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2016/17 Trinity Hall
A year in the life of the Trinity Hall community 2016/17 Trinity Hall Academic Year 2016/17 2016/17 2 Trinity Hall Reports from our Officers Hello and welcome to the Trinity Hall Review 2016/17, looking back on an exciting academic year for the College community. Major milestones this year include a number of events and projects marking 40 years since the admission of women to Trinity Hall, the completion of WYNG Gardens and the acquisition of a new portrait and a new tapestry, both currently on display in the Dining Hall. We hope you enjoy reading the Review and on behalf of everyone at Trinity Hall, thank you for your continued and generous support. Kathryn Greaves Alumni Communications Officer Stay in touch with the College network: 30 TrinityHallCamb Alumni News inside Reports from our Officers 2 The Master 2 The Bursar 4 The Senior Tutor 7 The Graduate Tutor 8 The Admissions Tutor 10 The Dean 11 The Development Director 12 The Junior Bursar 14 The Head of Conference and Catering Services 15 The Librarian 16 The Director of Music 17 College News 18 The JCR President’s Report 20 The MCR President’s Report 21 Student Reports 22 Fellows’ News 24 Seminars and Lectures 26 Fundraising 28 18 Alumni News 30 THA Secretary’s Report 32 College News Alumni News 34 In Memoriam 36 2016/17 Information 38 List of Fellows 40 College Statistics 44 Fellows and Staff 48 List of Donors 50 Get involved 59 Thank you to all who have contributed to this edition of the Trinity Hall Review. -
New Constitution
Cam FM Constitution Cam FM Constitution Definitions ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 2 SECTION 1: NAME, IDENTITY AND OBJECTS .............................................................................................................................. 3 1. Name and identity ................................................................................................................................................................ 3 2. Objectives of organisation .................................................................................................................................................... 3 SECTION 2: THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS ..................................................................................................................................... 4 3. The Company ....................................................................................................................................................................... 4 SECTION 3: MEETINGS, ELECTIONS AND APPOINTMENTS ......................................................................................................... 5 4. General Meetings ................................................................................................................................................................. 5 5. Elections and Appointments ............................................................................................................................................... -
Freshers' Guide
Freshers’ Guide 2020 Freshers’ Emmanuel Postgraduate Prepared by Emmanuel College MCR Contents Contents 1 Welcome 2 MCR Committee 4 How to get here 10 College 12 Accommodation 13 What to bring 18 What’s What and Who’s Who 22 Welfare 26 Disability 29 Students with Families 32 Healthy relationships 33 International students 42 Religion 45 Being Green 46 Computing 47 Sports and other activities 50 Cambridge Life 53 Freshers’ week 58 1 Welcome to Emmanuel Hello! Congratulations on joining Emmanuel — ‘Emma’ as it is affectionately known — and beginning your new postgraduate course. We are thrilled that you have chosen Emma to be your college and we hope that you are excited to be starting at Emma, and at Cambridge. But you probably also have a lot of questions. We hope that this guide will provide answers to some of those questions along with lots of other useful information, both for planning your arrival and once you are here. But let’s start right at the beginning, because some of you may be wondering what Emmanuel even is - you thought you were joining Cambridge! Well, you are. The University of Cambridge is at the same time one thing and many, being made up of many faculties and departments, and colleges. As a postgraduate student you will belong to both a department, responsible for your education, and to a college, responsible for your pastoral care, accommodation and an important part of your social life. So who are ‘we’? Emma has its own student unions, who represent the students to College and vice versa, and run various events. -
ANNUAL REPORT of the UNIVERSITY Docx
ANNUAL REPORT OF THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE SYNDICATE, 2008 – 9 This year, as well as being one of celebration for the University, was also a year of celebration for the ADC Theatre, as it reflected on the completion of many long-term objectives. October 2008 saw the completion of the redevelopment that had started in 2003 and the beginning of a new set of opportunities for the Theatre. The last phase of the building work included the rebuilding of the workshop and dressing rooms, and the creation of a rehearsal and performance studio (The Larkum Studio, named for former Sidney Sussex Bursar and Chairman of the ADC Theatre Executive Committee Charles Larkum). It also saw the installation of a platform lift which allows disabled access to the stage area for the first time in the theatre’s history. The changes were evidently popular with the theatre’s audience, with audience figures breaking the momentous 50,000 mark for the first time in the theatre’s history, as it welcomed 53,000 visitors over 353 performances. Programme Review The Autumn season once again opened with a production from the Cambridge University American Stage Tour: Henry V , which claimed an unprecedented six stars from Varsity. Also back from tour was the Edinburgh sell-out, Devils , written and performed by the Cambridge Footlights. The redeveloped building was re-opened to a selection of alumni and current students with a performance of an exciting new musical written by Cambridge students called Hero , which had also enjoyed a successful run at the Edinburgh Festival. The gala evening was attended by Sir Peter Hall (guest of honour) and Sir Trevor Nunn, and a number of volunteers involved in the building project were invited. -
To Download Rupert Christiansen's Interview
Collection title: Behind the scenes: saving and sharing Cambridge Arts Theatre’s Archive Interviewee’s surname: Christiansen Title: Mr Interviewee’s forename(s): Rupert Date(s) of recording, tracks (from-to): 9.12.2019 Location of interview: Cambridge Arts Theatre, Meeting Room Name of interviewer: Dale Copley Type of recorder: Zoom H4N Recording format: WAV Total no. of tracks: 1 Total duration (HH:MM:SS): 00:31:25 Mono/Stereo: Stereo Additional material: None Copyright/Clearance: Assigned to Cambridge Arts Theatre. Interviewer’s comments: None Abstract: Opera critic/writer and Theatre board member, Rupert Christiansen first came the Theatre in 1972. He was a regular audience member whilst a student at Kings College, Cambridge and shares memories of the Theatre in the 1970s. Christiansen’s association was rekindled in the 1990s when he was employed to author a commemorative book about the Theatre. He talks about the research process and reflects on the redevelopment that took place at this time. He concludes by explaining how he came to join the Theatre’s board. Key words: Oxford and Cambridge Shakespeare Company, Elijah Moshinsky, Sir Ian McKellen, Felicity Kendall, Contemporary Dance Theatre, Andrew Blackwood, Judy Birdwood, costume, Emma Thompson, Hugh Laurie, Stephen Fry, Peggy Ashcroft and Alec Guinness, Cambridge Footlights, restaurant, The Greek Play, ETO, Kent Opera and Opera 80, Festival Theatre, Sir Ian McKellen, Eleanor Bron. Picturehouse Cinema, File 00.00 Christiansen introduces himself. His memories of the Theatre range from 1972 to present, he is now on the Theatre’s board of trustees. Christiansen describes his first experience of the Theatre seeing a production of ‘As You Like It’ featuring his school friend Sophie Cox as Celia, by the Oxford and Cambridge Shakespeare Company and directed by Elijah Moshinsky [b. -
PLANNING COMMITTEE 10 January 2018 Application Number 17/1541
PLANNING COMMITTEE 10th January 2018 Application 17/1541/FUL Agenda Number Item Date Received 5th October 2017 Officer Michael Hammond Target Date 4th January 2018 Ward Market Site Cambridge Union Society 9A Bridge Street Cambridge CB2 1UB Proposal Demolition of ancillary buildings and removal of 1930's facade at the Grade II listed Cambridge Union Society. Construction of replacement facade, reinstatement and refurbishment of historic features and internal and external access and refurbishment works including enlargement of existing cafe (Use Class A3) and reopening of 'footlight's' entertainment space (sui generis). Demolition of squash courts and un-listed 3-5 Round Church Street in the conservation area. Construction of new link building for access and ancillary uses for the Union Society. Construction of adjacent new building with ground floor restaurant (Use Class A3) with 45 room post-graduate student accommodation above (Use Class C2) together with basement storage and services. Applicant Cambridge Union Society and Trinity College SUMMARY The development accords with the Development Plan for the following reasons: The principle of demolition and development has been established under the previously permitted application (16/0673/FUL). In comparison with the previously permitted plans (16/0673/FUL) the proposal is not considered to exacerbate the level of harm caused to heritage assets. The proposed changes compared to the previously approved development would not impact on the accessibility of the building. RECOMMENDATION APPROVAL 1.0 SITE DESCRIPTION/AREA CONTEXT 1.1 The Cambridge Union Society is located in the historic core of the City Centre. It occupies a large site on the south-west corner of Park Street and Round Church Street. -
Top Cambridge Talent Denied Visa
Sport p32 Misogyny p16-17 Comment p10 The freshers are annoying Rob Sturgeon on why men Rebecca Usden on why our man at John’s in can and should be allowed to atheists have more to do if they Redboy Reports enter the feminism debate want to dispel creationism FRIDAY 8TH OCTOBER 2010 THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1947 ISSUE NO 724 | VARSITY.CO.UK UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE Churchill Fellow Top Cambridge awarded Nobel Prize talent denied visa VARSITY NEWS Professor Robert Edwards, University loses out as Indian materials scientist Emeritus Professor of Human Reproduction at the University of is refused British work permit Cambridge, has been awarded the 2010 Nobel Prize in the fi eld of Phys- OMISING INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIST WHO WAS HOPING TO BUILD A RESEARCH CAREER AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDG iology or Medicine. Agency rules, migrants who aim to E HAS BEEN Professor Edwards, who is also a OSAMA SIDDIQUI work in the UK must apply through Pensioner Fellow at Churchill Col- A promising international scientist the points-based assessment lege, was given the award “for the who was hoping to build a research system. development of in vitro fertilisation” career at the University has been Dr Jain required 75 points to (or IVF). IVF is a medical treat- prevented from doing so by UK qualify for a visa. His doctorate enti- ment for infertility, which allows the immigrationCOLLE A PR rules. tled him to 45 points. To secure the sperm to fertilise the egg outside Dr Prashant Jain, an Indian remainder, he would have needed the body, resulting in what is known researcher who holds a PhD in to show proof of an annual salary of as a “test-tube baby”. -
TRINITY COLLEGE Cambridge Trinity College Cambridge College Trinity Annual Record Annual
2016 TRINITY COLLEGE cambridge trinity college cambridge annual record annual record 2016 Trinity College Cambridge Annual Record 2015–2016 Trinity College Cambridge CB2 1TQ Telephone: 01223 338400 e-mail: [email protected] website: www.trin.cam.ac.uk Contents 5 Editorial 11 Commemoration 12 Chapel Address 15 The Health of the College 18 The Master’s Response on Behalf of the College 25 Alumni Relations & Development 26 Alumni Relations and Associations 37 Dining Privileges 38 Annual Gatherings 39 Alumni Achievements CONTENTS 44 Donations to the College Library 47 College Activities 48 First & Third Trinity Boat Club 53 Field Clubs 71 Students’ Union and Societies 80 College Choir 83 Features 84 Hermes 86 Inside a Pirate’s Cookbook 93 “… Through a Glass Darkly…” 102 Robert Smith, John Harrison, and a College Clock 109 ‘We need to talk about Erskine’ 117 My time as advisor to the BBC’s War and Peace TRINITY ANNUAL RECORD 2016 | 3 123 Fellows, Staff, and Students 124 The Master and Fellows 139 Appointments and Distinctions 141 In Memoriam 155 A Ninetieth Birthday Speech 158 An Eightieth Birthday Speech 167 College Notes 181 The Register 182 In Memoriam 186 Addresses wanted CONTENTS TRINITY ANNUAL RECORD 2016 | 4 Editorial It is with some trepidation that I step into Boyd Hilton’s shoes and take on the editorship of this journal. He managed the transition to ‘glossy’ with flair and panache. As historian of the College and sometime holder of many of its working offices, he also brought a knowledge of its past and an understanding of its mysteries that I am unable to match. -
May Week 2008 Is Published by Varsity Publications Ltd
Here is Summer poems drawings stories photographs T-Rex going home ferret wheels Cancun Thomas De Quincey’s London prostitutes David Shrigley ice cream Paul Smith’s fried egg unseen Cambridge Minsk men Sark scrambles tangerines Blogotheque accordions on roofs cellos on punts Scroobius Pip Peggy Sue and the Pirates’ search for whiskey Jens Lekman pilots Grobs Titanic incest fucking in Californian accents Auntie Amy mix tape a minha menina 1 Oh dear. I went to one May Ball. Was it in Trinity (I was in Peterhouse)? I remember: my girlfriend coming from London and staying (illegally) in my digs opposite the Fitzwilliam Museum; not enough drink, not enough dope (we called it pot); undergraduates behaving as if they were adults from an earlier gen- eration; undergraduates puking on the grass at dawn (not me); Georgie Flame and the Blue Flames; twisting; feeling obliged to stay much longer at the ball than we wanted because the tickets had been so exorbitantly expensive; dur- ing May Week feeling that I should be having the time of my life but wasn’t. I entirely wasted my time at Cambridge, I was on the King’s May Ball commit- did badly in my exams (missed one alto- tee for 1968. We had booked some tre- gether), scraped a degree and have felt mendous groups, including the up and vaguely uneasy ever since at the expense coming Tyrannosaurus Rex (they’d had of spirit in a waste of shame... their rst small hit the month before and Richard Eyre didn’t become T-Rex until 1970.) Some idiot on the committee also booked a bouncer who was charged with making sure the acts did their full contract and no funny business. -
Pocketbook for You, in Any Print Style: Including Updated and Filtered Data, However You Want It
Hello Since 1994, Media UK - www.mediauk.com - has contained a full media directory. We now contain media news from over 50 sources, RAJAR and playlist information, the industry's widest selection of radio jobs, and much more - and it's all free. From our directory, we're proud to be able to produce a new edition of the Radio Pocket Book. We've based this on the Radio Authority version that was available when we launched 17 years ago. We hope you find it useful. Enjoy this return of an old favourite: and set mediauk.com on your browser favourites list. James Cridland Managing Director Media UK First published in Great Britain in September 2011 Copyright © 1994-2011 Not At All Bad Ltd. All Rights Reserved. mediauk.com/terms This edition produced October 18, 2011 Set in Book Antiqua Printed on dead trees Published by Not At All Bad Ltd (t/a Media UK) Registered in England, No 6312072 Registered Office (not for correspondence): 96a Curtain Road, London EC2A 3AA 020 7100 1811 [email protected] @mediauk www.mediauk.com Foreword In 1975, when I was 13, I wrote to the IBA to ask for a copy of their latest publication grandly titled Transmitting stations: a Pocket Guide. The year before I had listened with excitement to the launch of our local commercial station, Liverpool's Radio City, and wanted to find out what other stations I might be able to pick up. In those days the Guide covered TV as well as radio, which could only manage to fill two pages – but then there were only 19 “ILR” stations. -
Newsletter Is Published by the College
Trinity Hall cover 2013_Trinity Hall cover 07/10/2013 08:51 Page 1 3 1 / 2 1 0 2 R A E Y C I M E D A C A R E T T E L S W E N L L A H Y T I N I R T The Trinity Hall Newsletter is published by the College. Newsletter Thanks are extended to all the contributors. ACADEMIC YEAR 2012/13 The Development and Alumni Office Trinity Hall, Cambridge CB2 1TJ Tel: +44 (0)1223 332562 Fax: +44 (0)1223 765157 Email: [email protected] www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk Return to contents www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk 1 Trinity Hall Newsletter ACADEMIC YEAR 2012/13 College Reports ............................................................................. 3 Trinity Hall Lectures .................................................................. 49 Student Activities, Societies & Sports ....................................... 89 Trinity Hall Association .......................................................... 109 The Gazette ...............................................................................115 Keeping in Touch ...................................................................... 129 Section One College Reports Return to contents www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk 3 From the Master The academic year 2012/13 closed with a sense of achievement and pride. The performance in the examinations was yet again outstanding: we finished third in the table of results, consolidating our position as one of the high achieving colleges in the College Reports University. This gratifying success was not the result of forcing the students into the libraries, laboratories and lecture theatres at the expense of other elements of life in College. Quite the contrary: one of the most pleasurable aspects of life in College at the moment is that students enjoy their academic work and find it a source of endless interest. -
The Eagle 2013 the EAGLE
VOLUME 95 FOR MEMBERS OF ST JOHN’S COLLEGE The Eagle 2013 THE EAGLE Published in the United Kingdom in 2013 by St John’s College, Cambridge St John’s College Cambridge CB2 1TP johnian.joh.cam.ac.uk Telephone: 01223 338700 Fax: 01223 338727 Email: [email protected] Registered charity number 1137428 First published in the United Kingdom in 1858 by St John’s College, Cambridge Designed by Cameron Design (01284 725292, www.designcam.co.uk) Printed by Fisherprint (01733 341444, www.fisherprint.co.uk) Front cover: Divinity School by Ben Lister (www.benlister.com) The Eagle is published annually by St John’s College, Cambridge, and is sent free of charge to members of St John’s College and other interested parties. Page 2 www.joh.cam.ac.uk CONTENTS & MESSAGES CONTENTS & MESSAGES THE EAGLE Contents CONTENTS & MESSAGES Photography: John Kingsnorth Page 4 johnian.joh.cam.ac.uk Contents & messages THE EAGLE CONTENTS CONTENTS & MESSAGES Editorial..................................................................................................... 9 Message from the Master .......................................................................... 10 Articles Maggie Hartley: The best nursing job in the world ................................ 17 Esther-Miriam Wagner: Research at St John’s: A shared passion for learning......................................................................................... 20 Peter Leng: Living history .................................................................... 26 Frank Salmon: The conversion of Divinity