T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
18.1 | I'd never admit to that | KAOFS::D_SEED | | Mon Jan 11 1988 16:09 | 11 |
| Not a native, but I can admit to working out of the HPO - Hamilton
DEC office (located in Burlington?!?!) for two years, and actually
living in Burlington for 14 months.
Biggest news (industrial) is that Dofasco has brought its
continuous-caster (replete with 100s of $Ms of DEC equipment) online
finally. Project only slightly behind schedule, awaiting the next
major DEC hardware announcement so that they can buy one of
whatever-it-is.
Desmond.
|
18.2 | ""Just a Party in Toronto"" | TRFSV2::P_KLINOWSKI | | Wed Nov 08 1989 21:35 | 9 |
| Well, I hate to admit it but I was born in Hamilton and grew up in
Grimsby. Fortunately, I now work in Toronto, a fine town. Are you
still interested in the Hammer? One piece of information I can give
is that there is now two skyway bridges and the hamilton harbour near
the steel companies is being filled in faster than you can blink. They
finally built a proper hockey arena downtown minus a hockey team. Am I
getting you interested??
Cheers, Paul
|
18.3 | I am I am I am I am I am I am I am I am I am I am | POLAR::WILSONC | A dog is a womans best man | Sat Oct 21 1995 20:19 | 12 |
| I was born and raised in Hamilton. I spent the first part of my life on
Tisdale ave. (between Victoria and Wentworth) I went to Wentworth
Street Public School. Later my family and by extension, myself, moved
to Cannon St., near Gage ave. Gage Park was a large influence on my
life. I went to Prince of Wales school next and then high school at
Scott Park Secondary. I swam with the Hamilton Wentworth Aquatic Club.
I still like Hamilton very much and walk around the whole city every
time I have an extended stay there.
Gotta go will continue later.
chris, from hamilton.
|
18.4 | | TROOA::SOLEY | Fall down, go boom | Sat Oct 21 1995 20:34 | 10 |
| Well, I was born there (St. Joe's) I lived in Saltfleet township (later
amalgamated into Stoney Creek) the east property line of our farm was
also the Hamilton city limits. I went to kindergarden at Mount Albion
school the last year that the original one room schoolhouse was still
part of the building. I did my time in the steel mills (two co-op
workterms at Dofasco). We moved down the peninsula to Grimsby when I
was 9. I still occasionally go back to the old neighbourhood as my
Grandmother (92 going on 39) still lives there (less than a mile from
where she was born, across the street from where my grandfather was
born.
|
18.5 | at least we blow our pollution over to toronto | POLAR::WILSONC | A dog is a womans best man | Sat Oct 21 1995 23:54 | 5 |
| I made a point of not working in the steel mills. I always thought that
it was my Dad's job that made him so depressed and eventually an
alcoholic. I writhed every time he came home at precisely 1532 every
day. Same thing day in day out. I survived the steel mills but the chip
left on my shoulder looms large.
|
18.6 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Cyberian Paganism | Sun Oct 22 1995 19:17 | 5 |
|
I have, in no way, had anything to do with Hamilton.
Just thought I'd say.
|
18.7 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Sun Oct 22 1995 20:29 | 16 |
|
My former companion, Colleen Horner, was born and reared in
Hamilton. Her father, Hugh, had the unusual middle name `Urchin'.
Really, he did.
Colleen claimed to haved dated Wayne Rivers when he played for
the Hamilton Red Wings; I later followed Wayne undistinguished
career in Boston as he went on to play several seasons for the
perenially last-place Bruins.
I have also seen the escarpment.
On the whole, that's really quite a bit -- more than one would
ordinarily want, in many ways -- to have to do w/Hamilton.
--Mr Topaz
|
18.8 | Dundas! | TROOA::DLOTEN | Semper ubi sub ubi. | Mon Oct 23 1995 12:05 | 10 |
| Like Norm, I was born in St. Joes, but call Dundas my birthplace!
I lived in Dundas until I was 9, when we moved up onto the escarpment
near Millgrove. Went to Dundas District High School and on to the
University of Waterloo.
After a brief stint in Kitchener, where my wife and I were married, we
moved to Sarnia!
-doug
|
18.9 | | LEMAN::DZIALOWSKI | sharks gotta swim, bats gotta fly... | Tue Oct 24 1995 10:07 | 1 |
| I've worked in Hamilton. Not as nice as Sarnia...
|
18.10 | | POLAR::RUSHTON | տ� | Tue Oct 24 1995 12:01 | 5 |
| Hamilton??!!
What street's it on? :*)
Korff
|
18.11 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Pettin' & Sofa Settin' | Tue Oct 24 1995 13:25 | 1 |
| I think Linda Hamilton is pretty. Does that make me a Hamiltonian?
|
18.12 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Cyberian Paganism | Tue Oct 24 1995 14:03 | 6 |
|
It depends; how do you feel about George Hamilton?
Please respond without wasting disk space, network bandwidth, CPU
cycles, or the time of your fellow noters.
|
18.13 | fan of neither, nor even Alexander | CTHU26::S_BURRIDGE | | Tue Oct 24 1995 14:12 | 4 |
| Is that George Hamilton IV, the country crooner who recorded "Canadian
Pacific," or that other guy, the tanned 2nd-rate actor/showbiz figure?
-Stephen
|
18.14 | Uh,..oh.... | TROOA::MCRAM | DEC: ReClaim TheName! | Tue Oct 24 1995 15:29 | 4 |
|
Watch it. It's just a clever trick so he can post his Statistics Canada
survey on George Hamilton....
|
18.15 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Cyberian Paganism | Tue Oct 24 1995 16:23 | 3 |
|
That reminds me...
|
18.16 | Pardon my lunchbucket | TROOA::SOLEY | Fall down, go boom | Tue Oct 24 1995 18:35 | 4 |
| Re: .11
c/Linda Hamilton/Sheila Copps/ and you're much closer.
|
18.17 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Pettin' & Sofa Settin' | Tue Oct 24 1995 18:38 | 3 |
| <----
Bluuuuuuuuuurgh!
|
18.18 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Pettin' & Sofa Settin' | Tue Oct 24 1995 18:42 | 1 |
| By the way, Sheila Copps is not my baby.
|
18.19 | | LEMAN::DZIALOWSKI | sharks gotta swim, bats gotta fly... | Wed Oct 25 1995 09:49 | 4 |
| Hamilton: that was a mathematician from Scotland (father of the
quaternions - an extension of the complex set, and of the Hamiltonian,
- a formulation of the least-effort principle named after him, I think).
He was also Nelson's lover (an English sailor).
|
18.20 | if memory serves | CTHU26::S_BURRIDGE | | Wed Oct 25 1995 09:59 | 4 |
| It hink that's the "Hambletonian," and it's not a "formulation of the
least-effort principle," but a harness race.
-Stephen
|
18.21 | | POLAR::RUSHTON | տ� | Wed Oct 25 1995 14:42 | 6 |
| >>He was also Nelson's lover (an English sailor).
Close, very close...but completely wrong.
Nelson was an English admiral in the Royal Navy. His mistress was Lady
Hamilton.
|
18.22 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | CPU Cycler | Wed Oct 25 1995 15:58 | 1 |
| Yabbut that's when he was dressed up like Lady Hamilton.
|
18.23 | | TROOA::SOLEY | Fall down, go boom | Wed Oct 25 1995 17:43 | 1 |
| Now this is getting silly. What is this the Sarnia note?
|