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Kingspark News Rotary Club of Kingspark Hong Kong |
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This is the weekly bulletin of the Rotary Club
of Kingspark Hong Kong, District 3450
Club Website: http://www.rotary3450.org/kingspark-hongkong |
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President's
Message - By Raymond Sin |
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Bulletin Editor : Alexander
Mak
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By President Raymond Sin (2001-2002) |
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Merry Christmas was the word we said most often to each other last Saturday night (15th Dec). It was our Kingspark annual Christmas Party. It was an occasion for our own club members, families and some of our close friends to celebrate and exchange wishes for a better year next year. Kingspark is our family in Rotary. We should have more family gatherings where we can relax and see the family members of other members and have fun together. It was a happy time to see each others' children and be amazed as to why they have grown up so fast. That night, the weather was surprisingly good. It was a little windy in the beginning, but it soon became mild and warm when we started eating and drinking. The temperature got really hot and exciting when the Band started to perform. Thanks to Rtn Terence for introducing and inviting his friends to come over to the Party. Everyone would agree that the performance of the Band was excellent and we all kept calling for encore after they finished. I am sure all the adults enjoyed very much the music, the Band and the dancing. And the kids also had a great time. They just ran around, played with their best friends, chased after the Musical Chairs and danced with the Band. I truly believe that the "The Weakest Link" is not a fair game when I watch it on TVB. The nature of the game is to encourage people to kick the best one out first. That is why CP John and I were the first two being kicked-out in the Game. We should be proud, CP John. I could not remember who was the winner. Anyway you could tell how serious Jimmie and the Rotaractors were in preparing the Games from the script she prepared. A good job very well done, Rotaractors. That night, we got a very beautiful venue, good food and drink, fun and excellent entertainment programmes, Christmas presents, professional singing and Band music, but, most important of all, a high attendance (I always remind myself that one way to measure the success of the event is the extent of involvement of members). All these were the efforts of the Party Organizing Committee. Thank you, Organizing Committee Chairman Rtns Sunny So, Terence, Thomas, Patrick, David Cheung and the Rotaractors. Well done, you all deserve a big big hand. We were in so high a mood that most of us stayed until the mid-night. Because of this, I look forward to our next 'Family gathering'. Christmas is about love and hope. Love was brought to this world by Our Lord, Jesus Christ, when he became man to be our Savouir. People have forgotten how to love. There is only anger and hatred. That is why things like the 9-11 disaster and its consequences still happened to us every day. Many of us are pessimistic about life, and believe that the next year would be no better than the last year. But it was said that the deepest fear of life is hopelessness, and the greatest miracle of life is that we have hope. Fellows, let us love your beloved ones and be hopeful. Merry Christmas. |
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By John Wan Elvis is of course Elvis Presley, Ken, Ken Kesey and John and George, John Lennon and George Harrison. They have all died, some longer than others; and I have named them in the order they were born. Everyone my age and many others older or younger know Elvis. In the early Sixties in Wah Yan College, we had a very much-revered Reverend Jesuit Father who was not known to be modern, who would ask windows to be closed to keep off draughts in June, but who could name his songs. My parents never liked us listening to pop songs, on grounds that these western singers could corrupt our morals, and besides they wasted too much of our study time, but they knew who Elvis was and would waste no time to scoff him and his style of singing. Elvis would be close to 67 if he lived. He was certainly one of the most popular entertainers and icons in the last century and many would agree the greatest rock performer. There are 28 numbers in the RCA CD, Elvis, The Essential Collection, from Heartbreak Hotel, Don't Be Cruel, Wooden Heart to Always On My Mind and Moody Blue. Any one song would jog some old memory, in similar fashion that one always remembers what one was doing on certain fatalistic dates. Ken Kesey was the psychedelic pioneer who wrote in the Sixties novels "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" and "Sometimes a Great Notion," and who became famous as a counterculture figure after a cross-country bus ride with LSD drugs and pals who called themselves Merry Pranksters. He died from complications following liver cancer surgery last month, at 66. He said he wrote Cuckoo's Nest from his experiences working at a veterans' hospital in Palo Alto. Two years later, he wrote "Sometimes a Great Notion" which was widely considered to be his greatest book with the motto "Never Give an Inch" which was adapted into a movie with the same name starring Henry Fonda and Paul Newman. However, Cuckoo's Nest became more widely known, probably because Milos Forman who also did Amadeus turned it into a movie in 1974, which claimed a few Academy Awards, including best director for Forman, best actor for Jack Nicholson and best actress for Louise Fletcher. My young friend Harry had cited the two books to illustrate his one-author-one-book theory. Thus, while he was conscious that Sometimes a Great Notion is a great work, he has so far successfully resisted the urge to acquire it, having read Cuckoo's Nest cover to cover more than once and derived so much from it already. He was amused when I referred him to records showing that Kesey hated Forman's Cuckoo's Nest film and sued the producers on grounds that it was not true to the character of the schizophrenic Indian. My young friend was unsurprised to find a litany of works by Kesey that he had never heard of or come across in any fashion and was equally unsurprising that these works had all gone unpublicized. He was certain that there were gems and outstanding material among them. True indeed, Kesey had written a variety of short autobiographical fiction, articles and children books, but he did not produce another major novel until much later. Kesey had said, "There's a lot of stuff happens that happens because I'm famous. And famous isn't good for a writer. You don't observe well when you're being observed." But listen to what Zane Kesey, his son, said of him, "He had a full life, that's for sure. He didn't just sit around…. He was always writing. He was the total archivist." When asked about whether he had any regrets about his past, Kesey said, "Anybody who says they have no regrets is either a dimwit or a liar - probably both." Still on Kesey, Harry thinks that Kesey had flourished in an era of American history when a growing iconoclastic sentiment was developing. I agree. Kesey symbolized anti-establishment and had the courage to articulate the public's disapproval on tradition, authority, government and so on. He rode on public opinion and benefited from it consciously or subconsciously. He could have done well if he had gone into politics. He had chosen to stick to his pen, and the literary world benefits in turn. Berkeley and San Francisco have always embraced revolutionary or what they would call innovative ideas and movements, which is why I think Stephanie would almost certainly love Kesey's works. John Lennon and George Harrison were both icons of our time. Like Elvis and Ken in a way, they were all iconoclasts and anti-establishment at the time they shot to fame. The Beatles were four different and distinct personalities, but the four joined together created such unprecedented explosive and rebellious forces in the Sixties, sending vibrations all over the world that were felt long after they were disbanded and even to date. The Beatles had influenced everything, from hairstyles to music, fashion to lifestyles, art and culture. It is interesting, but perhaps not surprising that after the Beatles broke up in 1970, the four never managed to achieve such fame and success, individually and added together. Sadly, John died in December 1980 when he was 40, and George, last month, at 58. John's life was very much an open book after the Beatles became famous. Even his marriage to Yoko was much publicized, and under public pressure, the coupled separated for 14 months in 1973 before John openly said he could not live without Yoko. The media interviewed them in bed for three days and created a bit of controversy, again, not surprisingly. George Harrison was a quiet and private person by comparison. He openly admitted he had problems handling the thrill and madness flowing from the group's success. He said there was nothing good about the experience and that even the best thrill soon got tiring. He likened the group to monkeys in a zoo and he always cried out for more space. Nevertheless, he did say in an interview in 1972, "We had the time of our lives. We laughed for years." A long time friend said, "He left this world as he lived it, conscious of God, fearless of death, and at peace, surrounded by family and friends. He often said, 'Everything else can wait, but the search for God cannot wait, and love one another'" Paul McCartney on hearing of his death said from London, "I am devastated and very, very sad. He was a lovely guy and a very brave man and had a wonderful sense of humour. He is really just my baby brother." John Chambers of the Liverpool Beatles Appreciation Society had been hopeful of a reunion of the Beatles, with Julian Lennon standing in for John. He lamented that the death of George "really is the end of a dream, the end of an era." The Beatles will always have a place in my heart. I saw all their films and knew most of their songs by heart in the early Sixties. I can still sing many of their songs, albeit not very well, and I regularly listen to their hits. Our children know quite a few of these songs, through listening to them with us, which is why I find it interesting that McCartney's friend Heather - they could have married by now - could not recognize some old numbers. Memories and experience are perhaps what would be left in and of a person at the end of the day and essentially what matter most. One wonders whether these four icons of our time, or for that matter many icons who became idols among people of various ages and nations, were willing icons or had set out to become as such. We have seen that not all of them were willing idols or could cope with fame, which in itself speaks volumes. My young friend Harry had questioned whether these people should be aware of their social responsibilities and destinies and hence should behave in a manner and fashion appropriate to what the world expected of them. I think that is a very difficult and multi-faceted question and cannot be dealt with easily or monolithically. Talk to you again soon. |
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By PP Edward Lau When I was back in Hong Kong in mid September, PP Alex suggested I write something for the Kingspark News. I gladly accepted the request. However, I promptly forgot all about it upon my return to San Francisco until PP Alex gave me a gentle reminder a couple of weeks ago. He also indicated that I should write something about my Rotary experience in this part of the world so members can have a better appreciation of Rotary in the States. I thought it was a good idea and I should have no problem writing about my Rotary experience since I have been here for over five years. Well, it didn't turn out that way as I sat in front of the computer, my mind seems to go blank and my fingers decided to go on strike, even though I have written my weekly column for Kingspark News when I was President. The fact that I haven't written for quite a while means that I have gone rusty. So bear with me. The Rotary Club of San Francisco, also known as the No.2 Club, is a large club with membership of over 350 when I joined over five years ago. The Club was founded in 1908 after a chance meeting between a visiting salesman, a member of the first Rotary Club, Chicago, and a local attorney, Homer Wood, who became fascinated with the idea of a club to promote business interests, good fellowship, civic pride and loyalty. These ideals were incorporated into the Club's constitution which came into existence before Rotary International's own constitution and, as a result, differs somewhat from it especially in one important aspect, and that is, the lack of the attendance requirement. This has a subtle but profound impact on the Club and its members as the pressure to attend meetings and to make up at other clubs is simply not there. This I feel is the biggest difference that I have experienced and I must say that there are times that I did not go to Club meetings simply because there weren't enough "reasons or drive" to make me do it. I should add I don't know how many other clubs, if any, are in a similar situation but I am convinced (through everything that I have seen and experienced with the Hong Kong Rotary scene) that the attendance requirement is the key driving force in bringing members together, to become life time friends, to have better fellowship which in turn leads to service above self. Having said all that, the Rotary Club of San Francisco is after all the No.2 Club and has a long established tradition and many members do attend meetings regularly. There are lots of programs, service projects and activities and fellowship is very good among those members that regularly participate in them. I just felt that the Club would be better off with the attendance requirement. An interesting feature of the Club is that many of the service projects and programs run continuously year after year. The president of each Rotary year may initiate a service project, and many do, but he or she (we had a lady President last year) is expected to continue these long established programs. This I understand is not unique to the No.2 Club. Indeed, there were enough ongoing service projects that presidents in two of the last five Rotary years did not initiate new projects during their term of office. Examples of continuous service projects run by the No.2 Club include the annual blood drive, Academic Decathlon, AIDS walk, book donation, Camp Enterprise (summer camps for inner city kids), Camp Mendocino (summer camps for high school kids), Rotaplast, and programs for the San Francisco Boys & Girls Club. The concept of continuous service projects is of course very different from the single year projects that we are all familiar with in Hong Kong. Having witnessed and participated in several of the continuous service projects, I must say there is merit in having them. There is no reason not to continue with worthwhile service or community projects year after year. I do like the approach of the No.2 Club which is that there is no pressure, as far as I can tell, for the incoming president to take on his or her pet projects. There seems to be a good sense of balance and that is more important than embarking on unrealistic projects. These are two of my observations and, if you like, I will write about other experiences in the future. We will be back in Hong Kong for Christmas and I do hope to meet some of you then. Unfortunately, we will not be able to make it to the Christmas Party on the 15th and I am sure you will all have a wonderful time. So let me now take this opportunity to wish every one of you a very merry Christmas and a prosperous new year. |
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(1) 5 January 2002 (Saturday) - District Mahjong Competition by RC of New Territories. (2) 10 January 2002 (Thursday) - Joint Luncheon Meeting with RC of Mid-Level, RC of Peninsula South and RC of Hong Kong Harbour at 12:30p.m. at Ritz Carlton Hotel. (3) 13 January 2002 - District Sports Day at Wan Chai Sports Ground. (4) 22 to 24 February 2002 - RYLA Camp. (5) 16 to 17 March 2002 - District Conference. (6) 4 May 2002 - Our Club's 8th Annual Ball. (7) June 2002 - RI Convention in Barcelona, Spain. |
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President |
Raymond
Sin Tom Hui Anwer Islam Peter Lo Michael Eyles Thomas Chan Ho Chi Ming Amy Chow Stephen Lin Sunny So Jane Fung Patrick Wong Alice Chau David Cheung |
Bulletin
Editor : Alexander Mak
Bulletin Publisher : Terence Leung
Club Webmaster : John Wan
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