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Riding with the Reaper
Riding with the Reaper

Sydney Morning Herald

time14 hours ago

  • General
  • Sydney Morning Herald

Riding with the Reaper

Sara Kasch of Milton 'was very surprised and concerned yesterday as I was a passenger in a car when I opened a letter from my health insurance company, stating that my husband had died. I was slightly concerned as he was the one driving the car. We're not sure from where they obtained that information, maybe they know more than we do?' 'Globite cases (C8) came with a small key that could lock them,' informs Barrie Restall of Teven. 'Most kids did not bother to use the key so it was easy to fill an unattended case with, rocks, rubbish or a brick and lock it, leaving the owner to lug it about until they got home. Mostly done on sports day when numerous cases were unattended.' 'My Globite school port (I grew up along the coast so it was a port, not a case) saw me through my last years of school, then was passed on to younger siblings,' reports Ann Clydsdale of Bathurst. 'Years later I reclaimed it on a visit to the family home. Sadly, it was adorned with stickers (it had been pristine when I owned it) but it was still in robust physical condition. It is now doing sterling service storing some of my wool stash.' Switching bags now with Robert Hickey of Green Point who concurs with Geoff Carey's memories of the Gladstone bag. 'At my school in Mascot it became a rite of passage, used by the senior boys while the juniors had their Globites. It was often accompanied by a long black umbrella on rainy days which was either used as a quasi walking cane or else secured in the bags handles. We used to think it looked quite stylish.' An acquaintance of Jim Pollitt of Wahroonga was on the course at Mona Vale Golf Club on Sunday when that Piper Cherokee decided on an emergency landing (C8): 'He went up to the crashed plane and said to the pilot 'You can't park here'.' Mary Watson of Balgowlah Heights adds that 'it would planely be a preferred lie. It wouldn't be a handicap however for a good player. They would probably wing it.' 'I've begun reading many articles about Al (C8), keen to discover whether the subject is an Alan, Albert, or perhaps even Aloysius, only to realise that the subject is Artificial Intelligence,' laments Graham Meale of Boambee East. 'I now avoid all Sans Serif typefaces.' Is Jim Chalmers cornered? 'I hope the government's Economic Reform Roundtable meeting in Canberra goes well,' says Lin Sinton of Killarney Heights. 'But I don't hold out much hope. To start with their table is not round but rectangular.'

Riding with the Reaper
Riding with the Reaper

The Age

time14 hours ago

  • General
  • The Age

Riding with the Reaper

Sara Kasch of Milton 'was very surprised and concerned yesterday as I was a passenger in a car when I opened a letter from my health insurance company, stating that my husband had died. I was slightly concerned as he was the one driving the car. We're not sure from where they obtained that information, maybe they know more than we do?' 'Globite cases (C8) came with a small key that could lock them,' informs Barrie Restall of Teven. 'Most kids did not bother to use the key so it was easy to fill an unattended case with, rocks, rubbish or a brick and lock it, leaving the owner to lug it about until they got home. Mostly done on sports day when numerous cases were unattended.' 'My Globite school port (I grew up along the coast so it was a port, not a case) saw me through my last years of school, then was passed on to younger siblings,' reports Ann Clydsdale of Bathurst. 'Years later I reclaimed it on a visit to the family home. Sadly, it was adorned with stickers (it had been pristine when I owned it) but it was still in robust physical condition. It is now doing sterling service storing some of my wool stash.' Switching bags now with Robert Hickey of Green Point who concurs with Geoff Carey's memories of the Gladstone bag. 'At my school in Mascot it became a rite of passage, used by the senior boys while the juniors had their Globites. It was often accompanied by a long black umbrella on rainy days which was either used as a quasi walking cane or else secured in the bags handles. We used to think it looked quite stylish.' An acquaintance of Jim Pollitt of Wahroonga was on the course at Mona Vale Golf Club on Sunday when that Piper Cherokee decided on an emergency landing (C8): 'He went up to the crashed plane and said to the pilot 'You can't park here'.' Mary Watson of Balgowlah Heights adds that 'it would planely be a preferred lie. It wouldn't be a handicap however for a good player. They would probably wing it.' 'I've begun reading many articles about Al (C8), keen to discover whether the subject is an Alan, Albert, or perhaps even Aloysius, only to realise that the subject is Artificial Intelligence,' laments Graham Meale of Boambee East. 'I now avoid all Sans Serif typefaces.' Is Jim Chalmers cornered? 'I hope the government's Economic Reform Roundtable meeting in Canberra goes well,' says Lin Sinton of Killarney Heights. 'But I don't hold out much hope. To start with their table is not round but rectangular.'

AI should never mind the Pollocks
AI should never mind the Pollocks

The Age

time2 days ago

  • The Age

AI should never mind the Pollocks

It's just not cricket, according to David Pigott of North Parramatta: 'Following the Wallabies' wonderful victory in South Africa, I asked Google a question regarding the 1969 Wallaby tour of that country. In its reply, AI overview got its sports slightly mixed up: 'During the 1969 Wallabies tour of South Africa, the highest scorer was Graeme Pollock from South Africa, with a total of 517 runs. He played in seven innings and maintained an average of 73.85'.' 'Just wondering whether the Piper Cherokee landing at Mona Vale Golf Club qualified as GUR (ground under repair) and allowed the players a preferred lie?' ponders Steve Semple of Port Macquarie. 'Perhaps they adjourned directly to the 19th hole to discuss?' 'In 1969, I was playing golf on a course in the highlands of Papua New Guinea when I noticed a sign that read: 'Planes have right of way at all times',' says Bob Phillips of Cabarita. 'Members at Mona Vale might have to adopt this practice.' Peter Jeffery of Garran (ACT) recalls that 'Globites (C8) in the 1970s were said to be unbreakable. My brother James was sceptical. He tested the claim by jumping on someone else's case at Tumbarumba High School, saying 'I bet it's not unbreakable'. He was right.' 'So what filled the time gap from Globites to backpacks?' offers Geoff Carey of Pagewood. 'In our school, it was the Gladstone bag. Though highly unlikely a true Gladstone, probably what's known as the square mouth kit bag. Mine was a fetching orange faux leather with a crocodile skin pattern. As for Globites, a game of skill emerged when you would launch your bag 'ten pin bowling-style' along the corridor towards the bag racks. The bag must stay upright as it slides into the next available slot. What could go wrong?' Alison Stewart of Waitara still has a use for her father's large 1950s Globite suitcase: 'It's in our storeroom, containing my wedding dress, 53 years to the day after it was worn!' Happy anniversary, Alison. 'I was on a crowded bus and a small child and her mother were on board but separated from each other by two or three rows,' writes Jennifer Tidey of Mudgee. 'The child turned and shouted, 'I was sick at school today, Mum!' Mum quietly mouthed that they'd 'talk about it later,' but the child then added, 'It was OK though, I did it in my pencil case'.'

AI should never mind the Pollocks
AI should never mind the Pollocks

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 days ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

AI should never mind the Pollocks

It's just not cricket, according to David Pigott of North Parramatta: 'Following the Wallabies' wonderful victory in South Africa, I asked Google a question regarding the 1969 Wallaby tour of that country. In its reply, AI overview got its sports slightly mixed up: 'During the 1969 Wallabies tour of South Africa, the highest scorer was Graeme Pollock from South Africa, with a total of 517 runs. He played in seven innings and maintained an average of 73.85'.' 'Just wondering whether the Piper Cherokee landing at Mona Vale Golf Club qualified as GUR (ground under repair) and allowed the players a preferred lie?' ponders Steve Semple of Port Macquarie. 'Perhaps they adjourned directly to the 19th hole to discuss?' 'In 1969, I was playing golf on a course in the highlands of Papua New Guinea when I noticed a sign that read: 'Planes have right of way at all times',' says Bob Phillips of Cabarita. 'Members at Mona Vale might have to adopt this practice.' Peter Jeffery of Garran (ACT) recalls that 'Globites (C8) in the 1970s were said to be unbreakable. My brother James was sceptical. He tested the claim by jumping on someone else's case at Tumbarumba High School, saying 'I bet it's not unbreakable'. He was right.' 'So what filled the time gap from Globites to backpacks?' offers Geoff Carey of Pagewood. 'In our school, it was the Gladstone bag. Though highly unlikely a true Gladstone, probably what's known as the square mouth kit bag. Mine was a fetching orange faux leather with a crocodile skin pattern. As for Globites, a game of skill emerged when you would launch your bag 'ten pin bowling-style' along the corridor towards the bag racks. The bag must stay upright as it slides into the next available slot. What could go wrong?' Alison Stewart of Waitara still has a use for her father's large 1950s Globite suitcase: 'It's in our storeroom, containing my wedding dress, 53 years to the day after it was worn!' Happy anniversary, Alison. 'I was on a crowded bus and a small child and her mother were on board but separated from each other by two or three rows,' writes Jennifer Tidey of Mudgee. 'The child turned and shouted, 'I was sick at school today, Mum!' Mum quietly mouthed that they'd 'talk about it later,' but the child then added, 'It was OK though, I did it in my pencil case'.'

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