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Class

News of Class year.

Arthur Johnson was born in Hong Kong on 10th September 1930.

He attended the Diocesan Boys' School ('48), but the Japanese Occupation of HK during the 2nd World War disrupted his education. After HK was liberated from the Japanese occupation, he returned to HK and completed High School education at the St. Paul's Co-education College.

After graduation, he joined the HK Civil Service as an accountant in the Medical and Health Department. Shortly thereafter, he started to work as a Health Inspector with the Urban Services Department of the HK Government.

He attended the Royal College of Health Inspection in London and obtained his Higher Diploma in Food Hygiene in 1968. Upon his return to HK, he continued to serve the Urban Services Department of the HK Government until his retirement in 1986. His last posting was Senior Superintendent of Health Inspection in charge of the entire health inspectorate of HK. Sir Murray Maclehose, the Governor of HK appointed him a Justice of the Peace in 1981.

He married Tang Yuk Sang in 1951. Out of their marriage, 4 children were born, namely Susan, Vicky, Winnie (all DGS old girls) and Eugene Leslie (DBS old boy class of 81). Yuk Sang was a home-maker dedicating her entire life towards looking after the family.

Arthur immigrated to Canada in 1986 and started to live permanently in Vancouver in 1989. After a valiant battle with lung cancer, he passed away on 24th November 2006 at the Rouge Valley Centenary Hospital at the age of 76.
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The Funeral Service took place on Monday 4th December 2006 in Toronto.
Order of Service
Prelude – Arthur’s favourite tune from the Chariots of Fire
Reading of Poetry – Winnie Johnson
Obituary – Eugene Johnson
Eulogy – Susan Johnson
Tribute – Vicky Johnson, Peggy Wan & Jessica S. Pang
Cremation took place after the service followed by a deluxe Chinese Cuisine.

Acknowledgment

We thank you, perhaps you sent a lovely card or sat quietly in a chair, perhaps you sent a floral piece, if so, we saw it there, perhaps you spoke the kindest words as any friend could say. Whatever you did to console our hearts, we thank you so much.

The Johnson Family

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Class 73 Reunion 06

The class of 71 had a gathering at the school on Dec 2006. (correction received that this was not 73).

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Our classmate Michael Albert Ryan (DBS '75) was promoted to Brigadier General on November 3 this year in Wiesbaden, Germany (he's stationed there since June 2005).

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Mike entered P.5 with us, and left DBS after finishing Form 4. He joined the U.S. Army's Tank Corps after finishing university, and has now been with the Army for about 25 years already. He's been mostly overseas, having been posted in Germany, Bosnia, Kosovo and the Middle East (twice in Iraq after Saddam's capture).  Next week, he'll be going to Afghanistan.

Here's what Mike said about his education at DBS:- "I am absolutely convinced my time at DBS and in HK prepared me for success in studies, discipline, teamwork and cameraderie with diverse friends and so on, which saw me in good stead for my 5 tours in Germany, and when I was on a NATO mission in Bosnia in the 90's, negotiating and working with Russians, Romanians, Bulgarians, Serbs, Iraqis, Koreans and now soon-to-be working for a British 3-star General in Afghanistan."

75-ers are very proud to have studied under one roof with Mike, who very possibly is the first ever U.S. general that DBS has ever produced!!!


1st Armored Division pins new brigadier general

Story and Photos by Spc. Andrew Orillion, 1st Armored Division Public Affairs

Photo by Sgt. Samuel Smith, 1st Armored Division Public Affairs November 3, 2006

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer once boasted that it had more stars than in the heavens. The 1st Armored Division may give MGM a run for its money, having just added another star to its roster, the newly pinned Brig. Gen. Michael A. Ryan, assistant division commander (Maneuver). Ryan was promoted to the rank of brigadier general during a ceremony at Wiesbaden Army Airfield Nov. 3.

The ceremony was presided over by Maj. Gen. Fred D. Robinson Jr., division commander. Robinson spoke of his firm belief in the abilities of the 1st AD’s newest brigadier general.
"Only one out of approximately 300 officers in any year group and 2% of all colonels will ever rise to the rank of general officer," Robinson said. "That speaks volumes about the quality of the officer himself and it sees even more about the efforts of the leaders and Soldiers who have molded him along the way."

Robinson continued, by mentioning a few of Ryan’s many accomplishments as ADCM. Ryan has held this position since July 2005.

"As ADCM, Ryan concentrated his efforts on reconstituting, training and building leaders throughout the division, making sure that they are all prepared for battle in this global war on terror,"

Robinson said. "I have never met an officer with greater dogged determination to insure the readiness of units." Robinson concluded his remarks by reaffirming his faith in the
leadership abilities of his newest one star. "I know of no officer more deserving of this than you, there is no doubt that you will continue to make a difference for every Soldier in this division," Robinson said.

After being officially pinned by Robinson, and being given his new kevlar and pistol belt, Ryan took the podium and spoke about his new rank and what it meant to him.

"Promotions are thought by some to be a very personal recognition which then triggers a very long and torturous monologue using every permutation of the personal pronoun and an excruciating trip down memory lane," Ryan said. "We are going to avoid some of this."

Ryan’s self-effacing sense of humor eventually gave way when he spoke about the responsibilities that come with any promotion.

"With every promotion there is a greater opportunity to train and care for our Soldiers, to fight bureaucracy and apply common sense to challenges," Ryan said. "If you accept a promotion with the intent of doing everything in your power to make a positive impact on the unit and its Soldiers, then I suspect that you will never be disappointed."

Ryan concluded his speech by thanking God, his family and all the troopers he served with over the years. He also offered a last bit of reflection on a career spent in service to his country.

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2006 Nov 4
Diocesan Boys' School


"The Spirit of DBS- Pride in the School, sense of belonging and loyalty, manifestation in later life of values acquired in school days, are defining factors for our DBS Tradition and Spirit. Cheering for DBS by our boys at the Annual Inter-School Athletic Competition was one of the crowning moments for expressing our DBS pride and loyalty, of no less significance in contributing to our DBS Tradition than the athletes themselves, who gave everything they had in their quest for the glory of DBS."

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The Class of 56 held its Golden Reunion this year at DBS on Nov 4th. We were honoured by the presence of the Headmaster and Mr. & Mrs. Brittain, one of the eminent teachers of our time, who at the age of 86 came especially from England to attend our Reunion.

Our "DBS DAY" -Nov 4 – kicked off with a warming up lunch at Loong Yuen Restaurant in Holiday Inn Hotel, where Mr. Brittain and Mr. Stephen Tai (Chemistry teacher) made their appearances together with some old boys from other years, namely Fung Yee Wang, Ha Wing Ho and George Kotwall.

A nostalgic return down memory lane began at 4 pm when our group returned to DBS to tour its grounds, with some successfully climbing all those steps, and memories of past years were rekindled by familiar landmarks. At 5 p.m. group photos were taken at the front portal of the school building. Headmaster Terence Chang joined us for the photo shoot. The "Thanks Given Service" took place in the School Chapel at 5:30 pm, officiated by classmate Rev. Paul Tong. The Headmaster then spoke of how the DBS Tradition & Spirit had been maintained in the intervening years. Classmates Chang Sze Wang and Henry Wong also spoke following the Headmaster. The Service ended with the presentation of the Library Fund– a donation collected from classmates of Class 56 – in the sum of HK$85,000 to the Headmaster, who pledged that HK $25,000 would be set aside to buy books and the balance for development of the School Library.

After the Service, the party adjourned for dinner in the Day Boys’ Dining Hall, where the Welcoming Speech was delivered by Howard Un, followed by speeches from Mr. Brittain and other classmates, namely Chang Yu, Alan Cheung, Henry Kennedy-Skipton, Lo Kingman, Peter K.S. Pun and Ronald So.
The "DBS DAY" of our Reunion was brought to a close after distributions of souvenirs presented by the Headmaster.

Participants to the "DBS DAY" – Chan Chung Kong, Otto Chan Kwok To, Chang Sze Wang, Hugh Chang Yu, Frank Chen, Alan Cheung, Charles Ho, Gary Hamet, Henry Kennedy -Skipton, Lawrence Kotwall, Albert Lam, Lincoln Lao, Herbert Lee, Leonard Leung, Lo Kingman, Pang Wing Luk, Peter Pun Kwok Shing, Ronald So, Paul Tong, Eric Tsao, Howard Un, Henry Wong.

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Class of 83 Reunion Dinner

We had a great party with our Ronnie on August 26th, 2006 in celebration for his recent promotion to be one of the Vice Principal of DBS. His lovely wife Ying Ying was there too!  Over thirty of us were at the dinner party.  Tommy was so kind to offer his service by organising such a wonderful gathering and we had the Tommy Ho juniors to be our professional photographers!  We even had raffle draw on prizes kindly donated by our classmates. I won a bottle of Lafite 82! 🙂

If you want to be informed on our next great Class of ’83 gatherings, make sure you join our distribution group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dbs1983.

Spencer Leung
Class of ’83
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Class of 84 reunion dinner

The DBS Class '84 Reunion Dinner 2006 was successfully held on 28 July, 2006. This is the 22nd Anniversary for our Classmates and we had 29 people who attended.

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I presented an opening speech to express the heart for all of us for 22 years and appreciated our strong unity as a group. The tradition will carry on every year and there will be a big celebration in 2009 having the 25th Anniversary. Our Class ’84 will continue to support DBS and DSOBA in the years to come.

Darwin Liu (84)

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Jacland Lai(55) – HKUST Honorary Fellowship

Jacland Lai (55) was conferred an Honorary Fellowship by HKUST on June 30 for his contribution to Hong Kong and HKUST. Jacland is a founding member of HKUST and has served on various
committees of the university.

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Some Views from Another Country

I browsed the Web for "DiocesanAND BoysAND School." I did not expect to find anything, but I was interested enough to have a try. I found a bright user-friendly site with video.

The clip of the Opening of the new Chi Athletics track was my introduction to DBS 2006. I saw something familiar to me - the arched windows of the original buildings: and something totally new - 21st century Kowloon.

It is very hard to put across the shock of seeing buildings towering above the DBS campus. Most of you will have known nothing else. My mind sees only the parched soil of the NT hills stretching for miles. The nearest buildings were three story houses below the retaining wall at the site’s periphery. We boarders would perch there to watch the Harbour or kites fighting in the grey sky of an overcast evening.

A speaker on the video talked of chivalry being the enduring gift of DBS to its alumni. I feel I recognize that as indeed a legacy from my contact with DBS. In addition the film showed the cultural richness that was only foreshadowed in my short time at DBS.

A pop-up on the site lists the Achievements of the school.  Who would have thought that there would be choral competitions won? The copy of ‘Steps’ beside me from December 1948 reports that the term’s ‘Gossip’ included that ‘people say that during singing lessons many boys creep out of the Hall’ and ‘that nine out of ten boys are found somewhere on that "famous Jordan Road"’.

The live performances at Chi Track’s opening celebrations of a Schubert quartet piece and of Classical Chinese music – not to mention Cliff Richard? – take to a different level Mr Du Toit’s gramophone recitals of Beethoven piano concertos in the Hall. But, those long ago evenings included members of the public as well as pupils and staff – a contribution to the total cultural fabric of Hong Kong society.

In that sense, it seems that little has changed in the significance of DBS, merely expanded many times. Even then, former pupils distinguished themselves in their contributions to the re-birth of public life after the chaos of the WW2.

I had not foreseen nor understood that an organisation like DBS would grow and thrive. I imagined that the land might have been sold and shopping malls have been built in its place. I was sure more recently that there was no place for a faith school in an officially atheist society. How wrong I was.

What I have discovered is a dynamic, welcoming community with a vibrant, distinct identity. I hope that my planned trip to HK and China takes place in 2007,so that I can re-visit DBS and renew contact with one or two at least of the people I knew. Then memories of new realities will be laid down alongside ancient shadows, and new relationships replace the ghosts of the past.

(Thanks to Daniel Ma for his research and encouragement.)

Tom Richardson 1949
<click for forum>
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Obitruary – Mohan Narain (63)

Mohan Narain (Class of 63)

 

We announce with great sadness the passing of our beloved Moni in Mumbai, India on 31-May-2006.(1945-2006)

 

His memory lives on with his daughters Nadia and Katia; loving companion Gabi Kapur; sister Devi-Chandru; brothers Lachman-Maina, Kishu-Bharti, and the mother of his children, Beth.

 

A memorial service will be announced later. May his soul rest in peace.

 

SCMP
4-Jun-06

 

Note:
Mohan was an excellent middle distance runner (re: Dr Stephen Chow)
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2-Jul-06 Sun Main event:

12:00 to 14:00
– Yum Cha, book a restaurant
15:00 to 17:00 DBS
– Sports get together at tennis courts and basketball
– Tea near the tennis courts
17:00 – 18:00
– Tour of DBS and DBSPD
– Photo taking in front of school entrance
– wear school uniform
18:00 – 22:00
– Dinner at Prefects dining room
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