Interview with John Peel – 1970 John joined St David’s in grade 1, 1958 and was a day boy which meant he had more of a family life and time with his brothers and sisters which he felt was important to him, although, if he had been a boarder he would have ... »
Interview with John Peel – 1970 John joined St David’s in grade 1, 1958 and was a day boy which meant he had more of a family life and time with his brothers and sisters which he felt was important to him, although, if he had been a boarder he would have been able to participate in more sport. On his first day he recalled the smell of lead pencil and erasers shavings and sitting next to his friends Adrienne Tygh and Antoinne Simaan. The teachers he remembers are Brothers Anthony (Ounges), Andrew (Drac), Bosco (Boing) and Br Sean in standard 6. He recalled being caught smoking on rugby tour twice by Drac; being caught pinching orange juice out of the store room together with Willy Castle; being sent out and standing in the corridor and hearing the click of “Ounges” fingers and “to my office boy”. He really enjoyed the sport and was a member of the 1st rugby team, 1st cricket team, tennis 2nds, athletics team, golf and swimming. He entered into every heat to get out of school but couldn’t swim a stroke. He was selected for the 1971 hockey, SADF; 1990 – 2005 Mpumalanga Masters Hockey; 1974 Transvaal cricket; 1972 rugby U/20 Transvaal. The friends he had and with who he is still in contact are Willy Castle, Keith Shaw, Dan Toner, Phillip Karakashin, Errol Macaulay and Johnny Williams. He recalls being a prefect and not particularly enjoying catching fellow smokers. His last day he remembers sitting at the Rosebank Hotel (not in uniform) and having a beer. On leaving school he went to Wits Technical College and Pretoria Technical College and is currently employed as an ecologist. John last visited the school in 2001 2010
Interview with Peter Scott- 1970 Peter came to St David’s in 1969 as a day boy having moved up from Durban where he had attended Northlands Boys’ High and had been streamed to study Maths. Peter had an interview with Br Anthony who made a place for him. ... »
Interview with Peter Scott- 1970 Peter came to St David’s in 1969 as a day boy having moved up from Durban where he had attended Northlands Boys’ High and had been streamed to study Maths. Peter had an interview with Br Anthony who made a place for him. Peter’s father was employed by Barclays Bank as was Angus Band’s father and Peter spent a week’s holiday with Angus before starting at Marist Inanda. It was quite a change coming from a government school into a private one, he was no longer just a number, everyone knew you and Peter enjoyed the friendship and the smaller classes; for Biology there only 8 of them in a class. Peter recalled that Br Anthony was a wonderful man whom he respected, he was strict but fair. He had a saying that all roads lead to Damelin and as a form of discipline every time a boy committed a misdemeanour he would first add their name to a transfer card. Next would come the address and so on until the card was complete and the boy was then out of St David’s. Br Timothy taught Biology in a didactic manner; Br Bosco (Mario) Science, he was a great teacher who gave classes after school for the more advanced pupils. Br Patrick – English; Br Andrew (Drac) who was very strict; Br Michael – Maths and Mr Kalifi, an electrical engineer turned teacher who taught Maths and Applied Maths. Lex Fernhead was the Biology teacher in standard 9 and taught the boys as if they were at university level. He gained a Phd, ran the Durban aquarium and then started the Two Oceans in Cape Town. Fellow pupils were Kevin McPherson who became an architect, was very good at drawing caricatures and drew one of Br Mario on the blackboard. Peter Elliot, Alec Chemaly (both cyclists); Keith Shaw who was head boy, now living in Cape Town and involved in tv work having done an excellent series for the BBC on Mandela. Kim Small, a good ruby player is now farming in KwaZulu Natal. Peter often works together with another MOB, Greg Boyes-Varley and Francis Gibbons and he were best man at each other’s wedding and still keep in touch today. Peter wore his hair as long as he could, the maximum allowed, which led Br Anthony to comment at a prize giving – “grow it, you might lose it one day!” In those days the prize giving was held under the trees on the south side of the school. Socially the boys would meet up with the girls from Rosebank Convent and Parktown Convent with the girls coming to the rugby matches. There was also a coffee club on Friday nights at the Rosebank Catholic church for teenagers aged 14 to 16 with dancing and socialising but no alcohol. Peter got quite involved with this and used to organise the music until he was in his second year at university. On the sporting front Peter was a runner together with John Williams, his best being the 400m, however Willy Castle was a better runner. He was a member of the 5th team rugby in standard 9 and in the 3rd team in matric. There was a good spirit and Peter enjoyed the rugby, playing against CBC Boksburg and CBC Springs which was quite a journey taking two or more hours in the school buses. Peter remembered a controversial match against St John’s, where everyone believed that the referee was biased and the Marist boys chased the St John’s team up to the bell tower. St David’s didn’t play against St John’s for a number of years after that incident. Peter was also a student officer in the cadets. The drill team came second in the championships. Mrs Moni organised all the uniforms and the boys had to travel standing up so as not to crease them before the competition. Peter recalled a weekend in Henley on Klip for school leavers prior to their matric study week. They were allowed to drink beer and John Moni was rather bleary eyed on the bus trip home. There was a three week marine biology trip to Chidenguele, Mozambique where the boys had an amazing time. Peter participated in the “Business Game” with his team doing well coming second that year when Michaelhouse won. Other members of the team Kevin Ryan and Richard Collier went to do well in business. The matric dance had the theme of Venice and was catered by Fattis and Monis with the after party held at John Moni’s home. Academically, Peter did well and achieved 3 distinctions for his JMB matric. He walked away with all the prizes with the exception of Afrikaans. After matriculating Peter went to Wits university to study Medicine, delaying his stint in the army when he did his two years military service as a doctor on the Angolan border and in mission hospitals in Natal. He studied Medicine and a BSc Hons in Bio Chemistry simultaneously, graduating in 1978 doing his housemanship at the Johannesburg hospital. He lectured in Anatomy for a year with Philip Tobias then started his career and did 6 months as a senior house officer in plastic surgery and then specialised in general surgery and plastic surgery up until 1986 when he graduated from the Royal College of Surgeons, Edinburgh. He then underwent 2 years as a consultant at the Johannesburg hospital and began his own private practice in 1988. He is still heavily involved with teaching and is on the executive committee of the Association of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons of South Africa and is a member of the world body of plastic surgeons which involves a lot of travelling and teaching. On a personal level he is interested in archaeology as a result of his friendship with Philip Tobias and is a keen cyclist. Peter is married with three children, two daughters and a son who went to St John’s – his wife, who is a teacher chose the schools and Peter selected the doctors! One of his daughters is likely to follow him into the field of Medicine. JLE April 2013
Interview with Nick Mavrodaris – 1970 Nick was born in Springs and was enrolled as a pupil at St David’s, as a boarder in 1965. Springs High School was in decline; also Nick’s father had brought 35 children to South Africa from Greece and wanted a better ... »
Interview with Nick Mavrodaris – 1970 Nick was born in Springs and was enrolled as a pupil at St David’s, as a boarder in 1965. Springs High School was in decline; also Nick’s father had brought 35 children to South Africa from Greece and wanted a better education for his son. He remembers his first day arriving and his parents helping him unpack. The pranks the other boys played on their first day telling the new boys to go to one of the brothers and ask where the crows were – unbeknown to them the brothers were nicknamed the “Crows”. Nick was a boarder and loved it; he enjoyed the sport and joined in all the school activities. The discipline was good and it was only years afterwards he appreciated that aspect of school life and the influence it had on him. The discipline involved getting up early to study, then school work, then sport and homework periods at the end of the day. Nick did however regret missing out on family life especially as his father died when Nick was only 3 years into adulthood. He was a member of the U13, U14,U15 A and B rugby teams, in standard 9 was a member of the 3rd team and in matric the 1st team until he injured his knee and required surgery. He participated in cricket, tennis although he wasn’t that good, volleyball and diving. He also went to Cape Town to St Joseph’s to celebrate the Marist’s 100 year anniversary. The brothers he remembers are Br Anthony, Br Andrew “Drac”, whom he visited when he went to Barcelona for the soccer world cup in 1982. Br Andrew taught Geography and at his first lesson he told the boys to study the map of the Transvaal. The next day he brought a very large map into the classroom and asked the boys the location of various towns etc which of course they hadn’t learnt. In standard 9 he had a Jewish Maths teacher and James Harrywyn took advantage of the fact that he didn’t understand what was to happen when the Angelus bell rang and carried on praying and saying Hail Mary’s for 15 minutes until Br Anthony walked past the classroom and saw everyone laughing. There was Br Patrick, an Irishman who said “what do you expect from a pig but a grunt”, he taught English and Nick remembers the opening lines of “The Tale of Two Cities” “it was the best of times and the worst of times”. Br Aidan the bursar, Br Bosco “Boeing” who taught matric Science and finished the syllabus by April. There was another brother from Mexico who didn’t understand English. The boys nicknamed him “Gringo” and took advantage of him during study periods. He remembers pupils such as Jonny Stavros, a Greek from Zambia, John Williamson, Alec Chemaly, Patrick Quarmby, Lee McGregor, a Springbok swimmer and Keith Shaw, head boy. The boys were always playing jokes on one another and Nick remembered an occasion when the priest didn’t turn up for confession and James Harrywyn took it upon himself to stand in for him. He listened to all the confessions and sent the boys to the chapel to pray for their sins – all evening! Mickey Joseph was a walking pantry and carried all sorts of sauces in his blazers’ inside pockets. The food was monotonous and Nick recalls one evening when the boys were served spinach. Nick got hold of some olive oil and lemon juice and soon everyone was tucking in. The boys were not allowed to have radios at school but, in 1966 Nick acquired a mini radio which he hid in his blazer and ran the wires for the earphones up his sleeve so that he could listen to the soccer world cup scores. Nick also remembers planting grass for the school rugby and cricket fields. Nick’s father had a grocery store and worked long hours. When Nick went home for the holidays he had to help as a packer which he hated at the time. His father trained them so well that he went away on holiday and left his sons to run the business. Nick recalled that for his matric dance he took a Greek girl from Germiston as his partner as he really didn’t know many girls at that time. When Nick left St David’s he joined the commandoes which entailed basic training in the January and July 1971 and being called up to camps for 3 weeks over 16 years. Nick did 3 months border duty but didn’t see any action. He studied law at Wits University but realised after 3 ½ years he wasn’t going anywhere. He had been regularly helping out at the grocery store then got a job with the nearby Elegance Jewellers working every Saturday and during varsity holidays for R2.50 per day. He had to travel by train to Johannesburg leaving home at 6.10am to catch the 6.20 train arriving in Johannesburg at 7.30am. In all that time he only missed 3 lectures. In 1974 he joined Elegance full time and eventually bought a half share then the full, shares in the business. He had one shop in Springs then expanded further. This year Nick consolidated the business from 5 stores to 2 and now enjoys some more quality time with his family. Nick’s sons didn’t attend St David’s as it was too far to travel from Benoni which has an excellent high school. Also if they had become boarders they would have missed out on family life which is very important. JLE August 2013
Interview with Timothy Marsay – 1970 In the November of 1963 Tim moved with his 8 brothers and sisters from Leeds in the UK to South Africa, as his father had been offered a position with Crossley Carpets as marketing manager. Tim began his career at St ... »
Interview with Timothy Marsay – 1970 In the November of 1963 Tim moved with his 8 brothers and sisters from Leeds in the UK to South Africa, as his father had been offered a position with Crossley Carpets as marketing manager. Tim began his career at St David’s in 1964 aged 10 coming from a Catholic family. The family initially lived in Fourways on a guest farm before moving to Houghton. In those days there was an A and B stream and Tim was initially relegated to the B stream moving up to the A stream in standard 5. It was a complete culture change with a different climate and he had to learn another type of History and Geography plus another language, Afrikaans. Tim was third in line with six brothers of whom 5 attended St David’s the younger one going elsewhere. Three of his brothers eventually matriculated at De La Salle the family was then living in Ferndale. Br Anthony (Oanges) was the headmaster and Tim remembers struggling to adapt through standard 4 until standard 5. He participated in soccer and athletics and eventually made some friends which made life much easier. His teacher in standard 4 was Mrs Dunsford-White, standard 5, Mrs Kenesovich, a lovely lady but a battleaxe and Mrs Kempster. Tim’s mother also taught at St David’s for a while. Willy Castle was age 11 in standard 6, far too young for his class, however he had a strong personality and after his matric in 1968 he went into the air force and repeated matric in 1970. In the high school from standard 6 there were two classes for each standard. Tim got very involved with running formerly a timid child in the prep school he became more confident as he achieved on the sports field. There was a big race against Marist Observatory and although U13 he ran in the U15 mile and won the race with his older brother Andrew coming in second. The following Monday, at assembly Br Anthony announced his achievement which put Tim on the map. He was so successful with his running that he was prevented from playing rugby in case he was injured. In standard 7 at an athletics meet at Jeppe wearing borrowed spikes he was observed by a Springbok runner who advised him to rather run barefoot than in illfitting shoes. Tim then started running at club athletics and inter-provincial events. He was bottom of the league in club running but eventually represented the province from the age of 16 onwards and Southern Transvaal in cross country. He ran for Diggers an Afrikaans speaking club. This improved his Afrikaans but not quite in the way that his teacher Mr Malan would have liked. He was called out and asked if he was mixing with Afrikaans boys and it was pointed out to him that certain words were not quite the adjectives to be used in polite conversation! In 1970 Tim broke the record for the 800m at 2 mins 02.3 secs and the 1500m at 4 mins 17.3 secs. These records still stand today. Tim didn’t enjoy cadets and used the excuse of his athletics training to get out of it. Tim remembered that when he was in standard 6 in 1966 the boys were each given a medal by some military persona to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Republic of South Africa. He also recalled President Verwoed being stabbed that year. In standard 8 a new young priest, Father Tony Bailey came to the Rosebank parish and decided to make a facility available to the boys from St David’s and the girls from Rosebank Convent. A disco room with a coffee bar was built as a venue. This was fantastic for the parents as well as the young people who were dropped off on a Friday night at 6pm and collected at 10.30pm. They were in a safe and supervised environment and many marriages subsequently followed as a result. Academically Tim did well and achieved a first class matric he wasn’t a prefect but was vice-house captain of The Bishops and captain of the athletics team. He was awarded an honours blazer for athletics and studies, received scrolls for merit, studies and athletics, was a member of the senior Christian life group and in standard 9 received a prize for Latin. After matriculating, Tim went into the air force for a year and then went onto RAU where he received a bursary for his first year. In his second year he was awarded a sports bursary, the first ever. He studied for a BComm Industrial Psychology but joined his father as a holiday job and is still working for the same company W Marsay & Sons now known as Marsay Equipment. Tim got on well with his father and enjoyed working with him. Tim has two sons, Michael who matriculated at St David’s in 1999 and Chris in 2003. When his son Chris was in grade 11 and fund raising for the matric dance, Tim participated in an evening when the fathers got together and put on a show performing stage acts including excerpts from Swan Lake, The Full Monty and the Rocky Horror Show. They sold tables and made R70 000 in one evening. Everyone involved thoroughly enjoyed the event and Tim recalls being thrown out of Swan Lake as he couldn’t learn the routine. Tim is a member of MOBS and is still involved with the school. JLE March 2014