Saturday, October 6, 2012

Mangalorean teachers . . .


Two Mangaloreans dotted the landscape of our school in the 60s and 70s.
One was Ms Theodore.
The other was Ms Thyreum.

The first was surely came from a very British background. The second carried her West Coast roots to this city.

Ms Theodore taught Std.IV and was in that chair for ages, if memory serves me well.
The Brit accent and poise may not have endeared all of us to her. Short, plump and properly attired, she had her very own home in an independent block on the eastern side of the campus ( I guess the other nook was occupied by Ms. Leela?).

A spinster as many teachers were at one time Ms Theodore was a professional, the sought kids like us may not have understood.

I saw many of her kind in some circles back in Mangalore when we used to go 'home' for our annual holds. 

It was her prim and proper style that moulded us when it came to English and manners.

Ms Thyreum came to St Anthony's much later and was also a feature at Std.III on the first floor of the south block on campus. Quiet, low profile and very Indian, she too had a long innings at the school.

When her kids, Peter, Michael and Nirmala joined her, the Thyreums, along with Mr Thyreum really made a family with character and colour.

I did not follow Ms Theodore after we passed out of school. She led her life on her terms and passed away.

But the contact with Ms Thyreum has continued because Peter was our classmate. She now lives her evening years in Mangalore, with Nimmi her daughter who teaches at St. Aloysious College.

Mangaloreans that we were, these two were my mom's early friends on campus.

The 50s and 60s must have also been years when a sprinkling of Mangaloreans studied at St. Anthony's. By then this community had moved from San Thome to Kilpauk.

Friday, September 21, 2012

Recalling Miss Neaves

If there is one image that stays with me related to Miss Neaves, perhaps one of the great teachers at St. Anthony's, it was her handwriting.
It was classic and vintage.
And it was part of her - and not limited to writing the names of athletes in their certificates.

Miss Neaves came into our orbit only when we must have passed into Std.VII. Her classroom was in the classic block on the north end of our campus, on the ground floor. And everybody who studied her knew her of her.

Tough, proper, classic, Anglo Indian, disciplined, sports loving, quiet humour.
And she carried the image of a teacher of the 60s generation.

Neaves not only piloted sports at school but was a huge figure in the city athletics scene. You got a sense of her role and her importance at inter-school meets.

I think she also handled Moral Class / Catechism. She directed a Jesus play in which Beverly, a relative played Jesus!

But I had to interact with her more closely as School Head Boy. It was a careful interaction. And when we did a naughty act on a sports file, I got into trouble with her. I think those were times when teens simply didnt like authority.

Few students can forget the memory, the role of Miss Neaves. All of us who had to do with sports, still spoke of her. though we lost track of her after we passed out of school.

Now comes a time when we begin to value the work of people like Miss Neaves.
As we plan a project that recalls her, you can share your own anecdotes of Miss Neaves. Post pictures too please.

I will need to dig out my Shot Put cert carrying her handwriting, scan it and post it here soon!

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Recalling Sports Days . . .

Apologies.
I had set aside this blog for ages for no reason at all.
Or was it because the Alumni had not warmed up.
It now has and Asha from San Thome keeps feeding me all the news that the alumni and the School generate.

The Sports Day was held on campus in August ( Apologies again for posting late).
Asha and her team joined the nuns and the management and teachers to lend a hand.

That our Sports Day has had to be reduced to an event to the small ground inside the school says a lt about the decline of sports in all our schools and at St Anthony's.

In the 70s and 80s, the school had its own sports heroes - in athletics, volleyball, TT and cricket. And almost all senior students were aware of these sportspeople.

One person who made Sport the domain of St Anthonys was Miss Neaves - admin, coach and judge, Neaves set the tone and ensured our school was up there even if we lost out to the Big Daddies like St Bedes and St Marys and Don Bosco.

I used to have the shot put and discus simply because of my weight and not because I was a great athlete. I loved TT. But our team mates like C K Murali and Seftin Bernard and John and the like worked and acted like sportspeople. Khaja and the rest led the cricket brigade.

So when some of us heard about the campus-run Sports Day we were sad.

The march past, the drill and the games held this year were neat and nice. But there is now a need to develop sport here and promote some games seriously.

Alumni C K Valson now a international athletics official who was at London for the Olympics had promised help and guidance - we must take it forward. Perhaps build a small TT and badminton team which can play the city tourneys? A small athletics team that can shine in meets?

Meanwhile, Rajaratinam Stadium, managed by City Police in Egmore where we had all our meets, has been reduced to a Police Office and Quarters space. A sore sight for sports alumni like us!

Perhaps it is also time to institute a trophy in memory of Miss Neaves. Anybody has ideas to share? Any leads on Miss Neaves' family in Chennai?




Annual Sports Day; August 2012