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KING’S July 2008 PARADE a newsletter for members of King’s College, Cambridge The fertile fields of King’s research Where are they now? Day in the life of a Blues rower Welcome to the King’s in pictures summer edition King’s hosted eight Tibetan monks for four days while they created a sand mandala in the Chapel, a holy painting of coloured sands. The picture represented the impermanence of life: once completed it was swept up and poured into the waters of the Cam. Ross Harrison The Chapel was packed with visitors including local children who watched in I am delighted to welcome the new editor silence throughout the destruction ceremony. of King’s Parade, Charlotte Sankey, who takes on the role as part of the newly Amnesty International has created post of Communications Director special permission from at King’s (see page 6). the College Council to hold events and demonstrations. King’s is sad to say goodbye to Alison In February the student Amnesty group dressed Carter who was the editor for the last ten in orange jumpsuits years, and very grateful for all the energy calling for the closure of and expertise she put into the role. Guantanamo Bay, to echo “Many King’s members will have come the clothing worn by the into contact with Alison over the years prisoners detained there. They also lay down on the and appreciated how she transformed Front Court lawn in the King's Parade from a simple black and shape of an Amnesty white newsletter to the insightful, colour candle. publication it is today,“ said Joelle du Lac, Development Director. Custodian Barbara Stevenson (right) may Iain Fenlon, Senior Tutor, says about have had preternatural Alison: “Her accumulated knowledge of experiences of a different the history of the College is formidable, kind in mind when she and the interested way in which she signed up to work in the engaged with King's was impressive. She Chapel. She is pictured with a cyberman from will be sorely missed”. Alison is now Doctor Who and fellow working in the Development Office of custodian Lena Pledger, Fitzwilliam College and we wish her well to help publicise the in her new role. University’s 2008 Science Festival at which several King’s fellows ran events. Ross Harrison, Provost Carpenter Ian Sutherland puts the finishing touches to a set of new ‘A’ frames now in use to display information around the College. Ian has worked The editor, Charlotte Sankey, welcomes for King’s for 23 years. your news and suggestions for articles. He communicates with colleagues by lip reading Please contact her at: as he has been profoundly [email protected], deaf since childhood as a Tel: 01223 767361. result of meningitis. King’s College King’s Parade Cambridge CB2 1ST news Tel: 01223 331100 | 2 NEWS New website offers members easy ways to keep in touch Women’s Dinner celebrates personal King's College and the KCA are bonds launching a new website which will make keeping in touch far It was not until the 1950s that women easier. were allowed into King’s dining hall, Exclusive to King's members, and as guests on special occasions www.kingsmembers.org is only. Until then, they had viewed password-protected with an College dinners from the gallery above. online directory of members. It is This strange situation has been marked ideal for social and professional for more than a decade now with King’s networking. Members can also College Annual Women’s Dinner which link from it to other networking took place this year on 8 March, sites such as Linked-In, Flickr International Women’s Day. The main and Facebook. It is a convenient speaker was feminist Juliet Mitchell, place for members to register and New Register and website,” said Development fellow at Jesus College. She said that pay for events, to see who is King’s card Director Joelle du Lac. looking head on at 500 years of men’s attending events as well as make At the same time, King's and history can feel uncomfortable for donations. To ensure the new Register and the King's College Association women, so they tend to use concepts online directory is as accurate is bringing out a new, up-to- that belong to a different logic. King’s email for life and comprehensive as possible date edition of the King's Sisterhood is one such concept: it is a Many members will also be King’s will be individually College Register, the beloved relationship that derives its spirit and interested in the new facility of contacting NRMs by year group ‘purple book’ which is a Who’s content not from history but from the signing up for a lifelong King's over the next year to review Who of all living Kingsmen and present, not from inheritance but from email address. This allows recent their entries online and in the women. The Register is a an inter-personal bond. graduates and NRMs to set up a book. Members can decide how cherished King's tradition, and kings.cantab.net email address much information they would Professor Mitchell reminded guests that last published ten years ago. It with a full service mailbox. This like to share with other it was at King’s that the first conference is only available to members of basic service is free of charge, members. All members who of what was to develop into the King's and will be on sale for although enhanced features, such update their profile will be sent Cambridge University Centre for Gender pre-subscription purchase early as mobile email and larger a new King’s membership card Studies was held. She emphasized the in 2009. storage capacity, will cost extra giving them entrance to the always collective nature of women’s after an initial free trial period of “We want to bring the listings up College and Chapel and other struggle and called for the recuperation one year for new graduates, three to date, and also put it online for privileges, such as discounts of the long fought-for values of months for NRMs. the first time on the new around Cambridge. cooperation between women from the dominant discourse of fierce competition. Other speakers included Carol Gilligan who called upon Virginia King's boats row to glory in the Bumps Woolf’s Three Guineas, in which she questions the value of merely striving Going up seven places in the Bumps is a near In the May bumps, King's did even better: in to extend the privileged education of impossible feat, but one which two King's crews addition to the men's third going up seven, the men to women, if it is only to replicate achieved this year: the women's first boat in the men's second went up four places, both getting structures of oppression. Lent Bumps - making them the most successful their blades. Both women's crew went up a place. crew in the race - and the Men's third boat in the The men's first went down one, despite the fact that Dr Melissa Lane, who launched the May Bumps. King's have had two very successful they were twice just inches away from bumping. dinner in 1997, acknowledged the Bumps races this year, most fitting in this, the Many congratulations to all King's rowers. immense progress within King’s in 150th year of the King's Boat Club. terms of gender since the admission of women in 1972, noting that women had In the Lent Bumps King's went up ten places since occupied every position in the overall. "We rowed home glorious, Olivia King’s hierarchy and constituted [Rothbury, cox] holding King's flag high and all of roughly 50 per cent of students, us never prouder or happier," reports Ariane although there have never been more than 25 per cent women fellows. She Welch. "The bank party was huge and someone Katy whipped out a bottle of champagne. What a Critchfield, of also stressed the importance of week!" the first developing a female tradition of women's boat feasting and proposed a challenge: the All crews that competed in the Lent bumps went at the May creation of an endowment to subsidise up: the first men are at their highest point in 50 Bumps, the Women’s dinner in perpetuity. complete with years, finishing ninth in the first division, and the the If you would like to support the second men continue to move up the lower celebratory women’s Dinner please contact Joelle divisions. greenery. du Lac at the Development Office. news | 3 NEWS People news China’s most famous poem to grace stone by King’s willow Martin Rees (Lord Rees of Ludlow) has been elected A white marble stone is being installed at the back of Honorary Fellow of King’s. Rees King’s this July bearing a verse from China’s best-known was a Fellow of King’s until poem. Saying Goodbye to Cambridge Again is by arguably becoming Master of Trinity in the greatest poet of 20th century China, Xu Zhimo. 2002. He is arguably the most eminent and respected Xu Zhimo wrote the poem on the King’s College Backs, astrophysicist in the world, being and it is thought that the ‘golden willow’ of the poem is Astronomer Royal, President of the the tree that stands beside the bridge at King’s, near to Royal Society and a working Peer.