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 |  | Dr Allan McRobie   Next year Allan is introducing a new fourth year undergraduate module 
        on water engineering and public health, which will look at global issues 
        concerned with river modelling, flooding, water supply and sanitation. 
        'This Millennium Bridge is a wonderful structure and a fascinating problem. 
        The way that crowds walking on this bridge synchronize their steps involves 
        biology and psychology as well as nonlinear structural dynamics. There 
        are useful mathematical analogues for this phenomenon across the biological 
        and physical sciences: synchronous flashing of fireflies in SE Asia, Josephson 
        junction arrays, pendulum clocks, the moon, menstrual synchrony, to name 
        but a few. I can talk about this for hours. The much-studied mathematics 
        of these other problems suggests to me that the bridge wobbles may be 
        rather tricky to fix, and I wish the engineers involved every success. 
        But fascinating though all this is, ultimately I would rather spend the 
        rest of this summer working on subjects like water engineering where the 
        bottom line is 18 million lives rather than 18 million pounds. And, again, 
        I think Joan can help me.'  Allan's final comment on the bridge is this: 'It may be just a footbridge, 
        but we should NEVER forget that with several thousand people suspended 
        at any instant out above the Thames, if some unforeseen phenomenon had 
        actually led to a collapse of the bridge, then we would have witnessed 
        the most terrible national tragedy since the Second World War.'  
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