What did university engineering lab work look like in 1937?

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Might be this person: SKELT George James (Jim) F.R.I.C.E., Royal Engineers (1941-1946), U.K. Colonial Service, H.K. Government, M.M.B.W. Born London Nov. 7, 1918 Died Melb. Apr. 17, 2014 Peacefully after a brief illness, Aged 95 Loving and loved husband for 59 years of Edwina (dec. 2013). Father of Caroline, Stewart and David. Father-in-law of Len, Louise and Jill. Much loved and admired Grandpa of Alex, Chris, Patrick, Matthew and Geoffrey. With grateful thanks to the staff of Gardenia BlueCross Residential Care. Please refer to Saturday's Herald Sun for funeral details.

graddivrot
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This is such a wonderful channel! It has that other side of Physics, which is often omitted from other A-Level channels! Exploring it, out of passion as well as a subject - something I think a lot of people outside the field don't realise we do!

Andromeda
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You say "real attention to detail in marking this" (36:50), but I bet the instructors were accustomed to seeing hundreds of students' lab books, so any inconsistency instantly stood out. Not to take away from their rigorous standards ... after all, mediocre engineers working on military equipment would lose a war, in civilian life mere kill dozens of civilians. He had quite a fancy boat although still a student, or just a graduate, so comes from a well-heeled family, it seems.

TomLeg
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Youtube is nearest thing to timd machine

aditya