Saturday 9 March 2024

It's not age that wearies them, but continual recreation: 45th Year Law School Tas Uni Graduation Reunion. Report: 10th March 2024

 An extremely courteous reception at the Uni law school, Sandy Bay lower campus, from Dean Prof Gino Dal Pont, with Bernard Cairns in attendance, and former governor, Kate Warner, was enjoyed by the group of approximately 20 of our year graduates.

Refreshing the memory with 'old' faces, and chatting around the wine and cheese provided by the Law School, was a relaxed affair, overlooking the Uni sports oval, and with outside temp in the order of 27 degrees.

Gino gave us an open and positive review of the Uni's apparent reversal of form on the dismantling of the Sandy Bay campus, and retraction of the previous push into the city.

Sceptics will view this as only a temporary reprieve, and we will need to keep a close monitor on the Machiavellian antics of the bureaucrats.

Current Uni students addressed us, detailing how our previously anarchic syndication the "Tas Uni Law Students Association" had morphed into a committee of 20, with formal portfolios and many methods of helping students survive what they described as an arduous learning course. No doubt.

As the sun tilted toward Mt Wellington, the wine ran out and so did we, some reserving their energy for the next event, others to the Metz for a further refreshment, and on to dining establishments.

Come Saturday 9th March, and temperatures forecast into the mid 30s, it was a slow day, and the group did what they could to get to the Ball and Chain restaurant on time, or in some cases, at all. A couple of grown men in our group thought it was the Astor we should be going to (Robert Noga - legend), and Bruce Levet seemed otherwise engaged in NSW. His absence amply compensated by late entrant, as we were blessed by the presence of Councillor Geoffrey Tremayne.

The Ball and Chain set up was relaxed, a long room to ourselves, ability to turn up or off the music, and a great range of dishes and wines. 

Speeches, limited to 3 minutes a piece (more or less) erupted after dinner, and the general tone was of the great privilege we had in our education, and also, more particularly, in the people we were surrounded by during those 4 or so years in the mid-late 1970s.

Particular reference was made, by way of exception, to a few of the lecturers, who seemed to run different agenda, self aggrandizement or fear tactics - but in reality, that was a lesson too.

For most of the educators, the comments we exceedingly positive, and great gratitude expressed for their resource, skill, knowledge, and willingness to impart. Particular mention for Sorna, whose good grace was again evident in his recent email to us.

In regard to our cohort, a number of speakers made express wishes of good health to Jim Cousland, and voted thanks for his generosity with his knowledge, and pressure and power in exerting some degree of control over the way the faculty interacted with us.

Good humour was the theme, and laughs all around, as the evening progressed. 

But now, I'm off to Frogmore Creek for lunch. See you there.

Tuesday 6 February 2024

Derek Roebuck obituary

 Obituary

Derek Roebuck obituary

This article is more than 3 years old

My husband Derek Roebuck, who has died aged 85 of heart failure, started his professional life as a solicitor in Stalybridge and Manchester in the 1960s, but soon accepted a teaching post at the University of Wellington, New Zealand.

In 1968, he moved to the University of Tasmania, where he was professor of law for 10 years, and also dean. He was active in anti-Vietnam war politics, and was among those in Angola monitoring the trial of mercenaries, resulting in The Whores of War (1977), written with Wilfred Burchett.


His appointment as Amnesty International’s head of research in 1979 was controversial because of his leftwing politics. Derek and I met there while I was campaign co-ordinator in the British section, and were married in 1981

The following year, we moved from London to a five-year posting in Papua New Guinea, where Derek was again professor and dean of the UPNG Law School and also practised as a criminal defence barrister.

In 1987 Derek was appointed to set up a new law school in Hong Kong at the City Polytechnic, later City University. He remained there for 10 years as professor and sometimes dean, practising, too, as duty lawyer in the magistrates courts. Those years allowed him regularly to play cricket which, with opera, were his abiding pleasures.

Derek Roebuck during a cricket match in Hong Kong
Derek Roebuck during a cricket match in Hong Kong

In Hong Kong, arbitration – dispute resolution outside the law courts – entered his life, and he set up a department teaching it. The subject gained further traction when Neil Kaplan, the founder of the Arbitration Centre, asked him to write a historical introduction to his own arbitration study. Derek was hooked.

Already the author of 40 legal titles, his 10-volume history of arbitration and mediation, starting with Ancient Greek Arbitration, was to dominate the last 22 years of his life in Oxford, for 10 years of which he also edited the journal of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators. The final volume he was able to write, with two co-authors –English Arbitration and Mediation in the Long Eighteenth Century – was published in November last year by the small publishing house we set up to publish our work.

Derek was born in Stalybridge, Cheshire (now part of Greater Manchester), the son of John Roebuck, a postman, and Jessie (nee Thorpe), a former bookbinder. From a local school, he gained a scholarship to Manchester grammar school, and then to Hertford College, Oxford, where he studied first classics and then law.

Soon after graduation he married Peggy Mounkley and they had three children, Derek, Paul and Lucy. The marriage ended in divorce. Derek is survived by me, his children and two grandchildren, Christopher and Anna.

Monday 22 January 2024

45th - Remember When We Were Young?

 Not harping on the age thing, but it is a justification to reflect. I thought I remembered a song by that title, and thought I heard it/the band at the Blues Fest in Byron Bay last year. Some of that is correct.


We used to never say never
Used to think we live for ever
Flying free beneath the sun

Days go running and hiding
The weeks are going slippin and sliding
Years leave quicker every time they come
Remember when we were young


Or the other version by 'Chain': https://open.spotify.com/track/6QePwarqM4GBRtGkapdh88?si=8b034d47f5cd4de1

or: https://youtu.be/XTvzzgk_jEY

Anyway, progress has been exceptional for the planning for the 45th Reunion, with steering committee lunch last week rolling the throughts of each into a draft plan. Additionally, I called in on the Dean at the Law School in the lower campus, Sandy Bay, and was very well received by Prof Gino dal Pont.

We've resolved on a Friday 3pm, 8th March 2024 refresher at the Law School, and informal address by the Dean, and questions and answer session on the 'State of Play' with the University and what happens to law students when they enter and ultimately depart (law school, profession, alternative careers, etc).

Gino will then give us a tour of facilities, which I thought about: remember when the Vice-Chancellor opened or re-opened the law faculty 5 years, ago - when he must have had on his mind that he was endeavouring to finish plans to move the faculty into the city! What a curious way to run a ball room!

Refreshments after, courtesy of the Dean, and free evening Friday.

Saturday, dinner, I'll consolidate plans in the next week and send out formal invitations with request for response and confirmation you are going to attend.

For Sunday, I've been wrestling with the simplicity of a BBQ at the Waterworks, and then Belinda Bingham (Webster) suggested 'Frogmore Creek Winery' on the way to Richmond - great for a Sunday lunch and lazy afternoon. So I'll investigate with them what they can do for us.

Meanwhile, Leigh Sealy found his photos of the last 'gig in the sky' - and I'll re-post them below.

Talk soon.


Interesting times. For good reason the Law School commissioned or received this portrait of character, advocate and barrister, John Kable QC, who died young, but made a mark. Now, within a generation, it is unacceptable and to appease perceived views, has been removed
Prof Emeritus Don Chalmers leading the chorus with 'Rule Britannica' - What a kind gentleman, and great help in the last reunion. He now sits aside our Governor Barb Baker on the big sandstone pile near the Tasman Bridge
Recognise the faces and heads? Lovely people

Something called a moot court. I reckon we would have enjoyed a few more moots back then.
Warwick Smith: a few years in parliament, and one gravitates to the pedestal. I see former Associate Judge Stephen Holt , being overlooked by Tom Holmes, with Michael McHugh, Joan Roberts, and Debra Rigby - with Noges in white
Striptease? Must have been one of the younger students at the re-opening of the faculty building after the floods in 2018
Sealy the photographer: one might wonder. I suspect the Vice Chancellor is reading his notes up front
Father Michael Tate, Kate the Governor at the time, and David Ashton-Lewis - preparing for further work in Fiji

A re-production of the old 1978 photo with same people and places, but in 2019