Sunday, 3 May 2026

Article Z – A scholarship, a war zone, and a midnight dentist

What the Clipping Doesn’t Say

This post is part of the Blogging from A to Z Challenge (#AtoZChallenge), where I’m exploring historical newspaper clippings—one story at a time—through my series “Behind the Newsprint.”

Sandra is pictured being farewelled by her “backers”. From left, Mr Alan Cozens, and Mr Ron Barber of Rotary, Sandra, Mrs Williamson, and Rotarian Paul McMaster.


“Sandra Williamson is now in the Philippines as Cheltenham Rotary Club’s first exchange student.

She left last week for Davao City where she will study the equivalent of sixth form in a Filipino high school.

President of the Cheltenham Rotary Club, Mr Ron Barber, said that later this year a Filipino student will be hosted and billeted by Rotarians in Cheltenham.

Sandra, a former Cheltenham High student, said she was thrilled at the prospect of living for a year in the Philippines.”

They had put advertisements up. It is a neat little story. A local girl, given an opportunity, heads off on an adventure. It says nothing about how unlikely that felt at the time, or how close it came to not happening at all.

The Rotary Club had decided to send an exchange student overseas. They had put advertisements up around the school—or was it in the newspaper, I can’t remember. What I do remember is excitedly discussing with my school friends whether we should apply for the scholarship.

I was from a single-parent, lower-middle-class family; we’d moved into the area so we could walk to both the primary and high school, a deliberate choice by my mother who believed it would offer us a better start. One brother had already gone to live with my grandmother; he needed more attention than my mother felt she had the time to provide. Overseas travel didn’t just feel unlikely; it felt like something that belonged to other families.

Applications were due the following week. Two of us decided to apply.

I don’t remember much about the early stages, just the waiting room and lots of “kids” waiting their turn. What I do remember is the final interview. We were given very little notice. It was in the evening, and I had to convince my mother that my latest harebrained scheme had merit. I vividly remember being told that kids from families like ours don’t get to win things like this, that no one wanted to send a child from a single-parent family to represent their country overseas. That was not said with cruelty, but with certainty, and that certainty was almost harder to argue against.

Reluctantly, she agreed to drive me; it was too dark to walk.

The interviews were conducted in a house. There were quite a few teenagers there. We went from room to room alone to be interviewed by various panels. There was a hushed, nervous excitement everywhere. The questions consisted of “how would you feel if…,” “what would you do if…,” and so on.

The only one I remember with any clarity was being asked what people overseas would think if they were to meet someone whose parents were divorced.

I was furious, though at the time I wouldn’t have called it that. It felt more like being cornered, as if something ordinary in my life had suddenly been made into a flaw I was expected to defend. I sat there and looked back over the table at the men and quietly responded along the lines of: both my parents loved me and I loved them; the fact that they no longer loved each other was beyond my control. Even as I said it, I knew I was pushing back against more than just a question; I was pushing back against an assumption about where I belonged.

This was my last interview for the night. I was tired, and so were they. It can’t have been easy, so many interviews in a row after work. I remember standing up and saying I didn’t have a problem; they had a problem, and I left. Was it that dramatic? I don’t know, but that is the way I remember it. Memory, like newsprint, has a way of sharpening some edges and softening others.

Mum was waiting outside in her beat-up car. There wasn’t much to tell her. I couldn’t say that I had walked out, after all, she had taken the time to drive me back and forth without too much complaint.

I was in bed, tired after the adrenaline rush. The phone rang. It was in the days before mobile phones; the landline sat in the hallway just outside the bedrooms, no privacy if you were trying to keep things from those inside.

Then Mum screamed and started jumping up and down, calling my name. It was midnight. What the hell was going on? The chaos was only just beginning to ramp up.

“You won!”

I was bewildered. It was midnight. What does a seventeen-year-old win at midnight? A Rotary exchange, apparently.

“Get dressed, you need to go to the dentist.”

Nothing was making sense. It was dark outside. It was midnight.

It turned out that the club was running late with their application; they were pulling out all the stops as they finalised everything that had to be done. One of the Rotarians—a dentist, and quite possibly one of the men who had interviewed me—opened his surgery so they could tick off the requirement that the proposed applicant be up to date with dental work. It was my first glimpse of how quickly things could be set in motion once a decision had been made. Mum had also just been told she would need to contribute $1,000 towards my travel—no small amount, and not one she was sure she could manage. That would be worked out later. For now, at least, the dental work was taken care of.

The next month or so was a blur. I underwent all sorts of medical tests, filled out endless paperwork, got recommendations from teachers, and attended a weekend with other students preparing to be sent overseas—training on what to do and not do, how to behave, how to represent something larger than yourself.

I gave two talks at Rotary Club meetings, standing behind a dais while members ate their meals. Friends wanted to know how I felt about missing a year of school and whether it might affect my future, whether I would fall behind. There was an unspoken question beneath it all: whether this opportunity was worth the risk for someone like me.

And all that happened before I got on a plane to go and live on the island of Mindanao—something I only later understood was, at the time, a war zone.

We knew so little about where I was going and what it would be like.

Mum complained when I got back to Australia the following year that I hadn’t written home much. But what was I going to say? I didn’t want to worry her. I wasn’t going to tell her about the high brick walls with broken glass embedded along the top, about the cinema that was bombed shortly after my Filipino classmates and I left, or how I almost got a man shot by yelling out after he snatched my handbag. I didn’t tell her how, when I played on the university basketball team, the audience would stamp their feet and yell “import, import,” assuming I was being paid to play.

None of that appears in the newspaper clipping. Nor does the uncertainty, the anger, or the quiet determination that sat alongside it all.

Those are the parts that have stayed with me, long after the details have blurred. Not just the experience itself, but the realisation that the official version—the tidy, confident paragraph—can only ever tell part of the story. The rest sits elsewhere: in memory, in moments of resistance, and in all the things that never quite make it into print.

It’s a year I will never forget—not because of where I went, but because of what I learned about how stories are told, and how much they leave out.