Kylie Walker: at the top of her game
Transcription
Kylie Walker: at the top of her game
Etcetera Number 11 Spring 2010 The magazine for former pupils and friends of Glasgow Academy and Westbourne School Kylie Walker: at the top of her game Editorial The First Eleven... The External Relations office at Glasgow Academy first saw the light of day four years ago. Actually, to suggest that it ‘saw the light of day’ is something of an exaggeration given that its original location was adjacent to the janitors’ ‘dunny’ in the basement of the Main Building – a place which would be in perpetual gloom were it not for the odd electric light bulb. There were two of us – Karen and I – and our task was simple: to improve communications between The Academy and outside groups that might reasonably expect to be kept informed about the school. We reckoned that one of the most important (and arguably one of the most neglected) of these groups was that of former pupils. We needed some regular means of communication that would attempt to represent the whole former pupil body (Westbourne too!) and keep people informed about what was going on. We needed something that would contain all the sport that people wanted to write about, but that also had room to include art and business and memories and events and... everything else that mattered. And so Etcetera was born. The name seemed appropriate as a catch-all for all the ‘stuff’ that former pupils and friends of The Academy may want to contribute. Now, just a few short years later, we have reached number 11. The first edition struggled to fill 16 pages: now we work hard to ensure that we don’t exceed twice that number. Occasionally I hear from people who feel that there’s not enough of one thing or another. My answer is always the same: if you would like to write something for Etcetera, I would be delighted to include it. Contents 3 Glasgow Academy Bursary Fund Regular Giving 4 ‘Something a little bit special’ 6 Business Etcetera 11 Westbourne School Section 13 Academical Club News 16 Events 18 Memories 24 Announcements 31 From our own correspondents 32 The next step on the road to realising our 2020 Vision Stop Press! Many congratulations to Johnnie Beattie (2003) on being named 'Man of the Match' in the Calcutta Cup game at Murrayfield on 13 March. It’s your magazine. In this edition – as in every edition – thank you for your contributions. With best wishes Do we have your e-mail address? It’s how we communicate best! Malcolm McNaught, Director of External Relations, m.mcnaught@tga.org.uk Keeping in touch Cover photo: Kylie Walker at Loch Lomond Golf Club (photo by Colin Gray www.colingray.net mobile: 07901 826254) Sponsor Etcetera Etcetera is now firmly-established as a quality publication, hugely popular with our community and delivered free, three times a year, to all Academy and Westbourne former pupils. The magazine is sent to 5000 homes worldwide and to over 4000 homes in Scotland! Would you or your firm like to reach the Etcetera readership through advertising or sponsorship? To find out more about this unique opportunity, please contact Mark.Taylor@rga.org.uk 0141 342 5494 2 Etcetera The External Relations office is situated in Colebrooke Terrace. Former pupils are always welcome to pop in and have a chat. Just give us a call to arrange a time. Our address is Colebrooke Terrace, Glasgow G12 8HE and you can contact us on 0141 342 5494 or at exrel@tga.org.uk The Glasgow Academical Club, 21 Helensburgh Drive, Glasgow G13 1RR President – Jimmy McCulloch E-mail: james.mcculloch@speirsjeffrey.co.uk Secretary – Kenneth Shand Tel: 0141 248 5011 E-mail: kenneth.shand@mms.co.uk The Academical Club pavilion is available for functions. Please contact Ken Barron at k.barron@tga.org.uk for details. Academical Club’s London Section Secretary – David Hall, 20 Cadogan Place London SW1X 9SA Tel: 020 7235 9012 E-mail: ecj@aralon.co.uk Glasgow Academy Bursary Fund I was born in July 1940, two months after my father was killed in the defence of the Dunkirk perimeter. My parents had been married for just over two years and my father had taken over management of the family coopering business a couple of years earlier. Wartime was not a good period for making and repairing whisky casks. The prospects for my education looked grim! Fortunately, my father had attended Glasgow Academy before completing his education at Sedburgh. With the support of the War Memorial Trust, I entered the Academy in 1947 and from then until 1958 the cost of my education was largely taken care of by the Trust. From school I went on to qualify as a chartered accountant and have had a subsequently rewarding career in merchant banking, as Legal Services Ombudsman for Scotland, and now as a nonexecutive director. I will always be grateful to the Trust and to the school for the start that it gave me in life. The Glasgow Academy is a now a very different school from the one I left in 1958. It has seized its opportunities and provides an impressive experience in terms of activities that could not be dreamt of at that time. Thankfully, there will be few demands like that of mine in 1947, but its capacity to provide Bursaries to those who would not otherwise be able to afford its fees will enrich the lives of those who benefit from them and the school as a whole. I hope that members of the Academy family will continue to give the Bursary Fund their generous support. Garry S Watson OBE (1958) I grew up on a Council housing estate near Glasgow. After spending one year at my local comprehensive, my parents felt I wasn’t being challenged and I was fortunate to be awarded a Bursary to join The Academy in 1989. This changed the course of my life. For the first few months, it was a complete culture shock and I was utterly miserable. I had left my old life and my friends behind, the workload was demanding and I faced a long journey to school by bus, train, and underground. The discipline was alien to me and I stuck out like a sore thumb as the only pupil wearing a uniform in my neighbourhood. However, The Academy served to broaden my narrow horizons and gave me opportunities that I would never otherwise have had. I was not only stretched intellectually, I was encouraged to become a more rounded individual through participation in team sports, CCF, Arts and Crafts, the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award scheme and in many other ways. The Academy taught me selfdiscipline, self-belief and respect for others and I’m proud to be part of The Academy family. However, without a doubt, the most important legacy for me is the friendships I formed at school. My school friends are my friends for life. Richard Munday (1994) Regular Giving 2009-10 Thank you to all those who have already supported this year’s appeal since its launch in November. This year we are focusing on Bursaries because in the downturn the demand for help with fees has been greater than ever. Currently, over 100 pupils receive fee support and requests for Bursaries – many from existing Academy parents – have increased significantly in the last 18 months. For generations, The Academy has supported talented youngsters whose parents need help with fees. Donations from members of our community help to ensure we can continue to give talented youngsters an excellent all-round education at the school. Thank you again to all those who have already ensured our 2009-2010 appeal has got off to a sound start. If you would like more information on giving to Bursaries, please don’t hesitate to get in touch. Mark Mark.Taylor@tga.org.uk 0141 342 5494 Etcetera 3 ‘Something a little bit special...’ Following her success at the European Ladies’ Tour School in December, Kylie Walker recently returned to the scene of her first golfing triumph as an amateur – the beautiful Loch Lomond Golf Club – where she won the Faldo Junior Series in 2000. There Malcolm McNaught met her to discuss her golfing career to date and what she feels about her old school. As a teacher, you remember some of your pupils really clearly. Perhaps because I taught poor Kylie Walker for three years in a row, I remember vividly how much she hated talking to an audience. But – as we meet in the opulent surroundings of Loch Lomond Golf Club Spa – Kylie is every inch the assured professional sportswoman, parrying difficult questions with the easy diplomacy of someone twice her age and showing a mastery of her subject that suggests she has been playing golf for ever. By the time you read these words, Kylie will be half-way round the world playing in her third professional golf tournament on the women’s tour. But her route to the top ranks of the game has not been a conventional one and it certainly has not been without incident. In an era when sports men and women seem to be fashioned for greatness from their earliest days, Kylie breaks all the rules. While Tiger Woods was playing golf almost as soon as he could stand, Kylie was a schoolgirl of 14 before she exchanged a hockey stick for a golf club. ‘Almost immediately I knew golf was the sport I wanted to play. But I also knew I couldn’t play both golf and hockey: with Academy hockey matches on Saturdays and club hockey on Sundays, I was struggling to find time even to practise golf. And my hockey swing affected my golf swing and vice versa.’ For a dedicated hockey player, it was a real moment of crisis. Both Glasgow Academy – and Kylie herself – needed to be convinced that golf was the sport for her. The school’s policy was that only internationalists or those with the potential to become internationalists should be excused team games on Saturday mornings. A naturally modest and eminently likeable girl, Kylie has never been one to get ahead of herself so when people 4 Etcetera began to say that she had a real talent for golf she took quite a bit of convincing. But the experience of winning the Scottish Schools Championship less than two years after she picked up a golf club changed all that. At that time she played off a handicap of 7 so when she completed Glasgow’s Hilton Park course in 4 under par – eleven shots better than expected – even Kylie said, ‘Okay, maybe I have something a little bit special.’ Even The Academy had to agree – something for which Kylie is still grateful. ‘Towards the end of my school time, I was playing golf more and more, representing Scotland and so on – and as long as I showed them exactly what I would be missing, they were great. On Games days when the girls were playing hockey, my mum and dad would pick me up and take me to coaching sessions in Lanark. I’m really grateful that I got the chance to do that.’ And Kylie’s dedication paid off as she improved phenomenally quickly. ‘When I was 14 years old, my handicap went from 28 to 12 in one season. The next season it went from 12 down to 5 and from 5 to 1 the season after that.’ Not surprisingly, progress in shaving further strokes from her handicap has been slower since then, but her last amateur handicap of +4 tells its own story. It is clear that Kylie loves her sport and relishes competition. When she first started at The Academy, swimming was her thing. Although she learned to swim only when she was seven, she took to it like a fish to water and swam competitively for Milngavie and Bearsden Swimming Club, training in the mornings four or five times a week until schoolwork and her new love – hockey – made that degree of commitment impossible to sustain. A legacy of all those early mornings in the pool is the upper arm strength that allows her to launch a golf ball over 270 yards, the kind of distance that most men can only dream of. After The Academy she went off to Stirling University on a sports scholarship. Improving her golf was the main reason for Kylie being there, however, and when she began to struggle with tiredness she assumed her fitness was the problem and tried to work-out more. Fortunately her doctor at the Scottish Sports Institute quickly diagnosed post viral fatigue syndrome and she was told to rest. ‘It wasn’t stress because I don’t do stress. I think I was just overdoing things. I wanted to be too good too quickly and I was working on every aspect of my game.’ It was ironic that the girl who loved the game and was so dedicated to improvement had to take an enforced break right at the beginning of a golf season that promised so much. She withdrew from all her tournament commitments for the next few months. ‘It was probably a year before I fully recovered... It wasn’t a great experience at the time but in a way it was really important for me to learn from and I’m so glad it happened then, right at the start of my career. Now, when I’m travelling all over the world, it’s taught me about the importance of sleep and I’m careful to get the rest I need.’ Inevitably the lack of practice took its toll. ‘For about two years I was playing really poorly and that was quite difficult to deal with too. I was getting quite angry and frustrated...’ Given that she’s so dedicated to improvement, you might expect her to be bitter about all the time she lost. But that’s very far from the case. ‘When I was 14 or 15 there were so many girls I knew younger than me who’d been playing for years. They were so much better and I used to wish I had been playing golf for longer. But, looking back, I’m so glad with the albatross of expectation that the media usually hang round the neck of past winners. Going into the last round two shots in the lead with two very experienced girls in the final group was a real test of her nerve. ‘There was a bit of added pressure but I felt so relaxed because I really love St Andrews. Coming down the last hole there were big crowds because everyone had come out to see the finish. But I knew what I had to do and I’m really proud that I kept cool and did it.’ Now that she’s turned professional, she is debarred from defending the Trophy – but that doesn’t worry her. The reason for that is her recent experience at La Manga in Spain when she came through a field of several hundred players to qualify as a professional on the Ladies’ European Tour. It’s her second go at tour school and, typically, she’s glad she didn’t make it first time. ‘I’ve learned so much in the last year.’ Part of the reason for her success this time is that her brother, Kris, was on the bag. ‘He has such a great attitude. He’s so laid back and knows exactly the right thing to say at any given moment. We have a great laugh.’ Kris, who has been working as a lawyer in Dubai for a number of years, may have to take a bit of a career break as his little sister’s career takes off. Photo: Colin Gray that I started when I did. I’d had my swimming, I’d played hockey with a team, I’d done everything that normal 15-year-olds do. But if it had just been golf, golf, golf I would probably have burned myself out. If I had children, I wouldn’t hothouse them in a sport. I see too many girls whose parents push them too hard go off the rails – you know, drugs and that kind of thing. Like the Brittney Speirs kind of scenario where they haven’t had the childhood they should have had and now they’re craving it.’ repay them for all they have given me. Mum and dad sent me to such a good school too – one that gave me confidence. The Academy throws you in and forces you to be outgoing and prepares you for important things like manners. I’m not a public speaker but I’m quite comfortable speaking about the things I know most about: golf – and, well – me!’ The golfing world really started to sit up and take notice after Kylie successfully defended the St Rule Trophy last year at the home of golf, St Andrews. The Trophy is one of Indeed we all know of child prodigies who have grown up and one day they the biggest open tournaments in blame their parents for denying them a women’s amateur golf but, the way normal upbringing. By contrast, she describes it, her first win in 2008 Kylie’s relationship with her parents, sounds a bit like a stroke (or two) of Raymond and Elizabeth, couldn’t be luck. Last June as defending champion stronger. ‘My parents have always she should have been under enormous been so supportive of me and I want to pressure, especially weighed down Does she worry about handling the extra pressure? ‘I can’t think about the money, the crowd or anything else. I can’t control the other players. All I can control is me. My reactions, my emotions and so on. I just go out there to enjoy it and to win...’ It’s clear that Kylie has and is ‘something just a little bit special’ and is a credit to her parents and her school. In the cut and thrust world of professional sport how many others would identify ‘manners’ as being important? A bit like the Arizona desert, the world of professional golf is littered with the skeletons of promising amateurs who haven’t made the grade. With her formidable work ethic, her sense of what’s important and her refusal to take life too seriously, the chances are that Kylie Walker won’t be one of them. Etcetera 5 Business Etcetera Forget the recession! With 14 million theatre-goers in 2009, London’s West End has just had its most successful year on record. And over the years Academical theatre producer Colin Ingram has been responsible for some of the West End’s most successful shows – like Les Miserables, The Lion King, Oklahoma and Billy Elliot. We caught up with Colin and asked him to describe the journey from the West End of Glasgow to the West End of London... 14 million customers can’t be wrong... What subject would you like to have studied at school that wasn’t on the curriculum? I hear that they’ve just introduced Drama into the curriculum at Glasgow Academy. How I wish Drama had been a subject when I was there! Was it always your intention to get involved in the theatre? No, my intention was to follow my dad’s footsteps and become an architect. It was only when we took trips to the West End as a family and I started getting involved in the school plays that I got interested in theatre and started to understand it. None of my family were involved in theatre, but all liked musicals, apart from my brother, Alastair, who is an Academical and ran the stage lighting at school (which I followed him into). Were there any moments at Glasgow Academy when you realised that this was what you wanted to do? A lot of my early interest was in lighting and set design (perhaps linked to my interest in architecture), and I was very much encouraged by Mr Gregor Anderson who was very influential throughout my school career. My interest in writing and directing followed when I wrote a couple of scenes for the School Pantomime. Some were official (i.e. I had cleared them with Mr Grey, the Master in charge of the Pantomime), some I just put in on the first public performance (complete with lighting and sound effects). I wasn’t particularly popular when I went ‘off script’, but the audience seemed to like it!! At the end of my school life, I took the biggest jump and started writing, 6 Etcetera directing and producing a new musical which both Mr Gray (this time the English teacher) helped me along with Gregor Anderson and the then Rector, Colin Turner. The production was entitled Sound and Light and it played for three nights at the Eastwood Theatre with boys from The Academy and girls from Craigholme School. We raised sponsorship (including from my local Indian restaurant) and my brother underwrote the cost: I think it came to £3,000 and we practically broke-evens! This gave me great confidence when I went to Edinburgh University (to study law) and set up the Edinburgh University Footlights, which continues today after over 18 years. What’s the riskiest production you’ve done since? Was it worth it – and would you encourage young people leaving school today to take risky decisions? I wouldn’t say that anything I’ve done professionally was risky as we have always used third party funds, but I did mount a musical at Edinburgh university which cost £20k and I only recouped half of the costs. It took me 3 years to pay off and one Christmas in my third year with Cameron Mackintosh I got a big enough bonus to pay back the sound hire company and buy a car. They were very good about it and even sent me a Christmas card. I wouldn’t encourage anyone to take risks unless you have a plan to pay it back over a short period of time and the reward is going to be worth it – from a financial point of view – and not just for one’s ego. It’s too easy to fall in debt nowadays especially with the temptation of student loans. Unlike in America, I think it’s hard for people starting out to pay them back with high enough salaries. It’s a terrible stress and a de-motivating rope to tie round a neck. Having said that, Richard Branson built Virgin on debt and look at him! You have worked with some very wellknown stars. Who has most impressed you? I would say Anna Friel, Ian McKellan, Kevin Spacey and Hugh Jackman. Being a star is a lot harder than it looks. They get no privacy and are constantly being criticised by the media and public. After a hard day, when they don’t look their best, they get hounded by photographers who are looking for the most unflattering picture. The media in this country is very tough, and everything in their personal life is talked about, which is unpleasant when their parents, spouse and – in particular – children have to read about it. Anna because she was so hard working and never missed a show, Ian because he is so humble and unassuming and Kevin because, again, he is such a hard-working person and is brilliant with people – indeed he would have made a great President of America: I’m sure he taught Bill Clinton to public speak! Lastly, Hugh Jackman because he is such a nice guy, and has the ‘triple threat’ – singing, dancing and acting, which is very rare these days – what a lot of talent in one person. Why do you think London’s West End has been so successful recently? Yes, the West End has had a record year with over 14 million tickets sold in 2009, which is more than Broadway. I think that during a recession, people want escapism and theatre is relatively inexpensive, especially if you get one of the deals or a standby ticket. I also believe that in a world of video games, texting and the internet, people want to reconnect with other people and watch something together – enjoying, laughing or crying with others. Cinema also does this. I also believe with television dumbing down, people want stories again and that is why Plays have done so well. People love live theatre or music because the performers are doing it exclusively for them and there is a real connection between the stage and the audience. Musicals are enjoying a great resurgence because of television – High School Musical, Glee and the reality casting shows have made musical theatre more ‘cool’. There is also much more of a cross over from pop music to musical theatre than ever before, with stars from X-Factor and American Idol constantly in Musicals. Are there days when you wish you’d become an architect? Yes, some. Producing and being an architect are both hard ways to make money (nearly as bad as being a teacher). I think they are related – ‘Anna Friel was so hard working, and never missed a show’ both deal with creative and technical problems and with lots of people with different skills and talents working towards achieving something together. There must be great joy in designing a building that people love to work and live in and, of course, it stands as a legacy after you have gone. I suppose with Producing, it would be great to think that a Play or Musical you help create goes beyond your life and will be staged for generations to come. Having said all that, architects have a tough life especially since technology can play such a big role, and much of the work must be factories, warehouses and fairly mundane buildings. There is no replacement for me for the ‘rush’ you get at an Opening night. Academicals win prestigious business awards Ian Gardiner (1988) won a prestigious Australian Entrepreneur award in November as he was named as NSW ICT Entrepreneur of the Year 2009. Ian is the founder of online video and digital media company Viocorp. He cofounded the company in 2002 and it now employs 35 staff at its Sydney headquarters. Also in November, but closer to home, another entrepreneurial former pupil led Dundee-based Safedem to success at the International Demolition Awards in Amsterdam. Safedem picked up the ‘Explosive Demolition Award’ and the top award – ‘Demolition Company of the Year’. Managing Director Wilf Sinclair (1984) said ‘...we saw off challenges from companies from around the world – the USA, Spain, Italy, England, Denmark, France, Germany, Finland, Japan, Russia etc. – so it’s like being world champions!’ Ian Gardiner and his family on a recent visit to The Academy Etcetera 7 One man and his dog... Malcolm McNaught meets Alasdair Boyle and his faithful friend, Gem. But that’s only half the story... ‘I suppose you might say that it was devastating... Except for the fact that I just haven’t allowed it to be.’ I have just asked Alasdair Boyle to describe the impact of being told – ten years ago and at the pinnacle of a distinguished business career – that he had progressive Multiple Sclerosis. The degree of detachment that he shows in answering my all-toopersonal question is astonishing. I’m meeting a very brave man. I first met Alasdair Boyle fourteen years ago at a conference at Gleneagles Hotel where he was the main speaker. 8 Etcetera He was the UK Managing Director of Adobe Systems and was extolling the virtues of his company’s software solutions that – at the time – were transforming business and personal computing. Adobe Acrobat was – and still is – one of those brilliant products without which many businesses would find it almost impossible to cope. At that conference Alasdair was wearing an Academical tie and that fact gave me all the excuse I needed to engage the great man in conversation. I remember his enormous kindness in ensuring that I received the latest version of the software I used for the Chronicle as soon as it came out. When I meet him again 14 years later – this time at his home in Crieff – Alasdair comes to the door with the aid of a walking frame on wheels and in the company of his constant companion, Gem. Gem is a threeyear-old black Labrador and, with typically self-deprecating modesty, Alasdair assumes it is she who will be the subject of our conversation and of this article. It is, then, perhaps something of a surprise to him when I ask him about his own career after leaving Glasgow Academy in 1959. ‘I didn’t go to university or anything like that – very few people did in my day. Instead I got a job with India Tyres in Inchinnan. There I got a great training in all aspects of running business – from production to marketing.’ The quality of the training is in no doubt as the young trainee went on to play an integral part in some of the most successful and groundbreaking businesses of the next four decades. From Inchinnan, Alasdair went to Granada TV Rentals at a time when the technology was changing so fast that few people owned their own television set. As black and white blossomed into colour and, as the technology became both more reliable and more affordable, Granada saw its rental market shrink as customers quickly realised that owning a television set made more sense than renting. As part of Granada’s sales team, Alasdair was tasked with finding alternative products for new markets. One that caught his eye was a computer for businesses produced by IBM and he helped establish a new part of the company called Granada Business Systems. Alasdair was quick to see the possibilities of this new untapped market, but it was the software side of the fledgling computer industry that caught his attention and he was snapped up by a new company called Microsoft as its UK Sales and Marketing Manager. ‘It was an exciting time to join Microsoft,’ recalls Alasdair. ‘I was their seventh UK employee – 007 they called me – and they only had one application product, a spreadsheet. On my first day they flew me to Seattle where I met an unusual young man who impressed me. Everyone listened when he talked at lunch. His name was Bill Gates.’ It was Alasdair’s responsibility to launch a new product called ‘Word’ in this country while others were working on something called ‘XL’. It’s amazing now to think that there was ever a time when no-one knew the name of Bill Gates or when Microsoft and its products needed any introduction. But perhaps it’s not so surprising that the man who sold Microsoft to us was an Accie! And there you might think that Alasdair Boyle would have been content to remain, but in the fastchanging world that was computing in the 1980s he saw a better opportunity with a rival software manufacturer and he joined Aldus. Within six months he had been appointed its UK Managing Director. Aldus is generally credited with the invention of desk-top publishing and its PageMaker program was the main reason for the early success of Apple Computers. Boyle’s marketing genius ensured that Aldus went from strength to strength and, even when the company was effectively taken over by its merger with the powerful Adobe Systems, he was appointed UK Managing Director of the new company. ‘… I met an unusual young man who impressed me – his name was Bill Gates’ Alasdair’s experience of working for big business was a positive one, but he was aware that there was a ruthlessness at the heart of things. ‘Working for American companies is absolutely brilliant. They’re tremendously supportive. If things are going well, they throw money at you. If things don’t go well, they throw you out.’ Unbeknown to him Alasdair had been suffering from remitting MS for some 25 years with only occasional signs that all was not well. When in 1999 he developed unmistakeable symptoms of progressive MS to the extent that he needed steroids to get him through the punishing schedule that was expected of the MD of a highly-successful company, he had no hesitation in calling it a day. Fast-forward 10 years to the sitting room of the beautifully-situated Victorian villa in Crieff he shares with his wife Ann, and the contrast to those pressurised days is palpable. The third member of this household is a threeyear-old black Labrador and the subject of much of our conversation. ‘I drive a Mercedes and a couple of years ago I discovered that the local dealer was sponsoring an organisation that provided dogs for the disabled called ‘Canine Partners’ – so I thought I’d investigate them.’ In the end it was Canine Partners who investigated Alasdair. They wanted to know about his medical condition, his home and garden and his suitability as a dog owner. ‘I love black Labradors and I thought that I would have the chance to choose a suitable dog. In the end, Gem chose me.’ All the time Alasdair is speaking, his doggy partner sits watching expectantly – willing him to drop his spectacle case, listening for a command to open the door, waiting for a chance to be useful... After her 18 months of training, Gem came to her new home in Crieff knowing over 100 commands – everything from picking up shopping in the local supermarket to summoning an elevator and following the complicated sequence of commands to ensure that she, her partner and his wheelchair all arrive at the same floor at the same time. But Gem’s most important role is less about receiving commands than giving company: ‘She provides tremendous therapy for me. On my own in a wheelchair, no-one wants to talk. They feel too awkward. But with a dog, it gives you great openings with people.’ As the first person in Scotland to have a Canine Partners dog, Alasdair was – as in so many other things – a pioneer. ‘I regularly give talks on the work of Canine Partners locally. Often these will result in donations to the organisation. I’m glad to be repaying my debt.’ There’s a quotation that Alasdair appends to e-mails that seems to mean much to him. It reads: ‘The opportunity for distinction lies in doing the ordinary things extraordinarily well.’ I get the impression that Alasdair is used to doing things well. Nowadays, however, he is happy to know that he has a doggy friend, a ‘partner’ who is delighted to pick up where his failing health leaves off. Together they do ordinary things extraordinarily well. Etcetera 9 Chris (far left) and myself (second from right) with the other Interns and Saltire Foundation Fellows The Saltire Foundation helping young business people succeed In July 2009, fellow-Academical Chris McLellan and I ventured out to Houston, Texas to work for Wood Group as part of the Saltire Foundation programme. We were lucky enough to be selected from over 300 applicants and be part of the ground-breaking internship programme. The Saltire Foundation allows students from Scottish universities to experience life in some of the world’s top companies. The aim is to encourage candidates to develop their confidence, skills and capacity to succeed. Communications – and on projects as diverse as compiling budgetary forecasts for the manning of new oil rig developments to editing the company newsletter. We also got in contact with Nigel Robinson (1982), an Accie living in Houston at the time. Over a traditional Texan burger and fries, we shared stories from school (mainly about which teachers were surprisingly still there) and the best sights to see in Houston. This only emphasised to us how great the Academical network is and how no matter where you are there is bound to be one of us nearby! I was based in the Light Industrial Turbines facility. My role, for the eight weeks we were over there, was to carry out reverse engineering on components used in the turbines that are serviced by Wood Group. The internship allowed great hands-on experience along with the opportunity to network with some of the leading people in the business. Not only did we learn so much from this experience but we also got the chance to travel every weekend. The different cultures that we saw were incredible considering most of the places we visited were in the state of Texas alone... definitely an excuse to visit America again and see more! Chris was on a rotation programme which saw him working in various departments – from Business Development to Corporate We would both like to thank everyone at the Saltire Foundation that made last summer possible and all the people in each of our departments, 10 Etcetera who not only taught us so much but also made the whole experience one of our best summers yet. More can be found at www.saltirefoundation.com where you can learn about the Saltire Foundation and read our blogs from over the summer. Philip Gilchrist (2004) Careers Evening 2010 On 28 September we will hold our third Glasgow Academy Careers Evening. We would like to combine the event with the launch of The Glasgow Academy 100, a new business and professional networking organisation for members of our community. All members of the school community who play a part in helping our pupils in their careers (with advice or work placements for example) will be given the opportunity to join ‘The Academy 100’. If you can help with our Careers Evening this September or if you would like to find out more, please get in touch via exrel@tga.org.uk Westbourne School Section Tina Anderson (1985) changed! I was at Westbourne for Primaries 1 to 3 and left when we moved to England because of my father’s new job. I ended up going to Westholme School for Girls (which also had purple uniforms!) until 1985. I did a BA (Hons) in Music at Leeds University (1989) and then a one-year postgraduate diploma in accounting and finance at University of Strathclyde (1990). Rashmi Sinha (1972) I got married to a Norwegian fellow student from Strathclyde in 1991 and moved to Norway in 1994. We split up in 2000, but I decided to stay in Norway and now I have been here for almost 16 years. I have a partner and we have been together since 2002. I am a Senior Systems Developer for a small consultancy firm, specialising in databases and Business Intelligence. Kate Clanchy (1976) Better-known as a poet, Kate won the National Short Story Award in December 2009 at the head of a talented shortlist. Her story entitled ‘The Not Dead and The Saved’ is a haunting tale of parental love and sacrifice set in a hospital ward. Dr Penelope Curtis (1979) Many congratulations to Penelope – formerly curator of the Henry More Institute in Leeds – who has been appointed Director of Tate Britain. Fiona Johnston (1957) For anyone living in the Stirling area with children aged 8 – 18 years interested in music, we are running workshops led by ‘Bodega’ – an award-winning young band. See our website www.feisfhoirt.org for details. It is a great way for children to try an instrument they fancy without committing mum and dad to buying one until they are sure of the commitment! Some instruments can be hired afterwards. Gereth McCaskill (1960) We attended the Women’s Hockey Olympic Event in Vancouver on February 20. The security in place for the games is the most Canada has ever been involved with, to the sum of $900 million: when the games were held in Calgary in the 80s security cost $150 million. How times have Rashmi is a Senior Investigator in the Nutritional Epidemiology Branch of the US National Cancer Institute and recently led a study looking at the relationship between people’s diet and the likelihood of developing cancer. The largest study of its kind found that older Americans who eat large amounts of red meat and processed meats face a greater risk of death from heart disease and cancer. Rashmi commented that the findings support the advice of several health groups to limit red and processed meat intake to decrease cancer risk. Westbourne ‘Old Girls’ Dorothy Baird (nee Turnbull) and Jean McAdam began their school days at Westbourne’s Kelvinside House in 1924 aged 6 and 5 respectively. Jean left aged 12 when her family moved to Crieff. She then attended Morrison’s Academy. Dorothy left aged 15 to board at St Hilda’s in Edinburgh. The two friends (who believe they were in a class of 6 initially) remained in touch over the years. In 2008 Dorothy moved to Dollar to live with her daughter Anne (Westbourne 1969). From there, Dorothy, now 91, is able to be a regular visitor to the residential home in Crieff where Jean, now 90, lives. Are they the oldest ‘Old Girls’ to enjoy a reunion? A favourite teacher of both Jean and Dorothy was Miss Rankin, who appears to have been an FP herself. She was a young teacher and very well liked. When Dorothy and Jean might Dorothy Baird (nee Turnbull) and Jean McAdam have been about 7 or 8 years of age, Miss Rankin got married and the girls were invited to be part of a school Guard of Honour for the occasion. They wore their school uniform, and Jean remembers that they all got a handful of confetti. Late on, when ‘Miss Rankin’ had a baby, she brought the baby into school for the girls to see. Jean remembers it was a daughter. Anne Baird (1969) Deaths Lorna Blackie (1937 - 43) Died, aged 81, peacefully in her sleep at home in Acton Trussel, Staffordshire. After leaving Westbourne School she continued her education at Lowther College in North Wales, before graduating with an Honours degree in English from Glasgow University. Her main career was journalism, writing for a number of publications including The Scotsman. She was, for a time Press Officer for the National Trust for Scotland and also the 1987 Commonwealth Games. As well as journalism, from 1966 to 1981, she became a successful fashion retail business woman, opening Campus, which had branches in Edinburgh, Glasgow and Aberdeen. On 24 November 2009, Mrs Isobel Broom, Office Staff, Westbourne School. Gals’ Golf The 2009 GALS GOLF outing took place on Friday 21 August and ‘midst a month of rain, rain and more rain we had the sun shine on us that day! We couldn’t believe that, once again, we had the best day of the summer! The Kirkintilloch Golf Club was a new venue for us and everyone enjoyed both the course and the lunch afterwards. Following the lunch was the PRIZE GIVING! Betty Henderson was once more in charge of our score cards, (thank you), and soon the results were in. It was a closely-run race! In 3rd place was Susan McKenzie, with Louise Angus coming 2nd and our defending champion, Carole Hill, once again carrying off the silverware. Well done, Carole! Etcetera 11 The Westbourne Grand Reunion Dinner I left the Westbourne Grand Reunion Dinner in a reflective mood, having been thoroughly reminded of where I come from. Westbourne isn’t gone. It lives on in all of us, because it isn’t about wearing purple or trekking up the hill to Winton Drive every day. It says so much about Westbourne girls that I didn’t just spend the reunion with old friends. I made some new ones too. congratulated for organising such a successful event. Although I’m sure it was a difficult task, I certainly hope that in, say, five years they will have recovered sufficiently to arrange the next one. I also hope that my chosen profession, teaching, has the same effect on me as it has had on my own inspirational teachers, who didn’t appear to have aged by a single day since 1992! Miss Henderson and the External Relations team are to be heartily I don’t think I can fully explain the spooky feeling that I experienced when, upon entering the Grosvenor Hilton Hotel, I saw my first Westbourne girl in seventeen years! The ‘purpley’ in question turned out to be wearing Amy Primrose’s old uniform (complete with badges) and her appearance was only the first of many blasts from the past at Westbourne’s Grand Reunion Dinner on Saturday 24 October 2009. A true feat of organisation, the reunion attracted hundreds of nostalgic purple people to Glasgow’s west end, many of whom had travelled a great distance to be there. I thought that it was a real sign of our enduring affection for our alma mater that many of the now grown-up and glamorous ‘girls’ chose to wear purple to the event. It took me a few years to begin wearing purple by choice, but I have to admit that it’s still one of my favourites! In the manner of all reunions, ours began with catching up on news and identifying familiar faces. Gossip was traded, success stories swapped and inevitably the wedding and/or baby photos were fished out. Later on in the evening, when old pals had become reacquainted, other less happy tales were occasionally shared among the oldest friends that most of us have. As I looked around an enormous function suite full of laughing, sparkly, confident women, I was struck by an overpoweringly familiar feeling. I can only describe this feeling as ‘Westbourness’, because I’ve never felt it anywhere else. It’s an empowering and optimistic feeling, something like being among supportive sisters who genuinely want you to succeed but who will still love you if you don’t. 12 Etcetera Gail McNeill (1993) Books Etcetera The Glasgow Tramcar by David Thomson (1958) David Thomson (1958) visited The Academy in February to present a copy of his recently-published book The Glasgow Tramcar to the school library. His 304page work charts the development of Glasgow’s tram services and how they waxed and waned over 65 years. The book is lavishly illustrated with over 200 photographs (most previously unpublished), and a large number of old maps, detailed drawings and advertisements. Copies are still available by contacting: sales@scottishtransport.org David, who went on to study Law at Glasgow University before a career with McGrigor Donald and later worked as an actuary with Stenhouse noted after his visit that it was ‘encouraging to see at first hand the tremendous advances made by my old school’. Relationships Made Easy by David Fraser (1981) A glance at the back cover – sadly we haven’t seen the text – suggests that David Fraser’s book is an indispensible guide to life in the 21st Century. ‘So much depends on our ability to get on with other people. You might think there is no systematic or insightful way. But there is. And it’s in this book. With the right approach, developing the skills we use in all our relationships is an easy route to success and one of the few reliable and enduring ways we can improve our lives... Sounds as if we all need to go out and buy a copy. The Morris Minor Monte Carlo Rally Tales by David Gray To many Academicals, the name David Gray will need no introduction. Even those who were not actually taught English by him will know of his passionate interest in Morris Minors. Combine that with many years of teaching Chaucer to young minds eager to learn and the result is The Morris Minor Monte Carlo Rally Tales. An excerpt from the blurb will suffice to give a flavour of this unique publication: ‘If your car could talk, what secret tales could it tell? Tales of ghosts and revenge, fraudulent conversion and a banking disaster, boy bands and property development, not to mention a love story and the injection of noxious substances, are told by Morris Minors about their owners, one each night, as they battle towards Monte Carlo in The Morris Minor Monte Carlo Rally Tales. Typing the title in to Google will reveal all!’ Academical Club news Accies’ Rugby This season’s rugby seems to be lasting forever! Normally at this time of going to press, early March, all of the Club’s fixtures would have taken place. However the 1st XV still has five matches to play, as a result of the severe winter we have had. Both the 1st and 2nd XVs have performed well, so far, in their respective leagues with playing numbers greatly boosted by the number of Academy leavers now coming to play, and also the Glasgow University students being attracted to the Club. Happily, the 2nd XV has already won promotion. Nigel Campbell, their manager, is to be congratulated and thanked for all the time and effort he has put in to bring about this success, which has had the knock-on effect of strengthening the pool of players available for the 1st XV. Competition for places in both teams has been fierce, which can only be positive for Accies rugby. That is something which has been of real help to Director of Rugby, Donald Reid, and the 1st XV coaches, Chas Afuakwah and Steve Winter who have got the 1st XV to the brink of promotion from National Division 2, where they are within two points of second-placed Lasswade with both clubs having five matches remaining. This league entails many lengthy bus journeys, from Wick in the north to Newton Stewart in the south, at a season’s cost of over £4,000… so there is good reason for trying to gain promotion! The players have all acquitted themselves well, and are hopeful they can overtake Lasswade in the run-in. Jamie Doig for the 1st XV, and Richard Taylor for the 2nd XV have both captained their sides well, and the coaches have had the outstanding support of Duncan Beattie, who has supported the players with their fitness /weights training in the excellent gym facility the Club now has. New Anniesland now has facilities which are the envy of all who visit the Club, and we are eternally grateful to our Head Groundsman, Robert Cheape, and his staff whose efforts ensure we have the best possible pitches on which to play both rugby and cricket throughout the year. Off the pitch there has been a great spirit amongst the players throughout the season, with a real vibrancy within the clubhouse at the after-match hospitality. New Anniesland is coming New Anniesland as we have come to know it this winter… alive, and next season we are keen to develop our facilities even more, with a £20,000 share of the money raised by The Gordon Mackay Memorial Appeal. However, the section is ever-dependent on, and grateful for, the outstanding generosity of so many Academical supporters who each season contribute faithfully. In particular we thank those who are major Sponsors: Brian Gibson; John Watson; Niall Campbell; Gordon Lindsay; Kenneth McLeod; Bruce Mitchell; George Thomson; and Peter Stokes. Throughout the season we have organised pre-match lunches for opposition officials, sponsors, and past players. One of the most successful events has been the Brian Lockhart Lunch organised by Alasdair Graham. Open to anyone who had played alongside Brian (which encompassed many, many players during his extremely lengthy career, evidenced so obviously by his many replacement joints and a distinguishable rolling gait!), the lunch attracted over 60 former players who enjoyed an excellent meal prepared and served by the Club’s Bar/Catering Steward Ken Barron and Etcetera 13 his team. www.glasgowacciesrfc.com At last Season’s rugby Dinner, two special presentations took place. Engraved Tankards were presented to Johnny Beattie and to Chris Dunn, both of whom had shown outstanding contributions in different ways. Johnny in recognition of his gaining International honours, and to Chris in recognition of his long, committed and loyal service to the Rugby Section, as secretary for over 10 years. Chris was also given honorary life membership of the Sports Club. We do send out regular updates to our rugby membership, and would be pleased to hear from any Academicals who would like to be kept in touch with the section’s progress. If you have any news to pass on, do contact any of the club representatives on the website, or our webmaster Stuart Wilson at communications@glasgowacciesrfc.com The Rugby Section now has its new website, for which we are greatly indebted to former Accie player, George Thomson, and his company, GEO-GRAPHICS, for their enormous help in setting it up. The site has been live since September 2009, and has already had over 6,000 hits. Please do visit the site for regular updates on club news, social events, fixtures, match reports and results at Looking ahead to next season, the Club is always delighted to welcome new players, and particularly Academy leavers who are staying on to study in Glasgow. Therefore please do contact our Director of Rugby, Donald Reid – at director@glasgowacciesrfc.com – who would be delighted to hear from any potential recruits and to advise them of pre-season training arrangements. Gordon Wilson (1964) Academical Golf Section With the new golf season fast approaching, here are some dates for your diary and some points of contact should you wish to participate in any or all of events we will be organising. Academicals of all ages are encouraged to take part in the matches we have and the outings in both spring and the autumn. Sunday 6 June v Watsonians at Prestwick Wednesday 9 June v Glasgow High School at Kilmacolm Wednesday 23 June v The School at Killermont Sunday 12 September v Kelvinside at Prestwick Midweek October v Glasgow High FP at Kilmacolm 30 May Spring Meeting at Shiskine Golf Club, Isle of Arran 9 October Autumn Meeting at Elie Golf Club The intention with both the spring and autumn meetings is to have a dinner on the evening before the event and to stay with those Academicals with holiday homes in Arran and Elie who are kind enough to offer hospitality to those wishing to take part. Brian Lockhart and friends Rugby Players’ Lunch On Saturday 24 October 2009 a lunch was held at New Anniesland attended by 53 former players from the 1960s and 70s. Brian Lockhart was the main speaker and he also chaired the proceedings. The lunch was organised with assistance from the External Relations office at Glasgow Academy. After lunch the attendees watched Accies play against Hawick YM RFC in a SHE National League Division 2 match that in a highly-exciting game they won by the narrow margin of 5-0. This was Accies’ fourth successive win and it pushed them up to fifth position in the league and still in with a chance of promotion. If you are interested in attending similar future events at New Anniesland or wish to receive regular updates on Accies-related rugby matters, please contact Joanna Lennox at The Academy. Alastair Graham (1959) 14 Etcetera Anyone interested in finding out more about any of these events please do not hesitate to contact one of the following: Brian Ker (Captain): kerbn@willis.com / 0141 306 1868 / 0141 637 4548 Gordon Wilson: wilsongb@btinternet.com / 07595 218497 Mark Kitson: markjhkitson@aol.com / 07798 856088 Brian Ker (1974) London Section Is your old school tie too old? New pure silk Academical ties £15 The Glasgow Academical Club, London Section would like to take this opportunity to invite all Academicals residing in the South/London area to the London Section 2010 Annual Dinner, which will be held on Thursday 25 March, 2010 at The Caledonian Club, 9A Halkin Street, London SW1X 7DR. We are delighted to announce that Mr Bruce Anderson, political journalist and former editor of The Spectator will be our guest speaker, along with The Rector, Mr Peter Brodie, Chairman of the Glasgow Academical Club, Mr Jimmy McCulloch, and Chairman of the Governors, Mr Gordon Jack. Academicals of all ages are welcome. Further details can be obtained from David W Hall (ecj@aralon.co.uk). We would like to inform you of two other forthcoming fixtures in our calendar: the first is that the London Section will be represented at the London Scottish Schools’ Golf Day which will be held at Denham Golf Club on Tuesday 22 June, 2010. If any Academicals are interested in participating, please contact David Stirling (david@dstirling.co.uk). The second, is that the London Section will be hosting a dinner for the Academy Shooting Team during their annual visit to Bisley. This dinner will be held on Thursday 15 July 2010. Any interested Academicals please contact Henry Watson (henry@watsonhn.demon.co.uk) or Crawford Alexander (crawford.alexander@tesco.net). The London Section would also like to announce some new additions to our Committee and we welcome Mr Jack Campbell and Miss Karen Smith. If any Academicals are acquainted with Jack or Karen, or any other member of our Committee (President – Anthony Frieze; Vice-President – Gordon Low; Peter Marr; David Hall; Alastair Brown; Colin Buchanan; John Deans; Roddy Graham; Melanie McLean; David Stirling; Cameron Wilson) please get in touch with them to pass on names of Academicals living in the South/London area. (including p+p in UK) 128 Please contact External Relations office for further details exrel@tga.org.uk Three good sports (l to r) Colin Dawson (cricket), Alasdair Graham (rugby) and Colin Atkinson (badminton) were honoured recently by the Sports Council for Glasgow. They received long-service awards at an event at St Andrews in the Square entitled ‘Celebrating 30 Years’ Voluntary Service to Sport’. We’re sure that each of them has been involved in his chosen sport for a few more years than that! G LASGOW ACADEMICAL C LUB D INNER Save the Date! The 128th Glasgow Academical Club Dinner will be held in The Cargill Hall on 12 November. Save the date and look out for more details in the summer edition of Etcetera. Etcetera 15 Events 127th Glasgow Academical Club Dinner 6 November 2009 The Accies Dinner returned to the Cargill Hall last year. It was a great success with over 200 Academicals in attendance. The night began with reception drinks in the Dining Hall followed by a three-course dinner provided by Kensingtons Catering. The toast to the Club and The Academy was made by Baron Maxton of Blackwaterfoot who recalled his Accie playing days as well as his time as a member of staff of the school. The reply on behalf of The Academy was given by Rector Peter Brodie. Club President, Jimmy McCulloch, replied on behalf of the Club and toasted the guests. Deputy Head Boy, Alfie Lloyd, replied on behalf of the guests. As well as the familiar faces of regular attendees, External Relations hosted a table of 6th year pupils on behalf of the GAC and a large group of 1989 leavers combined their 20-year reunion in the afternoon with the evening in the Cargill Hall. We hope to see many more new faces at this year’s Academical Club Dinner on Friday 12 November. 1989 Reunion 6 November 2009 20 years – where had the time gone? When Mark Taylor asked me to help organise our 20-year reunion I’ll be honest, I was a little ambivalent about the whole thing. However once I started contacting oldclass mates and hearing about their lives – family, work etc I really started to enjoy it. With the help of Gregor Hinks, Pete Brown and The Academy, the task certainly seemed less daunting than it had at first. Unfortunately not everyone could make it as we are a much diversified group in terms of geography and professions. We have classmates living and working 16 Etcetera in Australia, the USA, Belgium, Poland, Singapore, Germany, Spain, Isle of Man, even a few in the East of Scotland. There is a strong contingent naturally in London and the South East. We have lawyers, bankers, accountants, surveyors, stockbrokers, doctors, dentists, vets, colleagues in the leisure industry, telecommunications, IT, the drinks industry, retail, property, laundry services, security (Ike works with the gurkas in Singapore), a golf pro, a world famous DJ – Lars Sandberg aka (Funk D’Void) – and me in frozen chicken. We all met late afternoon for a tour round the school. The place certainly has changed much since our day. The investment made in the school and its facilities was impressive and we all agreed we were proud that we were once part of it. Afterwards we met for drinks and the chance to catch up with some of our former teachers. It was a real pleasure to see Messrs Latimer, Gray, Hadcroft, McNaught, Robertson, Williams and, of course, Mr Woods. I believe at one point I plucked up the courage to call him Ronnie. It was a real tonic to reminisce over old tales of teachers, pupils, sport and... detention. Some of our teachers had sadly passed away. For some retirement had beckoned and a well-earned rest while for others the journey at The Academy continues! For their patience and perseverance in getting us through school, we thank them. Our reunion coincided with the Academical Dinner that evening in the Cargill Hall which worked out very well. We all had an excellent meal and of course too much wine and port. We stayed together late on into the evening with promises of a regular yearly get together. A golf day has been mentioned and a table at the Summer Ball. I hope we follow this through as it was great to meet so many old friends again. We would all like to thank Mark, Joanna and Malcolm from The Academy. The department they run is an asset to the school and its former pupils. Much work has been put into rebuilding the database of former pupils and – put simply – it is a daunting task. Without help from them, the job of pulling these reunions together would be extremely difficult. Special thanks must also go to Andrew Calder for providing some very fine whisky for our enjoyment. Until we meet again... Adrian Louden (1989) 1979 Reunion 4 December 2009 It was a fantastic day – the school has been transformed in the 30 years since I left and you could only be impressed by the standard of the facilities now available to the pupils. Most things have changed – and I think we surprised the lady teaching Piano in my first classroom – Miss Alexander’s Prep 5X – when we pressed our noses against the door to peer in! Trying to remember which way you could and could not walk up stairs and through passageways was fun and being in the Rector’s office without having done something wrong was nice. Seeing the yearbooks brought back loads of memories – though seeing that my older brother had shot an average 97 for the year in the range was a little annoying as I’ve just taken up the sport again after 30 years and have a bit of work to do to catch up! The appearance of a salad bar in the dining hall was just a bit too modern for my taste though! Catching up with people whom you haven’t seen in a long time was a highlight. Thanks for the organising and the hospitality – I think everyone had fun. Julian Stark (1979) 1999 Reunion 19 December 2009 10 Years On On the Saturday night that heralded the beginning of one of the snowiest Christmas periods our generation has seen, the Class of ‘99 braved the elements for a festive ten-year catchup at New Anniesland. Our minister in the making, Jonathan Fleming, opened the evening by saying a short and thoughtful grace that thanked everyone for making it through the snow and paid tribute to those who are no longer with us. Not standing on ceremony, the evening progressed to what our year group do best: the enjoyment of food, conversation and a little beverage or two. Dancing was not the order of the night with the party choosing to use the evening to chat and mingle instead. There have been some notable Accie achievements since 1999, many involving weddings and babies, tours in Afghanistan, graduations, promotions and jobs in far-flung destinations. However, this gathering was equally a chance for a group of like-minded people to compare notes on the challenges that have been faced over the past ten years and to know that we’re not alone in going through ups and downs that life throws at us. By the time of our next reunion, we are hopeful that we will have managed to get back in touch with more of our year group and that we will all have some great stories about how we weathered our first recession and came out the stronger for it. Hopefully in 2024 (!?!), the evening will once again end in the venue formerly known as Clatty Pats. Thanks go to Ken Barron and the ladies at the clubhouse for putting on a great spread and helping with the organising, to Joanna Lennox at the school for printing the menus and to Malcolm McNaught for giving some of the boys a tour of the school in the afternoon. Newsworthy gossip from the evening – and since – that may be of interest to those who couldn’t be there on the night (including an unlucky Toni Scott who was stranded at Gatwick): Nicola Connelly will marry her long-term boyfriend, Roly, this summer after becoming the All-Anniesland After Eight Champion; Penny Hart (nee Miller) had a beautiful baby girl, Sadie, last summer; Jonathan Fleming is proud father to Rachel and husband to Karyn; Jonathan Morrison will return to Afghanistan on tour this year in his role as a medical officer; Michael Atkinson is engaged to Alison, who it should be noted is a lovely Scots girl from Gullane; Richard Inglis and his wife, Katy, have welcomed their daughter, Olivia Jane, into the world; Allan and Kiran Wilson are still the Top: Some of the 1979 group with current senior pupils during their tour of the school in December Above: Bruce, Andy, Allan and Johnny enjoyed the 1999 reunion... golden ‘99 Accies couple; Chris Socklingham is happily married to Helen and is now an uncle; Mansur Halai is loving married life with wife Fatima; Stephanie Newland’s twin babies are now four! Erica Dickson and Nuala Devlin (1999) To view many more photos from past events, logon to GA Connected – www.glasgowacademy.webintouch.com. If you don’t have your login details, email exrel@tga.org.uk Etcetera 17 Memories... I came to the Academy in January 1945 after one term at King’s College School in Wimbledon, London. When I first arrived at the school I was placed in the First Year – though it should have been Transitus. The pupil allocated to be my companion through the first months was James C Stewart who ultimately became a very highly-regarded Minister of the Church of Scotland. My academic distinction was not great, but I did shoot well and, after being injured on the rugby field, I travelled with the 1st XV as touch judge. On one occasion at New Anniesland, I disagreed with the referee. One of our backs had kicked the ball forward, raced past the opposing full back and caught the ball on a bounce and scored. The referee pointed to touch, saying the ball had gone out while in the air and had fallen back into play. I knew that if it had gone out it would have gone over my head, which it didn’t. There were a few remarks on the field which were, perhaps, unworthy of the gentlemen of the Academy and I got into trouble in the dressing room for arguing with the referee. However, you will never see a dressing-room empty so fast for the baths as when the referee turned round, wearing a clerical collar! I wonder if anyone else remembers that incident? I left in 1950, having the previous year quarantined the entire cast of the Shakespeare play by contracting chickenpox at the beginning of the summer holidays – not a popular thing to do! My aim after school was to become a sea-going engineer; but instead I felt called to the ministry. I was commissioned in the Artillery in 1956, thanks to my grounding in the Corps, was ordained in 1961 and served the church in East Africa for seven years, served religious broadcasting with the BBC for nearly 20 years, mostly as Senior Producer for Religious Radio, and, with three years in Edinburgh, concluded my full-time ministry in Clackmannan. stopped working and currently am Interim Moderator in Dollar linked with Glendevon linked with Muckhart. We have three children, sadly none educated at the Academy. The eldest, Ewan (also a minister), is currently Secretary of the Church and Society Council of the Church of Scotland; the second, Stewart, is CEO and Artistic Director of the Aberdeen International Youth Festival; and the youngest, Ronnie, is a Project Manager at the Royal Bank. Sadly his salary is not in the seven figure category! We have seven grandchildren to keep us busy when I stop working! The sad thing is that I have lost contact with all my classmates in my years at the Academy – sad because their friendship through those years and the whole learning atmosphere of the school, are largely responsible for what I have been able to achieve in the 60 years since I left. To my wife’s frustration – this is our Golden Wedding year – I have never Attention! Going through some old photos I came across this of the Annual Church Parade to Glasgow University leaving Colebrooke Street in 1949. Names are a problem but I think the Pipe Sergeant was Alistair Oliphant. The Corps RSM was George Burnett. Happy days! Alan Carlaw (1949) 18 Etcetera Douglas Aitken (1950) Now there are so many other ways of distributing printed information, but back in the 60s the only way to do this successfully, other than by writing by hand, was by the letterpress process. This was like a glorified rubber stamp whereby if you inked a raised image and applied the necessary pressure the image would transfer to the substrate. There were no modern equivalents such as desktop printers or photocopiers working with breathtaking speed as they now do as virtual printing machines in their own right. John Watson with Angus and Sandy, two of his four sons Was there life before photocopiers? Yes, there was – and it was alive and well in the basement of House 3 at Glasgow Academy! There we had the Printing Club which, although marred in dust and dirt, was a highly-efficient basement operation which would expedite various orders from school and pupils alike. The work carried out by this allembracing Club included rugby club dance tickets, business cards, letterheads, concert and pantomime programmes, menus, etc. The printing process was letterpress and the principles and procedures which we used had remained virtually unchanged since Guttenberg printed his 42-line bible in 1450. We printed with moveable type, a eutectic alloy of lead, tin and antimony setting up individual letters in reverse-reading format imposed in a metal chaise. We printed on one of the two presses bought by the school. The smaller press was an Adana, which was ideal for the New Anniesland Rugby Club dance tickets and business cards with the largerformat Vicabold press being used for quarto programmes for the various concerts and pantomimes in the Cargill Hall. The school’s financial oversight was always very correct and they used the finances that were paid in to the office to buy new supplies for the Printing Club, including consumables such as paper, ink, new typefaces and type fonts. The Club was a hive of activity at lunchtime and after school, when pupils could allow their creativity to come to the fore, a bit like one would now today on an AppleMac Computer. Health and Safety considerations were completely nonexistent with sandwiches being balanced on the corner of the type cases containing a deadly alloy of lead, tin and antimony type metal. It was only some ten years later that the Health and Safety Executive banned chips from being served in newspaper, due to the possibility of crosscontamination! A sad day for the ubiquitous fish supper! They say in printing that the industry has changed more in the last forty years than in the preceding 600 and this I would agree with, as the system for transferring an image to a substrate had remained almost unchanged since the early pioneers in the middle ages. Shortly after leaving the Academy, I remember visiting the then Glasgow Corporation print works in Pollokshaws Road and witnessing the first hand-operated attempts at xerography, whereby the image was electrostatically charged and a print was produced, the forerunner of Rank Xerox and the modern day photocopier. These were heady days for young, aspiring, teenage entrepreneurs, as we had to tender for business. Jock Carruthers or ‘Jazzy Bill’ Coulthard, the music teacher, would always get a check price from Lawrence and Lang, the stationery shop situated where the current Co-operative 24-hour shop is in Great Western Road. Lawrence and Lang had a pretty antiquated printing press in the back shop and they were the guide price for the Academy printing. We did print in various colours if asked, but much preferred to adopt the Henry Ford principle that you can have anything you like as long as it’s black! The output, as you will see from the Chronicles of the time, was many and varied and the Club was almost part of a Private Press Movement, which was the norm in those days. Cleanliness was not our strong point and the floors were littered with paper off-cuts, inks and line blocks in all sorts of disarray, but we still managed to print some very acceptable quality work for the school and beyond. The pecking order for delivery used to have the Rugby Club dinner dance tickets as a main priority, as one would generally be allowed a few extra tickets free-gratis for turning the work round in time. All-in-all these were great fun days and – although the Printing Club has not continued to prosper as the technology changed – it was a wonderful place to meet up, be creative and to think ‘outside the box’ while at the same time being introduced to the entrepreneurial ways of the world at an early age. John M Watson OBE (1964) Etcetera 19 We never did that in our day! It is 40 years since Nick Utechin was School Captain and tried to change the Rector’s mind about the wearing of caps. What occupies the time of today’s Head Boy and Head Girl? A Captain’s Memories It was at an Academy 1968 swimming gala in a pool up by the University that my friend AJ (Andrew) Kerr told me that I would probably end up being School Captain. He was a Junior Prefect, I was a Senior one and he’d worked out my future on the basis of who was leaving when for Scottish universities, who wasn’t and thus who was mathematically guaranteed the position. I was trying for Oxford, and so was due to stay on for the Winter ‘69 term for the entry exam. The decision actually had to be taken by the Rector, Basil Holden, but unless I seriously blotted my copybook, the post was there for me – and so it came to pass. I had come in as a prefect under the strict regime of then-Captain Viv Clements and was made a house captain (Albany) under Malcolm Harper. So the Prefects’ Room, beneath the eaves of one of the houses opposite the main school building, was nothing strange to me. I had survived arriving in 1965 as an English schoolboy, being dealt with very firmly at Anniesland my first Saturday as a novice 13-year-old hooker and being laughed at for my accent! There was a toughness and formality that was new to me, let alone the Cadet Corps mentality which, in those interesting 20 Etcetera Nick Utechin (front left) with the gentlemen of the Upper Sixth in 1969. But who are the others? 1960s years, seemed perhaps fractionally out of place! But at the age of 17, the captaincy came. My goodness, how powerful the school allowed us to be! There were rotas to be drawn up (I never could work that sort of thing out, so gave the responsibility to my ViceCaptain, Karl Aeberli): prefects at the Cargill Hall for Assembly, ditto in the Dining Hall, ditto in the playground, ditto to check beneath the Hall stage at break-time for smokers! We punished by setting lines, and liberally. That was what was expected of us. The Captain could also beat. I had seen my predecessors do it. There was a certain master who hit the hand with a nasty angled piece of leather if the miscreant had not achieved 6/10 for a weekly piece of work. But the Captain then could also do the deed. When I took over, I announced to my prefects that I would never beat. But I did, once. A single strike of a plimsoll on the backside of a 1st former who’d already been with his parents to Mr. Holden to discuss his future at the school. Three of my senior group were present, but after all these years, I remember it and am not proud of it. I could name that boy, but he’s probably a captain of industry or hedge-fund manager now and somehow survived this rather pathetic episode! What I did enjoy pushing for, and eventually achieving, was the removal of the school cap (at least for some). This will mean absolutely nothing to present readers, but was a huge issue forty years ago. All boys had to wear the school cap, not only in the vicinity of Colebrooke Street, but on their journeys to or from school. And there seemed always to be an appalling army of ‘Friends of the School’ who would inform Mr. Holden or others that soand-so had been seen not wearing the damn thing at such-and-such a bus stop. I went to battle. Basil Holden I now remember only for being a slightly choleric, port-faced and old-fashioned man (he was probably the age at which I am now!!). He seemed generally remote and made assumptions about a world that had undoubtedly moved on. But he had made me Captain, and there was the cap issue to debate. I had several discussions with the Rector, suggesting that 1969 was, perhaps, a year when this invidious and so public element of uniform could be got rid of (there were bad tales of bad treatment by others on the subway, but I was trying for a principle). Mr Holden fought well. He told me once that the wearing of the school cap was a good preparation for what he believed to be the hatwearing norm of grown-ups in Glasgow. Matters began to get quite heated: I was annoyed at how often our prefects were obliged to punish for the nonwearing of caps. One day, I decided I would ‘address the school’ – something a Captain could then do in those days after assembly in the Cargill Hall if he so chose on a matter of moment. I held everybody back to talk about what I was trying to achieve re. caps and asking the school to trust us and hang in there and please not break the rule while it was still in place. Thud thud came the sound of Gordon Carruthers’ shoes coming up the Hall. The authorities had somehow gathered what I was going to talk about. I faltered and merely dribbled out a few words, rather than the ‘call to arms’ speech I had envisaged. An hour later, while, I think, I was in an A-Level French class with ‘Chic’ Varley, I was hauled out and told not to do that sort of thing again. O tempora, o mores! I left at the end of term, and received, in the envelope with our report, results and whatever, a slip of paper from the Rector, informing the Academy community that the school cap would no longer be compulsory wearing for IVth form and above with immediate effect. By definition, this was a fascinating time to be at the Academy. I was an English intruder into the senior school, happened to be in the right place at the right time and was made School Captain. Undoubtedly the most powerful position I have ever held! Nick Utechin (1969) A Head Girl remembers Head Boy (2010) Regretfully times have changed and Corporal Punishment has been denied to me this year! However, there are other forms of punishment like running and press-ups which I took full advantage of at eleven thirty on the first night of the New Recruits’ Training Camp. I have to say that I had no trouble with my fourteen recruits for the remainder of the weekend. My first few days of primary school could be referred to as traumatic. In contrast to the exciting and colourful experience of Nursery and Kindergarten, the memory of waving goodbye to my parents from the classroom window, tears rolling down my cheeks while I In Nick Utechin’s day there was only one School Captain. Today, there’s a team – a Head Boy, a Head Girl, two Deputies and a whole lot of braid! Meet the 2009/10 held Mrs McKechnie’s team: Alfie Lloyd (Deputy); Lucy Aitchison (Head Girl); Fraser Stark (Head Boy); hand, is not a fond one. Anna Smrkova (Deputy); Sam Reilly (Deputy); Zara Reid (Deputy). In 1970 Nick Five years old and locked went on to study at Oxford. Of the 2010 group above, no fewer than four have in the toilet cubicle for a Oxbridge offers. We wish them all well for the future, whatever it holds. seemingly indefinite period of time, threatened by the unfamiliar environment of the ‘big’ school, certainly was a marking ordeal. Unfortunately, this lack of strict discipline has resulted in a change of respect among the How is it, then, that the great unknown soon became the familiar? younger pupils; on a number of occasions I have Firstly, it would have to be the people. It was Mrs McKechnie been tied up with skipping ropes whilst who rescued me from that cubicle and proceeded to restore my venturing across the playground during the Prep faith in school by contributing to make our Primary 1 such a School break. On a more serious note, I’ve special year. Soon, it was my parents who were left waving as I found that Prep school children are more than turned my back on them and rushed off to discover more about happy to approach Sixth Year pupils in the Biff and Chip. Break times equated to absolute anarchy as playground and start conversations, something everyone ran around, all joining in to play ‘Red Rover’; to have which I certainly would never have considered gone through primary and secondary school with friends is like when I was their age. This shows the confidence having an extended family. that the school is nurturing in the pupils but also Secondly, the variety of opportunities offered in the ‘big, big’ the close, family atmosphere that has been school, the Senior School, has afforded me invaluable experience, created which is, I feel, very healthy for the further learning, socialising and lots and lots of laughter. After school and its students. four years, it still feels a privilege to be part of the mystical Gavel Along with the usual dismissing of the school at Club. From debates in front of the whole school and UK maths assembly, my other duties have involved competitions, to building igloos in Aviemore and discovering New returning stolen Christmas trees (some Sixth Year York’s rich history, I have enjoyed it all. Even the seemingly pupils thought that the External Relations tree standard activity of hockey has been a fantastic opportunity to would look far better in the common room) and enjoy the banter of different year groups, by uniting as a team. herding Sixth Years into our weekly lecture on a With new and exciting endeavours ahead, Sixth Year has been a Friday. useful mix of independent learning and new responsibilities. I My position keeps me on my toes but I wouldn’t have, after all these formative years, overcome the terror of a have it any other way; the fact that most people locked cubicle. However, although The Academy has readied me in the school know my name is quite a special for the next great unknown, there is always a tinge of sadness as I thing and one which I will miss as I become one contemplate leaving the place where I have spent most of my of many first year University students next year. childhood, and made the best of friends. Fraser Stark (S6) Lucy Aitchison (S6) Etcetera 21 Paris Loire Valley trip, 1960 More on Moreton... I was saddened to read the news of Moreton Black’s death. Aside from expanding my vocabulary and teaching me some of the finer points of French grammar sufficient for a Higher, I remember a trip to Cannes circa 1961 arranged by Morty Black. It was train to London and ferry to Calais (no ‘Chunnel’ then). The overnight train to Nice in couchette accommodations was particularly memorable for us mostly sheltered Scottish lads. Once on the Riviera, we stayed at a high school. We felt sure every meal was horsemeat. There were lots of interesting and educational side trips – a perfume factory, Ventimiglia, St Tropez and somehow even one to a Casino. In Cannes, the presence nearby of the US sixth or seventh fleet and the joie de vivre of the sailors on shore leave made the nightlife scene even more entertaining and eye-opening. I also remember on the ferry back we met a group of girls from a school in Victoria BC – perhaps that’s why I ended up in Canada a few years later! Oh yeah, it is a bi-lingual country too! Al Fleming (1962) In April 1960, Moreton Black ran a school trip to Paris and the Loire Valley, which I took part in. I attach a photograph taken of the group in Paris. 22 Etcetera I also went on a trip to Cannes with him in 1964, I think it was. My form teacher for a couple of years was Jimmy Jope. He hated school dinners, but was supposed to sit at the head of the table and keep order. So as I was the oldest at the table, he appointed me to stand, or sit, in for him. Our table was Table 13, next to Moreton Black’s table. He sat very close to him. At our table there was a lad surnamed Morton. We took delight when I would call, fairly loudly ‘Morton!’ and Moreton would turn round. Ah, the things which amuse childish minds! I know some found him quite frightening, especially on the very rare occasions he wielded the belt, but I had extra tuition from him, and we would lean on the window ledge of his room watching the world go by, and discuss it in French. From that, and the two trips with him to France came not only my love of French, but my joy in all languages. He and I also shared an interest in philately – Moreton’s speciality being Bermuda, if I recall correctly. It is now a few years since I saw him at a stamp fair, and he was becoming forgetful, but still remembered me immediately. He always called me Michael, never Faulds. Mike Faulds (1965) Can I make a belated contribution to the affectionate memories of Morty Black? My old friend Alex Pollock’s mention of Morty drilling us to memorise the text of General De Gaulle’s defiant speech after the Fall of France inspires a happy memory of events in my career much later. By way of introduction, I should explain that at the Academy around 1960 I was not a gifted student of French, having little idea that I would end up as a book publisher in Canada, where the official languages are English and French. But I learned enough to pass a first-year French course at Morty’s other alma mater, St Andrews. There the Academy’s teachers were so well-respected that an essay of mine was returned by the Professor (the Professor!) with one howler circled, along with the question ‘What would Mr. Varley say?’ Many years later, I was sitting in my Publisher’s office in Toronto, listening to a self-important author declaiming about De Gaulle. It is one of the trials of a Publisher’s life that by definition he or she spends a great deal of time with authors who know everything under the sun about their chosen subject (which is good) but are not shy about proclaiming this fact, and talking down to their audience (which is bad). On this occasion, the author was pompously listing De Gaulle’s skills, and lamenting that ordinary people like me had no idea of the range of his talents. ‘Why,’ he announced contemptuously ‘Nobody in this country has any idea what a great orator he was!’. I felt a stirring of hope. ‘For example, nobody knows anything about the inspired speech he made after the Fall of France in 1940….’. Aha! I sprang to interrupt him. ‘Ah, yes’, I said, smiling, ‘the speech Rugby scores that goes… ‘S’il est vrai qu’ a travers les vents et les marees, a ete sauve… He beamed, and supplied the punch line, ‘And you thought of me!’ He scowled in obvious irritation, but I continued to declaim the MortyBlack-inspired words until – just before my memory ran out – he broke in testily, ‘Yes, yes, yes,’ and changed the subject. Some years later, I thought of him, when my French had improved to the point that I was able to translate French essays for publication in book form with no critical responses quoting Messrs Varley or Black. Many years later, when he visited Toronto, I told Morty about this story. Douglas Gibson (1962) Colin Stewart (1970) was about to throw out this lovingly-typed reminder of a glorious youth when he thought someone might be interested. Impressive stuff... but what went wrong in the final Hutchesons’ match? This 1932/33 photo of Miss Walker’s class was sent in by WN Herbertson (1944). W. Neilson Herbertson is pictured front, centre but who are the others? Etcetera 23 Announcements Births Rory Anderson (1992) Rory Anderson (1992) and his wife Jenny are delighted to announce the birth of their daughter Sarah on 15 November 2009. Ross Beveridge (1975) We had a second son, Adam John Dunlop Beveridge, born 3 December 2009 in Pittsburgh PA, 7Ibs 11oz. All doing well. Thuri Bjornsson (1997) Adam John Dunlop Beveridge I have recently extended my family and had another little boy, Oskar Bjorn Moor, who was born on 9 October 2009. Lesley Bloomer (1998) Lesley (nee Bloomer) and James Stuart-Gammie celebrated the birth of their son, Aulay, who was born in Edinburgh on 21 November 2009. Richard Inglis (1999) Richard and his wife Katy are delighted to announce the birth of their daughter, Olivia Jane, on 1 February 2010 at the Chelsea and Westminster hospital, London. Sandy Nelson (1998) Wee Baby Dave Nelson was born to Sandy and Elaine Nelson on 26 October 2009, weighing 7lbs 15oz and is doing well, especially at keeping his Mum up all night. Baby Dave Nelson with his Uncle and his Dad His namesake – Uncle Dave Nelson (2000) – is celebrating a successful year after co-writing several songs on Paolo Nutini’s number one album ‘Sunny Side Up’ and touring the world with the band. Jamie Sim (1992) Louis James Sim was born on 22 Aug 2009. My wife is called Jo. Born in Edinburgh, but a Weegie at heart! Engagement Fiona Begley (2003) Both familes are delighted to announce the engagement of Fiona Begley CA BA (Hons) to Paul Ferguson BA (Hons) from Lenzie. Marriage Louis James Sim with his Grandpa and his Dad Aulay Stuart-Gammie Michael Atkinson (1999) Our son Michael became engaged recently to Alison Kirkwood. Both families are delighted. Best wishes. Moira and Colin Atkinson (1957) Family news... Siva Nathan (1995) Siva is married to Dr Kavitha Gunasuntharam. They had their first baby, Rosa, on 15 July 2009. Suresh Nathan (1997) Suresh is married to Meena and is working as a dentist in Bolton. 24 Etcetera Deaths Grahame S Blackwood (1945) September 3 1927 – May 7 2009 Grahame was the second eldest son of a Glasgow fruit merchant, one of four Blackwood brothers and the last survivor of that proud generation. His younger brothers Kenneth and Jim were also Academicals. He attended Glasgow Academy from 1937 to 1945, before going on to complete a degree in Mechanical and Chemical Engineering at Glasgow University. A lifetime member of the Academical Club, he proudly sported the blue, black and grey tie until shortly before his demise. He was also a fellow of the Institute of Chartered Engineers and latterly an active and enthusiastic member of PROBUS. Grahame passed away at Roxburgh House, Dundee, in his 81st year after a brief illness and is survived by his wife, Sheila, his three children Carolyn, John and Pam and three grandchildren. John G Blackwood Hunter R Crawford (1939) August 14 1921 – January 31 2010 Hunter Ralston Crawford OBE was born in 1921 in Glasgow but like many others of his generation sought employment in the British colonies. Shortly before the Second World War he arrived in the Federated Malay States and commenced a long and eventful career in the rubber plantation industry. In 1941 he joined a group which infiltrated the jungle behind Japanese lines to carry out sabotage under the direction of Force 101. He was eventually captured in Sumatra and endured three years of internment before being released soon after his 24th birthday in August 1945, ‘by which time’, Crawford later commented, ‘both the Emperor and I had had enough’. After the war Crawford resumed his career in the Malayan rubber industry, living and working through a communist insurgency dubbed ‘The Malayan Emergency’ which lasted from 1948 to 1960. He rose steadily up the ranks of rubber industry executives, eventually becoming Managing Director of Plantation Agencies, a business which under his guidance became one of the largest plantation agency houses in newlyindependent Malaysia. Hunter was a member and director of many important bodies within the Malaysian rubber industry for which work he received a number of awards including being made a Freeman of the City of London. He was the Honorary British Consul in Penang and was awarded the OBE for services to the community. He died in Sussex, aged 88, and is survived by his wife and two sons. H Crawford Dr DIA (Ian) Cunningham (1950) February 18 1933 – July 13 2009 Dr Ian Cunningham (retired GP) passed away peacefully at Fleming Hospital, Aberlour. He is survived by his wife Mary, three children and three grandchildren. Ian is also survived by his Academical cousins, Antony Cunningham (1962) of Toronto, who followed his footsteps into the Boarding House in the days of Coleman Smith, and Antony’s son, Andrew (1987). After a few years in practice with his father, Donald, in Dudley, England, Ian moved back to Scotland and became a much-beloved general practitioner in Dufftown. He was a keen golfer and hill-walker and also served for many years on the public side of the Scotch Whisky Association in disbursing monies for alcohol education and research. A Memorial Service was held in Mortlach Parish Church, Dufftown, on July 17, and donations made to cancer research. Antony Cunningham (1962) Alexander W Dickie (1951) February 22 1935 – November 21 2009 Alexander Dickie, known to all as Alex, died after a lengthy battle against illness. He was a man of many accomplishments who had a great capacity for friendship and fun. Destined to become a building contractor, he was born in Muirend, in a house built by his grandfather. He was a pupil at Glasgow Academy from 1944 to 1951. Alex deferred his national service to learn his trade as a stonemason with the Glasgow firm Wilsons. Joining the Royal Artillery in 1956, his time in the army seemed more sporting than soldiering. Although he played some rugby for the British Army of the Rhine, skiing was where his real interest lay. Alex spent two happy winters in the Alps racing for the Army Team, which then also included two Olympic skiers. In 1958, he joined the family firm of John Dickie and Son Ltd, which by then was being run by his older brother Matt and, between them, they built and expanded the business with considerable success and in continuous profit. The company was renowned for the quality of its work with its housing developments regularly selling out off the plans. Golf was a major passion. Alex was a member at various times of Williamwood, Western Gailes, Machrihanish, Prestwick, Royal County Down, Crail, Pollok, Royal Troon, the ‘32 Club and Kilmacolm, where he was captain in 1994. A regular visitor to St Andrews from an early age, he became a member of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club in 1974. He officiated for many years at various championships, including the Masters and the Open. Alex also enjoyed success in the R&A’s own competitions including overcoming a well-known Scottish actor, who was licensed to kill, in a 1996 final. Alex is survived by Primmie – to whom he was very happily married for nearly 50 years – three sons and eight grandchildren. Dr George D Kay (1942) July 13 1936 – December 25 2009 George Davidson Kay, MB, CH.B, FRCS(C), passed away peacefully in Thornhill, Ontario, Canada. He was predeceased by his wife of fifty-four years, Gloria Violet Barwell, and by his brother, David Alan Reid Kay (1941-1948), Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario. George was born in Motherwell and soon earned the nickname ‘Jacko’ on account, it is said, of his prominent ears! He was a representative rugby player at school and university and, Etcetera 25 after scoring his first hole-in-one at the age of 16, remained an enthusiastic and competent golfer until very late in life. He also took great pleasure in fishing, fine woodworking, reading, bridge, and an ever-growing collection of single-malt Scotch. George emigrated to Canada in 1951. Seventeen years later he was appointed Head of Orthopaedics at North York General Hospital, a position he held for a further seventeen years! He was founder of the Pennal Orthopaedic Society and was also a generous contributor to the School’s Canada Prize Foundation and indeed remained a loyal supporter and proud former pupil of Glasgow Academy throughout his life. Antony Cunningham (1962) Alexander D Oag (1943) June 6 1925 – August 27 2009 ‘Sandy’, as he was known, was a pupil at Glasgow Academy from 1935 until 1943. On leaving school, he served in the Royal Navy as an officer on mine sweepers protecting Atlantic and Russian convoys. After the war he joined the Inchcare Group of which Mackinnon and Mackenzie were agents in the East for the British Steam and Navigation Company. Sandy eventually retired after service as Chairman of the company in Pakistan. It was during a voyage on one of the company’s ships that he met his wife, Dorothy, en route from Australia. They later married in Sydney and had three sons, eight grandchildren and two great grandchildren. In poor health for a number of years, he retained a great fondness for his old school. Mrs D Oag John H Sinclair (1952) November 5 1935 – November 8 2009 John, who attended The Academy from 1946-48, passed away suddenly in November. A former Professor of Conveyancing at the University of Strathclyde, he was also a practising solicitor, author of Handbook of Conveyancing Practice in Scotland and editor of the Scottish Law Agents Society’s Memorandum Book. John was also a former office bearer of the Royal Faculty of Procurators in Glasgow. 26 Etcetera Robin Veitch MBE (1960) March 9 1943 – October 26 2009 Following a year at Atholl Preparatory School, Robin climbed the steps of Glasgow Academy in 1950 into the loving care of Nan MacEwan and her Junior School Staff. As he progressed through The Academy he successfully managed to gather, not only an education, but also a passion for rugby, an interest in geography, a circle of loyal friends and a nickname, ‘Sam’, all of which remained with him throughout his life. At the age of 23, he joined the Cumbernauld firm of Traditional Weatherwear, manufacturing rainwear for various uniformed organisations. This was a fiercely competitive market, and when the firm began to fail, Robin was astute and courageous enough to purchase and take control of the company. In the years that followed he worked hard at establishing a market for his mackintoshes in Europe, America and Japan and his achievements resulted in him being awarded the MBE for services to export and the Queen’s Award for Enterprise. He also ventured into the fashion world and quickly built up a list of prestigious clients including Calvin Klein, Ralph Lauren, Gucci and Hermes. In 1972 Robin married Hazel who provided him with invaluable support throughout a happy marriage of 36 years. He was a founder member of Clydebank Rugby Club and for fifty years followed his great interest in rugby either as player, supporter, referee, selector or club president. He served as a church elder at Killearn, and was a committed Rotarian, being a former chairman of both Cumbernauld and Strathendrick branches. Sadly, in October 2009, Robin finally succumbed to cardiac problems that he had endured for many years and passed away in his garden with Hazel by his side. At his funeral service, a huge congregation filled the church to celebrate the life of a man of great enthusiasm, drive and energy who lived life to the full. DT Salmond (1962) Updates... Sergeant-Lieutenants Dr Donald JC Angus (2002) and Dr Scott Jamieson (2002) passed out from Sandhurst on Thursday 10 December 2009. Ben Bannatyne (1989) I am the Regional Director for ProLogis in Central Europe, based in Warsaw, Poland. We are a real estate developer and manager of warehouse / logistics parks with our HQ in Denver, US. I have been in Poland since 1997. I am married with one child, Samuel (31/2 years) and another one on the way. Andy Brown (1999) I recently became a CFA Charterholder and completed the arduous ‘Tough Guy’ challenge. Alan K Burnett (1964) Alan left Glasgow Royal Infirmary in 1991 to take up the post of Professor of Haematology at the then University of Wales College of Medicine in Cardiff, which later became Cardiff University. The post enabled him to pursue his keen interest in leukemia research and to develop a number of innovative treatments for leukemia. Alan was recognised for the outstanding progress he made in his field when he was awarded an MBE in the Queen’s Honours list in July 2008 for his services to Medicine. Joanna Cram (2000) I would like to offer osteopathic treatment to pupils of the Academy, and will ensure they will be given an appointment for the same day that they (or their parents!) call. I would be happy to provide further information on how osteopathy may benefit young children and teenagers. I do remember when I was a pupil at the Academy, students in the sports teams were often referred to a ‘Physio’ following any injury. Please see www.cramosteopaths.com Antony Cunningham (1962) After more than forty years in Canada, Antony Cunningham and his wife Rena are returning to Scotland at the end of April. They will be living in Allan Alstead (1954) recently became become an Honorary Doctor of Glasgow Caledonian University. The citation described him as follows: ‘A retired soldier and tireless volunteer, Allan Alstead is a former chairman of Mercy Corps Europe, which named him a ‘Humanitarian Hero’ for his work with the organisation, and a former chief executive of sportscotland.’ Many congratulations, Allan! Langside and old friends can make contact at 0798 007 8003 or at ethics@alumni.stfx.ca. Antony has represented the school and the Academical community with distinction over the years. Indeed, for a while, there was a flourishing section of the Club in Ontario and Antony and Rena were always generous hosts to many visiting Academicals and school teams. Together with Sandy Ferns, Antony also conceived of the Canada Prize and, raising funds and support from fellow-Academicals in Canada, brought it to a reality. Over the years, Antony served on numerous public boards and committees, including the Council of the College of Nurses of Ontario and the Minister of Education’s Task-Force on Student Retention. As past-president of two rugby clubs, the Ontario Rugby Referees’ Society, as a Life Member and past-president of the Toronto and District Rugby Referees’ Society, and as a former National Refereeing Coach and IRB Match Official, Antony is also well-known for his long-time commitment to Canadian rugby, especially in the area of refereeing development. Chiswick, West London (www.reallynicedentist.co.uk). The surgery has now been open just over 12 months and sees patients from all over London. Alistair Donald (1974) I left GA in 1974. After a degree in Geography (St Andrews) and PhD in Environmental Science (Wales), I worked in that field for a number of years in Wales and Scotland before becoming a Church of Scotland minister in the late 1990s having done a BD (Edinburgh). I was in a parish in Aberdeenshire till 12 months ago, when I moved to my current post – Chaplain to Heriot-Watt University. Because of my background I’m very interested in the science-faith debate (not on the side of Richard Dawkins!), so you might say I feel very much at home in the science-based HW Uni. Diabetes Federation for 2012-2015 at the recent World Diabetes Congress in Montreal. For the next three years, he will serve as President-Elect, succeeding Prince Jean-Claude Mbanya of Cameroon in 2012. Michael’s interest in diabetes started when his younger daughter Kate (1997) was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes at the age of five. He was the first Scot, and first non-medical person, to chair the Board of Trustees of Diabetes UK between 2001-2006, and was the deputy chairman of the successful global campaign to secure the United Nations Resolution on Diabetes. Robbie Low (1993) I have moved again. This time to Hartford, Connecticut to take up a new position as Finance Director with Aetna Life Insurance Company. David Dickson (1996) Sandy Fitzpatrick MBE (1988) Scot McRae (1987) Having completed my Bachelor of Dental Surgery in 2001 at Glasgow University, I moved to just outside of Oxford to complete my postgraduate vocational training with the University of Oxford Postgraduate Medical Centre, before joining a private dental practice in Berkshire. I have subsequently qualified with a PGCert in Surgical and Prosthetic Dental Implantology from The Eastman Dental Institute and University College London. I have just returned to Glasgow after nearly 20 years away and am thoroughly enjoying getting back in touch with Accies rugby. Sadly I spend more time on the touchline these days, but it is pleasing to see the club in good spirits and be part of such a vibrant atmosphere where talent is very evident. More school leavers should join and support the club. Those at the helm do a fantastic job and we should support them by watching the teams and supporting their efforts. Glasgow-based marketing strategy company fennonmcrae, of which Scot is a founding partner, shared their first birthday at the start of the year. The business helps organisations market and present themselves better, and they have played a fundamental role in successfully growing organisations across a number of sectors. fennonmcrae have had a very successful first year and are continuing to grow. www.fennonmcrae.co.uk. I have recently opened my own brand-new modern, customised dental surgery close to where I live in Sir Michael Hirst (1963) was elected World President of the International Peter Muir (1987) I have recently been appointed a Director of Colliers CRE a firm of Chartered Surveyors and International Etcetera 27 property consultants. I am based in their Glasgow office covering the whole of Scotland. Ricky Munday (1994) The unbelievable news is that I was awarded a 2010 Winston Churchill Travelling Fellowship. I’m absolutely over the moon about this because not only will the grant cover some major expenses (average grant last year was £5,500), but just as (if not even more) importantly it gives the expedition some credibility. It’s great to know that such a distinguished interview panel believe in me and my plans. And without your contribution I wouldn’t have been eligible for the award. So THANK YOU! Finally all the hard work I’ve put in to planning is starting to pay off. John Thomson (2001) I’ve moved to Austria, and I’m just starting a new job this month as an Assistant Professor at the University of Innsbruck, in the Informatics department. And in unrelated news, I’m getting married on 8 May this year to Rosalyn Tait in South Queensferry. Nigel Robinson (1982) After a two year stint in sunny Texas, Nigel Robinson and family have transferred back to Aberdeen where Nigel will continue his work with the marine oil and gas consultants, Noble Denton. Alastair (AJM) Scott (1963) Alasdair recently retired from the BBC as an Executive Producer of Television Golf Programmes and has been appointed a Coordinating Producer for the Commonwealth Games in New Delhi in October and will also be Senior Director of Hockey at the Games. Dawn Soutar (2004) I completed my Bachelor’s degree last year, and graduated in Japanese BA Hons with year abroad at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. Overall, I had fun, especially during my year abroad at Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, which was excellent. I also hoped that the Academy would be interested to hear that my father, Walter, has opened up a gallery with a friend in Glasgow’s Trongate area, called the James Walter Gallery. Their website can be found here: www.westendgalleryglasgow.co.uk/home.html Bryan Thomson (1981) I have just been made Managing Director North Asia for Bacardi, with responsibility for Japan, Korea, China, Taiwan and Hong Kong. 28 Etcetera Party time... Lindsay Crawford (1972) (above) (Left to right) Iain Jarvie, John Monaghan, Douglas Anderson and Lindsay Crawford – all of whom left GA in 1972/1973 – attended the 9th Warsaw Burns Supper on 7 February. John was the Master of Ceremonies; Iain did (a memorable!) Immortal Memory and Douglas and I did the whisky sampling. A great night was had by one and all! Russell Gilchrist (1967) (below) Lesley Peacock (Westbourne 1967) and I held a party to celebrate our combined 60th birthdays and retirements at Glasgow Golf Club last March. Around 90 people attended, including a number of Academicals. The photo is of Lesley and me with my mother. James Guthrie (1976) I had a 50th Birthday last summer which, despite trying to keep quiet was celebrated with a surprise party in a local hostelry in Carlisle. Unfortunately the organiser did not have the details of my friends from Glasgow Accies to invite them along. My sister Carol, who was one of the organisers for last year’s successful Fund Raiser in memory of Gordon Mackay, held at The Academy, had a surprise party recently to celebrate her 40th birthday. Fraser Thomson (1972) On Friday 5 February nearly 100 Westcombe Park Rugby Club gentlemen gathered in a surprise event to celebrate and thank Fraser for 30 years of service to the club, as both a player and a coach. Although he is not one for big speeches and has always been most humble with regard to his achievements, many of us felt it right to thank him in the only way we knew how – eat curry, drink too much, sing loudly and talk rubbish all night. However, this time we added a wee amount of finesse. After speeches from the current President John Ward Turner and past captain Rupert Chitty, Fraser was then presented with a unique Special Edition Club Cap for the years 19802009. He was also given a framed replica and Fraser’s ‘All Time Team’ – of players he played with or coached over the years – (his wife had gradually extracted these details from Fraser over a 6 month period). This was followed by the highlight of the evening – Fraser’s unplanned response. Fraser attended the Academy in the 1970s and indeed was part of the very small group of boarders at the school who lived in Belmont Crescent under the stewardship of Jim Cowper Bob McDowall (1978) Cameron Wilson (1999) I have recently taken over as president of the London Curry Club, which is a club that was established three years ago by fellow Academical Richard Inglis and me, in memory of my late father. The club meets once a month to sample the delights of London Indian cuisine, in addition to maintaining a link between young professionals working and living in London. The club’s membership is largely made up of Scottish and Irish ex-pats, with other Glasgow Academicals Andrew PS Brown, Fraser Lundie, Johnnie Peacock, Ramsay Wilson and Scott Chassels in regular attendance. If anyone is interested in joining the Curry Club, please email cameron.wilson@mainfirst.com for more details. Fraser Thomson VISIT US If you would like to visit The Academy please don’t hesitate to get in touch – former pupils are always welcome. Please contact exrel@tga.org.uk to arrange a visit at any time throughout the year. Sport... John Beattie (1975) BBC commentator John Beattie and some of his former rugby playing colleagues from across the fence are organising a Glasgow rugby friends reunited at the Fruit Market on 19 June. It’s a dewy-eyed attempt to recreate the days of New and Old Anniesland, Balgray, Hughenden and Burnbrae discos when pubs shut at ten and all the fun in town was at rugby clubs. There will be awards, a hall of fame induction, and music with the money going to the Hearts and Balls charity which looks after injured players. Just find John on facebook, or email johnrossbeattie@btinternet.com for more details. Ryan Dalziel (2000) Congratulations to Ryan who was part of the team that won the Daytona 24Hour Race, ‘America’s premier 24 hour-long endurance race’ in the Number 9 Action Express PorscheRiley Daytona Prototype (a car with a name almost as long as the race itself!). Calling all cricketers... Crawford Leslie (2009) would like to hear from all former pupils – young and old – who would like to play against Glasgow Academy’s 1st XI this June or July. To be included in the squad, just e-mail Crawford at crawf900@hotmail.com by the end of April. A DATE FOR YOUR DIARY The 2010 GALS GOLF outing will take place on Thursday 19 August at The Clydebank end District GC. It doesn’t matter what your handicap is, so please come and join us there. For further info please e-mail Elaine Horner (1970) elainemh@sky.com Etcetera 29 Clearly, we could not disappear to Scotland when our daughter faced such a challenge. She managed to buy a house within 200 metres of ours – another indicator that we were expected to stay; so the scene was set as she was taken to Lord Winston’s clinic in Queen Charlotte Hospital. Channel Five took over recording progress and the result was screened in the ‘Extraordinary People’ series. On 23 March 2006, four healthy girls were delivered in around four minutes by a team of thirty, including four dedicated groups to care for each child. Four Charming Reasons delaying my return to Scotland Having left the Academy in 1963 and pursued a business career that took me everywhere but Scotland, I had harboured an ambition that my wife and I could retire to Ayrshire when I reached 60. The ‘For Sale’ sign went up outside our Bedfordshire house in August 2005 just two weeks before our daughter Julie and her husband announced her first pregnancy at 38 years old. We left the sign in place – we could always visit Bedford to see our grandchild and be around for the birth. Fortunately, our estate agent took a relaxed view of our cancelling the proposed sale when Julie announced that a scan had indicated the presence of four babies and that these were identical quads. This it transpired is a 64 million to one possibility and these children – if they survived – would be the only identical quads in Britain. Survival is the issue with Quads – they will be delivered around two months early because mother runs out of space and the ability to sustain them. The professor in charge admitted that there was at least a 50 per cent chance of abnormality. The girls are now approaching four years old, energetically normal, a delight to be with and have completely changed my expected retirement activities. Baggy Aston – my English Class mentor in Transitus – had advised that I would never master the English language because I had declined to take Latin and Greek and he suspected that I spent too much time watching the ‘idiot’s lantern’ (his term for television). Perhaps I should have heeded his caution, because I now want to write the girls’ story. I wonder what Baggy would have thought about the Spell Check in Microsoft ‘Word’ – pure dismay probably? David Kay (1963) Academy pipers Alasdair Dickson and Fiona McDonald were on hand to pipe in the haggis at the Spina Bifida Burns Supper held in Glasgow recently. Guests of honour Jonathan Watson and Duncan Bannatyne also enjoyed the evening. 30 Etcetera Transitus ‘C’ 1950-1951 Back row: Geoffrey/Mike Arnold, Hugh Parsons, Jim Band, Jim Buntin, Robert Logan, ? Greenhill, David Gray From our own correspondents Dear Malcolm, 3rd row: Raymond Mills, Jimmy Renfrew, Neil/M MacLean, ? Hunter, John Riddell, Evan Mitchell, John/David Henderson 2nd row: George Galloway, Hamish Jackson, Alan Rennie, Mr Rupert Hedger, Christopher Carrick-Anderson, Timothy Robertson, David Keddie Front row: Drew Isaac, Leslie Davis, Hugh Hogarth, G Donaldson, Stewart Carswell Indian Trophy Mystery Dear Sir, I enjoyed reading Ken Waine’s story of the Indian Trophy. There is, however, a twist to the tale. I was interested in the class photograph from 1950-1951 on page 6 of the last issue of Etcetera (No 10). I was in that class myself and remember Drew Isaac (very front row extreme left). I remember well when he left and indeed have met with him a few years ago when he was ‘home’. John McCann, the Academy’s ‘odd job’ man, was tasked to clear the basement area, including the ‘dunny’ ready for redevelopment. During this work I had stopped for a chat with John when his assistant walked past carrying two bin bags. These were then thrown into a skip, which was parked on the yard. One of these bags made a strange noise on landing. When I asked what was in the bags I was told it was just ‘rubbish’. Still curious, I climbed into the skip to find the Indian Trophy wrapped inside the bin bag. I then took the trophy to Ken who told me the story. Glasgow Academy has a superb collection of trophies. While the Indian Trophy is the most spectacular trophy, my favourite remains the Swimming Champion Trophy, which must be the oldest. Rob Littlefield (former Academy staff) Thanks to Raymond Mills and David Keddie whose best guesses at the names of their classmates have been combined (left). (While there’s still some doubt, at least we can be fairly sure that they’ve recognised themselves!) Dear Mark, Through Etcetera I was reconnected with Allan McNicol and his wife Evelyn. They are coming to visit us here in Australia at the end of March 2010. We haven’t seen each other in 66 long years! John M Crombie (1944) Dear Joanna, It was a happy class and the room we used in the main building high up was heated by a solid fuel stove – Rupert’s gown (they all wore gowns!) used to get caught in the wee doors at the front of the stove and go on fire – much to our delight! Seeing some recent correspondence regarding David Humberstone late of the Geography Dept, brought to mind one anecdote. His predecessor (a Mr (Dodo) Olgilvie), the end of whose teaching career I just caught had, as I recall, an ink roller device which could transfer outline maps of various lands into one’s jotter. We had to line up dutifully and the maps were duly rolled onto the page. David Humberstone swept this traditional technology away with something called a ‘Banda’ printer or some similar trade name. It worked with alcohol solvent and could produce colour outline maps. By recollection, it was a very primitive predecessor to a photocopier – but that overstates the technology – still ‘twas all new then. On printing these off David – should I say ‘sir’ – would hold a sheet to his nose, breathe in the vapours deeply and cry-out ‘Start the day the Banda way’. Life was so simple back then… David Keddie (1958) Allan Pollock (1973) Our class master was Rupert Hedger – a very kind and good man, but not a great disciplinarian! It’s worth remembering that in those days Transitus was the equivalent of today’s Primary 6 – there being no P6 in the old Lower School – so we were all pretty young and mischievous. As I recall, Rupert Hedger had seen action in the RAF during the war (which was after all only 5 years previous). Etcetera 31 Dear Sir, The comment in the most recent edition of the Etcetera regarding the necessity of obtaining second-hand books during war time, brought back memories, so much so that I had only to open my copy of The Golden Treasury by Palgrave to note that it was purchased from WN Stirling (IVB) who in turn had acquired it from a TB Buyers. It has not only a veritable plethora of useful notes on almost every page. For example I note The Lady of Shallot is the ‘First of Tennyson’s Arthurian legends, not an allegory, but a series of imaginative pictures.’ Perhaps of more interest are five questions, perhaps taken from an old examination paper, viz. 1) By examining one or two comic characters from English literature show wherein the comic exist. 2) How does a story in verse differ from a story in prose? 4) Discuss and illustrate the features which (apart from length) distinguish the ‘Short Story’ from other forums. 5) Under what circumstances can works on history, travel, or science become literature? I would be grateful if the assertion that modern day exams are as rigorous as those of yesterday could be put to the test! Perhaps some of the staff might oblige. I have no idea who Mr Buyers might be, but I knew of Neil Stirling, for I think the purchase cost 18p. I have carried my copy as far away as the Falkland Islands and I doubt if I shall ever be able to get a better read at a better price. Robin Johnston (1948) P.S. I understand WN Stirling is still with us, and is living in the Nottingham area. Perhaps you could ask your readers if anyone else still treasures Palgrave, or has similar purchases. 3) Can a ‘Thriller’ be good literature? Dates for your Diary Thursday 25 March London Section Dinner Friday 30 April Class of 1959/60/61 Reunion Monday 24 May 1st XI versus the MCC Saturday 12 June The Cargill Ball Friday 17 September Class of 1990 Reunion Tuesday 28 September Glasgow Academy 100 Careers Evening Thursday 11 November Class of 1949/1950/1951 Reunion Friday 12 November The Glasgow Academical Club Dinner Friday 3 December Class of 1980 Reunion Friday 17 December Class of 1990 Reunion If you would like to attend, be involved in or receive more details on any of these events, please contact exrel@tga.org.uk or 0141 342 5494. The next step on the road to realising our 2020 Vision In August last year we completed the purchase of two entire tenements opposite the school’s main building on the corner of Colebrooke Street and Colebrooke Place. Considering our ambitions for The Academy, we as Governors felt it right to take advantage of this unique opportunity to buy a large potential footprint adjacent to the school. We acquired 19 flats in just 21 months, which is in contrast to the 80 or so years it took to purchase all of Colebrooke Terrace – leading ultimately to the development of our new Prep School in 2008. Our 2020 Vision seeks to capitalise on all features that make The Academy special: excellence in learning and teaching; arts; science; sports; and personal and social development. In line with this vision and in order to take full advantage of our existing estate and the new purchase, we have appointed two first class advisors to help us form a development framework – Page and Park, Architects 32 Etcetera and Muir Smith Evans, Planning and Development Consultants. Such a plan will be key to maximising the longterm strategic view of the school and its needs. We are considering a number of options for the site and once the Development Framework is approved – which involves the entire campus – more information will be available regarding the detail of our short- and long-term aspirations. Bryan Duncan (1978) Governor