Post Heroes
- Roger Hart/Roger Wells went on to become an author and meditation trainer. His books on meditation are: Happy to Burn (Lothian 1997) and Love & Imagination. More recently his first novel, Levin's God was published by Fremantle Arts Centre Press (2004).
- John Taylor became a filmmaker and graphics designer, winning an AFI award in 1986.
- Paul Brickhill went on to head the Music Department at the Australian Ballet School.
- David Crosbie was the Chief Executive of Melbourne's Odyssey House, the largest drug and alcohol treatment centre in Victoria and is on the National Expert Advisory Committee on Drugs. He is now the Chief Executive of the Mental Health Council of Australia.
- Alan 'Clutch' Robertson worked for Warner Music for sixteen years in Australia, Malaysia and Singapore, after which he established Alan Robertson Management, representing bands such as Magic Dirt, Taxiride and Juke Kartel. Robertson currently works in the mobile advertising and publishing industry and plays drums for The Rock Legends.
- Martin Fisher became a Crown Prosecutor in the Northern Territory and played keyboards in popular Darwin band The Fabulous Baker Brothers.
- Peter McCaughley (Drummer) was an original member of 'The Secret Police' in the year of 1979/1980. Prior to them he was with a local Melbourne band 'Ready Rubbed' and after leaving 'The Secret Police' he joined up with another local group 'Danger Dancer' died in 1986 of a brain haemorrhage at the age of 32.
Read more about this topic: Little Heroes
Famous quotes containing the words post and/or heroes:
“A demanding stranger arrived one morning in a small town and asked a boy on the sidewalk of the main street, Boy, wheres the post office?
I dont know.
Well, then, where might the drugstore be?
I dont know.
How about a good cheap hotel?
I dont know.
Say, boy, you dont know much, do you?
No, sir, I sure dont. But I aint lost.”
—William Harmon (b. 1938)
“There have been heroes for whom this world seemed expressly prepared, as if creation had at last succeeded; whose daily life was the stuff of which our dreams are made, and whose presence enhanced the beauty and ampleness of Nature herself.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)