here is no record of any unofficial prewar student publication
existing alongside The Victorian, the only official one at
that time. It was only after the war that the V.I., with its swollen
population of over-aged pupils and
additional Standard Five classes, witnessed the student yearnings
to write, inform and express. School records indicate that in
1952 the Junior Literary and Debating Society produced the
Junior Orator for its members’ erudition. The Science and
Mathematics Society also launched its Quack, a collection
of scientific articles, that same year. Early the following year
some enterprising boys in Standard 7C churned out their very own
cyclostyled collection of articles and jokes called 7C Herald
which they peddled to other classes. The Herald went defunct,
however, after two issues when the school newspaper The V.I.
Voice, with even more features and jokes for the same price
of 20 cents, was born in mid-1953. The Voice became The
Seladang in October of the same year.
The V.I. Scout troops, too, published their own
newsletters, magazines and campfire song books in the fifties,
with the First KL Group producing their annual King Scout
magazine which appeared in fits and starts. The 1969 issue, edited by
Yap Piang Kian - the 1967 Victorian editor - was filled with
a wealth of details from boy scouts, seniors and rovers who submitted
regular comprehensive reports. The masthead, designed by Wong Twee Juat,
was printed professionally by Khee Meng Press but the content below was
imprinted from stencils cut on an antique typewriter. Their rival
Troop started the Second KL Gazette in 1953 which lapsed after
a while, reincarnating in 1971 as the Second To None newsletter.
After again lapsing in 1980, it was revived as a termly publication in
1985. In 1971 the enterprising Troop made and sold hundreds of their
139-page song books for a dollar each to scout and guide groups all
over KL. Their own campfire magazine, The Apache, debuted in
1989 and survives to this day.
In 1970, another class publication saw the light
of day when Leong Yoke Keen and Khong Teck Yee founded the eight-page
tabloid 3-Easter, named after their class, Form 3 East (lower
secondary classes were named after compass points in the Murugasu era).
On the day of the inaugural issue, Yoke Keen slipped into school before
anyone else, placed a cyclostyled copy on the desk of each 3 East boy,
and then later extracted the price of the issue - five cents - from his
classmates. His enterprise was realised with the full approval and
encouragement of the teacher in charge, Mrs Chong Hong Chong. It was a
typical example of how the ideas of V.I. boys and girls were allowed
to see fruition in V.I. There was no prior vetting by Mrs Chong and no
censorship; permission was freely given, and no questions were asked
thereafter as well. Yoke Keen, an accountant today, is still enamoured
with V.I. publishing and, adapting to the internet age, has founded the
first V.I. e-zine, The Victorian Times, a slick multi-page
production emailed by request to any Victorian. So, 35 years on, there
lives - in cyberspace - a successor to his schoolboy 3-Easter.
Meantime Teck Yee, now a pathologist, has gone on to publish something
slightly more serious than that schoolboy tabloid - a book on pathology!
Three V.I. student publications stand out for
their own specialized readership, their visions, the broad and
consistent appeal of their content and the laudable annual efforts
by their student publishers. It is hard enough for any school
anywhere in the world to support even two publications but there
was a short period in the nineteen sixties when FIVE publications -
two official and three student – were produced and sold in the V.I.!
Three have vanished now but their stories and those of the Victorians
behind them are told below.
(1) The Scientific Victorian
It was inevitable and by 1953 the time was
ripe. The Science and Maths Society was by then the largest and
most prestigious society in the school. Founded in 1949 in the
dying weeks of the headmastership of Mr F. Daniel, the school’s
first and most famous science master, the Society’s membership
now included all the science students from the Fourth Form and
above. Its 1953 Post-School Certificate classes, now offering pure
science subjects, were populated by pupils from the major boys and
girls schools in Kuala Lumpur, Klang and Kajang, giving it breadth
and depth of talent. Science was both the darling and the scourge
of the fifties. It offered hope of dazzling inventions and consumer
products that could cure new diseases, alleviate pain and boredom,
transport people safer and faster, while simultaneously dangling
the Damoclean sword of nuclear annihilation over the world. At
the V.I. it was obvious its scientists took only the positive view.
The Society’s annual science exhibitions at the end of the second
term attracted and enthralled thousands of students from secondary
schools in the Klang Valley. Regular film shows, quizzes and talks
by local and visiting men of science added lustre to its reputation.
It even produced its own publication, The Quack, a cyclostyled
affair distributed internally amongst its membership.
The School newspaper, the V. I. Voice,
had been launched in June of that year. Its Literary Editor was a
science student, one Tay Chong Hai. He had earned his position through
his unabashed love of writing, especially of poetry, submitting his
efforts to the Singapore Standard, Young Malayans and
other local publications. Even as the first issue of V. I.
Voice was launched (incoporating his humorous short story of
a fictitious fat boy Ah Fatt joining the V.I.), Chong Hai was already
planning his exit to prepare for the birth of his very own brain child.
A short announcement at the bottom of page three in the cyclostyled
Voice went, "The Science and Mathematics Society will,
this year, publish a magazine called The Scientific Victorian.
All V.I. students, especially members of the above Society, are
invited to send in their contributions – articles, problems, jokes,
etc before 22nd June, 1953." The editorial Board was
listed, with Tay Chong Hai as editor.
The new magazine, typeset at the local printers,
most likely Khee Meng Press of High Street, was sold for a dollar
a copy. It was also distributed in other schools, a leg up over
The Victorian and The Seladang, which were essentially
internal publications. By all accounts the new journal recovered
its costs and made a profit. There were few science magazines in
Malaya in that era. Sure there was Science Digest, some
psychology magazines in the bookstores and then there was Scientific
American (which inspired Scientific Victorian’s knockoff
name) but the latter was prohibitive expensive and a tad too advanced
for schoolboys. Of course there was Time magazine and Reader’s
Digest with their occasional science articles. But V.I.'s own science
journal, at a dollar a pop, met the limited budgets and assuaged the
intellectual appetites of a legion of Malayan science students.
Its cover was designed by one "Ahmad M."
and its central pictorial component incorporated elements of what was
perceived to be "Science" then - a horse and pulley (looking
suspiciously like something taken from one of Mr Daniel’s textbooks)
obviously representing energy and, therefore, physics, while a rabbit,
a leaf and a cross-section of a human head stood for biology. (There
was no DNA molecule yet, as 1953 was precisely the year its form
had been revealed and it would be a few years down the road before
the iconic double helix became de rigueur for most science
journal covers.) Scattered elsewhere in the cover, a pair of scales,
a test tube, several flasks and retorts stood, presumably, for
chemistry and a pair of compasses and calipers on a pattern of
triangles signified mathematics.
Tay Chong Hai’s editorial began with the
pronouncement that the Society’s Quack would now die
"a natural death" and from its dust his Scientific
Victorian had risen. He editorialized that science was the servant
of mankind and that it was mankind, not science, that was the
source of evil.
He ventured some interesting predictions
that, seen in hindsight across half a century, were rather
prescient for a schoolboy. "We shall not be
surprised," declared Chong Hai, "to hear that
men have reached the moon or Mars, that living cells can be
synthesized, that weather can be controlled…" The first
prediction has come true (sixteen years after he wrote it) while
the others are being either being actively researched or seriously
debated at the present moment.
Chong Hai then gave timely and - in hindsight,
accurate - warning with regard to Malaya’s main export commodity
of that era: "Synthetic rubber has long proved to be a
strong rival to our rubber industries…. we cannot always rely on
our rubber and tin for maintenance. A day, not very distant, will
come when rubber and tin are exhausted or that they are no longer
useful in any industries, then and only then, Malaya will face a
certain slump. This can be averted if Malaya will now train up her
young talents in various scientific pursuits." To that end,
he promised, The Scientific Victorian would do its duty
"by supplying the maximum scientific information to all its
readers."
The Scientific Victorian’s inaugural
issue carried congratulatory messages from the headmaster, Mr
Dartford, and the Society’s president, Mr Gurnell, and - in its
role as the Society’s official organ - its annual report in finer
detail than the version in the school magazine. It could carry, as
well, the glowing reports, section by section by each supervisor, on
its popular science exhibition. It could also indulge in printing
photos of its own managing committee and of the journal's own
editorial board. In the early years it proudly splashed news - backed
by photographs - of the success of its members leaving for futher
studies, especially the large numbers heading south to the University
of Malaya in Singapore and the growing numbers snaring prestigious
scholarships to other Commonwealth countries.
Across the rest of the pages of the inaugural
issue was a dazzling feast of some 20 scientific articles, two
quizzes and a crossword puzzle contest (using science words). The
articles ranged from Aspects of the Mechanics of Tennis to
Mathematical Curiosities, from Corrosion to The Iron
Lung, and from The Universe to New Wealth from Wood.
In addition, there was a Believe it or Not feature as well as
a Scientific Recreations section. Of course none of the
articles contained original material but still the content reflected
the efforts of intensive research in the well-stocked school library
and the various libraries at the British Council, the USIS and the
KL Book Club. Not that writing scientific articles was something
new to V.I. boys. In the first few years of its existence, the
Science and Maths Society actually required each aspiring applicant
for membership to submit an essay on a science topic. Only when it
was adjudged to be of a certain standard was the author admitted
to the Society’s exalted membership rolls!
Interestingly, there was a short story featuring
Ah Fatt, Chong Hai’s fat boy from The Seladang, recounting our
hero’s escapades in the V.I. science lab. It was printed in pages 48
and 49; unfortunately, readers looking for it found the pages
literally ripped off from every issue. The explanation came decades
later from the author himself: Chong Hai, writing anonymously as
"V.I. Columnist" as he did in The Seladang, had
carelessly used the word "under" instead of "behind"
in his concluding sentence of the story, giving a racy connotation
to Ah Fatt’s actions, a faux pas that the V.I. Headmaster
considered to be serious enough to order the story censored.
Chong Hai left for medical school in Singapore
soon after the Scientific Victorian appeared, but not before
donating two collections of his poems to the school library. The
medical career of the first Scientific Victorian editor has been
exemplarily dazzling. Dr Tay discovered a rare syndrome in 1971
associated with mental impairment, ichthyosis and brittle hair now
known as IBIDS or "Tay’s Syndrome." In 1999, this Father
of Rheumatology, as he is dubbed in Singapore, discovered yet another
disease, a rheumatic condition now called Eosinophilic Arthritis.
The template he cast for The Scientific
Victorian – a mix of quizzes, puzzles, and short articles in
plain, non-jargon English covering the main disciplines of science
and mathematics - proved a winning one. For almost two decades the
journal rolled off the presses into the eager hands of thousands
of readers in the V.I. and other K.L. schools.
Its editors and contributors have invariably
been drawn from the ranks of the top science students. It was in
the pages of The Scientific Victorian that many future doctors,
scientists and academicians took their first tottering professional
steps. To name a few, Ti Teow Kong (now a Professor of Surgery)
mused about the Chinese concept of ‘heaty’ and ‘cooling’ foods
in 1955 and, in the following year’s issue, future Electronics
Engineering Professor Tan Hong Siang taught readers how to make
a one-valve radio set. Chia Ah Bah described an algorithm on how
to compute the day of the week for any given date; he later became a
Professor of Statistics. Yeoh Peng Nam, a Professor of Pharmacology
today, presciently wrote on Alcohol – Its Effects, while
future doctors M. Jeyasingam and Gan Kwai wrote on leprosy and
cancer respectively.
Wong Cheng Lim, a future nuclear radiologist,
was already speculating on the implications of space medicine in
1961, the very year the first man orbited the earth. In the same
issue, Tan Meng Hee, today a Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry,
discussed the biological effects of radiation. Amiroel Rizal’s
precocious article, The Defects of Certain Endocrene Glands in
Man, sounded as if it was written by a medical student. And,
indeed, Amiroel went on to read medicine and is now an orthopaedic
surgeon. Chemical Engineer-to-be Chang Choong Kong presented an
equation-studded study of the mechanisms of chemical reactions.
Yong Hoi Sen wrote a five-page report on an ecological
trip to the Batu Caves, documenting in detail a survey of its fauna by
a three-boy V.I. team. Not surprisingly, he is today a Professor of Zoology,
author of the Animal volume of the Encyclopaedia of Malaysia and a Fellow
of the Academy of Sciences Malaysia. Amongst the eight species of flora
and fauna named after him by his grateful students, from a beetle to
a crab to a blood protozoan, is a mosquito - Topomyia Yongi -
first discovered flitting in the forests of Hulu Gombak.
But not all material was speculation or prediction
or summaries of other people’s writings. Some articles were actually
based on original field work or research, like future physician Lim
Meng Hooi’s eight-page class project paper on the mineral content
of soil from the school garden. Drawing on expertise and advice from
the RRI, this schoolboy effort, supported by charts, diagrams and
photographs, could easily hold its own against as any university
undergraduate assignment. More astonishing was the precocious effort
of K. Arichandran in 1959 who wrote an original mathematical treatise
on solving projectile problems by drawing. In nine pages of figures
and equations, Arichandran described a method - based on nothing more
than Form Six mathematics - of locating the points of impact of a
project using just compasses, straight-edge and pencil. Ari’s own
career trajectory has seen his beginnings as an Arts student in Forms
4 and 5, his switch to the science stream in Form Six and his appointment
as Professor of Engineering.
There were a few severe dislocations, though, between
school interests and future vocation: Kok Wee Kiat wrote on photosynthesis
in 1958, sprinkling his article with ionic equations. After editing the
same journal the following year, he turned his back on science and read
law at university instead! Another editor, Chong Siew Meng, wrote
exclusively two years running on astronomical topics - Quasars
and The Birth and Death of Stars - but became a pathologist instead,
earning his living peering downwards through a microscope instead of
skywards through a telescope. However, stars are still Siew Meng's
passion - honestly, can he help it if the character for "Meng" is
made up of the radicals for the sun and the moon? A former President
of the Astronomical Society of Malaysia, he has co-authored a book
on the moon - with nothing as yet on pathology. Siew Meng's contemporary
and a member of his editorial board, K. Satkunantham, authored a
prize-winning article on the detection of sub-atomic particles using
cloud and bubble chambers. The budding physicist became an orthopaedic
surgeon instead and is now the Director of Medical Services in Singapore.
Norman Foo Yeow Khean, who pioneered the Psychology Section in the 1959
Science Exhibition, mapped out an extensive outline of that discipline
in The Scientific Victorian. But he went on instead to read
engineering and later shifted sideways into computing. But some karmic
influence must be at work nudging him back to psychology, because
Norman Foo is today Professor of Artificial Intelligence researching
human behaviour on computers.
Predictions, no matter how informed, and reality
are seldom in sync as well. Future engineer Chow Kok Hoong’s 1959
article on The World in 2000 A.D. talked about how atomic
power would have been harnessed for peaceful purposes when the
21st century dawned. In a future household, he sniffed,
robots would cook simple meals and other machines would polish,
clean and sweep the house. Citing space travel as another benefit
the inhabitants of 2000 A.D. would enjoy, he prophesized that "the
gigantic space-liners of that age could take them to Mars for
Easter, Pluto for the August holidays and maybe Jupiter for
Christmas." Hmmm…
The Scientific Victorian was ably
supported over the years by the V.I. science staff, some of whom
contributed articles as well. From Joan Floyd came an article
on Economic Zoology and two reports on field trips by her
students, including one in 1958 for a survey of the fauna of the
Gombak River at the request of the Chemistry Department. Her
colleague and successor Yeoh Oon Chye generated an eight-page
report on an ecological study of some tin tailings at Ampang while
Indian expatriate teacher F C Vohra expounded on animal courtship.
Chemistry master, Sim Wong Kooi, contributed two articles with
completely different themes and thrusts. His first, Chemistry
in Malay and Malay in Chemistry, was a sober survey of Malay
terminology coined for chemistry four years after independence.
His seven-page thoughtful and detailed exposition - reprinted
in the 1969 Scientific Victorian - quoted from Indonesian
as well as Malayan sources and was critical of inconsistent and
haphazard methods in coining terms. Wong Kooi pointed out many
glaring examples and made several suggestions for better
methodologies and approaches. His second contribution, in 1961,
was Fun with Chemistry, a list of 100 humorous definitions
of chemistry terms. Some samples:
Red Litmus: Lye detector.
Catalyst: Busybody, instigator and matchmaker.
Alchemists: Lazy people who expected to get gold without digging for it.
Nitrous oxide: Gas with a sense of humour.
Law of Conservation of Mass: Matter can neither be created nor destroyed,
except when students perform the weighing.
Newly returned Old Boy physics teacher, Mohd
Ali bin Ibrahim, wrote on cosmic radiation in the 1958 issue. In
1966, the journal’s advisory teacher, Chung Chee Min, wrote about
a fundamentally new approach to mathematics education of that era
dubbed the New Mathematics. He also redesigned the pictorial
component of the cover, inserting Watson and Crick's by-now-famous
double helix to go with the human head and leaf to represent the
life sciences and an atom with orbiting particles to represent
chemistry as well as physics. Mathematics was represented by a
scattering of geometrical shapes and symbols including a pentagram,
a sigma sign and a tessellation of polygons which morphed downwards
into the chemical symbol of a benzene ring. The weight pulled by
the horse was changed from 200 lbs to 550 lbs, a more meaningful
number in the Imperial system of that time - if the cover horse
pulled this new weight upwards one foot in one second it would
generate, by definition, exactly one horse power!
Peace Corps teacher, Charles Norman Silver
contributed a humorous piece in 1970. Quoting a certain "C.N.
Argent" - purportedly a French pedagogue from Aix-la-Chapelle
in the year 1789 - he presented, tongue in cheek, Argent’s two
theorems on "Classroom dynamics". The first stated that the noise
level of a classroom over time might be described by a saw-tooth
curve, which Silver illustrated with a diagram and an exponential
equation. An abstruse corollary followed: The area under the curve
represents the sum of the kinetic energies of the tongues in the
aggregate and is a direct function of the time of the day, subject
and location of the classroom.
Argent’s second theorem intoned: In a class
of N the abilities of the students are related to the distance from
the front of the room by the following curve. The illustration
showed two sinusoidal curves, one for noise and the other for ability
plotted over distance, the peak of one curve coinciding with the
trough of the other. One can only hope, even if the journal's readers
did not know that argent meant silver in French, that they
were aware that the piece was nothing more than a spoof.
The quality of The Scientific Victorian
rapidly improved as it matured. Its articles got progressively longer
(compared to the initial page-length efforts) and were packed with
more detail. Photographs (snapped by the authors or sourced from
agencies like the British Council or the USIS) were used increasingly
and even the artwork was immeasurably improved with the recruitment
into the editorial board of a succession of artists (beginning with
Lee Wee Kee as "Artist" in 1958 and ending with R. Kularajah as "Art
Editor" in 1964/1965). By 1959, enough articles had already been
published to warrant an index for the past six years. 125 articles
had been printed by then, with the most, 37, from physics, and 36
from biology. There had been 30 articles of general interest, 12 from
chemistry and 10 from mathematics. The 1960 issue sold 1,500 copies
bringing in a tidy profit of $600. The following year's journal, with
a print run of 1,700, was sold out within a week. With orders were
still pouring in from all parts of the country the editorial board
decided to send a complimentary copy to every school that had to be
turned down. With printing costs climbing though, the profit for 1961
was projected to be just over $250.
1957 had seen the beginnings of a regular forum
although it was not described as such then. A light-hearted article,
"Humanise the Scientists? Ha!" by Ooi Boon Teck,
now a Professor of Power Engineering, poured contempt on the study
of humanities with its "arid scholasticism" and
"nothing but stacks of epic poetry and sickening Petrachian
sonnets." Man, he asserted, does not "survive through
verses, music and frescoes… we can sup in manna dew and drink
in poesy, only all too often the murmur of gastric juices
proclaim that it is time for dinner." Boon Teck challenged,
"What do Wordsworth’s pantheism, d’Quincy’s opium dreams,
à Kempis' ascetic piety, Tolstoy’s Christian pacifism, D. H.
Lawrence’s sexual preoccupation tell us but apologies and
excuses for the kind of lives they live?"
That was enough to raise the hackles of V.I.
Head Girl, Leong Siew Mun, a future economist and University of
Malaya Chief Librarian, and sometime poetess. In the immediate
following pages (this clash was obviously engineered by prior
arrangement by the editor Tan Hong Siang), Siew Mun launched her
first salvo, " ‘The great man,’ said Confucius, ‘is no robot.’
After reading the last article, we see that its author is determined
to be .. a robot!" We cannot go to war with sonnets and
sonatas for the arts were essentially humanitarian, she thundered.
"The greatness of law and justice is apparent in its keeping
the world from chaos," Siew Mun asserted, "the
philosophies of Confucius, Buddha, Christ preach tolerance and
goodwill to all men…. Would you rather live in a world of machines
and mathematics, of dynatron oscillators and dysprosium, of KCl,
MgCL2.6H2O and COOH.CH2.CH(OH).COOH ….. or would you delight in
the finer aspects of life - poetry, music, drama, dancing,
painting, philosophy and the beauty, purity and truth of
religion?"
This lively exchange began a tradition over
the next few years of the examination of various scientific
issues. 1958 saw the first formal forum with written opinions
submitted in support of or in disagreement with a question that
is still debated to this day - Creation or Evolution?
As a matter of record, all three submissions from the science
students supported evolution while the two opinions from the
Arts stream were in favour of creation! Later forums sought the
views of readers on The End of the Earth, Science
and the Control of Human Life, Science and the
Supernatural, Science and Society, and Science
is Truth. They elicited enthusiastic and intense arguments
from Victorians, schoolchildren at that time but today’s luminaries
in science, engineering and medicine. The final forum in 1965
had a different format. It was live, presided over by the Society’s
chairman and the previous year's The Scientific Victorian
editor, Foo Yeow Leong, with participants from the V.I., M.B.S.
and the Convent, Bukit Nanas. The topic was Is Sex Education
Necessary in Malaysian Schools? A transcript of the discussion
was printed in The Scientific Victorian.
The annual interhouse analytical chemistry
competitions were initiated in 1959 with the aim of improving
the practical chemistry skills of the Society’s members. The
Scientific Victorian printed the names of the teams and
the winners (senior and junior analysts) in its pages. But more
useful and popular was the accompanying multi-page post mortem
of the contest by the chemistry teacher in which he also gave
tips and suggested answers. This section alone was worth the
price of the magazine. Equally helpful, if not more, was the
three-page systematic cations analysis chart prepared by Sim Wong
Kooi, which the journal published in 1960 and reprinted in 1962.
This detailed guide was normally given out to Mr Sim’s students
for lab identification of cations; undoubtedly, it was a bonus
for any Scientific Victorian reader anywhere.
By the early sixties the magazine was reaching
its zenith with quality content and good sales. A newly arrived
biology teacher from New Zealand, Mr Leslie Allen, had this to say
of the Scientific Victorian: "Really amazing, you know,
especially to find pupils writing such articles. In New Zealand
most of this is usually done by the professors." In 1965 the journal
published a bonus two-page chart of the heavens prepared by Ng
Fook Loy. The star configuration reflected that seen in Kuala Lumpur
skies. .That same year, the editorial board initiated an innovative
idea to enhance the already high standard of articles it was
publishing. A contest was announced for the best article
submitted, with a Sheaffer’s Imperial 4 pen set donated by
the Borneo Company as prize. The judges of the best article
would be Dr Chatar Singh and Professor C. J. Eliezer both of
the University of Malaya, and Drs E. K. Ng and B.C. Sekhar
both of the Rubber Research Institute. All were members of
the Malaysian Scientific Association. The award was won by
Peter Tang for his article On Rocketry. His article,
illustrated with two photographs and several diagrams, described
the principles behind several kinds of rockets including solid
propellant, liquid propellant, nuclear, ionic and photon rockets.
The editorial boards of 1966 and 1967 had
other gimmicks to attract sales as well. Each issue of the 1966
Scientific Victorian came with instructions and a sheet
of printed outlines of a trihexaflexagon and a hexahexaflexagon.
These were paper polygons (with jaw-breaking names) to be snipped
out and folded according to the instructions. They could then be
flexed in various ways to exhibit many combinations and juxtapositions
of patterns. The following year, the magazine rolled out another
paper gift for its readers – polyominoes. Readers were invited to
snip out the various preprinted shapes made of connected squares
and to piece them together to form geometrical patterns.
By the late sixties, the V.I. was in the
throes of change. In 1968, the Education Ministry scrapped the
annual Sixth Form Entrance Examination whose results had hitherto
been used to select Fifth Formers to join Lower Six in January of
the following year. Beginning in 1969, Lower Sixers were selected
on the basis of their School Certificate results. But these were
released only in March of the new school year, which meant there
was practically one whole term when there were no Lower Sixers
around and the Sixth Form population comprised only the Upper
Sixers. This had dire consequences on school activities including
the Speech Day science exhibitions, Society activities and, of
course, the contributions to and support for the Scientific
Victorian. Adding to staff and student stress, following
directives from the Education Ministry, the school population
burgeoned post-May 13 to over 1,700 in two years. Extracurricular
activities requiring classrooms were difficult to pursue as,
even during school hours, some sixth form classes had to
"float" around looking for vacant classrooms.
Still the 1970 editor found time to revamp
The Scientific Victorian cover with a colourful collage
of images of the various scientific fields covered, presumably,
by the magazine - physics, chemistry, mathematics, astronomy,
life sciences, earth sciences and social sciences. By then the
magazine’s analytic competition post-mortems had ended as had
its forums. And there were no more gifts. Worse, the priorities
and values of the Sixth Formers from whom the journal drew its
readership and contributors seemed at odds with those of the past.
There was hint of a creeping malaise, of despair and desperation,
in the editorial by Anthony Sun:
Science is now turning into a mere farce!
… It is no longer a sincere thirst for knowledge but a means
whereby man steps into the next stage. This is magnified in very
concrete terms in most schools today. …..No enthusiasm, no
sincerity, no interest is found in the "budding scientists"
in the classroom. Science is taught and learnt as a necessity
for the selfish achievement of a certificate or perhaps as a
means for subsistence. Is this the situation that should prevail?
....Education is under heavy moral criticism and upheaval…
Confirming Anthony Sun's fears, the 1971 issue
failed to appear altogether and yet the Society’s annual
report did not offer any explanation for its absence though it
did report that its membership had plummeted to a shocking 75,
less than half of the previous year’s 187 members. Even the Junior
Science Club, comprising First, Second and Third Formers, could
boast a larger membership – 130! While the Society lacked the
critical mass to stage any large-scale activities, it still
managed to launch a cyclostyled newsletter called Science
Participator, whose aim, it said, was to serve as a medium
for students to "air their views and to contribute their
own articles of all kinds (short reports, discussions, puzzles,
scientific poems, etc)." Two issues were published that
year and by 1972 seven issues had seen the light of day. As a
service to its members preparing for the General Paper, the
newsletter published articles like Science and War,
Man’s Participatory Evolution and Hungry World.
With its different focus, the Science
Participator evidently fulfilled needs that The Scientific
Victorian could not. In 1973 there were two more appearances
of the Participator with articles treating science in
a lighter vein. That same year saw the final issue of The
Scientific Victorian. Its cover noted that it was for the
years "1972-1973", suggesting that the journal had
missed its 1972 appearance for the second year running. Further
proof could be seen in the date of the annual report of the
Science and Mathematics Society printed inside - 1972. The
journal's own editorial hinted at the turmoil and soul searching
roiling through the school and talked of even more changes to come:
The Victoria Institution as one of the
premier schools in the country has a major role in the task
of nation building. For decades the Victoria Institution has
accomplished its task with flying colours. However the May
1969 disturbances and the disappointing MCE results of 1970
jolted our beautiful rhythm. We are still in the process of
reorganizing ourselves in order to recover our step.
To do so, several changes have to be accommodated and the
traditionalists have had to make several concessions....
When The Scientific Victorian first
released its publication twenty years ago, the only society
that catered for the scientific interests of the students was
the Science and Mathematics Society. The magazine was
accordingly called the Journal of the Science and Mathematics
Society. Presently there are three major societies that promote
scientific activities, namely, the Science and Mathematics
Society, the Automotive Society and the Electronics Club.
Recently, there were many proposals, some suggesting the
amalgamation of the above societies and some the dissolution
of the Science and Mathematics Society into specialized
sub-societies. As yet no concrete steps have been taken. It
is up to the respective newly elected executive committees
and, most important of all, the science students, to decide
the future of these societies and consequently to redefine
the role of the Scientific Victorian accordingly.
And the following year, 1974, the three
science societies did indeed merge to form the V.I. Science
Union, continuing a trend started ten years earlier when their
arts counterparts of that time had merged to form the Arts
Union. 1974, too, was significant in that there was a fundamental
shift - as foreshadowed in the editorial above - in official
school policy away from "traditionalism." The annual
Sports and Speech Days were curtailed considerably in their
"showiness" and cost. The venerable Victorian
magazine underwent a profound change with its 44-old cover design
ditched and its report formats changed. The literary section
having been tossed out a year earlier, the 1974 issue now
weighed in at a mere 100 pages compared to 174 pages just a
year ago.
Frugality and a determined break with
the past seemed the order of the day as society reports and
house reports were strung together continuously one after
the another minus even the names of office-bearers (these
were all stuffed separately in small print into a two-page
matrix elsewhere). The report of the new two-hundred member
Science Union took just three paragraphs – 188 words. Of the
Scientific Victorian, this and later Science Union
reports made no mention. Perhaps the new student leaders
thought such a high brow journal irrelevant to the new
temper of the times. Whatever the reason, Tay Chong Hai’s
baby had vanished into the night, more with a whimper than
a bang. The Science Participator continued publishing
for a few more years and then it too faded away.
Editors * * * * * |
| 1953 Tay Chong Hai
|
| 1954 Soong Wing Choon
|
| 1955 Tang Khai Yuen
|
| 1956 Narendran K. Nair
|
| 1957 Tan Hong Siang
|
| 1958 Khoo Choong Keow
|
| 1959 Kok Wee Kiat
|
| 1960 Indran Devadason
|
| 1961 Tay Chong Young
|
| 1962 Koh Tong Bak
|
| 1963 Lim Meng Mui
|
| 1964 Foo Yeow Leong
|
| 1965 Loh Chi Loong
|
| 1966 Victor Sodhy
|
| 1967 Cheah Peng Fai
|
| 1968 Chong Siew Meng
|
| 1969 Chow Chun Khiong
|
| 1970 Anthony Sun
|
| 1971 * not published *
|
1972-1973 Mahendran & Chin Yew Neng
|
Next: The Analekta, the Arts Journal