A History of the Fellows' Boat 1970-2011
NUNQUAM CAPUT FLUMINIS: CHRONICLE OF THE LADY MARGARET FELLOWS BOAT, 1970-2011 Updated to 18th June 2011 by Tim Bayliss-Smith Prologue 2 The Dark Ages Mays 1970 2 Mays 1971 4 Mays 1972 5 Mays 1973 6 Easter Term 1974 7 The Middle Ages Easter Term 1979 7 Modern Times Mays 1983 8 Mays 1984 9 Mays 1985 9 Mays 1987 10 Mays 1988 11 Mays 1989 11 Mays 1990 13 Mays 1991 14 Lents 1992 15 Mays 1992 16 Mays 1993 17 Mays 1994 18 Mays 1996 19 Mays 1997 19 Easter Term 1998 20 Mays 1999 21 Mays 2000 22 Mays 2001 23 Mays 2002 25 Mays 2003 28 Michaelmas Term 2003 30 Mays 2004 31 Mays 2006 33 Mays 2011 34 Ups and Downs, 1983-2011 37 !2 PROLOGUE A few years ago, in an upstairs room in New Court, St John's College, archaeologists discovered an interesting artefact, believed to be an oar. It is shaped like a gigantic toothpick and is a faded red colour. Engraved upon there are some unlikely names, written in an archaic gothic script. They include “G.A. Reid”, “R.N. Perham”, “A.A. Macintosh”, and the date “1973”. It was once possible to study the artefact itself on the wall of the Senior Bursar's office, during quieter moments of Finance Committee meetings. There is a matching example in the Small Combination Room. These objects are surviving traces of the original Fellows Boat, whose very existence had faded into the realms of myth and legend before the onset of my own chronicle, begun in 1983 and periodically updated ever since.
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