was impossible...
- Tue Jan 10, 2017 5:09 pm
- Forum: General Chat - CH Stuff
- Topic: Poor disciplinary C.H. staff
- Replies: 95
- Views: 28650
Re: Poor disciplinary C.H. staff
I did notice Michael's " te absolvo." above - were the Romans that way inclined or is the French, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian avoidance of the second person singular a recent invention? I'm trying to stop myself picking nits, but slapping my own wrist doesn't seem to be helping ... so I...
- Mon Dec 12, 2016 2:04 pm
- Forum: General Chat - CH Stuff
- Topic: Cod Liver Oil and Malt
- Replies: 45
- Views: 14542
Re: Cod Liver Oil and Malt
... in rationing times before the catering manager was changed and the food was pretty awful. Meat - what you actually got of it - was pure gristle as an example. I agree with sejintenej. I arrived in 1954, and the food was dire, but quite normal for a big institution. In, I think, summer of 1955, ...
- Thu Dec 01, 2016 2:53 pm
- Forum: General Chat - CH Stuff
- Topic: Poor disciplinary C.H. staff
- Replies: 95
- Views: 28650
Re: Poor disciplinary C.H. staff
Their faces are covered, so nobody knows who they are. Why would they care who sees their willies?
- Fri Oct 21, 2016 9:57 pm
- Forum: General Chat - CH Stuff
- Topic: Housey Coat 'badge'
- Replies: 25
- Views: 9731
Re: Housey Coat 'badge'
I seem to recall understanding that Exhibitions were founded in 1851 or soon thereafter to mark the Great Exhibition of that year, probably encouraged by Prince Albert. I'm fairly confident that the word "exhibition" was used to mean something like a scholarship well before 1851. The OED ...