| Tom
Carty was my French CSE teacher for the fourth
and fifth years. He was real good, so good that
he got me through to a Grade 1 CSE pass in French
after I was booted out of Scotties French
torture classes for finishing bottom. Tom had a
bit of a lisp, and, boys being boys, we took the
mickey behind his back. During the annual Masters
v Boys soccer match, Tom was in goal and let a
soft one in. Dave Allanson quipped, Should
have stopped that one sir. Pith off
Allanson relied Tom. What can one say about
Mike Harvey, alias Beak, that hasnt already
been said? Its all true, he droned his way
through History, only occasionally changing the
pitch of his voice. I had him in the final year
leading up to the O Levels, and when it came to
the mocks, I revised furiously on a limited
amount of the work we had covered during the
course of the year. Amazingly, they all came up,
and I waltzed to an A5 assessment, the best you
could get. Unfortunately, the exam itself
rendered no such favours, and I failed,
miserably, which was a pity because I liked
History.
RANDOM
STUFF
At end of the
fourth year, after finishing bottom in Roy
Taylors biology class, a few of us were
offered an alternative one year O Level course in
either German or Religious Education. Seven of us
plumped for RE, and duly turned up to waste a
year with Billy Gray, my form master. And waste
we did. We messed around, took no interest in the
lessons etc etc. Kenny Marsden set next to me,
and in the middle of one bored lesson, I drew a
small but amusing cartoon on the inside of my
book. I nudged Kenny for him to look at it, he
did, and snorted with huge amusement and sent a
huge bogie down his nose to hang off the end of
his desk for the rest of the lesson. It was about
18 inces long. Billy never cottoned on, but me
and Kenny nearly wet ourselves once we got clear
after the lesson! Billy Gray declared that we
were all a bunch of wastrels, with no chance of
passing the O Level. I stuck my head down,
revised like mad, and passed! Not bad for an
atheist!
One year I was
secretary of the Subbuteo Club, and we duly
turned up after school on Thursday nights in the
Geography Room, pushing tables together and
trying to make flat pitches on which to play
table soccer. Fordy used to turn up occasionally
and play, but we had to relegate him as he
couldnt keep up his fixture commitments.
Spot Richardson
ran the school team in my fourth year, and though
he says he cant recall it, Glyn Phillips
was my partner at centre back, God alone knows
why I was playing there, probably because
Id play anywhere as long as I was getting a
game! Dave Ali couldnt get a game cos
Richardson thought he was too small. No worries,
we all went down to St Helens to watch Dave play
in a trial, where he eventually got picked to
play for Man United youth team! Dave continued
his playing days in New Zealand, playing in the
NZ National League with Blockhouse Bay before
teamed up in 1981 for a club called Oratia Utd,
where we progressed as players to the top
regional league. Dave eventually became manager
of the side, and took them to the National
League. Daves son Andrew, ironically born
in NZ but now living in Prescot, went on the
captain the NZ Under 17 national team, and his
other son Steven also played to a high standard,
but to my knowledge, neither of them longer even
kick a ball
During the
spring, PGS groundsman Ted Cullinan would seed
the grounds in preparation for the coming soccer
season. If we should stray onto the canteen
pitch, or one of the parallels during this time,
youd hear Ted from miles away
Get off them effing pitches!
Im sure we did it on purpose
At the end of
the fourth year, myself and a couple of cohorts
brought some records in on the last day to play
on the record player in the Spencer Briggs.
Unfortunately, someone had whipped the plug, but
I had the bright idea of just sticking the wires
straight into the socket. Turned it on and, bang,
the whole hall went black. Thanks, see you in
September guys
Never got caught for that
either
The Nab. He was
the guy who came round to catch a few people to
fill the holes in the first sitting at lunch.
This was a bad thing, because by the time you got
there, you were sat on a table with strangers, at
the bottom of the table, with a cold, small meal.
To be avoided at all costs. I was gutted when,
just as I reached fifth form and due to be top of
table, it all changed to self-service. Damn
Metalwork.
Woodwork. I was crap at both of these fine
skills, but depite that, Jimmy Dewsnips
reports in my Report Book (which I still have)
got better and better as time went by. I think he
must have mixed me up with someone else, I even
made a mess of the pencil box we made. None of
the hours of filing for me, I used the
guillotine. I remember Jug heating up a shilling
with the blowlamp and leaving it on the floor for
some poor unsuspecting sod to pick it up.
In Woodwork, I honestly couldnt understand
a word that Frank Davies, alias Splinter, said,
and I dropped the subject as soon as options came
in. Im still a crap home handyman, is it
any wonder?
SYNCHRONICITY
This is the art
of being in the right place at the right time. I
was in England in about 1989, visiting a friend
in Richmond, London. My wife was visiting her
sister in Hammersmith. We decided to meet up at
Earls Court for dinner on the Saturday night. At
the last minute, the venue was changed and we
duly met at the tube station. We came out of the
station, where we had never been before, turned
right, turned left and found a restaurant where
we booked in for an hours time. Meanwhile,
we went to the pub round the corner to kill a bit
of time. In there, I noticed a guy with red hair
at the bar, and told my wife, Im sure
I know that guy. She knows I do this all
the time, and dismissed the idea. When it was
time to go, I decided to approach the guy and ask
him where he was from. Liverpool he
said. Keith Yarrell, PGS, 1966-1971 I
said! Dead right! Wed never been there
before, and hed just moved into a house
round the corner the week previous. Syncronicity
go figure!
Via this site,
Ive managed to communicate with quite a few
people, namely Steve Birchall, John Parkinson,
Dougie Johnson, Geoff Sumner, George Stirling,
Ade Caesar, Dave Janes, Glyn Philips, Terry
McDonnell and Les Rafferty, plus Ian Walker from
the year behind us with whom I worked at the
BICC. To all, thanks and keep in touch.
And
finally, Paul Gerrard, whats he been doing?
Attained a
magnificent 5 O Levels (if you include the Grade
1 French CSE). Despite what careers teacher Mr
Rimmer said, the world was not my oyster. Worked
at Ocean Fleets in Liverool for two years, then
five and a half years at the BICC. In New Zealand
since 1979, I followed Dave Allanson out here to
NZ after he came in 77. Eventually got into
sales, then into publishing a soccer magazine,
now running my own graphic design studio,
Pageworks (6 staff) for the last 14 years. Still
married (23 years), two kids, daughter Kelly (16)
and son Patrick (11). Still playing soccer,
havent missed a season for 37 years,
havent missed a game for over 7 years,
coaching my sons team, playing golf and
drinking plenty of this countrys fantastic
wines, as well as some beaut Aussie stuff.
Never regret
coming to NZ, but still occasionally get back to
the UK every few years, trying to get there for
Christmas 2003, where Ill hopefully try to
make contact with some former co-pupils. If
anybody cares to contact me, my email address is:
peegee@pageworks.co.nz
And finally, I
realise that this diatribe will probably interest
only those relevant people in the great intake
year of 66 (wed just won the World Cup) but
Ive felt the urge to get this down ever
since I discovered the site. I can now rest easy.
And to those of
you who may feel defamed, misquoted or insulted,
dont bother suing, my lawyers a real b@stard!!
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