[…] isn ‟t one there although they pay for all their engineers, they pay all the fees of the people to […]
[…] Sid Cole: What about the others? Betty Bachelor: Peter is engineer for the electricity board, he has no connection with […]
[…] went to work, I was going to be an electrical engineer, I was quite interested in that, and then I […]
[…] industry? Eric Cross: Yes, I started as an apprentice in engineering at George Kent from Luton b ut that strike […]
[…] MGM – because the aforementioned D.P.Field was the Senior Electrical Engineer working for A.W. Watkins and, and DP was the […]
[…] [57] Kinematograph Weekly, “The Observation Window: Training Projectionettes – An Engineer’s Book for Beginners,” July 23, 1942, p.45. [58] Ideal […]
[…]y anything. I was felt incredibly nervous about this big hulk of a man sitting behind me watching everything I was doing. So as quickly as I could, I engineered a way to get him out of the room for a while what I got on with it. So when he when he came back, he confirmed he could trust me. Also, if […]
[…]cal knowledge, technical electrical electrical knowledge to i. To get me through, into into that area I could have got through, I think, as as in, in engineering as well, but I preferred operations, the idea of being actually operating things, rather than than being servicing equipment. Nick Gi[…]
[…]of IVF from the genetic point of view. Because the melding of the sperm and the ovum outside the body opened up a number of possibilities for genetic engineering and that sort of thing, therefore it seemed to me – having done the original films – we should also look at the implications of what Stept[…]