+852 27135268

Blog

Reminiscence of Ha Kao – Thomas Liang (66)

Reminiscence of Ha Hao (Jimmy Lowcock)

 
This ia a re-sent of my email of 2nd January 2012. An additional photo of Ha Kao with Alan Lam, Robert Chan and myself taken at his birthday gathering on 3rd December 2011 is attached.

The last time I saw Ha Kao was on Saturday, 3rd December 2011 when we had our usual annual gathering to celebrate his birthday at the Kowloon Tong Club. We were talking about horseracing and as he was in a jolly mood, I gave him three tips for the next day which he said he would bet $10 each on a 3×7 win combination. My tips drew a blank on Sunday and now I will never have a chance to make it up to him.

 During his tenure as headmaster from 1961 to 1983, he had an influence on so many students, each in their own individual ways that Ha Hao was many things to many persons. To me, he was a headmaster who had just caned you and the rest of the class for some mischievous deed that someone in the class had done but didn’t bothered to own up and still made you felt that he had done the right thing! With his typical sardonic grin, he subtly let loosed a gentle hint of his admiration for the class for sticking together for its own and bite the bullet head on rather than snitching on the culprit.

  He let you formed a fencing club and school fencing team without asking too many questions when only a handful of students was interested in what was then an obscure sport in Hong Kong and we later came First and Second in the inaugural  interschool fencing tournament.

 He had a knack of providing you with fresh and interesting perspective of things to stimulate you thoughts. Come to think of it, he was teaching us lateral thinking way before it became popular to do so.

 He introduced you to Jazz music and let you loafed around in his study at the headmaster’s house on lazy Saturday afternoons listening to all his records. Among his favourite were the Modern Jazz Quartet and the Dave Brubeck Quartet which I listened all night on the day of his passing.

Ha Kao had a unique influence on me during my boarding years at DBS from 1961 to1967. There were many good memories and he will be sorely missed.

 

Thomas Liang

Class of ’66

31st January 2012

Read More

The Headmaster’s House – Peter Kwok (65)

In Memory of Mr. Sidney James Lowcock – the Headmaster’s House

Where was that special “classroom” in which extra lessons were taught and learned on Hill Kadoorie?   The Headmaster’s House.

The House had served different headmasters through the years.   For my years, it was Mr. Sidney James Lowcock.   There could be many reasons why Mr. Lowcock had chosen to continue with the tradition.   One of the reasons could be that he preferred to be close to the school and his students.   After all, it was only a pleasant few minutes walk to school each morning across the field, a good warm-up with a healthy pre-load of fresh air for a long day at the office.   However, the more important reason perhaps was: Mr. Lowcock wanted to make himself and his 2-story old house accessible.

To me, Mr. Lowcock had made our headmaster’s house an integral part of our campus on Hill Kadoorie.   I may have learned my academics in many different classrooms in the main school building, my practical skills in the laboratories in the New Wing, and experienced that added dimension of school life on stage in the Assembly Hall with the orchestras.   However, when I became a boarder in my U6 year, my horizon widened.   As a senior boarder, hence free from all lights-out restrictions, I was able to stay at the headmaster’s house until late.   It was there, given those additional after-school hours, through the many days and nights in my Upper 6 year, that I was privileged to both know Mr. Lowcock better and above all, learn about my “self” much more.  

DBS had been known for offering a rounded education to its students.   Being active on the music-arm in our DBS tradition, I thought I was “rounded”, meeting the challenges in time-management between the demands from academics and extracurricular activities.  Little did I know that to be “rounded” in music, I needed to open up my tunnel vision, extend my understanding and involvement in music beyond the classical.   Still could remember how captivated I was when first introduced to jazz by Mr. Lowcock, listening to the body-moving, finger-snapping sounds by MJQ, the Modern Jazz Quartet.  Mr. Lowcock was holding a drink in his hand, with his body gently swaying to the rhythm and the syncopated thumps of the double bass.     “That’s the way to enjoy music!” I said to myself that night.   Not body-stiff, neck-tied and sitting still in the etiquette-laden concert hall!    I was amazed by the fact that despite being called “Modern”, the jazz group actually followed such old classic musical forms as baroque counterpoints, something I was familiar with and could therefore appreciate the new sound almost immediately.   At that moment, the boundary between the almost aristocratic classical music and the people-friendly music, such as jazz, began to blur; the wall separating them began to tumble as I began to realize the more important purpose and true meaning of music.   I finally unlearned my biases, and thereupon became open to question the meanings of not only music in particular, but also life in general.   It was Mr. Lowcock who had shown me the way, just as he had enlightened many others, both before and after me.

Mr. Lowcock had made his residence into an open “class room”, an extension from the main school across the field.   During his years, Mr. Lowcock had made his house an “open” facility, a “House of Discoveries” for all who came through the door.   The Prefects, the boarders, the day-boys, our school’s budding artists, painters, achieving athletes and the musically inclined… each would have his own unique encounter and story to tell.   David Sung (Class’65), my Upper 6 roommate, had told his.   It was also where my other artistically gifted roommate, late Victor Yeung Charn-hung, was finally able to verbalize his deep-seated fear of the unknown and uncertainties, in dealing with his health and financial problems as he contemplated on applying for college in the US.   Mr. Lowcock challenged Victor with more than a token stipend, but more importantly also with a lesson to learn in successfully completing a project.    So night after night, Victor would disappear from our dorm room, working overtime on his project when our remaining days on Hill Kadoorie were numbered.  There were times he hinted he could not make it, but he also expressed how important it was for him to start and be able to finish the project.   He eventually overcame his self-doubts and went on to finish his drawings of our headmasters’ portraits, now lining up the walls of our Assembly Hall.  [To this date, I still ponder what pain and sufferings he must have gone through after his DBS days before he finally took his own life.]

 

The headmaster’s house was a popular haven where we were encouraged to not only challenge the established with courage and determination, but also our self.  In the process, many would discover our own “self”… in our innocent nonage.  Mr. Lowcock made it happen.

…………………………………………

Headful of memorable flashbacks
Heartful of deep gratitude
Heavy indebtedness

Mr. Lowcock, thank you for being there
You touched and changed my life
You gave me my first instrument


[My first verse from “Joy in Heaven” (with attached mp3 audio track), a parody on Eric Clapton’s “Tears in Heaven”:
]

You would know our names
If we saw you in heaven
It would be the same
If we saw you in heaven…

We must be strong
And carry on
’cause I know
How you would have
Joy in heaven…

Good-bye, Jimmy…
One of your many who had received,
Peter Kwok, (Class ’65)

..

Read More

Do the Right Thing – Kenneth Wan (62)

Headmaster S.J. Lowcock – R.I.P.

 

Headmaster S.J. Lowcock had inspired me to become who and what I am today.

 

The pivotal point, where I changed my behavioral view in life, transpired from a single incident that happened to me in Form 4, the year Mr. Lowcock became the Headmaster.  Joseph Chou, my best friend since our DPS days and my partner-in-mischief, and I were ordered to the Headmaster Office during a Mandarin class taught by Mr. T.C. Chang (Mandarin Lo).  We were there because Mandarin Lo had noticed paper balls were flying across the aisles while he was writing on the board, and we became the prime suspects, even though there were other culprits.

 

Lowcock (as he was frequently referred to, besides Har Gau Lo) was surprised to see us at his office.  We were considered two of his favorite students after all, being quite athletic and religious.  Nevertheless, before he would meter the punishment, he said to us, “Do the right thing.  Admit that you were throwing paper balls, and that it was the wrong behavior to do in a classroom.”  In my heart, I thought Lowcock needed to hear a confession from us first, as a principle, before he would carry out the punishment.  However, by telling us to “Do The Right Thing”, it immediately trumped over all other feelings and excuses that we might have had at that time.  We both confessed, thereby relieving other offenders from being called to the carpet.  Ten canes later, we obviously felt the pain, but more critically, we felt a lot more at peace and renewed, knowing that we had done the right thing by confessing and by owning up to our (mis)deed.

 

From that day on, “Do The Right Thing” became my conscience and my guide in life.  Joseph Chou eventually excelled academically in DBS.  But his life was cut short soon after he entered HKU.  To this day, I still reminisce our time together in DBS.   Meanwhile, I continued to participate in sports.  “Do The Right Thing” rewarded me once again the year I became the school swimming team captain in 1961 -– In order to maximize our total points in the Inter-School Swimming Competition, I volunteered to enter a vacant slot in the Butterfly event that no other team members could or wished to participate.  Even though Butterfly was my weakest style, I did not want to give up the opportunity to increase our total team points.  I wanted to do the right thing.  Not surprisingly, I came in last, but I gained a point to the overall score for the team, and solidified our Inter-School Championship that year.  I still treasure the victory and the award ceremony to this day.

  

 

Headmaster Lowcock continued to be my mentor and advisor after I entered the business world.  When I wanted to marry the love of my life, he would “Do The Right Thing” for us and walked my bride down the aisle at our wedding because her father was not able to make it.  For that, Juliana and I are forever grateful to Headmaster Lowcock, especially when we celebrate our 50th anniversary in two years. 

 

 

 

For us, “Do The Right Thing” continues to inspire and guide us in cultivating team spirit and having a clear conscience on things we do in our daily life.  Juliana and I are very saddened by Headmaster Lowcock’s sudden departure.  We had looked forward so much to seeing him at our ’62 Class Reunions (DBS and Pooi-To Girls’ School) this year.  We shall miss Headmaster S.J. Lowcock dearly.  May he rest in peace.

 

Kenneth Wan, Class of 1962

Lt. Governor (retired)

New York State District, U.S.A.

Kiwanis International

Email Address:  kenwan888@hotmail.com

 

February 2, 2012

 

Read More

Dinner talk by Maurice Siu (89)

29-Feb-2012

<photo gallery>

<download flyer>

Read More
    wpChatIcon