I saw this picture on facebook. Ut sure brought back a lot of memories watching those old Carry One films, Here, we have Charles Hawtrey, Kenneth Willaims, Joan Sims, Sidney James, Hattie Jacques, Jim Dale and Barbara Windsor.
Saturday, 19 August 2023
Friday, 18 August 2023
A Woodstock drawing
A page from a very old issue of the MAD Magazine, drawn by Sergio Aragones, and celebrating the 54th anniversary of the Woodstock music festival in America. I know Alfred E Neuman is somewhere in the detail, but where?
#sergioaragones #aragones #madmagazineTuesday, 15 August 2023
OFA history (hip version)
I'm wondering whether I should submit this story to the Penang Free School Magazine for publication in this year's publication, since their editorial board had been asking me for a contribution. 😆 Or perhaps I should tone it down and make the story more proper and presentable? 😄
The Old Frees' Association, the original bunch of Penang Free School alumni, hit the grand One-Zero-Zero in 2023. Yep, we've seen a hundred years of greatness, and we're calling it the OFA Centenary – a special time for the old and the current gang.
Before 1923, when you wrapped up your time at the Free School, you were pretty much on your own. No official alumni club or anything fancy. The old school pals just did their own thing once they stepped out beneath that arch.
Way back in 1916, when Penang Free School reached its 100-year milestone, some folks had the idea, "Hey, let's make an alumni group!" But truth be told, the idea just sort of hung around.
For about six years, not much action took place. Then, in late 1922, a former teacher from the school, Harold Cheeseman, decided it was time to shake things up a bit. Cheeseman had been teaching there since 1907, leaving a lasting mark on every student he encountered.
Come August 1922, Cheeseman moved up the ladder to a different school. Suddenly, he found himself with some free time and thought, "Why not start an Old Boys club?" He penned a letter in the 1922 School Magazine, saying, "Let's start small – a club with a list of members, keeping everyone connected and having a reunion once a year. Maybe some games and debates with the school, and we'll pitch in for the parties."
That letter got the old gang excited. Yeoh Guan Seok, a big-shot lawyer, rallied the troops, and on February 20, 1923, over a hundred Old Boys and PFS teachers gathered for a meeting.
Familiar faces like Quah Beng Kee, Dr Lim Guan Cheng and a host of others were present. At the meeting, they all agreed – time to make The Old Frees' Association official. Anyone who was an Old Free or had taught there for over five years could join. They entrusted Khoo Heng Kok, Harold Cheeseman and Tan Kiar-Lew with the task of drafting the rules.
Around two months later, on 17th April 1923, they held their first gathering, and Yeoh Guan Seok stepped up as the natural leader. They brought the crew together – Khoo Sian Ewe, MHM Noordin, Dr Ong Huck Chye and more – and decided to set up shop at No. 10 Leith Street.
Come 21st October 1923, the clubhouse officially opened just in time for Penang Free School's 107th birthday bash. A couple of days later, the Old Frees and the school clashed on the football field, the game ending in a 2-2 tie.
In 1932, they shifted to a new place on Hutton Lane, and in 1939, they found a home at No. 2 Mandalay Road. Finally in 1963, they settled at No. 41 Jalan Sultan Ahmad Shah. In 2012, they added a spot in Bay Avenue for Old Frees around that area.
Coming back to the here and now, the OFA Centenary holds more weight than a simple mark on the calendar. It's a nod to an extraordinary accomplishment – not just surviving but thriving over a whole century. The Old Frees' Association has kept those meaningful ties going strong, weaving together Old and Present Frees from all walks of life.
As we toast to a century of rich history, the OFA Centenary also invites a moment of reflection. We raise our hats to the alumni who paved the way, whose vision and dedication have solidified The Old Frees' Association, allowing it to stand tall today. What's more, our shared heritage has given rise to two other official groups – the Old Frees’ Association Kuala Lumpur and Selangor, and The Old Frees’ Association Singapore.
Together, we carry on the Old Frees' spirit, strengthening the connections among the Old and Present Frees, and sparking inspiration for generations to follow. The OFA Centenary serves as a gentle reminder – once a Free, always a Free. The camaraderie and fellowship we cultivated back in the Green Lane days? They're here to stay, no matter where life's path may lead.
So, there you have it – a hundred years of Old Frees' awesomeness! Here's to raising a glass for the OFA Centenary! Hip, hip hooray!! 🎉
Sunday, 13 August 2023
Increasing stamp costs
However, having written a letter, I now had to go to the Post Office to send it out and it was then that I received a big surprise.
For a one-page letter sent by ordinary mail to another part of the peninsula, I was charged RM1.30 for the stamp. Initially, I thought that it was ridiculous. The stamp costing RM1.30? But I had no choice but to pay up. That's how much increasing costs had bumped up the prices at even the postal services. It's not cheap to send letters any more.
#snailmail #letterwriting #postagecosts #stamps #postalservice
Saturday, 12 August 2023
Friday, 11 August 2023
The "new" old Straits Echo building
In the last few weeks, I've noticed that the old Straits Echo building at the junction of Penang Road and Dato Koyah Road has been undergoing restoration. I don't know who is behind it but the splendour of the building is back. After the newspaper closed in the 1980s, it was occupied by the Kayu Nasi Kandar group and for a while, I think there was even an outlet here but it folded rather quickly and the building was then left empty.
To see the building in this sparkling shape today brings some satisfaction although back in the old days when I was working briefly in the Straits Echo, it was far, far from this pristine condition. But at least it was occupied and functioning as a newspaper office. The printing press was at the back of the building and at night, the place was busy with people working, the machines printing and folding the next day's edition, local newsvendors waiting for their supply of the Straits Echo newspaper and vans waiting to collect the newspapers for delivery to places like Taiping, Ipoh and Kuala Lumpur.
As I write about these newspaper vans, I remember that in the mid 1970s when I was studying in Petaling Jaya, these delivery vans were popular modes of transportation for students travelling between Kuala Lumpur and Penang. Come night time in KL, we would go to, if my memory serves me correctly, Jalan Walter Grenier somewhere in Ipoh Road, and wait for these vans to arrive with their newspapers. For a small fee, we'd hop into them for the journey home to Penang, sleeping in them and awaking to stretch our legs whenever the vans stop in the small towns along the way to offload the newspapers. Journey's end for me was at Butterworth where I would then catch the ferry to the island and take the bus back to my home in Seang Tek Road to surprise my folks. Those were the days of carefree living.
#goodolddays #memorylane #reminiscing #nostalgia #retrorides #newspaperdays #studentlife #yesteryear
Wednesday, 9 August 2023
The Wynners breaks up
The only time I had written anything about The Wynners was in 2014. I had mentioned then that "the band never disbanded officially and occasionally, they would re-unite to thrill their old and new fans."
Well, fans of The Wynners will no longer get to see them on stage any more. What we shall be left with are all old videos on YouTube.
Meantime, here is the report in The Malay Mail on their breaking up, which can also be read from their website:
End of an Era: Popular 70s HK band The Wynners officially breaks up
By Sylvia Looi
Tuesday, 08 Aug 2023 12:49 PM MYT
KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 8 ― After five decades, popular 70s Hong Kong band The Wynners has officially disbanded.The announcement was made during their recent concert at Hong Kong Coliseum, yangtse.com reported.
With the announcement, it is official the band, consisting of Kenny Bee (band head, lead vocals, rhythm guitar and keyboards), fellow singer and actor Alan Tam, (co-lead vocals), Bennett Pang (lead guitar), Danny Yip (bass) and Anthony Chan had broken up although they began pursuing solo careers in 1978.
Besides being the longest-living band in the Chinese music scene, The Wynners is also one of the longest-surviving bands in the world music scene.
In conjunction with the band's 50th anniversary in May, Tam had let slip that the concert would be their last performance as a band.
He reportedly said there was an ending to everything and why not do it when every one was still in a good state.
All the members are now in their 70s.
After going on their solo careers in 1978, Bee and Tam went on to become two of the most popular stars in Hong Kong during the 80s.
The group would however reunite on stage every five years to sold-out concerts.
They last performed in Malaysia in February 2020.
Saturday, 5 August 2023
New views with vintage lens
The lens from a time when digital cameras were not yet in vogue. This is the AF Nikkor 80-200mm f4.5-5.6 D lens.
It had been lying in a dry camera box for at least 20 years and I didn't know what to do with it. But finally, I decided to fix it to my son's camera body to find out whether it's true that though the lens was still usable on a digital camera, several functions were disabled.
And this proved quite correct as I couldn't use the auto-focus function at all. On some Nikon cameras, there would be a AF/MF switch but there is none on the D5100. What a bummer!
Instead, I had to search for the focusing ring on the lens which turned out to be a thin ribbed ring at the end of the lens barrel. It was with this setup that I used to take this picture on Thursday morning at 7.10am. The first of two full moons in a month.
PS. The full moon occurred at about 2am on Wednesday but I was fast asleep. And woke up too late to catch a sight of it at six or seven o'clock in the morning. Dunno what I did on Wednesday night to miss the moon too, but luckily I happened to look out my bedroom window at 7am on Thursday and there was the moon hanging low in the sky. So, snap snap snap with the Nikon D5100 and Nikkor 80-200mm lens. Since everything was manual, there was a lot of fiddling with the shutter and aperture controls and the focusing ring. My verdict: must practice more with this setup to get the hang of things.
#NikonD5100 #VintageLens #OldMeetsNew #LensExploration #MoonCapture #LensOnDigital
Wednesday, 2 August 2023
OFA Centenary chess tournament 2023
Friday, 28 July 2023
CENTENARY the book
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| The front and back covers of CENTENARY |
Finally, I am able to disclose the project that I've been working on during these past few months. And ta-dah....these are the front and back covers of CENTENARY, my latest book, which is about the history of The Old Frees' Association which celebrates its 100th anniversary in 1923.
To me, this project was the third of a trilogy of books, a continuation of my work which began in November 2011 soon after the OFA annual dinner in October. At that fateful dinner, I was asked to co-edit a coffeetable book for The Old Frees' Association called FIDELIS. I had various areas to look into and one of them was to touch on the Association's history.At that time, there was barely four months for us to put FIDELIS together because at the end of March 2012, there was an official function to announce Penang Free School's Bicentenary celebrations in 2016. The highlight of that function was the unveiling of FIDELIS by the Raja of Perlis.
Despite its triumphant unveiling, I felt that FIDELIS was inadequate in covering the rich histories of Penang Free School and The Old Frees' Association. I mean, how much could be uncovered in four mere months? The actual research and writing probably took only two months; the rest of the time was allocated to proofreading and the printing process.Soon after FIDELIS, I was tasked with coming out with a book on Penang Free School. For that book, I had the comfort of time to research and write. In fact, I took 30 months to complete all that and everything that appeared in LET THE AISLES PROCLAIM was the result of my time well spent. LET THE AISLES PROCLAIM was unveiled by the Raja of Perlis in a glittering ceremony in the school field on 21 October 2016 amidst a 5,000-strong crowd of Old Frees.
LET THE AISLES PROCLAIM provided readers with a very comprehensive history of Penang Free School and needless to say, I was immensely proud of my magnum opus, all 360 pages of it. But I still regarded my work as unfinished. There was still the part in FIDELIS on the history of The Old Frees' Association which was much in wanting.
The opportunity came with The Old Frees' Association's 100th anniversary celebrations. Another book project, this time on the Association's history. So this was the opportunity for me to do real research and basically, go over all my old notes from seven or eight years earlier.This book, CENTENARY, is the result of the last 12 months' full work. This morning, I received the sign-off from both the President of The Old Frees' Association and the Chairman of the OFA Centenary Celebrations Committee, and with their sign-offs the book is ready to go to the printers. We shall have it ready by 21 October 2023.
Monday, 24 July 2023
Big Dragon Project
This story has been late in writing. Originally, I wanted to write it in April after Ding Liren had won the world chess championship, making him the first-ever male player from China to become the world chess champion. Something had stopped me from writing then. Anyway, I've now decided to do something with Ding's historical win and what better way to begin than from the beginning?
Have you heard of the Big Dragon Project? No? Well, it wasn't a complete secret to begin with. Some people in the chess circle knew about it but as it did not involve them directly, they just didn't care much for it. Not until Ding became the world chess champion. But I've seen it happen, from almost the start of it.
After Ding's win, some foreign journalists became intrigued when they heard about a Big Dragon Project in China. Just about two to three weeks ago, I was contacted by a journalist asking for information, which I have given him. But I thought that I should also publicise it here on my blog for the greater good. So here goes! (I should mention that the version which I gave the journalist was mainly re-written. But this is my original version.)
#BigDragonProject #chesshistory #chinachess #chessdiplomacyIn 1974, Tan Chin Nam was elected as the first president of the Malaysian Chess Federation. He was already a very successful businessman in his own right, a big-time property developer. However in chess, he was a complete newbie but one willing to immerse himself into a totally new world.
Myself playing chess with Dato' Tan Chin Nam in 2014 Settling down into this new role, he got to know Dr Lim Kok Ann (Singapore) who in turn introduced him to Florencio Campomanes (Philippines) and other chess presidents from around the Asian region. As part of his scheme to revitalise chess in Malaysia, he agreed to organise the first Asian Team Chess Championship in Penang, Malaysia. It was also the 50th anniversary of the World Chess Federation and somehow, he invited FIDE to hold their FIDE Congress to Penang. So in December 1974, both the FIDE Congress and the first Asian Team Chess Championship were both held at the same time in Penang.
By Tan Chin Nam's assertion, the Big Dragon Project was hatched in December 1974 by Dr Lim Kok Ann, Florencio Campomanes and Yasuji Matsumoto (Japan) and him. He invited the Chinese Chess Association to send observers to the FIDE Congress Penang but instead, two officials from the Chinese Embassy in Kuala Lumpur turned up. On the sidelines of the FIDE Congress, the first meeting of Asian chess presidents took place. As a chessplayer representing Malaysia in that Asian Team chess championship, I remember seeing the Chinese officials arrive for meetings at the Merlin Hotel in Penang. (That old Merlin Hotel is now the City Bayview Hotel.)
The idea behind the Big Dragon Project was simple. An Asian country was selected as trailblazer to narrow the gap in chess technique and knowledge between Asia on one side and Soviet Union, Europe and North America on the other side. India could have been selected but the country sided with the Philippines, Indonesia and Singapore to give the opportunity to China with its bigger population and thus, potential.
On the coat tail of a successful Asian team championship in Penang, Tan Chin Nam convinced FIDE to accept the Chinese Chess Association as a member in 1975. I believe that more than anything else, China's entry into the world chess fraternity helped that country to open themselves up to the rest of the world in every aspect. It was even more significant than the American ping-pong diplomacy in 1971. A very grateful Chinese Chess Association subsequently invited the Malaysian Chess Federation to send an official delegation to visit their country in April 1978. Again, I was in the thick of it as a player.
So the Big Dragon Project was launched with China. It was all about creating a great Asian chess power by raising their level of play and then producing grandmasters. As far back as 1974 or 1975, the objective was to make China the destination for future world chess titles. The strategy would start with the Chinese women players. First, they challenged for the women's individual world title, and then for the women's Olympiad team title. The Chinese men would then follow in the same order in due course.
As a multi-millionaire, Tan Chin Nam was able to throw a lot of his own resources into the project. However, nothing came easy. For the Chinese women, for example, it took 13 years after China's men's team's debut appearance in the Bueno Aires Chess Olympiad in 1978. Who could ever forget international master Liu Wenzhe's demolition of grandmaster Jan Donner in a sparkling brilliancy when China met Holland at the Chess Olympiad?
He financed a united Asian chess team with two players from China and one each from India and the Philippines to play a match with Yugoslavia in 1984. In 1985 he paid for Chinese participants to play in a zonal championship. Next, sponsorship of the First Beijing Chess Open in 1988, followed by funding the Tan Chin Nam Cup for seven years beginning 1995. In 2002, the Tan Chin Nam International Open attracted 22 foreign grandmasters to China.
Also important was purchasing chess books, computers and research materials, as well as sponsoring two chess study trips to Europe for top Chinese players in 1996 amd 1997.
The first big breakthrough came in 1990 when Xie Jun qualified to challenge Maia Chiburdanidze, women's world champion from the Soviet Union since 1978. In October 1991, Xie Jun defeated Chiburdanidze in Manila and ended a 41-year monopoly by the Soviet Union and a 64-year reign by European champions. At that moment when it happened, I was in Genting Highlands for an Asian Cities Team Championship. We were elated and felt very happy for Asian chess. I initiated a congratulatory postcard for Xie Jun, signed by many players and officials in Genting.
The next breakthrough came at the 1998 World Chess Olympiad when the Chinese women's team captured the gold medal and affirmed themselves as the new dominant powers in women's chess. The progress of the Chinese male players has been slower due to the greater competition among male chess players, but the struggle was still there for everyone to see. It must have been some 20 years since The Big Dragon Project ended but nevertheless, China continues to progress on their own momentum. The pinnacle of their success came this year with their grandmaster, Ding Liren, becoming the first world chess champion from China.
All these would not be possible without the financial resources from Tan Chin Nam. But before anyone started accusing him of favouring chess in China before promoting the interests of Malaysian chess, he had made it very clear that the Big Dragon Project was nothing about chauvinism. In his own words, he said that it was, and it remained, a helping hand on his part to "promote excellence and to hammer out multi-national intellectual friendships on the anvil of honest competition."
Sunday, 23 July 2023
A pani puri treat
My wife and I made a short three-day, two-night trip to KL. Took the eight o'clock ETS train that arrived almost on the dot at KL Sentral. I wonder when will KTM get to finish upgrading their dual tracks from the Sungai Buloh station to KL Sentral? It takes so long to travel between these two points on the usable single track. As nobody's actually complaining seriously, KTM is taking their own sweet time to finish this task and in the meantime, the passengers have to endure stopping for what seemed like ages at the stations and moving at a pace not reflective of their electric train service. C'mon, KTM, buck up!
Anyway, the first thing we did was to search for food. With Sushi Tei having closed their outlet at Nu Sentral, we decided to walk Jalan Tun Sambanthan to find this restaurant known as Mr Naan and Mrs Idly. We've been here before, a good four years ago, and we wondered whether they'd still be around post-Covid. Found the restaurant still surviving with lots of patrons. Food is good. I guess good food will always attract the crowd. The wall decorations were still there although they were getting faded.Ever since about two years ago, I discovered the joy of eating pani puri; those little round balls that you fill with potato masala and accompanying condiments before popping the whole ball into the mouth. Lately however, I haven't been able to find the old man selling this at the China Street-Queen Street road junction in Penang.
So imagine our joy to find pani puri on the menu of this restaurant in Brickfields. No hesitation ordering a set which came with seven pani puri balls, a serving of potato masala, some chopped raw onions (not visible in the picture) and a sweet sourish sauce.The highlight, however, was a serving of a chilled mint rasam. The moment we popped a pani puri ball into the mouth, the different flavours simply exploded. An experience quite unlike other pani puri that we've taken before. Just writing about it makes me feel like going back to KL for another treat.
Tuesday, 18 July 2023
Kutub Khanah Tunku
Using the Kutub Khanah Tunku as the venue for the first day of our eighth student leadership workshop last Sunday brought back some memories of 1969. Not the bad memories of the racial violence in May that year but the good memories of December. The Kutub Khanah Tunku was opened by the first Prime Minister, Tunku Abdul Rahman, on 29 December 1969. As Prime Minister, he had requested the Federal Government to approve a $100,000 grant towards its construction.
I had written this about the Kutub Khanah Tunku in my book, Let the Aisles Proclaim some seven years ago:
At the School’s Speech Day on 21st October 1967, the Minister of Education, Mohamed Khir Johari, announced that the Prime Minister, Tunku Abdul Rahman, would approve a grant of $100,000 from the Central Government towards the Library Fund. (1) Subsequently, the Tunku visited the School on 17th November to choose a suitable site for the library. Showing great personal interest in the project, he requested the State Engineer to submit a few sketches to him for consideration. (2) On 5th February 1968, the Prime Minister made a second visit to the School whereupon he handed over a cheque of $100,000 to the Chairman of the Board of Governors (3) and in March, the sketch plans were forwarded to the Tunku for his approval. (4) The plan for the new Library would include two conference rooms and two reading rooms, both air-conditioned. (5) As the cost of construction was estimated at about $160,000 by the Jabatan Kerja Raya while the balance in the Development Fund was about $148,000, the School formed a Library Committee to look into raising an additional $40,000 to meet the shortfall and other anticipated expenditure.
References:
(1) The Straits Times, 22nd October 1967
(2) Minutes of Board of Governors Meeting on 17th November 1967
(3) (October 1968). Penang Free School Magazine (Vol. 5 No. 2)
(4) Minutes of Board of Governors Meeting on 15th March 1968
(5) Minutes of Board of Governors Meeting on 27th September 1968
I remember going to the Library on the 28th, the eve of its official opening, when word got around that the Tunku would visit the place for a preview. True enough, he did turn up at about noon on the 28th of December and we, the schoolboys, milled around him. If there were bodyguards, they didn't make their presence felt or seen. We could approach Tunku from anywhere and asked him questions. He spoke to us about his time at Penang Free School, then located in Farquhar Street, from 1916 till 1919. He gave us some well-meaning advice on our studies and our future. Several days later, I started my Form Five.
Kutub Khanah is a very formal, scholarly Malay term to mean Library. Sometime in the 1990s or 2000s, some wisecrack decided to rename the building as Perpustakaan Tunku, which didn't go down well with many Old Boys. Tampering with the name amounted to tampering with a school value. When 2016 rolled in, the Bicentenary celebrations committee took the opportunity to rename the Library back to its original form, Kutub Khanah Tunku.
Here are a few pictures of the Library's official opening by Tunku Abdul Rahman on 29 December 1969. Also present at the ceremony was Dr Lim Chong Eu, an Old Free who became Penang's second Chief Minister a few months earlier.
Monday, 17 July 2023
Eighth student leadership workshop
The first weekend of this academic year's student leadership workshop for the Fourth Formers of Penang Free School is over. My friends and I held it over the last weekend, and I must say that we are satisfied with the quality of the boys that attended the workshop. This is the eighth workshop that we have organised since 2017 and every time, we see fresh faces attend, initially feeling guarded over their expectations of us but by the end of the second day, all their inhibitions are gone.
We always start each day by asking them to sing the School Rally, usually more than once in order to get the participants more animated. By the end of the second day when I asked them to sing again, I could detect a different lift in their voices.
For this edition of the workshop, we we forced to seek an alternative venue for the first day. Our normal venue was the Pinhorn Hall, but on Saturday it was used for the MUET examinations. As such, we chose the Kutub Khanah Tunku instead. On the upper floor was a conveniently-sized conference croom to accommodate all of us. Sunday's session was back to the Pinhorn Hall although the boys had to put in an extra effort to clear the space of the examination tables and chairs first.
I arrived a little late on Sunday to find that the workshop had moved to the stage. Using the huge projector screen was a welcome change For once, our presentation materials were large enough for all to see. But there was a distinct disadvantage for me on a personal level. Every time I mounted the steps, I had to walk gingerly and mind where I was to place my foot next. No more bounding up and down quickly.
These pictures below tell the story of the boys' activities over the weekend. Apart from Loh Lean Kang and I, we were assisted by Sue Chan, SK Cheng and Benjamin Aw. Hue Yan Tatt, Malik and Danish from last year's batch, helped out on Sunday.. The second weekend of this workshop will be on 19th and 20th August.

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| Picture by Chan Sue Hay |
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| Picture by Chan Sue Hay |
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| Picture by Chan Sue Hay |
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| Picture by Chan Sue Hay |

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