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A year in the life of the Trinity Hall community 2015/16 Trinity Hall

Academic Year 2015/16 2015/16 2 Trinity Hall Reports from our Officers

Welcome to the Trinity Hall Review, rounding up the 2015/16 academic year in College. Once again we are pleased to report students’ continued success in academia, sport and music, and a strong programme of student and alumni events. Highlights from the year include the Chapel Choir recording their second CD, visits to Asia and another wonderful graduation day. The JCR and MCR Presidents report on a lively and committed student community and the Law and Engineering societies were delighted to welcome back alumni speakers and guests to their events. Trinity Hall alumni continue to make a real difference to the lives of our students by generously giving time, effort, knowledge, experience and financial donations. Thank you for everything you have done and continue to do for us.

Kathryn Greaves Alumni Communications

Stay in touch with the College network: 38

TrinityHallCamb Alumni News inside Reports from our Officers 2  The Master 2 The Bursar 4 The Senior Tutor 9 The Graduate Tutor 10 The Admissions Tutor 12 The Dean 13 The Development Director 14 The Junior Bursar 16 The Head of Conference and Catering Services 17 The Librarian 18 The Director of Music 19 College News 20 The JCR President’s Report 22 The MCR President’s Report 24 Student Reports 26 Fellows’ News 32 Seminars and Lectures 34 Fundraising 36 20 Alumni News 38 THA Secretary’s Report 40 College News Alumni News 42 In Memoriam 44 2015/16 Information 46 List of Fellows 48 College Statistics 52 Fellows and Staff 56 List of Donors 58 Get involved 67

Thank you to all who have contributed to this edition of the Trinity Hall Review. Cover picture of the Jerwood Library lit up 46 for the June Event by Sir Cam. We would also like to thank the 2015/16 College photographer, Kiloran Howard. Information 2 REPORTS FROM OUR OFFICERS

The Master’s The key thing is the Report life of the College

his has been a year of solid Things have to work differently at progress for the College. We undergraduate level because there is continue to do well academically a general agreement in the University T– which is, after all, the crucial that the richer colleges will not try to benchmark for an educational institution use their financial muscle to outbid the – and remain well within the top half poorer colleges at admissions; individual of colleges overall when it comes to support pre-admission is therefore results. We slipped a little in the highlighted via a University-wide Baxter Tables this year but, as everyone bursary scheme, which is substantially knows, the ranking can vary enormously supported by Trinity but which most depending on just a few unexpectedly colleges assist one way or another. good or disappointing performances So we can’t directly raise money for since the margins are very narrow; having individual College awards in the way we said that, I don’t actually set much store can for graduates. But we can make by the Tables. What is the most important funds available for students struggling thing by far is the difference we make financially once they’re here and it is a to the lives of our students; the ‘value proud but realistic boast that no-one, added’ to put it another way. And here, once arrived, need drop out of Trinity not only the tremendous work put in by Hall because they can’t afford to carry The Revd Dr Jeremy Morris Directors of Studies and supervisors, on. All the same, these ‘hardship’ funds Master but also all the pastoral and tutorial back make little difference to the huge debt up from tutors, the Dean, the nurse and students are now accumulating through College counsellor, all help enormously the tuition fees; it would require another when students face difficulties and help step-change in funding for us to make them to overcome them. There is a bit a significant dent inthat situation. But of a myth out there that students are it’s something we ought to be spoon-fed or ‘nannied’ nowadays: I contemplating and, like other colleges, don’t think that’s true at all. But one of we’re actively searching for ways of the outstanding features of a Cambridge doing that and of course for the practical education is its all-round strength – support that could make it possible. This not just academic, not just social, but is, to me, an urgent matter. As things pastoral too. stand, the College already effectively subsidises each of our students out The other way in which the College can of our own resources (not counting help students get through their time in the tuition fees) over £5,000 a year. Cambridge is financial. Far and away But were we to stretch that subsidy to the financial issue I am asked about include the £9,000 per annum tuition (let most of all is student support. This has alone maintenance), we would have to to work differently for undergraduates increase our endowment threefold. You and graduates. For graduate students, see the scale of the challenge! colleges can make specific provision for studentships to be awarded to individuals That perhaps leads on to the other – something particularly important in material benefit we offer our students the UK, when sources of funding for – accommodation. At Wychfield graduate study are drying up. Currently we have some of the best student we can make studentships available for accommodation in Cambridge and part- or full-funding for around 10% of we’re adding to it with the new WYNG our graduate numbers, a figure that is Gardens in Thompson’s Lane, which respectably high in the University but still should be open for use this year and a long way short of where we’d like to will replace the run-down ‘Clems’ with be (and shockingly low in comparison 72 really high-quality student rooms. It with our US competitors), so graduate will be a relief to have WYNG Gardens awards remain one of our top priorities open, not only because the absence for fundraising. of those rooms over the last two years 3

has put extra strain on our resources, but also because the works have cut off traffic from that part of central Cambridge. On a more personal note, those of you who’ve visited College recently will know that scaffolding coats the Master’s Lodge and the works have gone on all year; we all hope they will be brought to an end by the close of the year. I’m conscious I’ve written about money and resources again. It really is a part of my job – fundraising, that is, travelling on behalf of the College, stirring up support from alumni and others. But it’s only a means to an end, after all, and the key thing is the life of the College. There have been so many highlights from the past year that it seems wrong to pick out a few. But I have my own personal list – a number of really outstanding concerts by our Chapel Choir with Orpheus Britannicus and our Director of Music, Andrew Arthur; some glorious moments (to set against disappointments) in the Lent and ; getting to know our new colleagues on the Fellowship; remembering the late Dr David Moore on the tenth anniversary of his death; all those reunions; the Honorary Doctorate awarded on a day of glorious sunshine to Sir Nicholas Hytner (1974); and above all General Admission on another sunny day. And we have to record sad losses – including John Collier, who was mentor (well more than that) to a whole generation of Trinity Hall lawyers, and Fernando Szymczak (2014), one of our graduate students who sadly died in July. And then there are all the members of staff and of the Fellowship who have left us this year, to say nothing of the students. But that’s a reminder that the College renews itself every year – there’s much to look “The most important thing by forward to as well. I do hope you enjoy this edition of the Review, and can far is the difference we make come back sometime soon to see us. to the lives of our students.” 4 REPORTS FROM OUR OFFICERS

BuThe r s a r ’s Report Radical revision

his year I was left with a challenge only ‘likely’ they will be received and in how to present Trinity Hall’s there are no conditions to be met i.e. T results to my colleagues as the promise of a gift now appears in the format is unrecognisably altered the accounts as if it has already been from last year. The accounts’ already received! Consequently, the entirety of minimal usefulness has been rendered the US$5m WYNG Foundation gift (the completely redundant. Regular last part of which is not due until 2018) readers will know that I am not exactly has been taken in last year’s restated enamoured of statutory accounts and 2015 accounts. their peculiar necromancy, but this year Now you see it… now you don’t the sheer lunacy of what we have had to contend with defies both belief and The presentation has also been explanation! Still, here goes… transformed and all income and expenditure is now divided on the cover Water into wine sheet between unrestricted funds, (or rather Chianti into Brunello) restricted funds, and endowments. To Paul ffolkes Davis Under cover of FRS 102, a new make sense of this, one needs to draw Bursar European-led directive, the Recognised a line in the unrestricted column before Cambridge Colleges Accounts (RCCA) adjustments for other gains and losses SORP, itself a variant of the Higher (i.e. before movements in investments Education (HE) SORP, has been and other gains). This approximated radically revised. The numbers as to the old I&E before we swept off the presented are unrecognisable from restricted or un-spendable funds. The what has gone before and have needed resulting number will normally be a to be issued with a reconciliation to last small deficit, reflecting the struggle the year’s now heavily restated results. The College continues to have operationally principal change to 2015’s published in ‘washing its face’. Last year this totals is that the outcome on the number was inflated and distorted by Income and Expenditure Account (I&E) the Science Park profit that, as I have of a surplus of £3.3m (itself completely pointed out, should not have been overstated as it included an investment there. Without it, the College was profit made on our Science Park broadly in balance development only included in the I&E Last year’s balance sheet total of at all as it was made in a subsidiary £243.15m has also been revised to and Gift-Aided up to the College – it £244.40m. The reconciliation reflects: really only belonged in the endowment a) £2.56m of the WYNG donation calculation) has been magically formerly deferred income, now an transformed into a surplus of £26m! actual creditor and so added back; b) “The time is fast How did this happen and what is the £268,000 deduction for our share of the truth? FRS 102 has introduced revised USS deficit; c) £44,000 deduction for approaching when accounting treatment for gains/losses the value of staff holiday entitlement not on the value of investments and new taken by year end; and d) £993,000 cost Trinity Hall and revenue recognition rules. Changes in of studentships which now have to be Cambridge in investments are now captured on the recognised in full in the year of the grant. I&E instead of the Statement of Total Phew! 2016? general will need Gains and Losses (STRGL). This also applies to pension provision movements. So what happened this year? The to fundamentally All donations are now recognised good news is not much. Income reassess their as income, whereas previously only from academic fees was slightly money spendable annually was, the higher, expenditure fractionally lower. control over their remainder going into the endowment Residences, catering and conferences own destiny.” and appearing in the STRGL. This broadly flat as usual (another brings me to the best part: all donations accounting trick). Donations were only now have to be recognised when it is 23% of the 2015 number but that was 5

heavily restated (see above).Trinity Hall’s year, it is a shock. The 12 months to good. Turnover at £1.22m and contribution to the College’s Fund, the end of June were a difficult period contribution after expenses of £706,000 which supports poorer colleges, was for all stock markets and nearly all our were both the highest they have ever up to £166,000, while our net pensions asset managers underperformed. This been, while our margin, slipping last liability has widened by 10% to £5m situation was exacerbated and, perhaps, year, recovered 3% to 57.76% overall. (this is mostly our staff scheme and even caused, by our long-standing Well done to the team! we are making instalment payments predilection for mid-cap securities, Every year, I report on ‘Investment in over time to close the gap). Lastly, our especially post the Brexit vote when Students’ to the Governing Body. This depreciation charge is marginally up. large caps with big overseas earnings level of subsidy is before the granting All of this leads to two key numbers really benefited from the sterling crisis. of any specific hardship bursaries or barely discernible in all the noise: our Only the fact that roughly 20% of our support (in which Trinity Hall is in the balance sheet has only advanced 1.3% equity portfolios are held in US dollars vanguard). Ultimately, paying for your to £247.5m (we have had a poor year and another solid performance from own product is unsustainable and for our investments) and the old I&E Cambridge & Counties Bank allowed impossible for colleges with small approximate number in the unrestricted the endowment to show a small positive endowments. Something will have to column (see above) is a small deficit return on the year. After deducting give. With successive governments still of £163,000, suggesting the College borrowing, the College’s investment seeking to meddle in the operations is broadly in balance, as I would have worth has reached £157m. of the most successful university hoped. Although the statutory accounts present in Europe, whether on teaching I will leave the accounts there, save our conferencing activities as largely excellence, social or gender diversity, to say they are available in all their neutral, for management purposes we or PREVENT without paying for the incomprehensible glory on our website. look at them at the margin. It is the privilege of doing so, maybe the time additional revenue they can generate is fast approaching when Trinity Hall A quick look at some key drivers when being sold commercially that can and Cambridge in general will need to We have become so used to our justify all the effort we put into these fundamentally reassess their control equity managers outperforming their activities. Here the news is surprisingly over their own destiny. indices, that, when they have a bad Investment in students Overall education account deficit after fees = £2,638,303 (0.3% lower than last year before restated)

The cost/investment per TH student is £4,850 (£4,874) Based on numbers from the Education Memorandum and Note 1 on the Accounts Assuming 398 undergraduates and 146 graduates (the fee paying totals for 2015-16)

This breaks down to a subsidy of: £5,175 (£5,060) per undergraduate, and £3,963 (£4,387) per graduate

continue >> 6 REPORTS FROM OUR OFFICERS

BuThe r s a r ’s Report Banking

>> continued Cambridge & Counties Bank New Private Placement This has been another year when At the last Investments Committee CCB has exceeded all its forecasts. of Easter Term, we decided to take Customer lending now exceeds advantage of the dislocation in the £500m, first half profits (to end June) fixed-interest securities being caused are 111% of forecast, staff numbers by the Bank of ’s over-eager total 127, deposits have reached desire to reassure the markets. We £600m and we still have no losses resolved to issue a £15m Private recorded. It is now ranked in the top Placement for as long a date as 15 UK banks for Return on Equity possible and to invest the proceeds, and profitability growth, while our largely to bolster our investment Asset Finance product has won the property holdings. industry ‘newcomer’ award. Looking The timing proved propitious and, ahead: after four and a half years in the week that Governor Carney I am handing over the Chairmanship was driving down Gilt yields as he to Simon Moore (one of our long- tried to fulfil his obligation to buy-in standing independent Non-Executive government debt, we were able to Directors), we are forecasting a price our deal with Pricoa (Prudential profit before tax at year end of circa Insurance Company of America) £18m, and projections for 2017 show providing 40-year funds with a fixed continued growth in both volumes coupon of only 1.98%. We still believe and profitability. We have reached the this was the lowest point in yields ever end of the shareholders’ investment seen in the markets and that no other cycle, from now on all capital growth educational organisation has ever will be self-generated and the future borrowed sub-2%. The Committee is looks bright. considering a very interesting venture into which to invest the funds… 7

Main entrance on Trinity Lane 8 REPORTS FROM OUR OFFICERS

General Admission 2016 9 The Senior Tutor’s Report Another cohort of talented graduands

“It has been a quiet day in Lake Priscilla Mensah, and our own Audrey Wobegon, my home town...”: thus Sebatindira (2013), as CUSU Women’s began every episode of Garrison Keillor’s Officer-Elect. Elsewhere, termly popular American radio show A Prairie Directors’ of Studies Lunches offer a Home Companion, which broadcast on forum for Fellows to discuss academic (c) Ian Farrell Minnesota Public Radio in the 1970s and matters including new arrangements 1980s and formed the basis for Keillor’s currently being devised for admissions best-selling novel, Lake Wobegon Days assessments with the imminent (1985). Reflecting on the past academic disappearance of unit scores for AS year in the Tutorial Office, a similar examinations. consensus was reached. As Fellows and Underlying all the Tutorial Office’s staff congratulated another cohort of activities is, however, a growing talented graduands at General Admission dependence on philanthropic in June, the sun shone obligingly and the donation. As today’s undergraduates stunning Trinity Hall gardens detracted and graduates shoulder increasingly from the Master’s Lodge building works. heavy burdens of degree-incurred But serenity can prove deceptive: with debt, external funding is more critical this year’s General Admission date Dr Clare Jackson than ever to maintain the very best in coinciding with the referendum on EU Senior Tutor educational and pastoral provision. membership, the parent of one graduand Philanthropy subsidises outreach asked – semi-jokingly – whether tickets activities to recruit talented applicants for the twin marquees on Latham Lawn to undergraduate and graduate and the Fellows’ Garden had been courses; supports essential hardship allocated on the basis of ‘Leave’ or funds to assist current students; and is ‘Remain’ preferences... increasingly vital in enabling the College Behind-the-scenes, General Admission’s to award graduate studentships to the celebrations represent the culmination of very best Master’s and PhD applicants. 12 months’ hard work by students, staff With academic excellence remaining and Fellows. As Senior Tutor, a regular Trinity Hall’s core priority, it is terrific highlight are termly buffet lunches with that, once again, more than a quarter the JCR Committee as an opportunity to of our current undergraduates have mull – and munch – over perennial items been elected to academic scholarships of student scepticism (e.g. composition based on First Class Tripos results. of the ‘Kitchen Fixed Charge’) and At the same time, Hall students “It is terrific that, support the JCR and MCR committees continue to participate extensively in in external campaigns, such as lobbying College and University sport, music, once again, more the City Council to amend proposals for drama, journalism and other activities. reduced night-time street-lighting. In a And, away from Cambridge, another than a quarter new initiative, an external speaker – Dick privilege as Senior Tutor is the vicarious of our current Moore from the Charlie Waller Memorial armchair-travelling involved in awarding Trust – gave a powerfully moving, and endowed Travel Grants, which this undergraduates practically helpful, presentation on year will be taking undergraduates to have been elected mental illness in young people at the countries including Ecuador, Iceland, JCR’s ‘Big Welfare Tea’ in February. In Japan, South Korea and Zambia. to academic addition to an annual Tutorial Awayday With the rise of WYNG Gardens in and termly Tutors’ Meetings, I also Thompson’s Lane and exciting plans scholarships based convene fortnightly Tutors’ Lunches, to celebrate the 40th anniversary of on First Class which this year included a seminar on admitting women to the Hall, it will soon ‘Mapping Intersections: racial and sexual be time to look forward to another not- Tripos results.” harassment’ by the CUSU President, so-quiet-after-all year. 10 REPORTS FROM OUR OFFICERS

The TuGraduate t o r ’s Report A key aspect of the graduate experience is our pastoral support

his year has once again We also offer each research student been a very successful year around £500 per year in research Tfor our graduate students. support, a figure that has increased We admitted 85 new graduates, this year. This typically goes towards giving us a total of 246 graduates. conference expenses and we offer Dr Lorand Bartels This number included 35 new PhD some financial support to students Graduate Tutor students, 40 students studying for who suffer hardship due to unforeseen a one year Master’s degree and ten events. We also welcomed Juliet on other programs. Not all of those Bristow, a mental health advisor, who accept an offer to join Trinity as a new member of our tutorial Hall, or Cambridge, actually do so. team. While comparatively rare, the Often this is because of a funding pressures of Cambridge – and other shortfall but sometimes it is because events – can affect graduate students plans change or a student decides to quite significantly and it is of utmost accept an offer at another university. value to be able to count on expertise On average, we count on around such as Juliet’s when needed. 60% acceptances per offer, a figure Being able to support students in which usually remains steady but this way is a concrete and important was unusually low last year, not just way in which Trinity Hall is able to for us, but across the University. contribute to Cambridge’s academic We were able to fund nine new quality. And, of course, it is only graduates and four continuing PhD possible thanks to the generosity of students last year. These are all our donors, often alumni who have “The MCR students of the very highest quality themselves benefited from Trinity Hall. but who have just missed out This year the MCR has been expertly Committee have on funding from more traditional led by Charlotte Attwood (2011) sources. It also happens that as President, supported by Dan done a wonderful students to whom we have awarded Bowen (2011), Charles Board (2010), a studentship are later awarded job of continuing Phil Brown (2009) and other MCR alternative funding, in which case Officers. The MCR Committee has the College’s we are able to divert their award done a wonderful job of continuing to another deserving student. We tradition of being the College’s tradition of being one renewed our arrangement with of the most vibrant MCRs of any Melbourne Law School, whereby we one of the most college in Cambridge. share funding for an LLM applicant vibrant MCRs from Melbourne. We also continued The MCR performs many functions of any college in to partner with a variety of funding for graduates, from organising dinners bodies in order to maximise the value and social occasions to academic Cambridge.” of our studentship funding. events and advice on personal 11

Students in North Court and welfare issues. One of its main Representative, supported by Day-to-day, the work of the Tutorial academic events is the annual Marshall Dr Villads Egede Johansen. Traditionally, Office is ably conducted by Katrina McLuhan Symposium, which this year PDRAs are in charge of the McMenemy Purser, who magically manages to had the theme ‘Space’, organised by Seminar Series, which takes place be not only extremely efficient and Chris Wilson (2011) and Alina Kozlovski on Wednesdays before Grad Hall, knowledgeable, but friendly as well. (2014). It is evident from the program and they also contribute to College Dr Sasha Turchyn, the Deputy – available here: www.mcr.trinhall.cam. life as mentors to graduates and Graduate Tutor, and I are both ac.uk/academics/mcl/2016-mcluhan- undergraduates. Reflecting their status, extremely grateful to Katrina for symposium-space – just how unique PDRAs are also regularly invited to dine everything she has done, and Cambridge is in being able to gather with Fellows, which is made possible continues to do, since her arrival here students from different disciplines in the by a generous grant from the University. a year ago. Dr Ramji Venkataramanan same academic environment. Alumni stood in for Sasha during Easter Term A key aspect of the graduate are welcome to attend. while she was on sabbatical. We would experience is our pastoral support. also like to thank Vicky Mills, who A significant part of the MCR is made We are fortunate that, in addition to handles graduate admissions, bringing up of the College’s Postdoctoral the two graduate tutors, we have 21 her long experience of undergraduate Research Associates (PDRAs). These graduate mentors who are College admissions to the role, as well as are academics at the beginning of their Fellows who agree, on a voluntary Rosie Ince, Tutorial Registrar, Carol academic careers, who typically join for basis, to mentor students in their Farmer, Tutorial Administrator, and two years at a time. We take in around fields. Our mentors provide targeted Julie Powley, Tutorial Office Manager. ten new PDRAs a year and find that advice to graduates on studies and life We are fortunate indeed to be able to having College affiliation greatly adds after study and also offer opportunities rely on such an effective and friendly to their experience of Cambridge. Dr for socialising during the year. administration. Josh Kaggie was this year’s PDRA 12 REPORTS FROM OUR OFFICERS

The Admissions Tutor’s Report Exceptionally bright young men and women s I write this report I’m Singapore, Malaysia and China. I reform without putting further weight reflecting on the summer hasten to add that this is far from a on the interview. We have been of 2016; the sun shining, holiday! With around 150 applicants working hard to ensure that the Athe river full of punt-loads from across Asia to interview on behalf assessments are resistant to in-school of tourists and a hugely successful of all the colleges it can be absolutely or private coaching and will recognise Olympics for Team GB in Rio. exhausting, but it is also an extremely the ability of academically-able Year 13 Meanwhile, across the UK, and indeed rewarding trip. Typically around students from all backgrounds. across the world, around 120 students 10-15% of our annual undergraduate For more information please see: received their all-important examination intake hails from outside of the www.undergraduate.study.cam.ac.uk/ results, determining whether or not European Union and these students applying/admission-assessments we could confirm their places at Trinity add a great deal to the life of Trinity Hall. For these students, this is an Hall and the university experience of Finally, I would like to welcome our outstanding achievement towards our UK students by introducing them colleague the Revd Dr Stephen which they have been working all to different cultures and perspectives. Plant on board as he stands in for their lives. A new adventure awaits as Dr Isabelle McNeill as Admissions This Admissions round will introduce a Cambridge undergraduates, bringing Tutor for Arts and Humanities for new element in the shape of common- challenges and rewards and shaping 2016/17. We are all very much looking format written assessments tailored the direction of their lives to come. forward to working with Stephen whilst to each subject. The aim of the new Isabelle takes a year of research leave. For the Fellows at Trinity Hall it was an assessments is to provide us with I would also like to acknowledge our exciting week as we awaited the arrival additional, valuable information about Admissions Officer, Vicky Mills, and our of the results with almost as much each candidate’s academic abilities, Schools Liaison and Outreach Officer, anticipation as our future charges. We knowledge-base and potential to Dr Victoria Harvey, for their hard work could finally begin planning for the year succeed on their course of choice. By throughout the year in helping us to ahead and look forward to working harmonising our use of admissions admit outstanding young students to with these exceptionally bright young assessments in this way, we will be Trinity Hall and Cambridge. men and women; bright-eyed, eager able to treat all candidates equally, and just a little bit intimidated by those whilst protecting the fairness of our Dr Andrew Murray terrifying interviewers who they last procedures against ongoing A-Level Admissions Tutor for Sciences met before Christmas 2015! Though it doesn’t take long to find their feet and begin questioning and challenging us in our weekly supervisions together. For the Admissions Office, we had no sooner admitted this cohort before our thoughts turned to the next round of Admissions. We were all engaged in school visits and open days in September, hoping to encourage a few more applicants to give it a go before the mid-October deadline. Interviewing duties begin early for me as I join the University’s overseas (L-R) Dr Victoria Harvey*, Dr Isabelle McNeil, Dr Andrew Murray and Vicky Mills interview team for two weeks in

*Dr Victoria Harvey left Trinity Hall on 30 September 2016. 13 DThe e a n’s Report Communication is ephemeral and transient

he Church of England Among events that stood out were and the Methodist Church memorial services for three late support a programme members of the College: the Revd T called ‘Fresh Expressions’. Professor Owen Chadwick, a former ‘Fresh Expressions’ build Christian Dean; Michael Finn (1958); and Frazer communities by starting where people Jennings (2006). These were each unused to Church feel at home – in touching occasions. Also memorable curry nights, film nights, knitting groups, was the concluding service of the Lent skate-board parks or bread-making. Term, which incorporated the singing The ‘philosophy’ is that for people to of Fauré’s Requiem, and the Ascension have a chance to hear what Christianity Day service, which used Mozart’s has to say it is important that Christians Spatzen-Messe in C as a setting and communicate in accessible and relevant was followed by a meal for all who words, concepts and practices. had attended. During the past academic year we We welcomed a number of alumni and made two changes in the pattern of The Revd Dr Stephen Plant other distinguished preachers including services in the College Chapel that Dean, Chaplain and Runcie Fellow the Revd Deborah McVey (whose make for an interesting contrast with daughter Ella works in the College), such ‘new ways of being church’. the Revd Dr Keith Clements, former From the beginning of the year we social media for communication by General Secretary of the Conference alternated Thursday evensong with students can contribute to a sense of European Churches, the Rt Revd Compline, based on the final service that communication is ephemeral John Sherrington, Auxiliary Bishop of the day in the monastic tradition. It and transient – as if written on wind. in Westminster, and Nicholas Peter is a contemplative service that uses Services that are hundreds of years old Harvey (1955). The broadcaster the ancient prayers to lead participants offer a haven in which one can shelter Revd Richard Coles is, I suspect, the through themes of darkness and light, for a time, regroup, listen and breathe, first person to have preached in Chapel evil and good. I have been delighted and can be so not only for people with to have had a number one hit in the – and frankly surprised – by how well a Christian commitment but to anyone UK charts. attended this service has been. What with a little patience. We have said farewell this year to Seb is it in this most arcane and, on the Gillot (2012), who has been an Organ face of it, most irrelevant of liturgies Scholar from 2012-2016, and to long- that has proved attractive to students? serving and outstanding Sacristans Rob In the Easter Term we replaced the Sing (2012), Lea Benk (2013), Victor contemporary language of Anglican “Services that are Chu (2013), Audrey Sebatindira (2013) Common Worship for Evensong with and Sophie Wastcoat (2013), each of the Book of Common Prayer (BCP) hundreds of years old whom will be badly missed. Christopher service. This too has been well received Rogers (2015) has been attached to and we plan use BCP at least one term offer a haven in which the Chapel from Westcott House and a year in future. one can shelter for a I am delighted that he will continue on The relative popularity of traditional time, regroup, listen attachment in the coming year. patterns for prayer in Cathedrals and College Chapels around the country and breathe.” makes sense to me. The use of 14 REPORTS FROM OUR OFFICERS DevelopmentThe Director’s Report A year of expanding

Alumni Relations Report also took us further afield with the It’s been a year of expanding – and I Master attending events in Singapore, don’t just mean our waistlines through Boston, Los Angeles – thanks to Alan the College dinners! We have been Diamond (1983) – and Washington DC. improving our communications and The Washington event was held in events programmes and the office team conjunction with Cambridge in America has grown in number. where Trinity Hall Fellow Dr Nick Guyatt spoke about the Obama Presidency – Sara Collar, our Database and Gifts the theme for his 2015 Milestone Lecture Manager who had joined us in 2013, at the start of the academic year, which left in January to join the University you can read more about on page 34. Development and Alumni Relations Office. Also in January, our Publications We held our 1350 Garden Party in July Officer, Ginny Swepson, moved to thank everyone who had supported into the new role of Volunteers and us over the past three years. We have Stewardship Officer and we welcomed reviewed our donors’ events and in the Kathryn Greaves from the University future we will be organising an annual Development and Alumni Office who donors’ drinks reception in College, as took up the new full-time position Dr Rachelle Stretch well as inviting donors who have given of Alumni Communications Officer. Development Director for a certain number of consecutive We were recently joined by Andrew years to specific events. We also Thompson as our new Database and established the Master’s Circle and Engineering, THBC and the MCR. We Gifts Officer, so we are now a team of Bateman Benefactors to recognise continued our termly concerts and our seven. donors who have given at a higher level. annual event at Rugby. We have had a busy year of over 35 Our publications continue and we have Outside College we worked with the events, held in ten different cities, with expanded our social media presence; Trinity Hall Association (THA) to host over 1,000 alumni from across all the the Master has also begun tweeting dinners at museums in Birmingham and decades since the 1940s attending. – follow him on @TrinHallMaster. We Newcastle as well as the popular, now The year started with the opening of introduced new sterling silver Trinity Hall annual, London event. We returned for the Stephen Hawking Room in College. crested cufflinks to our gift range at the events in Hong Kong, New York and The seminar room is situated next to the start of the academic year. San Francisco – thanks to Jonathan Jerwood Library overlooking Latham Pyne (1977), Frank Morgan (1974) and We also held photography competitions Lawn. Professor Hawking (1962) Roderick Jones (1993). Our travels for students and alumni, surveyed our attended the room’s naming ceremony female alumnae in advance of the 40th on 17 October before giving an address anniversary of admitting women and, at the launch of the Campaign for the with thanks to alumni, we piloted a law University and Colleges of Cambridge. “With thanks to mentoring scheme, which we will be We have continued our programme of alumni, we piloted expanding further. reunions in College, welcoming back You may have heard about the years 1970, 1971, 1972, 1997 and a law mentoring Fundraising Preference Service and 1998, and we held anniversary reunions scheme, which we new regulatory body affecting charities. for 1956, 1966, 1991 and 2006. This new legislation may require that we We also worked with more student will be expanding seek consent from alumni so we can societies who chose to open up their continue to contact you. Please look events to alumni; the Law Society, further.” out for future information on this. 15

Development Report Philanthropic income received: Philanthropic income received: I would like to take this opportunity for different purposes source of donation to thank everyone who has supported us during 2015/16 through donations, hosting events and offering students careers advice. We raised £2,108,567 during the year and £1,889,381 was received. Our graduate students received additional support through departmental donations and we received gifts-in-kind. You may recall we announced that the College aimed to establish a prize in every undergraduate subject last year. We are pleased to announce that, thanks to donations, we have established ten new prizes over the New buildings £764,469.00 Trusts & Foundations £1,117,839.47 past year, enabling us to reward Unrestricted £517,275.56 Alumni £673,144.45 academic success for undergraduates in a wider range of subjects. Student support £338,990.46 Legacies from alumni £29,000.00 Over the Easter Vacation we ran our Refurbishment £228,492.91 Parents and Friends £20,918.70 12th telephone campaign. Eleven Teaching £4,319.56 Staff & Fellows £11,011.83 students had 565 conversations with a range of alumni and over £203,000 Corporates £1,633.04 was raised, taking the total raised by our campaigns to over £2.5m. This Donations to the Trinity Hall Fund totalled £673,779 and will be used has had a significant impact on our over 2016-17 to: students, the fabric of the College and • Increase the funds available for • Offer a choral scholarship the resources we can offer. students facing financial difficulty • Purchase equipment for College At the start of the academic year the • Improve resources in the library and sports teams including a new pool University launched the Campaign install rolling stacks table for the JCR for the University and Colleges of • Refurbish staircases on the main site • Assist with the costs of College Cambridge with a target to raise £2bn; next summer teaching so far over £700m has been raised. Every donation to Trinity Hall remains a • Repair the roof above H and I staircases Thank you to everyone who has gift to the College but counts towards • Assist graduate students with supported us; it is hugely appreciated the campaign target for collegiate expenses to attend academic by the College and all our students. Cambridge. Read more about the conferences for their research A full donor list can be found on campaign on page 36. pages 58-66.

Contact us Development Director Events Officer & PA to the Stewardship & Volunteers Officer E: [email protected] Dr Rachelle Stretch Development Director Ginny Swepson T: +44 (0)1223 332550 Development Officer Emma Bennett Alumni Communications Officer W: www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk James Adamcheski-Halson Alumni Officer Kathryn Greaves Liz Pentlow Database & Gifts Officer Andrew Thompson TrinityHallCamb 16 REPORTS FROM OUR OFFICERS

The Junior Bursar’s Report Looking strategically to the future

am pleased to be in the position of The space around Cherry Tree Court writing this just before we accept and the kitchens currently contains the practical completion of WYNG I Lecture Theatre, Terrace Room, Music Gardens and its 72 new student Room, music practice spaces and Old rooms and conference space. Bar as well as some poor communal The College embarked on this areas and circulation space. It is in development in November 2014 need of significant improvement to and after a slow start of demolition, meet the expectations of current and archaeological investigation and future students and we are making creation of a basement, the project progress on the Master Planning to started emerging out of the ground redevelop the area. in December 2015. Using a cross laminated timber frame, within just In relation to administrative staff, Trinity eight weeks we had the frame and Hall has seen a fair amount of change roof of our four-storey building Glen Sharp this year. The buoyant Cambridge fully erected and the internal fit out Junior Bursar market has put additional strains on began. It has been a long process, retaining and recruiting good staff, in however, we will end up with a truly particular on our Catering Teams in front beautiful building which will serve “We will end of house staff and chefs. We have a the College very well. We will soon new Head of Conference and Catering be busy fitting the building out with up with a truly Services, who is getting to understand loose furniture and fittings to enable beautiful building the intricacies of Trinity Hall, as well as students to move in. a new Conference Manager, who I’m which will serve the proud to say was a promotion from Trinity Hall has also been refurbishing within the existing team. Construction our Grade I listed Master’s Lodge. College very well” within and around Cambridge remains As we uncovered decades of history strong, which has had an effect on we also exposed more and more recruitment for our maintenance team asbestos. Whilst we have dealt and this is likely to last a few years with this properly it has set the yet whilst the sub-contract market is programme back significantly and we absorbed by live projects. are now expecting it to be returned into the College’s possession at the The College used to have some end of December 2016. downtime to catch its breath and prepare, but – just ask some of the We have also replaced the roof to longer-serving staff – this is not the H and I staircase. Visually, it doesn’t case now. look very different at all but is a necessary ongoing project to protect Trinity Hall is very much a 24/7, 365 and restore part of the fabric of days a year entity and the infrastructure, Trinity Hall. The maintenance team services and challenges this brings has continued to improve and adapt requires the College to plan carefully and the College to the ever-changing look more strategically to the future than requirements of College life. WYNG Gardens it has ever needed to before. 17

Summer party on Latham Lawn

HeadThe of Conference and Catering Services’ Report A passion for our historic city t has been another exciting year for the Among the highlights of the year ahead Conference and Events team at Trinity will undoubtedly be the opening of Hall. We were pleased to welcome back WYNG Gardens on Thompson’s Lane, Ialumni and friends of the College for a just five minutes’ walk away from Trinity host of events including anniversaries, Hall. WYNG Gardens will offer high- celebratory dinners, weddings and much spec conference facilities for up to 100 more. We always look forward to catching delegates and overnight double en-suite up with alumni and hearing about your life bedrooms, available to book outside of events and achievements. College term time. WYNG Gardens will make an outstanding addition to our Over the past year we were delighted conference and accommodation facilities, to welcome a range of alumni-related enabling us to further enhance the quality businesses and organisations for *Rachel Mortimer Holdsworth and diversity of all that we have to offer conferences and events including Head of Conference alumni, guests and clients at Trinity Hall. Horizon Discovery, Cantab, and Catering Services Cambridge Institute of Public Health, We hope to have the pleasure of The British Paediatric Neurology dinner in the Dining Hall and a special welcoming you back to Trinity Hall again Association, The European Molecular after dinner speech from the Master. soon and introducing our new facilities at Biology Laboratory, East of England WYNG Gardens. We are pleased to offer Other achievements this past academic Neonatal Neuroprotection Team and a 10% discount for all alumni booking year have included Trinity Hall being Addenbrooke’s Charitable Trust. WYNG Gardens for the first time with awarded Fairtrade University Status in minimum numbers of 20 guests. We were also honoured to host the acknowledgement of our commitment inaugural Open Cambridge Dinner to supporting and using Fairtrade For further details or to make a booking at Trinity Hall. This annual three-day products. We were also pleased to join enquiry please contact Trinity Hall’s celebration of history and architecture in forces with Cambridge Sustainable Food Conference and Events Team: Cambridge provides an opportunity for and a range of T: 01223 332554 guests to explore more of the city’s rich College catering departments to pledge E: [email protected] heritage. We were delighted to introduce our commitment to serving sustainably W: www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/conferences Trinity Hall to the Open Cambridge caught fish. Working together, we guests, all of whom shared a passion for succeeded in earning Cambridge its facebook.com/trinhallevents our historic city. Guests enjoyed drinks on first of five stars towards becoming a @THConference Latham Lawn followed by a three-course Sustainable Fish City. trinityhallevents *Rachel Mortimer Holdsworth left Trinity Hall on 12 August 2016. 18 REPORTS FROM OUR OFFICERS Librarian’sThe Report Our holdings will be accessible to scholars worldwide

The Jerwood Library The Old Library t has been another busy year in the This year we signed an agreement Jerwood Library. During the 2015 Long to become a partner member of Vacation we changed our loans system ‘Preserving the World’s Rarest Books’, Ito radio-frequency identification (RFID). a project organised by the Universal We installed a new self-issue unit and Short Title Catalogue (USTC). As part new security gates, and employed a of this programme we will be sent an team of sixth-form students to tag all our inventory of our incunabula and early books with RFID tags. The new self-issue print holdings, analysed in terms of rarity. unit is much easier to use and has proved In addition, our holdings will be added very popular with the students. to the USTC’s online catalogue making them accessible to scholars worldwide. This year’s Library survey had a good participation rate of 44% of Our project to catalogue the 16th- undergraduate and 28% of graduate century books in the Old Library is students. The survey focussed on the progressing well and over 820 rare Dominique Ruhlmann provision of study space, both in the books have been catalogued this year. Director of Library Services Library and in College as a whole. The Allen Purvis has finished cataloguing the results showed that, although students 16th-century books printed in England like to study in a variety of spaces, the and has also catalogued 122 books Library is the favoured study space printed in Venice during the 16th and for the majority of undergraduates, 17th centuries. We have been fortunate followed closely by their residential to secure funding from the Gladys room in College. Krieble Delmas Foundation to employ a second part-time cataloguer. In January Unfortunately the Library shelves are 2016 we recruited Adriana Celmare to now very full and we are facing a serious work alongside Allen on cataloguing space problem. The Library staff spent the European 16th-century printed much of the summer in 2015 addressing books. Adriana is an experienced rare this issue by moving some books off- “Our project to books cataloguer who has previously site and weeding stock to make way worked at the library of the University for new acquisitions. Moreover, where catalogue the of Pennsylvania. This project has also e-books are available we now tend not been supported by a generous legacy 16th-century books to buy books in hard copy unless they to the Old Library from the late Richard have been specifically requested in that in the Old Library Butterworth (1944). format. To further alleviate the problem is progressing well we began installing rolling stacks on the We would like to record our thanks lower ground floor of the Library during to all our generous donors who have and over 820 rare the 2016 Long Vacation to double the supported the Old Library and the books have been shelf space on the lower ground floor Jerwood Library this year. and provide the flexibility to add essential catalogued this year.” text books from new reading lists. www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/library www.jerwoodlibrarytrinityhall.wordpress.com JerwoodLibraryTrinHall

@jerwoodlibrary 19

The Director of Music’s Report It is especially good to embrace our ‘entente cordiale’ with our European friends

rinity Hall Chapel Choir (THCC) During the summer, the Choir has had a notably productive reunited with the Ensemble Vocal in and successful year. In addition Ste-Anne, d’Auray – Director, Richard T to their excellent regular Quesnel (1995) – for a tour of Brittany contribution to the life of the College and Paris. In such unsettled times Chapel, the Choir has performed it is especially good to embrace our splendidly at numerous important ‘entente cordiale’ with our European College occasions this year including friends! In addition to singing High the launch of the Campaign for the Mass and a short recital in the University and Colleges of Cambridge, impressive Basilica on the great the Eden and St Edward’s Feasts and pilgrimage site of Ste-Anne, d’Auray, the Commemoration of Benefactors. the two choirs were thrilled to give a Early in the Michaelmas Term the Andrew Arthur joint performance of Gabriel Fauré’s Choir enjoyed singing Evensong in the Director of Music Requiem in L’Église de la Madeleine, renowned Lady Chapel of Ely Cathedral. Paris, where the composer himself It is always good for the Choir to was organist. perform and to be heard beyond our “The superb A summer tour is always a bitter- own four walls but to be offered the sweet occasion; on the one hand it opportunity to sing in one of the finest progress they celebrates the Choir’s achievements, acoustics in Northern Europe, just a offers opportunities to sing in stone’s throw from Cambridge, is a have made in the some magnificent settings and privilege indeed. We were honoured last 18 months further nurtures music-making and to receive a return invitation to Ely for friendships; on the other hand, October 2016. The Choir’s participation was immediately for those members of the Choir in such events at both ‘home’ and obvious to everyone who graduate this year, the tour ‘abroad’ is valued enormously and, of represents the last time they will course, continues to reflect well upon during these latest perform with THCC. As we bid such the College as a whole. recording sessions.” farewells we note, with gratitude, the During the Easter Vacation, THCC time, dedication and skill they have joined forces with the soloists and sessions. They are justifiably excited all offered our community during their players of the College’s professional to hear the fruits of their efforts time in the Choir. Ensemble in Residence, Orpheus once the post-production work is Britannicus, to make a new CD complete. It was already a great recording of music by the great achievement for the Choir to have For further information, visit: Restoration composer, Henry Purcell. reached a stage in their development www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/about/music Whilst the Choir have cause to be where they were able to perform very proud of their previous debut alongside professionals in a concert Purchase CD recordings of the recording, released in December setting last year; it is an even greater Choir and Chapel Organ: 2014, the superb progress they have pleasure now to have realised this www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/about/gift-shop made in the last 18 months was development one step further in the immediately obvious to everyone form of their newest recording. @TrinHallCC during these latest recording 1 2

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1. JCR Viva 2. Fairtrade coffee in the Aula Bar 3. Game of Thrones Superhall 4. WYNG Gardens 5. Dr Libby Caygill, Fellow- Commoner, in the lab 6. Students on Latham Lawn 7. ‘Metropolis’ June Event 8. Stephen Hawking Room opening 9. Students at the JCR Garden Party 10. Graduands in Front Court 11. Dominique Ruhlmann, Director of Library Services, at the Song Lin Zhai exhibition 12. Fellows’ Guest Night 13. Game of Thrones Superhall 14. Child in the Jerwood Library 15. THWBC at May Bumps 16. Volunteers at the launch of the Campaign for the University and Colleges of Cambridge 17. Dessert 18.‘Metropolis’ June Event 11 12

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Updates from sports teams and societies and news from the student community College News 13

16 17 18 22 COLLEGE NEWS

Garden party

JCR Committee 2015/16

Sam Pulman-Slater (2014) – President Jennie Towler (2014) – Vice-President Veer Goiporia (2014) – Treasurer Catherine Hooper (2014) – Secretary Josh Send (2014) – Webmaster David Powell (2014) and Sam Slattery (2014) – Ents Presidents Alice Sowton (2013) and Dom O’Neill (2014) – Welfare Officers

Jade Treneary (2014) – GoT Superhall Access Officer Anna Edgar (2013) – LBGT+ Officer Hanan Ziad (2014) – Black and Ethnic Minorities Officer Meg Woodward (2012) – Special Considerations Officer Anna Murray (2014) – Women’s Officer Laura Salzmann (2015) – Green and Ethical Officer Mira Nadarajah (2015) – International Rep James Coe (2015) and Eric Dale (2015) – First Year Reps ‘Anything But Clothes’ Viva 23 TheJCR Report The blend of old and new that defines our experience here ne of my earliest experiences The JCR Committee continues to work of being JCR President was extremely hard to represent the interests Oan interesting discussion over of students, liaising efficiently with the whether students consider Trinity Hall Master, Senior Tutor and Junior Bursar. their ‘home’. It became apparent to The sheer smoothness of this year’s me that whilst we all cherish this place room ballot (aided by webmaster Josh and find infinite comfort here, its history, Send’s (2014) ingenious online visual culture and ever-evolving state render the guide) was evidence of this dedication. College more accurately a community. The use of online platforms to create discussion spaces about LGBT+ Through academic and social issues and green and ethical matters endeavours, students continue to has proven revolutionary and engaged demonstrate their cohesion. Our Ents countless students in current affairs. Presidents Sam Slattery (2014) and David Powell (2014) have provided an Of course any student’s experience here ample calendar of events, from the is defined not only by their personal ‘Anything But Clothes’ Viva to their Sam Pulman-Slater (2014) occupations but their interactions with ‘Game of Thrones’ themed Superhall; JCR President 2015/16 those around them. The librarians Trinity Hall students’ commitment to produced a survey this year to examine costume, besides all else, merits great ways in which the resources and praise. The June Event saw over 1,000 services of the Jerwood Library may be students from across the University bettered, something appreciated hugely flock to see our centuries-old courts “The use of online by students. The porters, bedmakers, transformed into a modern ‘Metropolis’, platforms to create gardeners and catering staff work headlined by Route 94 – a testament to tirelessly to make the environment the blend of old and new that defines discussion spaces comfortable, beautiful and efficient. It our experience here. struck me this summer that exam term, about LGBT+ issues despite being the most stressful period Music and drama remain a central focus of the academic year, is oddly the most for extra-curricular life at Trinity Hall. and green and social. The presence of people taking The Music Society’s Christmas concert breaks on Latham Lawn increased and spring jazz gig showed the range ethical matters has hugely, showing everyone’s commitment of talents the College attracts, whilst a proven revolutionary to balancing fun with work and, most hilarious performance of Shakespeare’s touchingly, to support each other Love’s Labour’s Lost saw the College’s and engaged through the trials, joys and brilliance of long-lost Preston Society kicked back countless students being a student at Trinity Hall. into action. Sporting success has been prevalent in current affairs.” this year in all fields. A major highlight was second-year Lucy Pike’s (2014) www.jcr.trinhall.cam.ac.uk place in the Cambridge Women’s Reserve Boat, Blondie, for the thjcr Cancer Research UK Boat Races – an @thjcr achievement that really put Trinity Hall sport on the map. 24 COLLEGE NEWS TheMCR Report The warmth and openness of the MCR remains the same

emale graduate students were by anyone in the MCR and the hard first admitted to Trinity Hall 40 work and enthusiasm of the current years ago in October 1976. The rep, Pauline Kiesow (2013), has F MCR was honoured to welcome been the driving force behind a wide back Dr Ann Simon (1976), the first variety of fundraising events this year. female student at Trinity Hall, to speak From raffles and auctions at black-tie at our annual dinner in May. Dr Simon’s dinners to sporting sweepstakes, the account of how welcoming the College MCR has raised over £700, which has had been was a reminder that, although gone to Crisis at Christmas, Jimmy’s many things have changed in the last 40 Night Shelter and towards a Students years, the warmth and openness of the of Cambridge Refugee Scholarship MCR remains the same. through CARA (Council for At-Risk Academics). Together with the JCR Academic and social life is as hectic as we also enjoyed a visit from a number ever in the MCR. Pub quizzes, cocktail of guide dogs, which not only helped nights and another wildly-popular Harry Charlotte Attwood (2011) relieve exam and deadline stress but Potter formal – complete with even more MCR President 2015/16 raised £300 for Guide Dogs for the owls and butter beer than the previous Blind as well. year – made for fun-filled evenings. Academically there have been many integration of the PDRAs into College We are very grateful for the support stimulating events throughout the year. life. We hope that this will bring further of all College staff. The hard work of Every week before Formal Hall we have cohesion to the College community and our Graduate Tutor Dr Lorand Bartels, been dazzled by graduates presenting help build even closer ties between the Graduate Administrator Katrina Purser, their work in the McMenemy Seminars, MCR and the Fellowship. Senior Tutor Dr Clare Jackson, Domus kindly kicked off by our very own Senior Tutor Dr Andrew Arthur, Head Porter Tutor, Dr Clare Jackson, back in October This year has also seen the creation Ian Lyons, Junior Bursar Glen Sharp 2015. The annual Marshall McLuhan of an independent MCR Charities and all the College departments has Symposium was also a great success. Representative. The role can be fulfilled benefited the MCR enormously and We were privileged to welcome Turner they all have our deep gratitude. Prize winner and Trinity Hall alumna Special thanks must also go to Paloma Strelitz (2006) as a keynote the Master for his tremendous and speaker. We also hosted a brilliant continuous support of Trinity Hall’s ‘Celebrating Women in Academia’ graduate community over the past event in May with a fascinating panel year. Last but not least, with so many of female academics invited to discuss members of the MCR coming to the the successes and problems they have end of their time at Trinity Hall, we want encountered in their careers. to take this opportunity to wish them all “Every week before the best as they move on to pastures One of the most significant changes fresh and to thank them for making the in the MCR this year has been the Formal Hall we have College as warm and welcoming as creation of a Postdoctoral Research been dazzled by Dr Ann Simon found it 40 years ago. Associates (PDRAs) position on the MCR Committee. Although the PDRAs graduates presenting are already a valued part of the MCR, www.mcr.trinhall.cam.ac.uk official representation will allow further their work.” 25

MCR Committee 2015/16

Charlotte Attwood (2011) – President Harry Potter formal Daniel Bowen (2011) – Vice-President Charles Board (2010) – Treasurer Philip Brown (2009) – Secretary Dr Josh Kaggie – Computing Officer Alina Kozlovski (2014) and Chris Wilson (2011) – Academic Officers Xanthe Gilmore (2015) – Entertainment Officer (Internal) Victor Chu (2013) and Verity Smith (2015) – Entertainment Officers (External) Robert Gard (2014) and Madeline Grimm (2015) – Stewards Peppar Cyr (2015) – Welfare and Disabilities Officer Students outside the Jerwood Library Gareth Mattey (2012) and Daniel Zimmerman (2015) – LGBT+ Officers Michelle Liebst (2013) and Kim Harrisberg (2015) – Women’s Officers Johan Henriksson (2014) and Allison Kindig (2015) – Green Officers Pauline Kiesow (2013) – Charities Representative Jordan Hattar (2015) – International Officer Isabel Estevez (2015) – JCR Graduate Representative Matthew Samson (2013) and Spencer Brennan (2014) – Alumni Officers MCR 26 COLLEGE NEWS

College Societies

Christian Union Matt Taylor (2013)

This year we have been truly blessed as a Christian Union. We have welcomed a number of enthusiastic new members and grown together in love for one another and for Jesus. In our meetings we have been challenged by the radically selfless way in which Jesus interacted with those around him. It is our desire that everyone should have the chance to hear about his love and be able to make up their own minds about it. A highlight of this year was the Main Event week run by the Cambridge Inter- Collegiate Christian Union (CICCU) during Lent Term, titled #nofilter. In this we aimed to explore life and the life that Jesus offers without any filters; listening and engaging with who Jesus himself claimed to be. During that week and the one that followed, we ran a series of ‘text-a-treat’ events where anyone in College could This year has seen success for many text in their questions about Christianity and we would bring them a hot drink and of our sports teams including the our best shot at an answer. This led to some really enjoyable discussions and women’s football club and the rugby it was great to see people taking away John’s Gospels to analyse the evidence club who were both unbeaten in their for themselves. leagues and promoted to the next It has been a privilege to see the work God has been doing in Trinity Hall and division. College Societies enjoyed the wider University. We have been fantastic speakers and Life in Colour, continually reminded of His faithfulness in providing a community where we can a new film society, was founded. build one another up in love and share our hope with others.

Engineering Society Mary Schafer (2013)

The main event in the calendar of the Trinity Hall Engineering Society is always the annual dinner and this year was no exception. The Society Student has continued to grow and this year we were delighted to extend dinner invitations to all alumni. An enjoyable evening was had by all 76 attendees, including 33 returning alumni, with matriculation years ranging from 1968 Reports to 2015. It was great to have such a wide age range and much valuable advice was passed around the tables. At the event we also marked Dr Christopher Padfield’s retirement – he has contributed so much to the engineering community of Trinity Hall 27 and his guidance will be missed. We make this possible. Marco and I are are looking forward to next year’s indebted to the Fellows; particularly dinner already, which we hope will be Dr Pedro Ramos Pinto for his help even bigger and better. with setting up the new Society bank account and Dr John Pollard (1963) for taking charge of the memorable tours FemFo of the College and Old Library. Katie Williams (2014) and We feel sure that our successors, Matt Isabel Jessop (2014) Gutteridge (2015) and Charlotte Burrows (2015), will carry on the Society’s work It has been an exciting year for FemFo, to an equal or better degree. Trinity Hall’s feminist society. In addition to our weekly discussion groups, we hosted a panel discussion in conjunction with the Politics Society on Law Society Tom Nicholls (2013) and women in politics, enjoyed our second Olivia Hosker (2013) annual garden party and participated in the Reclaim the Night march in It has been another successful year for Cambridge to promote awareness the Trinity Hall Law Society. A key event of violence against women. We also at the start of the year revolved around Manuscript in the Old Library had a poetry and spoken word event alumni and what they had gone on to to raise money for Cambridge Rape do with their law degrees. We are very Crisis Centre and a discussion forum grateful to Professor Deborah Price on women’s health as part of Mental (1982) and Graham Nicholson (1968) for Health Awareness Week. Another joining us and for talking us through the exciting event was the first ever Trinity various different routes open to lawyers. Hall JCR Women’s Dinner, which was a wonderful celebration of feminism Other events such as the moots and women at Trinity Hall. We hope this went ahead as usual, with strong event will be an even greater success performances from Chee Ching Sik next year as the College celebrates (2014), who won the Annual Moot, and the 40th anniversary of the admission Rose Marshall (2015), who won the of women. Freshers’ Moot. The Michaelmas Dinner was a lovely event and it was a privilege to spend the evening with so many History Society distinguished Linklaters members. At Love’s Labour’s Lost dress rehearsal Alex Pavlovic (2013) the Annual Dinner we were honoured to welcome both Lady Justice Black Marco Tenconi (2014) and I ran the and Lord Justice McCombe as our History Society this year; an experience Honorary Presidents and Mrs Nicky both of us found enjoyable and Padfield as our guest speaker. Their rewarding. In collaboration with a string speeches were fascinating and the of academics we hosted a range of students loved meeting them, the seminars focusing on the social history alumni and the Slaughter and May of ghosts, on Cambridge’s rich history representatives who joined us at dinner. of spies, on the treatment of Japanese Thank you to the Committee for all their war criminals after WWII and more. help with putting on such a great year We also carried on the annual tradition of events. of opening up the 16th-century Old Library, a real historic gem of Trinity Hall, for the public to explore. Life in Colour The annual Society dinner held in Audrey Sebatindira (2013) April went down particularly well and featured a fantastic speech from Life in Colour is a new film society that renowned Civil War historian Professor was set up at the beginning of the John Morrill. 2015/16 academic year. The aim of the Society is to encourage conversations Our main aim for our tenure was to amongst Trinity Hall students about attract a wider and more diverse intersectional racial politics and audience than ever before to our the challenges faced by black and events, including non-Trinity Hall minority ethnic communities in the UK. members and non-historians. Our Screenings so far have covered topics new public Facebook page and online ranging from colonialism (Concerning advertising campaign allowed us to 28 COLLEGE NEWS

Violence) to the 2011 London riots led everyone in an enjoyable festive (Riots Reframed). Short discussions sing-a-long! In Easter Term the Jazz are held after each screening where Band performed a concert of popular viewers deliberate over themes and and contemporary classics, joined debate the practical applications of the by vocalists Celeste Law (2013) and films’ messages in real life. These have Katie Williams (2014) with myself on proven to be just as enjoyable as the vibraphone. Seb Gillot (2012) organised films themselves. Although the Society a wonderful series of regular Sunday remains small we hope it will grow and evening concerts including Anna Semple become an important part of life at (2015) on the viola and alto Catherine Trinity Hall. Maguire (2012). It is great to have seen so many new faces join for our events. Medical and Veterinary Society Penguins Lucy Mackie (2013) Olivia Hosker (2013)

In Lent Term the Medical and Veterinary The Penguins have had a successful Viola Society (THMVS) had the pleasure of year in 2016. The highlight has been welcoming Professor John Cockcroft taking part in the annual Crescents to speak at our annual dinner. He Garden Party, which was hosted jointly gave an intelligent and humorous talk for the first time as the Crescents and on his experiences in research and Penguins Garden Party. I would like his time working with Professor Ian to thank Matt Simpson (2013) and his Wilkinson, Fellow in Medicine. The Committee for all their help. Another event was thoroughly enjoyed by all. success for the Penguins has been A ‘THMVS Speed Dating’ careers the effort made by all three years to event was held at the end of Lent integrate the Society across College. Term. Alongside a spectacular dinner, This is immensely promising and I hope current medics were able to ask useful that everyone has benefitted from this questions to alumni who have had and that the current mood will continue amazing careers. Dr John Bradley, in future years. As a result of this we Staff Fellow and Director of Studies have seen high attendance and strong in Medicine, hosts a garden party friendships formed over our now in May Week that is always a lovely infamous cheese evenings. Thanks go affair and a great chance to catch-up to everyone for being so active and with six years-worth of medics and dedicated – it has been great to spend Pool table supervisors. Nearly all second years my final year at Trinity Hall with you all. travelled to Yale University to undertake research placements in the summer; Other active this opportunity would not have been possible without various College travel College Societies funds. We would like to thank both Dr Bradley and Professor Wilkinson for Crescents their continued support. NatSci Politics Music Society Carl Wikeley (2014) Preston Society

It has been a noteworthy year for Trinity College Sports Hall Music Society (THMS). We had a great intake of freshers who were all keen to bring something to the music scene in College. Usage of the music Boat Club room has increased significantly with students using it for rehearsals, band The Cambridge Autumn Head started practices and individually, all of which 2015/16 for the Boat Club with the are greatly encouraged. Men’s 1st IV placing third in the Men’s 1st Division and the Women’s Particular Society highlights include 1st IV finishing a close fourth behind the massively popular Christmas Peterhouse by 0.1 seconds. concert where the Trinity Hall Jazz Band were joined by a number of solos The Men’s IV was drawn against King’s and the famous College singers who in the first round of the University IVs. 29

Trinity Hall got up on the King’s crew leaders Jesus, with Trinity Hall fielding thanks to some superb coxing from only nine players. First years Alexander Lizzie Gaunt (2013) and a strong shove Whitefield (2015) and James Farrington from the crew. The race finished in (2015) were the team’s stand out a dead heat and a call for a re-row. players, consistently providing energy Race two was a three-way quarter final and creativity. This should give the team against King’s and Emmanuel. The race something to build on for next season. was extremely close once again. The Things weren’t much better for the stopwatch declared King’s the victor seconds. After winning the opening and Emmanuel beaten easily. It was a three games, victories then eluded respectable result, although unfortunate them for the rest of the season. Despite to have lost by so small a margin. this run of form, special mention should On day one of Lent Bumps the go to striker Joel Daramola (2012) who Women’s 1st VIII rowed over in front consistently found the back of the net. of King’s, finishing with a comfortable Our thoughts now turn to rebuilding Mixed netball team lead. M1 also had a good opening the squad to be ready to challenge for day as they rowed over in front of a promotion next season. solid Magdalene crew – “You have six lengths on the crew behind” Martin exclaimed as M1 nipped down the reach at a relaxed 36 in the evening Football (women’s) sunshine. Day one was nervy for W2 Lillian Flemons (2014) after losing stroke Cat Hooper (2014) to illness but Lucy Mackie (2013) It has been an incredible year for Trinity stepped in and the crew caught Caius Hall Women’s Football Club (THWFC). W2 before First Post Corner. Day two The team has catapulted itself into next proved successful as W1 moved up year’s first division after moving up from into the W1 division after bumping the third division only last year. Magdalene 15 strokes into the race. The dedication and enthusiasm shown M1 also moved up into the top division by everyone in the team has been and W2 caught Magdalene early on. phenomenal. Despite fierce competition Day three was somewhat lacklustre for every week we remained undefeated all the crews but W2 finished strongly in the league and our dedication paid on day four, topping off a great week off in the final match against Christ’s, THWFC 2015/16 trophy for the women. M1 were composed winning us top spot in the league. on day four and the final day saw the crew itching to bump Fitzwilliam. After being forced out of the Cup in the Spurred on by continuous “Row Hall” first round by the Magdalene-Sidney and cheers, the crew surged on and team in a penalty shoot-out, we pushed the bump was made with a good solid through to the final of the Plate. While thump. May Bumps saw some equally sadly we lost 2-0, it was a valiant effort impressive performances, amongst against Trinity. disappointments. I would like to give a special mention The atmosphere at the races this year to Emily Coales (2014) for winning Top is a tribute to good campaigns and a Goal Scorer yet again, breaking the club with great ethos. previous record. Also congratulations to Mira Nadarajah (2015) for winning The Boat Club is extremely thankful to Most Improved in a landslide vote by everyone for their continuing support the team and Charlotte Attwood (2011), this year – Row Hall! recipient of the Coach’s Award. I wish the new captain, Mary Schafer (2013), and the whole team the best of luck for Football (men’s) next year in the top division! Ryan Evans (2014)

It was a difficult season for men’s Netball (mixed) football at Trinity Hall. Having lost the Solene Fercocq (2012) and majority of the previous year’s team, the Sam Ward (2012) firsts were lacking the quality required for life in the first division and were Another successful season for Trinity consequently relegated. The team put Hall Mixed Netball in terms of team in some determined displays against spirit and enjoyment! Once again the superior opposition, exemplified by team was full of new, wonderfully a narrow defeat to the then league 30 COLLEGE NEWS

enthusiastic recruits who did a great doubles game of the season and with job learning the rules on-the-go. Whilst nine out of nine previous doubles wins we didn’t win the league this time coupled with the electric atmosphere, round, hopefully the intra-Trinity Hall we were quietly confident. However, games we played in Easter Term will within just a few minutes the opponents lay the foundations for future success. had seized the initiative and looked set We would like to thank everyone who to win. A troubling silence descended played this season and wish the team the room as the black ball sunk into the the best for the future! middle pocket, and with it our hopes to win the league. Overall, it was a solid year for the first Pool team and as most of the players are Xavier Jameson (2013) leaving, we wish the up-and-coming players the best of luck in continuing Last season ended on a high as the to aim for that coveted league title! first team won the University Cuppers The second team, led by a skillful and for just the second time in over 14 motivated Dhruv Nanavati (2014), years. With the same six players in the ended in a respectable third place in first team and both a top division and their division. Blondie-Osiris Cup 2016 Cuppers battle ahead, 2015/16 looked © Getty Images to be an exciting year for pool. A special thank you goes to alumnus Phil O’Donnell (1994) who has very The second team started their season kindly donated to the Pool Society. This promisingly, jostling for the upper generous donation will give the Pool positions in Division 2 and possible Society the opportunity to buy new promotion, while the first team flew equipment, including a new pool table, through the start of the year with five motivating more and more students to successive wins. The first game of enjoy pool and hopefully to play at the Lent Term was scheduled and with top level. pool cues in arms (or in many cases, just the one cue) the team strutted through the mesmerising lights of Pink Week into Christ’s College for the sixth Rugby Angus Dalgleish (2014) game of the season. Perhaps it was the lights that blinded our vision for the This year Trinity Hall Rugby Club has long pots. Perhaps it was the onset of enjoyed one of its most successful complacency. Or perhaps it was a drink years to date. The season started too many in Cindies the night before. well with early wins against Pembroke Regardless, a below par performance and rivals Trinity. This continued an resulted in a 5-4 loss, a game that unbeaten run in the league, which would prove to be a turning point in the lasted the whole season and resulted top division. in promotion to the second division; a In the last game of term, students filled reflection of the strength of the squad the JCR to support the first team’s across all three years. In the Cuppers Varsity water polo last match of the season. With eight competition the team was able to wins and one loss we were level with progress through the early stages but rivals Christ’s and needed to beat was then faced with a strong Selwyn Other active Robinson 6-3 to win the league; a feat side. While the team was unable to not achieved by any pool team in Tit win they showed great character and College Sports Hall’s history. This was a Robinson was in no way embarrassed by the Athletics team who had been underperforming Division 1 side. Special thanks must yet contained five University players. go to the Captain, Hux Norman (2013), Badminton The atmosphere was tense and after who led us well throughout the season, 90 minutes of play both teams looked putting his body on the line and giving Croquet strong and a 3-3 deadlock had been inspiring team talks. Thanks also go Hockey reached. Dylon Sivam (2013), University to the freshers who have played for us ‘hotshots’ player of the year, stepped this season; Rhys Thomson (2015), Elis MMA (Mixed Martial up and put us 4-3 ahead. Then it was Vandyck (2015), Bak i (2015), Tobias Arts) my turn. The opponent was on form, Bharucha (2015) and George Booth- clearing up all but his last red. With the Clibborn (2015) were valuable additions Netball (women) pressure of the title at stake and some to the team, meaning we go into next fine Trinity Hall ale, a swift single visit year full of confidence. Squash put us 5-3 in front. Just one game to Water Polo go. Dylon and I were to play our last 31

Tennis Boat Club dinner (Photo Competition entry) Tom Nicholls (2013)

Trinity Hall Tennis Club has had a good season. The first half of the year involved the College league matches (both doubles and singles). Trinity Hall is in the third division out of six and after seven or so matches we found ourselves in third place. It was a shame to miss out on promotion but there was strong competition and the team performed well. The habitual core of the team consisted of Vice-Captain Ashley Clark (2013), Benedetta Maisano (2013), Will Sears (2014) and myself. I was also extremely grateful for the support and enthusiasm (which is so characteristic of Trinity Hall students) from a host of players, especially Katie Robertson (2012), Helene Mertens (2012), Akshay Karia (2012), Polly Harlow (2015), Will Parr (2015) and Tabitha Jackson (2015). The latter half of the year was dedicated to Cuppers where we saw off good opposition early on. However, we missed out on the quarter finals after a good fight with number one seed Jesus. It was an enjoyable season for all involved. We are particularly grateful to Trinity Hall and the JCR for giving the team the means to train indoors at Hills Road Sports Centre - something we feel was invaluable to good match performance. The team will undoubtedly flourish under the leadership of Will Sears next year.

Cherry trees at Wychfield Volleyball (Photo Competition entry) Helene Mertens (2012)

The Trinity Hall Volleyball Club was founded by Giulia Nicolini (2011) in Michaelmas Term 2013 to promote this less traditional sport and to give those who have played before the opportunity to continue here in Cambridge. The main goal is to enjoy playing and be a part of a friendly team. Players of all levels of ability are welcome to take part, which allows for constant knowledge and skill exchange. The club usually competes in both the indoor and outdoor Cuppers, organised by the Cambridge University Volleyball Club. Though we saw more losses than wins this year, the team enjoyed every match and each player has improved.

Students on Latham Lawn 32 COLLEGE NEWS

Dr Tom Bennett was awarded a University Research Fellowship by the Royal Society to support his research in making hybrid liquid and glasses. Dr John Bradley was made Honorary Professor of Experimental Medicine in the Faculty of Clinical Medicine. Professor Brian Cheffins was awarded a Major Research Fellowship by the Leverhulme Trust to work on a project entitled ‘The Transformation of the Public Company’. As a result, he will be on research leave in 2016/17 and 2017/18. Professor Jane Clarke was awarded the Protein Society’s Stein and Moore Award, which she was presented with at The Protein Society’s 30th Anniversary Symposium in Baltimore, Dr Tom Bennett Maryland, USA (16-19 July 2016). This award honours leaders in protein science who have made sustained, high impact research contributions to the field. Professor Clarke was also presented with the 2015/16 Linus Pauling Medal from University of Stanford in recognition of her outstanding achievements in chemical sciences and was elected a Fellow of the American Biophysical Society. Dr Simon Guest became Head of Civil Engineering in the Department of Engineering. Dr Nicholas Guyatt wrote Bind Us Apart: How Enlightened Americans Honours, appointments and Invented Racial Segregation, published by Basic Books in New York in April. news from the Fellowship NewsFellows’

Professor Jane Clarke 33

Professor Andy Hopper was awarded Dr Lucia Prauscello Dr Henry Bradford moved to become the Royal Society’s Bakerian Medal was promoted to Reader. a Postdoctoral Research Assistant and Lecture 2017 for his outstanding in the Mathematisches Institut of Dr Graham Pullan research in computer technology. was promoted to Reader. Georg-August Universität Göttingen, Germany. was awarded an Dr Lutz Jermutus Dr Martin Ruehl was promoted to Honorary Fellowship by the Faculty of Senior University Lecturer. Dr Craig French moved to the Pharmaceutical Medicine of the Royal University of Nottingham as Assistant Colleges of Physicians. Leaving Fellows Professor in the Department of Philosophy. Dr Isabelle McNeill has been awarded Dr Elena Cooper moved to become a Newton Trust CTO Research Leave a CREATe Postdoctoral Researcher in grant by the University to allow her to Copyright Law, History and Policy at take a sabbatical during the academic the University of Glasgow. CREATe is year 2016/17 to write a book entitled the Research Council UK Centre for The Rooftops of Paris: Cinematic Copyright and New Business Models Perspectives. in the Creative Economy. Dr William O’Reilly was appointed the first full-time (permanent) Fellow of the Institute of Advanced Study Budapest and edited The Atlantic World, published by Routledge in December 2015. Dr Graham Pullan was Visiting Professor in the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics at MIT during 2016. Professor Tony Purnell attended the 2016 Summer Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro as Head of Technology for British Cycling. Fellowship Promotions Dr Lorand Bartels was promoted to Reader. Dr Simon Guest was promoted to Professor. Dr Florian Hollfelder was promoted to Professor.

Fellows’ Garden Dr Simon Guest 34 COLLEGE NEWS

Milestone Lecture Saturday 14 November 2015

Dr Nicholas Guyatt

The American Promise: Reflections on the Obama Presidency Dr Nicholas Guyatt is University Lecturer in History and Fellow of Trinity Hall. He was educated at Cambridge and Princeton, and has taught in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom. He works on the history of religion, nationalism, race and empire in colonial America and the United States. He is the author of Providence and the Invention of the United States (Cambridge, 2007), Have a Nice Doomsday: Why Millions of Americans are Looking Forward to the End of the World (Random House, 2007) and Bind Us Apart: How Enlightened Americans Invented Racial Segregation (Basic, Numerous lectures are given 2016). He writes regularly for the London Review of Books, the in College throughout the Guardian, and the Nation. academic year. This year’s In advance of the 2016 US Presidential election, Dr Guyatt reviewed the past topics have included the Obama seven years of the Obama Presidency and speculated on how future presidency, linguistics and light. historians will look back on the current incumbent. “The key thing to remember I think about Barack Obama’s political rise was that he was very much a product of the George W Bush years; eight long years in which Democrats in the United States began to feel increasingly Seminars desperate. One of the few highlights the Democrats felt during a particularly depressing year, which was 2004, that was the year in which they failed to regain in the White House with Lectures John Kerry’s campaign, they failed & to regain the Senate or the House of Representatives; so we’d had all of the Iraq War at that point and it seemed to be beginning to turn bad and yet the Democrats couldn’t make any in-roads at all in that year. But one of the few highlights was the speech of a young US Senate candidate from Illinois. Not 35

even a Senator yet, a candidate for the The notion of community is central US Senate from Illinois named Barack to the terms we use to describe our Commemoration Obama.” collective identity: the Hall, aula, place where we come together, to learn, to of Benefactors Watch the full Lecture on the website: eat, to live; the College, contractual Sunday 7 February 2016 www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/milestone2015 binding together of equals in a common endeavour; the Fellowship, a group of companions; our Junior, Middle and The 2016 Commemoration of Senior Combination Rooms, places of Benefactors was given by Venerable social and intellectual exchange; and, Dr Alex Hughes, Archdeacon of events in the College calendar, like Cambridge. this one, where we join with common As every GCSE physics student knows, purpose. For scholars and Fellows light, white light, is actually made up of of Modern and Medieval Languages, a range of different colours. “Richard Of community and exchange underpin the York Gave Battle In Vain”: red, orange, work that we do every day. yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet – that’s how I learned them. So, what do linguists really do? The obvious answer is, of course, that we In our culture, deeply rooted in the study key language skills, comprising Bible and the Classics, ‘light’ also writing, reading, speaking and listening functions as a metaphor for human in the target language. All of we Fellows understanding and wisdom; and the in Modern and Medieval Languages analogy of a spectrum works here at some time or another make direct too to describe the many sources contributions to the development of of our enlightenment. This evening, Dr Nicholas Guyatt these skills in our students and all of in accordance the wisdom of our students here study at least two College tradition, the spotlight is on languages with the aim of achieving benefaction. What kind of illumination Eden Oration native or near native competency by might we find here, that we may Friday 4 December 2015 the end of their degrees. The study of become children of light? two modern European languages is not Visit the website to read the full address: a requirement outside of Cambridge www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/cob2016 and, like me, many of our scholars’ Dr Louise Haywood peers will be enjoying joint honours degree programmes in which a language is just one element. Dr Louise Haywood is Staff Fellow in Modern and Medieval The Eden Oration is continued online: Languages at Trinity Hall and www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/edenoration2015 Reader in Medieval Iberian Cultural and Literary Studies. She previously taught at the University of St Andrews before taking up her post in 2000. She has been Vice- President of Women in Spanish and Portuguese Studies, and Honorary Secretary of the Association of Hispanists of Great Britain and Ireland. She is active in a number of professional organisations dedicated to the Hispanic world and medievalism. Dr Haywood’s research interests lie in medieval Iberian literature and culture, on which she has published extensively. Her current interests focus on space, the visual, the body and humour in the 14th century. She has also worked extensively on 15th-century sentimental romance, and modern and medieval translation and practice. Dr Louise Haywood 36 COLLEGE NEWS

Fundraising The Campaign for the University and Colleges of Cambridge

he Campaign for the University and Colleges of Cambridge, which was launched in October T 2015, seeks to raise £2bn to ensure we are able to respond to the major challenges facing society in the 21st century. This is the largest fundraising campaign ever launched by the University and Colleges and the scale of our ambition is matched by the size, complexity and urgency of the problems we face in times of increasing political and economic uncertainty, rapid technological advances and globalisation; problems such as the spread of infectious disease, food security and alternative fuel sources. The campaign message has been positioned as a series of missives between Cambridge and the world – Dear World, Yours Cambridge. It emphasises the impact Cambridge has had on the world over the last 800 years, such as the laws of gravity and the structure of DNA, and how we have much more to give, but require the world’s help to do so. A programme of events was held to launch the campaign over the course of a weekend, at which many of the University’s most generous supporters were present. This featured a Sculpture and projection at the Senate House combination of College dinners, tours of the departments and demonstrations of supporters demonstrated the impact of The campaign has raised £744.8m some of the extraordinary work of our philanthropic support for the University so far (as of 30 September 2016). academics and students. A high-level and Colleges. The presentation was A gift to Trinity Hall counts towards the discussion was held on the implications accompanied by a series of specially campaign total but stays right here in of the digital revolution for democracy, commissioned images projected onto College to support our students. featuring input from Bill Gates, and the the ceiling of the Chapel. weekend culminated in a presentation in King’s College Chapel, in which Further launch events have been held in Read more about the Campaign for the academics, including Professor New York, San Francisco, Hong Kong University and Colleges of Cambridge Stephen Hawking (1962), students and and Singapore. at: www.philanthropy.cam.ac.uk 37

“This is the largest fundraising campaign ever launched by the University and Colleges and the scale of our ambition is matched by the size, complexity and urgency of the problems we face.” (c) Phil Mynott

Projections in King’s College Chapel 2 3

1

1. Professor Stephen Hawking 2. A portrait while dining in Trinity Hall1 3. Painting at the Song Lin Zhai exhibition 4. Professor Chaoyang Lu 5. The Revd Martin Turner 6. John Kalland wingsuit skydive 7. Sir Nicholas Hytner receiving honorary degree 8. Alumni and Development team in February 9. Andrew Edward Dickson 10. Alumni dinner in Singapore 11. 1997-8 Reunion dinner 12. TH in the City event, Cartoon 7 Museum, London 13. Alumni dinner in Hong Kong 14. Spencer Brennan at the 2015 ice hockey Varsity Match 15. Gail Southward at the Oxford and Cambridge Society of Hong Kong’s Varsity Ball 2015 16. Fairbairns Alumni Boat crew 17. Dr Waheed Arian visiting a refugee camp in Afghanistan 1Photo Competition entry 11 12

14 © David Tudman Photography 2015 15 4 5 6

8 9 10

The Trinity Hall community consists of 8,300 members across 100 different countries. We highlight news from some of our alumni and from the Trinity Hall Association. Alumni News 13

16 17 40 ALUMNI NEWS

The Secretary’sTrinity Hall Association Report Your alumni organisation

n Saturday 24 October we We were delighted to welcome the gathered in Newcastle for a traveller, writer and broadcaster John North East event held in the Pilkington (1968), who regaled those ODiscovery Museum. During present with a fascinating talk and pre-dinner drinks we had the run of wonderful slides on a part of his travels the first floor galleries, looking down along the Silk Road. There was also the on Turbina; the world’s first turbine- opportunity to visit a part of the RGS’s driven yacht and designed by Charles Collections. As is so often the case, the Parsons. It was demonstrated at evening went all too quickly. (and gatecrashed) the 1897 Diamond The 2016 Annual General Meeting Jubilee Spithead Review where it (AGM) was held in College on Saturday easily outpaced every Royal Navy ship 24 September. It was preceded by despite the Navy’s efforts to catch it. presentations and a Q&A session with Dr Chris Angus (1967) The museum provided a fascinating the three 2016 THA Award winners, Secretary, Trinity Hall Association view of the development of Newcastle recently returned from their time as a great and innovative industrial abroad. city. The galleries made a wonderful backdrop against which people The AGM was followed by a truly superb could mingle before we sat down for dinner – wonderful food accompanied an intimate dinner in the Tyneside by some terrific wines, great service and Challenge gallery. We were delighted to excellent company. welcome the Master to the event. If you haven’t sampled any Trinity Hall We experimented with our first regional Association (THA) events yet please event in Birmingham eight years ago do join us at one; they are superb “We were and on Saturday 12 March this year value, usually in fascinating venues delighted to we returned to the West Midlands. and a great opportunity to meet alumni Continuing our policy of choosing and their partners from across the welcome the venues that are very interesting in their generations. Don’t worry if there is no own right, we selected the Birmingham one from your year at a particular event traveller, writer and Museum and Art Gallery. Thirty of – you are guaranteed great company broadcaster John us enjoyed a particularly fine dinner – but why not persuade some others in the handsome Round Room, the of your year to come along too. If you Pilkington (1968), Master once again in attendance. The matriculated within the last ten years attraction this time was a private tour you are eligible for half price tickets. who regaled those of the Staffordshire Hoard, the finest present with a collection of Anglo-Saxon jewellery and As always we are incredibly grateful decorative artefacts yet discovered for the support that we receive from fascinating talk and and now displayed in its own new and the Alumni and Development Office exciting gallery. in organising our events around the wonderful slides country and in handling most of the On Thursday 12 May we made a return administrative tasks, and for the active on a part of his visit to the Royal Geographical Society support of the Master. travels along the (RGS) in South Kensington where about 180 alumni gathered for drinks and Dr Chris Angus (1967) Silk Road.” canapes on a lovely summer’s night. www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/THA 41

We asked those of you that came to our 2016 events in Birmingham and London what you enjoyed about them. Here’s some of what you said:

Birmingham: “Interesting evening in good company” “Very attractive setting” “Organisation was absolutely impeccable” John Pilkington presenting at the RGS “Warm welcome” “Everyone was very friendly”

London: “I particularly liked seeing new faces and older generations” “John Pilkington’s talk was fascinating”

Dining Hall “Relaxed interaction with alumni” “Wonderful venue” “Fantastic opportunity to see unique and historic items… far exceeded my expectations”

For your diary AGM and Cambridge dinner

Birmingham event Saturday 23 September 2017 42 ALUMNI NEWS

1930-1939

1939 Frank Gutteridge was presented with the insignia of Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur by the Defence Attaché of the Embassy of France in Switzerland on 2 June 2016.

Dr Waheed Arian 1940-1949

1941 Robert Eckton and his wife Elizabeth celebrated their 70th wedding anniversary on 9 May 2016.

1950-1959

1952 The Revd Martin Turner was awarded the Herbert Walter Award for Reconciliation and Interfaith Henry Arthur Lee Holmes Co-operation from the Archbishop of Canterbury at Lambeth Palace on 31 March 2016 for his post-war reconciliation work with Germany. 1954 Professor Anthony Edwards was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2015.

1960-1969

Sir Nicholas Hytner 1964 Dr John Kallend, along with 60 others, broke the official (FAI) skydiving world record for the largest completed wingsuit formation in Perris, California on 17 October 2015. We have been informed of the 1965 Dr David Burnell wrote Tunnel following news from alumni Vision (Cornish Conundrums Book 4), published on CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform on 6 May 2016. 1968 Dr David Billett published ‘Focus on the Basics’ in Chemistry Review (2016) volume 26.

1970-1979

1974 Professor Andy Hopper was News awarded the Royal Society’s Bakerian from our Medal and Lecture 2017 for outstanding research in computer technology.

1980-1989

Alumni 1983 His Honour Judge Simon Phillips was appointed to the Circuit Bench in October 2015. 43

1986 The Revd Conan Chitham-Mosley 2006 Paloma Strelitz won the Turner was ordained deacon in the Church of 2000-2009 Prize 2015, as part of Assemble, for England on 3 July 2016. their work with local residents in the Granby Four Streets area of Liverpool. 1987 Thomas Scholar was appointed 2001 Fran Denniss was part of the Permanent Secretary at HM Treasury in Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Choir 2006 William Swannell’s company, Hire March 2016. that reached Christmas number 1 in the Space, was shortlisted for a Marketing Week Award in the ‘market disruptor’ 1988 Gail Harban co-chaired the UK single charts with the song A Bridge category. Oxford and Cambridge Society of Hong Over You. Kong’s Varsity Ball in October 2015. 2001 Anne Dye and her husband 2007 Edward Dickson and his wife Jo welcomed their son, Andrew Edwards 1988 Mike Horne was appointed Robert welcomed their daughter, Dickson, born at 1am on 26 June 2016 Queen’s Counsel in 2016. Loveday, born in February 2016. and weighing 9lbs 3oz. 2001 Sarah Hamilton welcomed her second daughter, Mollie Ruth Hamilton, 2007 Professor Chaoyang Lu Winner 1990-1999 born on 9 November 2014 and sister to has been awarded the 2015 Physics Emily Beth Hamilton. World Breakthrough of the Year by the Institute of Physics UK, 2015 State 1992 Rupert Holmes and his wife Amy 2001 Emma Pooley won her third Natural Science First-Class Prize in welcomed their third child, Henry Arthur consecutive Elite Women’s ITU China and 2016 Jin Guo Fan Young Lee Holmes, born on 20 November Powerman Long Distance Duathlon Scientist Innovation Award by the 2015. World Championship on 4 September Chinese Society of Optical Engineering. 2016. 1995 Dr Barry Blades published Roll of 2008 Dr Phil Ewels married Miss Freya Honour: Schooling and the Great War, 2002 Cameron Duncan and his wife Kumm on 6 August 2016 at Wilderhope 1914-1919, published by Pen & Sword Alex (née Goss, 2003) welcomed their Manor in Shropshire. Books in October 2015. son, Charlie Gibson Duncan, born on 13 September 2016 at St Thomas’ 2009 Aaron Tait wrote Edupreneur: Dr Peter Dudley was appointed 1995 Hospital, London. Unleashing Teacher Led Innovation in City Fellow for Education at Hughes Schools, published by Wiley-Blackwell Hall in October 2015. 2002 Charles Rome and his wife in May 2016. Melissa (née Milner, 2002) welcomed Patrick Lynch wrote Mimesis: 1995 their son, Zachary Jordan, on 1 January Lynch Architects, published by Artifice 2016. Books on Architecture in February 2010-2016 2016. 2002 Louis Verdi was appointed Dean’s Scholar at Columbia. 1995 Peter Skelton was appointed 2010 Dr Adrian Leonard married Tanya Queen’s Counsel in 2016. 2003 Dr Waheed Arian was shortlisted Sawkins in Quendon Parish Church, in the Health Service Journal Rising Essex on 23 November 2015. Dr Matthew Forster was admitted 1996 Star Award for his work in establishing Leonard also edited Marine Insurance, to the Institute of Masters of Wine in the Arian Teleheal charitable trust, Origins and Institutions, 1300-1850, September 2016. which assists doctors in conflict zones published by AIAA in November 2015. by telemedicine. A successful pilot in 1998 Dr Andrew Lennon and his wife 2012 Alex Klein was listed in the Kabul is now being expanded to serve Irenka (neé Suto, 1999) welcomed their technology category of Forbes’ 30 a population of more than 30 million son, Joseph, born in July at the Rosie Under 30 2016 Europe. His company, people across Afghanistan. Hospital in Cambridge and brother to Kano, was named the UK’s fastest- Stephen. 2003 Alex Duncan (née Goss) and her growing startup by TNW. husband Cameron welcomed their 1998 Jim Passamano received the 2013 Victor Chu was shortlisted for the son, Charlie Gibson Duncan, born on Founders Award from the USA Adult Howard League for Penal Reform’s John 13 September 2016 at St Thomas’ Cystic Fibrosis Association in October Sunley Prize for his research Greying Hospital, London. for outstanding service to adults with behind bars: The older male offender’s cystic fibrosis. 2003 Andrew Palmer and his wife experience of prison life and preparations 1998 Sophie Winkleman and her Victoria (2005) welcomed their for resettlement. The prize celebrates the husband Lord Frederick Windsor daughter, Amelie Elizabeth Palmer, excellence and impact of post graduate welcomed their second daughter, Isabella born on 10 February 2016 and sister to research into penal issues. Frederick Palmer. Alexandra May, born on 16 January 2016. 2014 Lucy Pike rowed in the winning 1999 Dr Irenka Lennon (neé Suto) and 2004 Dr Tom Bennett was awarded a Blondie boat against Oxford’s Osiris in her husband Andrew (1998) welcomed University Research Fellowship by the the Cancer Research UK Boat Race their son, Joseph, born in July at the Royal Society to support his research in 2016 on 27 March. Rosie Hospital in Cambridge and making hybrid liquid and glasses. brother to Stephen. 2005 Victoria Palmer and her husband If you have news to share, it would Andrew (2003) welcomed their be great to hear from you. daughter, Amelie Elizabeth Palmer, Please email us at born on 10 February 2016 and sister to [email protected] Frederick Palmer. 44 ALUMNI NEWS In Memoriam We are saddened to report that we have been informed of the following deaths

1935 Major Gerald Flint-Shipman James Vernon Dr Kenneth Brown who died on 15 June 2016 who died on 20 December 2015 who died on 17 September 2015 Lee Harragin 1953 1938 who died on 15 February 2016 Martin Morgan Alec King Dr Peter Morton who died on 2 May 2016 who died on 10 September 2010 who died on 28 August 2016 1954 1941 Professor Bill Slater John Butterworth who died on 26 March 2016 Dr Roland Gibbs who died on 23 July 2016 who died on 17 October 2015 1947 1955 Sir John Osborn Jim Collings-Wells Professor Ian Ritchie who died on 2 December 2015 who died on 12 August 2014 Michael Kellaway Dr Philip Shortt who died on 31 July 2016 John Talbot who died on 7 November 2015 who died on 16 February 2016 Robin Lindsay Denis Wilson who died on 20 July 2016 Ian Telfer who died on 3 December 2015 who died on 4 May 2016 1948 1942 The Rt Hon The Lord Geoffrey 1956 John Allen Howe of Aberavon Gerard Julienne who died on 23 October 2015 who died on 9 October 2015 who died on 22 August 2016 Stanley Bolton Professor William Tyree Professor Egon Matijevic who died on 17 March 2016 who died on 2 January 2016 who died on 20 July 2016 Hugh Browne 1949 John Stephens who died on 14 December 2015 The Rt Hon The Lord Greville who died on 22 March 2016 Royston Dumbell Janner of Braunstone 1957 who died on 19 December 2015 who died on 14 February 2016 Andrew Jameson Richard Jones Jack Sweeney who died on 9 March 2016 who died on 14 May 2016 who died on 4 March 2016 1958 Group Captain Roy Morris 1950 Reg Bull who died on 24 August 2016 Dr Cyril Fox who died on 26 November 2015 who died on 18 May 2016 Dr Allan Nicholson Michael Hender who died on 16 February 2016 1951 who died on 20 September 2016 1943 Dr Maurice Bull Dr Chris Penn Standley Bushell who died on 8 December 2015 who died on 21 October 2015 who died on 22 June 2016 Dr Michael Carlile The Revd Canon Jesse Sage 1944 who died in March 2016 who died on 9 October 2015 Seymour Aitken Derek Gilyard 1960 who died in 2016 who died on 2 September 2016 Ian King Dr John McMullan Dr Giles Parkes who died on 8 April 2016 who died in May 2016 who died on 12 April 2016 Dr Iain Purchase 1945 The Revd Robert Procter who died on 8 June 2016 who died on 17 March 2015 William Hutchison 1962 who died on 26 August 2010 1952 Keith Blair Dr Geoffrey Taylor Dr Richard Earlam who died on 9 April 2016 who died on 23 July 2016 who died on 1 July 2016 1963 1946 Dr Keith Humphreys Michael Haywood who died on 14 September 2016 John Calviou who died on 10 August 2016 who died on 8 April 2014 45

1966 Barry Caulfield who died on 11 December 2015 Peter Kelsey who died in September 2015 1968 Jeremy Shaw who died in December 2015 1969 Vaughan Brooks who died on 13 October 2015 William Hodgson who died on 22 September 2016 1970 Guy Leigh who died in November 2015 1974 Dr Clive Castaldo who died on 23 November 2015 1977 Eve Hessey who died on 18 June 2016 Dr Caroline Lynas who died on 19 July 2016 1986 Dita Athanassoulia who died on 10 August 2010 1989 Dr Kate Barlow who died on 23 November 2015 1992 Susan Rothera who died on 18 March 2015 1993 Mark Naylor who died on 18 March 2014 2013 Thomas Harris who died in December 2015 2014 Fernando Szymczak who died on 9 July 2016 Fellows and friends John Collier (Emeritus Fellow) who died on 18 June 2016 Professor Bernard Neal (Fellow, 1947-54) who died on 26 March 2016

Obituaries can be found online at: www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/obituaries 2 3 © Liz Greenhalgh Photography

1

1. Fireworks from the wall1 2. Trinity Hall cuddly dog 3. PWC summerball 4. Milestone 14 in Barley 5. Fellows’ Guest Night 6. Glasses reflecting Front Court2 7. Star trails over Trinity Hall3 8. The Master with WYNG Philomathia Student Essay Contest Certificate recipients 9. Front Court at sunset1 10. Halloween at Trinity Hall1 11. Alumni dinner in Singapore 12. The Master 13. Irises and staircases1 7 14. Jerwood at night with reflections4 12 15. Alumni and Development stand on graduation day 16. Graduands 2016 in Front Court 1Photo Competition entry 2Photo Competition Alumni Office prize 3Photo Competition runner-up 4Photo Competition winner 11

14 4 5 6

8 9 10

Lists and Statistics for the Year 2015/16 Information 13

15 16 48 2015/16 INFORMATION List of Fellows From 1 October 2015 The Master The Revd Dr Jeremy Morris MA DPhil FRHistS

Fellows (in order of seniority) Vice-Master; Staff Fellow and Director of Studies in Michael Hobson Natural Sciences (Physics Parts II & III); Professor of MA PhD Astrophysics Supernumerary Fellow and Director of Studies in Christopher Padfield Engineering (Parts IIA & IIB); Tutor; Director, Cambridge MA PhD MICE University Corporate Liaison Office Michael Kelly MA PhD SCD FREng Staff Fellow, Graduate Mentor; Prince Philip Professor FRS Hon FRSNZ MAE of Technology Staff Fellow in Engineering; Professor of Structural Simon Guest Mechanics; Head of Civil Engineering, Department of MA PhD Engineering P John Clarkson Staff Fellow in Engineering; Professor MA PhD HonD FREng of Engineering Design James E Montgomery Staff Fellow; The Sir Thomas Adams’s Professor of Arabic MA PhD Florian Hollfelder Staff Fellow in Natural Sciences (Biological); Graduate MA MPhil Dipl-Chemiker (Berlin) PhD Mentor; Professor of Synthetic Biology Dr Jan-Melissa Schramm Professor Brian Cheffins Staff Fellow in Law; S J Berwin Professor of Corporate BA LLB LLM Law Simon Moore Staff Fellow and Director of Studies in Computer Science; MA MEng PhD FBSC FIET Professor of Computer Engineering Staff Fellow and Director of Studies in Natural Sciences R Vasant Kumar (Materials Parts II & III); Tutor; Graduate Mentor; BTech MA PhD FIMMS University Reader in Materials Science and Metallurgy Staff Fellow and Director of Studies in Natural Sciences Nick Bampos (Chemistry Parts II & III), Graduate Mentor; Assistant BSc MA PhD Director of Research in Chemistry Staff Fellow & DoS in Medicine; Graduate Mentor; Assoc Lecturer in Medicine; Consultant Physician Cambridge John Bradley Uni Hospitals; Dir of National Inst for Health Research MA DM FRCP CBE Camb Biomedical Research Centre; Director of Research, Cambridge Uni Health Partners Dr Kylie Richardson Staff Fellow in Modern and Medieval Languages; Reader Louise Haywood MA PhD in Medieval Iberian Cultural and Literary Studies Senior Tutor, Staff Fellow, College Lecturer and Director Clare Jackson MA MPhil PhD of Studies in History (Prelim & Part I) 49

Jan-Melissa Schramm Staff Fellow in English; University Lecturer in Nineteenth- MA LLB PhD Century Literature Staff Fellow in Engineering; University Reader in Graham Pullan MA MEng PhD Engineering Staff Fellow in Clinical Medicine; Graduate Mentor; BHF WE Parkes Senior Clinical Research Fellow; Ian Wilkinson MA DM FRCP University Reader and Honorary Consultant in Clinical Pharmacology, Addenbrooke’s Hospital Staff Fellow, College Lecturer and Director of Studies in Cristiano Ristuccia Economics, Tutor; University Senior Research Associate in MA CGA Laurea DPhil Applied Economics, University Proctor Fellow Archivist; Fellow Librarian; Staff Fellow and John Pollard MA PhD FRHistS Director of Studies in History (Part II); Emeritus Professor in Modern European History at Anglia Ruskin University Dr Lucia Prauscello Staff Fellow in Modern and Medieval Languages (Slavonic), Kylie Richardson BA MA PhD Director of Studies in Linguistics and MML; University Lecturer in Slavonic Linguistics and Philology Jerome Jarrett Staff Fellow and Director of Studies in Engineering (Parts MA MEng PhD MRAeS IA & IB); University Lecturer in Engineering Staff Fellow in Politics; Graduate Mentor; University David Runciman MA PhD Senior Lecturer in Political Theory

Tadashi Tokieda BLitt PhD Körner Fellow; College Lecturer

Paul ffolkes Davis MA (Oxon) Staff Fellow, Bursar and Steward

Edmund Kunji Staff Fellow; Research Group Leader, Medical Research MSc PhD Council Mitochondrial Biology Unit High Table Steward; Staff Fellow in History; Director of Graduate Studies, Faculty of History; University Senior William O’Reilly Lecturer in Early Modern History; Assoc Director, Centre Colm McGrath BA DPhil FRHistS FRSA for History & Economics; Senior Research Assoc Centre for Financial History Admissions Tutor (Arts), Philomathia Fellow in French, Director of Studies in Modern and Medieval Languages Isabelle McNeill MPhil PhD (IB and II), Graduate Mentor; Affiliated Lecturer in the Department of French Staff Fellow in Classics; University Reader in Ancient Lucia Prauscello MA PhD Literature in the Faculty of Classics Supernumerary Fellow and Director of Studies in English Alison Hennegan MA (Prelim & Part II); Tutor; Secretary for Governing Body; Graduate Mentor Staff Fellow and Director of Studies in Modern and Medieval Martin Ruehl MA PhD Languages (Part IA); University Senior Lecturer in German Thought, Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages Lorand Bartels Staff Fellow, Graduate Tutor (Arts) and Director of Studies Dr Cohl Fury BA LLB PhD in Law (Part II & LLM/MCL); University Reader in Law Admissions Tutor (Sciences), WYNG Fellow and Director Andrew Murray of Studies in Natural Sciences (Biological Parts IB and II); MBiochem DPhil Graduate Mentor; University Senior Lecturer in Mammalian Physiology

Acting High Table Steward (2014-16); Domus Tutor; Dir of College & Chapel Music; Staff Fellow & DoS in Music; Andrew Arthur MA Affiliated Lecturer, Faculty of Music; Director, University Organ Scholarships Award Scheme; Chairman, University Organ Scholars’ Forum 50 2015/16 INFORMATION

Robert Asher BA PhD Staff Fellow; University Senior Lecturer in Zoology

Gunnar Möller MA PhD Staff Fellowship in Physics

John Trowsdale BSc PhD FMedSci Staff Fellow in Medicine

John Biggins MA MSci PhD Staff Fellow in Physics

Staff Fellow in Earth Sciences; Director of Studies in Natural Sciences (Biological Part IA, Geology Parts II & III, Alexandra Turchyn AB PhD and Physical Part IA); Deputy Graduate Tutor (Science); University Reader in Earth Sciences Staff Fellow in Natural Sciences (Chemical Biology); Tutor; Jane Clarke BA PGCE MSc PhD Professor of Molecular Biophysics; Wellcome Trust Senior FMedSci FRSC FRS Research Fellow in Basic Biomedical Sciences Professor Thomas Körner Dean, Chaplain and Runcie Fellow; Director of Studies in Revd Stephen Plant BA PhD Theology; Graduate Mentor Staff Fellow and Director of Studies in History of Art; Alexander Marr University Reader in the History of Art, 1400-1700; BA MSt DPhil FRHistS FSA Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London John Collier Fellow in Law, Director of Studies in Law Stephen Watterson MA DPhil (Part 1A), Tutor; University Lecturer in Law Ramji Venkataramanan Staff Fellow in Engineering; University Lecturer BTEC MS MS PhD in Engineering

Thomas Bennett BA MSci MA PhD Research Fellow in Materials Chemistry

Craig French BA MPhil PhD WYNG Research Fellow

Staff Fellow in Bioarchaeology; University Senior Lecturer Tamsin O’Connell DPhil in Archaeological Science WYNG Fellow and Director of Studies in Law (Part IB), David Erdos BA MA PhD LLB Graduate Mentor; University Lecturer in Law Staff Fellow in History; University Lecturer in International Emeritus Pedro Ramos Pinto MA MPhil PhD Economic History

Fellows Lindley Lentati BSc PhD Gott Research Fellow in Astrophysics

Malcolm Gerloch Willem Paul van Pelt Schulman Research Fellow in Archaeology and BSc MA PhD ScD BA BBA MPhil PhD Anthropology Professor Jonathan Steinberg Staff Fellow in Mathematics; University Reader MA PhD Jack Thorne BA PhD in Number Theory John Collier (died 18 June 2016) MA LLB Nicholas Guyatt Staff Fellow in History; Tutor; University Lecturer in BA MPhil PhD FRHistS American History Sandra Raban MA PhD Tom Dougherty BA PhD Staff Fellow and Director of Studies in Philosophy Graham Howes Staff Fellow and Director of Studies in Psychological MA William Matthews BA PhD and Behavioural Sciences; University Senior Lecturer in Professor John Denton Psychology MA PhD FREng FRS Philomathia Fellow in African Politics; Director of David Rubenstein Adam Branch MA PhD Studies in HSPS; Graduate Mentor; University Lecturer, MA MD MB BS FRCP Department of Politics and International Studies David Fleming MA LLB Vladimir Brljak BA PhD Thole Research Fellow in English Professor Thomas Körner WYNG Research Fellow in Medical Law and Ethics; Colm McGrath MA MA MSc PhD ScD Graduate Mentor

Peter Hutchinson Cohl Furey BSc MSc PhD Walter Grant Scott Research Fellow in Physics MA PhD LittD 51 Fellow-Commoners

Glen Sharp BSc MRICS APM Dip Proj Man MBA Fellow-Commoner; Junior Bursar Christopher Constant Fellow-Commoner in Medicine MA LLM MCh MB BCh BAO FRCS Diane Haigh MA DipArch RIBA Fellow-Commoner; Director of Studies in Architecture Fellow-Commoner in English; College Teaching Associate in English; Director of Studies in English; Jane Partner MA PGDIP PhD Graduate Mentor Jordan Pober MD PhD Fellow-Commoner; Bayer Professor of Translational Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine

Franz Fuerst BSc MSc MA PhD Fellow-Commoner; Director of Studies Land Economy Fellow-Commoner in Engineering; Royal Academy of Engineering Visiting Professor in Integrated Tony Purnell BSc SMMechE FRSA Systems Design, Department of Engineering Lutz Jermutus Fellow-Commoner in Biotechnology; Graduate Mentor BSc MSc PhD FRSC FFPM (Hon) Poornima Paidipaty BA MA MA MPhil PhD Fellow-Commoner in Anthropology / History Fellow-Commoner in Biochemistry; Director of Studies in Natural Sciences (Biological Part III); Elizabeth Caygill BSc PhD Graduate Mentor Felix Deschler Dipl-Physiker PhD Fellow-Commoner in Physics

Miki Kawabata BA MA PhD Fellow-Commoner in Japanese; Director of Studies in Asian & Middle Eastern Studies

Rachelle Stretch MA PhD Fellow-Commoner; Development Director Honorary Fellows Lord (Ronald) Oxburgh of Liverpool Professor Alexander Goehr Professor Peter Sever (1962) MA PhD KBE FRS MA MusD(Hon) FRMCM(Hon) FRAM(Hon) MB BChir MA MRCP PhD FRCP FESC Professor Stephen Hawking (1962) FRNCM(Hon) FRCM(Hon) FRCP(Ireland)Hon CH CBE PhD SCD(Hon) DSc(Hon) FRS Professor John Langbein (1964) Walter Scott (1969) The Rt Hon Lord (Donald) Nicholls of MA MA(Hon) LLB PhD BSc PhD Birkenhead (1956) Sir John Lyons Sir Ewan Harper (1958) MA LLB PC MA PhD LittD FBA MA CBE The Revd Dr John Polkinghorne The Rt Hon Lord Justice (Roger John Harriet Lamb (1979) MA PhD ScD KBE FRS Laugharne) Thomas of Cwmgiedd (1966) MA CBE Professor Antony Jameson (1955) MA PC QC Nigel Thomas MA PhD FRS Professor Peter Clarke BSc The Revd Professor Keith Ward MA PhD LittD FRHS FBA Professor John Broome (1965) BLitt MA PhD DD FBA Sir Nicholas Hytner (1974) BA MA PhD FBA FRSE The Hon Donald Macdonald (1956) MA David Cleevely (1978) BA LLM PC CC The Rt Hon Lord Justice (Anthony) BSc MA PhD CBE FREng FIET The Rt Hon Lord (Peter) Millett of St Hooper (1957) Professor Sir John Cunningham (1967) Marylebone (1951) MA LLB BM BCh DM KCVO MA PC QC The Rt Hon Sir Colin Rimer (1963) Professor Martin Daunton Sir Mark Tully (1956) MA LLB MA PhD LittD DLit(Hon) DLitt(Hon) MA OBE KBE Professor Sir Brian Hoskins (1963) DLitt(Hon) FRHistS FBA Sir Derek Thomas (1950) MA PhD CBE FRS Professor David Thouless (1952) MA KCMG Edmund de Waal (1983) MA PhD FRS The Very Revd John Drury (1957) MA FRSA OBE Professor Sir Simon Wessely (1975) MA Professor Peter Holland (1969) MA BM BCh MSc MD FRCP FRCPsych Brigadier Paul Orchard-Lisle (1958) MA PhD FMedSci FKC MA CBE TD DL Mani Shankar Aiyar (1961) For an up-to-date list of Fellows please Graham Ross Russell (1953) MA refer to our website. The list is updated MA MBA Sir David Bell (1965) on the website at the beginning of each Michaelmas Term. Professor Sir Roy Calne MA MA MS FRCS FRS Professor Andrew Hopper (1974) www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk PhD CBE FRS FREng FIET 52 2015/16 INFORMATION

Undergraduates

During the year ending September 2016, the total number of undergraduates registered was 374. The numbers reading for a degree in each subject were as follows: Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic 0 Architecture 8 Asian and Middle Eastern Studies 8 Chemical Engineering 8 Classics 7 Computer Science 12 Economics 12 Education 0 Engineering 33 English 21 Geography 7 History 24 History of Art 4 Human, Social and Political Sciences 20 Land Economy 6 Law 20 Linguistics 3 Management Studies 1 Mathematics 22 Medicine 16 Modern and Medieval Languages 31 Music 4 Natural Sciences 85 Philosophy 6 Psychological and Behavioural Sciences 5 Theology 8 Veterinary Medicine 3 Total registered 374*

*Includes 9 students abroad, 13 not in attendance and 2 who withdrew The number of undergraduates taking College classed examinations in 2016 was 318, of whom 93 were placed in the First Class and 216 in the Second Class. Statistics Scholarships The following elections and awards have been made in the academic year 2015-2016 Elected to Bateman Scholarships: Chemical Engineering: Luke Vinter Classics: Charlotte Whittaker Computer Science: Darren Foong Economics: Christina Schneider, Amy Thomas, Sam Ward 53

Engineering: Solene Fercocq, Awarded College Prizes: Wylie Prize for Mathematics: Georgia Ware N R Pillai Travel Scholarship Dominic Skinner English: Sunao Honda (A&MES): Eloise Tunmore Parks Prize for Mathematics: History: Malhar Mahurkar, James Troup, Rees Roberts Prize for Architecture: Ed Walton Tom Wyer Joseph Marchbank Henry and Irene Dean Prize for History of Art: Francesca Dytor Angus Prize for Classics: Medicine: Lucy Mackie Human, Social and Political Sciences: Charlotte Whittaker Bill Grundy Prize for Medicine: Emily Evans, Lucy Mackie Lee-Yung Computer Science Prize: Furqaan Kaji Land Economy: Marton Price, Bruce Collie Frazer Jennings Prize for Medicine Patricia Walker Harcourt Prize for Economics: and Veterinary Medicine: Lauren Major Law: Olivia Hosker, Akshay Karia, Christina Schneider Elmore Travel Exhibition (MML): Ben Lock John B Lansdell Prize for Economics: Polly Harlow Linguistics: Rebecca Sharples Amy Thomas Peter Sykes Prize for Languages: Mathematics: Philip Glass, Ed Walton Baker Prize for Engineering: Sophie Aitken Modern and Medieval Languages: Ginny Rutten Peter Lawrence Prize for Languages: Jessica Fullman, Stephanie Maw, R A Hayes Prize for Engineering: Luke Sawyer Henry Primmer-Pyke, Katie Robertson, Solene Fercocq Sylvia Olive Stearn Prize for Music: Luke Sawyer, Sarah Sharpe Ernest Frankl Prize for Engineering: Carl Wikeley Natural Sciences: Adam Bateson, Dave Lei Kareen Thorne Prize for Biological Claire Bond, Will Earley, James Geddis, John Denton Prize for Engineering: Science: Phil Ruis Furqaan Kaji, Shudong Li, Lauren Major, Nick Slack Paul Beare Prize for Pathology: Josh Michaels, Marianne Perera, David Moore Prize for Engineering: Marianne Perera Phil Ruis, Ann-Marie Shorrocks Mary Schafer Michael Stobbs Prize for Philosophy: Sylvie Craig E G Harwood Prize for English: Natural Sciences: Claire Bond Elected to Scholarships: Sunao Honda Sir David Innes Williams Prize for Natural Sciences and Medicine: Chemical Engineering: Larry So Graham Storey Prize for English: Sam Wells Jon Rosser, Nathan Turnbull Computer Science: Beth Barnes, Katritzky Prize for Chemistry: Bruce Collie, Swaraj Dash, Bálint Kovacs Beatrice and Frank Pollard Prize for History: Megan Woodward Haydn Lloyd Economics: Armand Lambert C W Crawley Prize for History: Stephen Hale Prize for Chemistry: Engineering: Felix Barker, Nathan Clark, Malhar Mahurkar Bernadette Lee Dave Lei, Ginny Rutten, Andrew Sherman, Kitty Crawley Prize for Philosophy: Nick Slack, Joe Tompkins Kitty Crawley Prize for History: Tom Wyer Sylvie Craig Geography: Emily Harbach, Alice Tilley Hamish Maxwell Prize for History Excelect Awards: James Troup, History: Marco Tenconi, of Art: Francesca Dytor Dale Walmsley Megan Woodward Frank Morgan Prize for HSPS: Trinity Hall Music Prizes: Catherine Human, Social and Political Sciences: Emily Evans Maguire, Carl Wikely Harrison Butler-Stroud, Ned Kenwright, Jack Lewy, Anna Pick, Jade Treneary Orchard-Lisle Prize for Land Awarded University Prizes: Economy: Patricia Walker Law: Lok Cheung, Sebastian Mellab The Perham Prize, 1st Prize Lovells Prize for Law: Lok Cheung Mathematics: Nick Johnstone, (Biochemistry): Phil Ruis Jiwoon Park, Dominic Skinner, Henry Bond Prize for Law: The Harkness Prize (Earth Sciences): Matthew Wales Sebastian Mellab Claire Bond Medicine: Tas Pope, Lewis Timimi, David Clement Davies Prize for Law: The Sir George Nelson Prize in Jenny Wilkins Olivia Hosker Applied Mechanics: Sam Ward Modern and Medieval Languages: Dr Ellis Lewis Prize for English Law: The E.C.S. Wade Prize for Sophie Aitken, Oskar Bukolt, Akshay Karia Administrative Law: Akshay Karia Lillian Flemons, Polly Harlow, Ian Malcolm Lewis Prize for Law: The Littleton Chambers Prize for Tabitha Jackson, Joe Myers, Ben Lock, Isabelle Skaburskis Labour Law: Olivia Hosker Sophie Newbury, Jamie Turpin, Laura Kinsella Prize for Law: The Clive Parry Prize for International Emily Watton Eloise Edwards, Faith Yeung Law: Isabelle Skaburskis Music: Carl Wikeley Alan King-Hamilton Bursaries: The BP Prize for an outstanding Natural Sciences: Tim Birkle, Tim Boyd, Lok Cheung, Joyce Chin, Paul Duncan, performance in Part IB ChemB: Xenia Boyes, Alex Duthie, David Gibson, Abigail Harvey, Olivia Hosker, Bernadette Lee Akshay Karia, Ben Lock, Alex Jenkins, Bernadette Lee, Haydn Lloyd, The Lusophone Prize (MML): Tristan Orchard, Jon Rosser, Sebastian Mellab, Tom Nicholls Luke Sawyer George Smith, James Tarrant, Ed Tidball, Dr Cooper’s Law Studentships: Nathan Turnbull, Wearn Xin Yee Paul Duncan, Olivia Hosker, Akshay Karia, Philosophy: Anni Raty Ben Lock, Tom Nicholls Psychological and Behavioural Trinity Hall Law Studentships: Sciences: Hannah Puetz Joyce Chin, Paul Duncan, Olivia Hosker, Akshay Karia, Ben Lock, Tom Nicholls 54 2015/16 INFORMATION

Graduates

During the year ending 2016 the total number of graduate student registered working on a wide range of advanced degrees was 246. Of these 102 were working towards PhD degrees in arts subjects and 75 in science subjects. Nearly all the remaining were pursuing the MPhil, the Postgraduate Certificate in Education, the Master of Advanced Study in Mathematics or the LLM Degree. There were 21 students enrolled in clinical courses in Medicine or Veterinary Medicine.

In the academic year 2015/16, College Scholarships or prizes were awarded to the following graduate students:

New Awards The Brockhouse Studentship PhD, Engineering Edward Tan 3 years 2015/16

TH Research Studentship – PhD, Biological Stephanie Payne 3 years Mann Graduate Studentship Fund Anthropology

PhD, Development TH Research Studentship/McMenemy Laura Estevez 3 years Studies

The Nightingale Studentship PhD, Social Anthropology Natalie Morningstar 3 years

MPhil, Economic TH Research Studentship Gregory Hinks 1 year Research

TH Research Studentship MPhil, History Alfred Cheesman 1 year

PhD, Politics and TH Research Studentship Steven Schrage 1 year International Studies

Chancellor History Award MPhil, History Thomas Tyson 1 year

Cambridge AHRC DTP – PhD, History Thomas Smith 3 years Trinity Hall Studentship

Carried forward from ESA PhD, Biochemistry John Hervey 3 years 2014/15

PhD, Applied Maths and TH Research Studentship Yujun Qiao 3 years Theoretical Physics

Laura Guttierez TH Research Studentship PhD, Criminology 3 years Gomez

Carried forward from TH Research Studentship PhD, History Pauline Kiesow 3 years 2013/14

PhD, Politics and Atlantic Fund Scholarship Maha Atal 3 years International Studies 55

Research Associates Dr Mãris Ozols: DAMTP Centre for Daniel Zimmermann: Mathematics Anglo Saxon Norse and Celtic Dr Gabriel Recchia: Development and Duncan Montgomery: The College welcomes a number of English (awarded for 2014/15) Postdoctoral Research Associates Neuroscience – Physiology (PDRAs) each year. Below is a list Dr Marta Shahbazi Alonso: of those who joined the College in Development and Neuroscience – Student Blues Michaelmas Term 2015: Physiology Dr Mario Amado Montero: Dr Zhong-Nan Wang: Engineering Full Blue Materials Science and Metallurgy Daisy Baxter (2014), Cruising Jehangir Cama: Claire Bond (2012), Hockey Biological Soft Systems – Physics Bateman Scholarships Emily Coales (2014), Women’s Lacrosse Dr Davor Copic: Engineering Megan Crawford (2014), Women’s Dr Anil Dogan: Mitochondrial Biology Bateman Scholarships were awarded Lacrosse Unit (Wellcome Trust/MRC) to the following graduate students for Angus Dalgleish (2014), Men’s Cricket achieving a Distinction or First Class Dr Villads Egede Johansen: Chemistry in their Master’s Degree (as of 1 Half Blue Dr Laura Fachal: Centre for Cancer October 2016): Susannah Boddie (2015), Riding Genetic Epidemiology LLM – First Class: Michael Boucher (2012), Rifle Victor Chu,Isabelle Skaburskis Dr Stephanie Höhn: Mathematics Michael Boucher (2012), Small Bore MPhil – Distinction Standard: and Theoretical Physics – Biophysics Matthew Walton (2011), Water Polo Xanthe Gilmore: Dr Josh Kaggie: Radiology Screen and Media Cultures Club Colours Dr Natalia Kunowska: Gregory Hinks: Adam Bateson (2012), Trampolining Immune Genomics Group Screen and Media Cultures Allison Kindig (2015), Triathlon (Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute) Benjamin Lowell-Sluckin: Bronwen King (2012), Fencing Dr Geoffrey Macintyre: Cancer Theoretical and Applied Linguistics Lucy Pike (2014), Women’s Boat Club Research UK (Cambridge Institute) Jules O’Dwyer: Screen and Media Cultures Tasneem Pope (2014), Hare and Hounds

General Admission 2016 56 2015/16 INFORMATION

Fellows and Staff Arrivals and Departures

Fellows Arrivals

Dr Adam Branch Staff Fellow in African Politics 1 October 2015 Vladimir Brljak Research Fellow in English 1 October 2015 Colm McGrath Research Fellow in Medical Law and Ethics 1 October 2015 Dr Rachelle Stretch Fellow-Commoner and Development Director 1 October 2015 Dr Henry Bradford Fellow-Commoner and College 1 October 2015 Teaching Associate in Mathematics Dr Cohl Furey Research Fellow in Science 1 January 2016

Honorary Fellows

Dr Adam Branch Professor Martin Daunton 1 October 2015 Professor John Broome 1 October 2015 Professor Sir Simon Wessely 1 October 2015 Dr David Cleevely 1 October 2015

Fellows Leaving

Dr Elena Cooper Research Fellow 1 November 2015 Dr Henry Bradford Fellow-Commoner and College Teaching 1 April 2016 Associate in Mathematics Dr Craig French Research Fellow 31 August 2016

Staff Arrivals

Vladimir Brljak Victoria Barcroft Deputy Conference and Events Manager 15 July 2016 Katherine Bradley PA and HR Assistant to the Junior Bursar 19 October 2015 Juliet Bristow Mental Health Advisor 1 February2016 Alexander Bujak Groundsman/Gardener 16 May 2016 Tatiana-Adriana Celmare Rare Books Cataloguer 20 January 2016 Sophie Connor Deputy Librarian 19 September 2016 Levonne De Freitas Food Services Manager 1 August 2016 Mollie Douglas Food and Beverage Assistant 4 January 2016 Francesca Filipponio Food and Beverage Assistant 6 June 2016 Kathryn Greaves Alumni Communications Officer 4 January 2016 Jack Hailstone Assistant Gardener 30 August 2016 Robert Hibble Assistant Gardener 13 June 2016 Vikki Barcroft Veronika Lebek Bedmaker/Cleaner 12 September 2016 57

Ana Moreira Sousa Food and Beverage Assistant 2 May 2016 Emma-Louise Pim Porter 2 March2016 Michelle Pitkin Health Safety and Fire Advisor 7 March 2016 Elizabeth Pitt Conference and Events 12 October 2015 Office Administrator Gerald Platten Porter 16 November 2015 Mauricio Razo Diaz Chef de Partie 4 January 2016 Fiona Simon Head of Conference and 5 September 2016 Catering Services Michal Suszynski Kitchen Porter 6 October 2015 Andrew Thompson Database and Gifts Officer 18 July 2016 Waldemar Wosiek Handyman 1 June 2016 Andrew Thompson Staff Leaving

Matthew Brewer Deputy Head Gardener (Maternity Cover) 31 May 2016 Sara Collar Database and Gifts Officer 6 January 2016 Giampietro Costa Food and Beverage Assistant 3 May 2016 Filomena Dambrosio Food and Beverage Assistant 27 November 2015 Gianluca De Marzo General Kitchen Assistant 12 August 2016 Lee De-Grammont Groundsman/Gardener 7 April 2016 Michael Doyle Plumber 31 December 2015 Dr Victoria Harvey Schools’ Liaison Officer 30 September 2016 Martin Keaveney Porter 4 January 2016 Zsolt Kovacs Food and Beverage Assistant 2 March 2016

John McLeod Porter 7 June 2016 Yvonne Chapman Rachel Mortimer-Holdsworth Head of Conference and Catering Services 12 August 2016 Ross Nesbitt Food and Beverage Assistant 29 January 2016 Katarina Nevedalova Food Services Manager 10 September 2016 Lucie Novotna Food and Beverage Supervisor 17 January 2016 Antonio Pastor Sendra Bar Supervisor 30 June 2016 Marcus Rooks Porter 31 December 2015 Christopher Siebold Handyman 19 February 2016 Tom Sykes Deputy Librarian 4 August 2016 Emma Tomes Conference and Events Manager 24 June 2016 Lucia Zelenakova Food and Beverage Supervisor 10 August 2016

Long Service Awards Julie Powley

Yvonne Chapman Housekeeping Services Manager 30 years 8 August 2016 Martin Keaveney Porter 10 years 1 March 2016 Pawel Kusmierzak Bedmaker 10 years 5 July 2016 Julie Powley Senior Tutor’s PA & Tutorial 30 years 27 May 2016 Office Manager Agilio Ribeiro Food and Beverage Assistant 10 years 10 July 2016 58 2015/16 INFORMATION

Thankyou Donor list

The Master, Fellows and students of Trinity Hall wish to thank the following members and friends who have so kindly and generously made philanthropic donations, legacy pledges or gifts-in-kind to the College during the College’s last financial year (1 July 2015 to 30 June 2016). ‘Thank you’ garden party 59

Roll of 1950 Peter Hallam Jim Rowley 1957 Benefactors Anonymous Michael Howe-Smith Philip Rumney Anonymous x2 1 July 2015 Bob Ely David Keene Ken Saunders Ron Balaam to 30 June 2016 John Herklots Basil Middleton David Southward Bruce Beckerleg Alumni David Hull Martin Morgan † Brian Trustrum John Brown John Jones Charles Ortner John Waterstreet Stuart Fish 1938 Christopher Laurence Kenneth Rimmer Colin Hamer John Crockatt 1956 Wyn Reilly Graham Ross Russell Geoffrey Berry Richard Harrison 1939 1951 Philip Scowcroft Richard Burnett-Hall Rob Hendrie Thomas Patterson Guy Carless Robin Williams Tony Carruthers Michael Horton 1940 Edward Cunningham 1954 Alan Charters David Iwi Thomas Dickson Graham Elcombe Anonymous x3 Christopher Cheetham Gareth Jones Jack Howett Robert Gilchrist Robin Adams Joel Clompus Adrian Kellett 1942 Michael Larkin Anthony Bailey John Gammon Donald Kelly Roy Morris † Richard Levy David Beynon Neil Grayson Nigel Legg 1943 Michael Rusbridge John Borron John Guinness Peter Monahan Peter Bell Tony Wingate Geoffrey Boys Barrington Guyer Anthony Moncaster Keith Neal 1944 Roger Payne John Dalby Michael Purcell Rodney Hunt † David Raistrick John Isaac David Rothera 1945 Mike Umbers Michael Carey Derek Winter Alan Grieve 70% 1958 Ken Harries of those giving made Anonymous x3 Graham Jones Roger Backhouse Russell Keeley a regular donation John Belcher 1946 Ralph Cantor Ben Hytner John Clay Peter Morton † 1952 Jeremy Buckwell Richard Hardy Smith Andrew Curtis Norman Reeves † Anonymous x3 Charles Howe Tom Hill David Ford Ralph Ross Russell Don Cupitt Peter Jones Michael Hubbard John Gau 1947 Edward Day Michael Lucas Tony Kallend Bill Gibbs Anonymous x2 Richard Howard Ted Maden Jim Laidlaw Richard Hankinson Jim Collings-Wells † Max Mitchell-Fox David Markham David Lewis Robin Hardie Richard Wright Michael Pride Brian Shillito Edward Lyndon- Ewan Harper Stanford 1948 Douglas Redfern David West Clive Harrison Alan Moller John Hodgkinson Roger Spurling 1955 Michael Hender † Peter Morgan John Varga David Thouless Anonymous x2 Rowland Jackson Donald Nicholls of John Jones 1949 Dick Tripp John Cunningham Birkenhead William Kershaw John Crathorne Jeff Watkins David Evans John Pugh Grant Lewison Tony Powers 1953 Charles Goldie † Denis Taylor Denys Lloyd Marcus Bennett Roger Maltby Nick Weber-Brown Patrick Mackie Barry Cowper Graham Moore William White Douglas Miller James Crerar Mark Ransom

† Deceased *Fellow 2015/2016 ** Master 60 2015/16 INFORMATION

Paul Orchard-Lisle David Nicholson Charudatta Hajarnavis 1964 Hugh Morris Stephen Prickett Keith Sisterson Colin Hayes Anonymous Nick Patterson Roger Reavill Roger Sleigh John Hyland Tom Bigge William Shaw John Roche Jon Swayne Richard Jenkins Nick Butcher Jon Stern Colin Shrimpton John Waddington David Kerr Phil Chubb Colin Whitby-Strevens Jeremy Stone Donald Wesling Hugh Lee Frank Conley Anton Ziolkowski Peter Viggers 1961 Robert Leest Brian Dury 1966 Terry West Anonymous x2 Andrew Lindqvist Paul Eaton Anonymous x4 Philip Woodcock Michael Bonnin Sydney Norris Allan Grimley Leigh Bracegirdle 1959 Christopher Cowsley Howard Page Peter Hammond Steve Brickell Anonymous x2 Chris Ennals Richard Peters Nick Heesom Paul Clarke Michael Barnes Colin Hall Jon Sanders Stanley Hooper Michael Cleeve Christopher Beresford- John Hewston David Smith David Jarman Pat Elder Jones David Kleeman Chris Wakefield Alistair Jones Richard Morris Tony Bushell Magnus Linklater 1963 Nigel Jones Michael O’Brien † Michael Chant Arthur Lyons Anonymous John Langbein Christopher Road Anthony Colman Andrew Medlicott † Nicholas Alsop Ian McNeil John Roberts Richard Devitt Tim Rodwell Peter Freeman Toby Simon Earl Freise Christopher Smyth Peter Gornall Max Turner Michael Harrison Martin Williams David Hopkinson Keith Wilson Malcolm Innes 1967 Peter Jamieson David Allen Barry Lewis Chris Angus Patrick Prenter John Bedington John Pyke Tim Bilham John Rees Telethon callers 2016 Martyn Branford Derek Whitmell Frank Bryant Alan Newman 1960 Mahendra Patel Gavin Bateman Anthony Davis Peter Nicol Francis Annett Michael Peppiatt Mel Baxter Cortland Fransella Martin Pagnamenta Michael Boulton- Malcolm Savage Graham Browne Bill Gutteridge Jones Kerry Scott Arch Tait Peter Budden Bob Harper Michael Bowker Roger Ward John Tarling Peter Challands Michael Hawkins John Champion Michael Thomas Philip Dawid 1965 Simon Knight Michael Cliff David Wallington Bruce Drew Nicholas Bentley Paul Lewis-Smith Bob Friedlander Edward Wilde David Duffy David Briggs Michael Norman Mike Godfrey 1962 Edward Pank John Broome Tristan Rees Roberts Stephen Hale Anonymous x2 Maurice Pigott David Burnell Nigel Richardson David Hutt Chris Anderson John Pollard * James Dawnay Brian Simpson John Jackson Nicholas Beresford- Colin Rimer Paul Dowthwaite Mick Snyder Alastair Langlands Jones Neil Sharpe Nick Dyer Jon Wallis Richard Lea David Brewerton Chris Symonds David Fleming Malcolm Wylie Alan Macland David Defoe Richard Hine Stephen Marshall Walter Eglington Hugh Levinson

We endeavour to ensure that the list of donors is as up-to-date and as accurate as possible. However, if there are any errors or omissions please contact us on [email protected] 61

1968 1970 1972 Neil Honebon Nick Eastwell Anonymous x3 Robin Anderson Anonymous x2 Peter Horrocks Stephen Hancock Robert Arnold Jeremy Barber David Bean Mark Jones Ted Jones Dr Bass Bailey Roger Bryan Eric Billington Duncan Keeley Steve Lane Robin Bayford Oliver Dearlove Charles Bird Peter Knight Charles Medlicott David Billett David Fison Bill Croft John Marshall Lewis Petersen John Hardy John Gallagher Christopher Fry Nigel Morley Nick Salter James Hawkins Chris Maude John Griffith-Jones Graham Shorter Robin Tremaine John Hayes David Peters Richard Griffiths Simon Smith Michael Wallbanks Martyn Horner Marcus Rees Roberts Gavin Love 1974 Alan Walls Peter Howell Philip Shaw David Morris Anonymous Roy Warne Justin Jackson Bob Smith Nicholas Morrish Alan Bolton Stephen Warren Peter Judd Tim Stevenson Ian Nutt Guy Brannan John Woodman Steve Laurence Clive Wouters Patrick O’Donovan Adam Clarke-Williams 1976 Peter Mansfield Antony Wyatt Nick Russell Neill Cooper Anonymous Jeremy Mason 1971 John Temple Nicholas Crocker Tom Barton Kerry O’Connell Robert Brodie Christopher Terry Peter Gray Geoffrey Bell Lee Palmer Andy Downs Jim Powell Denis Featherstone Nicholas Ross Rupert Harding Christopher Shorter Rob Highmore Kent Smith Conversations with Andrew Hollingsworth 1969 Richard Holmes Anonymous alumni during our Christopher Homfray Julian Aylmer 600 Phil Nias Bob Calver Philip Prechner Tony Cowsley telephone campaign Rory Silkin Bob Critchlow Bryce Somerville James Davies 1977 Mark Drayton Anonymous x3 Keith Tribe Chris Ellins Richard Brown Brian Hadley David Beckman Ellis Wasson Angus Glennie Andrew Cooper Dirk Hazell Gina Cowen Brian Watson Ed Goodall Vince Gilbert Mike Heap Phyllida Earle Jonathan Wortley Bob Harrap Kevin Grafton Nicholas Hytner Anna Evans David Hinds Trevor Gray 1973 Gerard Martin Mark Hagger Duncan MacInnes Tim Guest Anonymous Frank Morgan Sue Highmore Steve McTiernan Illeperuma Gunatilleke Michael Archer Stephen Norman Lizzie Iron Nicky Padfield Peter Hutton Russell Baker Adrian Parker Janet Legrand Stephen Pride Keith Mundy Bill Cave-Browne- Giles Parsons Caroline Lynas † Cave Ken Roberts Andy Pelkiewicz Peter Sykes Stephen Lynas Jim Curtis Duncan Robertson Julian Richards John Wright Ken MacLean Robert Davies Walter Scott Jim Sleightholme Leon Wynne Catharine Paige Steven Elliott David Segal Clive Thorne 1975 Richard Paige Steve Foster Norman Walford Peter von Lany Anonymous Jonathan Pyne Steven Gould Kevin Welch Rob Wilks Richard Barrie Ed Sautter Nicholas Woodbridge Jeffrey Gruder

† Deceased *Fellow 2015/2016 ** Master 62 2015/16 INFORMATION

Mark Spence 1980 Carl Callaghan Chris Gillespie Michael Dubois David Tunbridge Anonymous Karen Chiappe Joshua Green Jodie Forbes Bridget Wheeler Emma Adams Rachael Craufurd Julie Kitze Vicky Gillard Clare Wikeley Victoria Boyarsky Smith Frank Lobo Lizzie Gold Peter Lawrence 1978 Brian Davies Jonathan Pearce Hugh Marston Alasdair O’Brien Anonymous x2 Charles Elworthy Clare Pollard Dennis May Alan Raymant Penny Barrett Knut Haenelt Nigel Scopes Alan Morgan Angus Whyte Tim Bateman Chris Harris Paul Spring Caroline Morgan Rosamunde Codling Hugh Hillyard-Parker 1983 Sian Sweeney David Oliver Fiona Cornish John Hiscock Anonymous Sarah Wolrige Gordon Michael Polster Julia Dias Susan Holliday Andrew Bird 1986 Rachel Scopes Bill Hayes Barney Lavelle Jon Blundy Anonymous x2 Bill Shurvinton Sarah Hopkins Charles Lloyd Sarah Budgett Christopher Aujard Gary Thornton Judith Knott Richard Millett Susie Clarke Brian Cheffins * Tim West Evan Lavelle Richard Mott Ruth Cox Conan Chitham- 1988 Mark Le Brocq Jeremy Parr Tracy Grinnell Mosley Anonymous Nick Matthews Jim Phillipson Andrew Herring Ross Clark Gerry Boyle Michael Milne Lydia Rettelet Michael Lazarus John Donner Andrew Cannon Peter Needham Colin Stutt Peter Rawlings James Gold Brookes Michael Samuels Nick Viner Sophie Skellett Rachel Hatfield Ian Cook Julie West Chris Winters Cathy Staveley Jayne Hill Alex Daley Paul Williams 1981 1984 Tim Jervis David Ehinger Tim Young Andrew Blankfield Sue Biddle Iain Jourdan Brian Evans Jasper Kent Samantha Godden 1979 John Clarkson * Wendy Caton Katerina Krikos-Davis Sharon Horwitz Anonymous Stephen Davies Gordon Deane Hollie Nielsen Hilary Jones David Allin Mike Dewhurst Rob Durkin Paul Nielsen Brian Lobell Jonathan Cullis Jo Eccleshall Charlotte Grant Simon Pudsey John Naylor Richard Fluck Rachel Hill Anna Griffiths Nicholas Rimmer Ade Odunsi Ian Hawkins Mary Hockaday Sue Hazel Ranil Salgado Simon Page Simon Hayes Geoffrey Hutchinson Daniel Hounslow Matt Schumann Dave Parry Alan Johnson David Middleburgh David Maclay Paddy Talas Mitch Reynolds Oliver Kerr Simon Naylor Kathryn Talintyre David Tricker Guy Thompson Stephen Kinsella Tom Parry Ed Wesson Gary Whitehurst Jon Thornber Iain Macmillan Romola Pocock Lucy Woodall Prabhat Vaze Jim McKee Frances Richards Sue Zealley 1987 Julia Miller Bridget Stutt 1985 Anonymous x2 1989 Richard Parrino Richard Todd Anonymous Roger Aldridge Chris Dale Olivia Pemberton Sarah Webbe Melanie Aird David Bagley Penny Davenport David Ross Russell David Worton Gregory Banner David Barlow Richard Flowers Jenny Tomlinson 1982 Vicky Cannon Stephen Barratt Arwen Johnson Jonathan Turton Martin Armitage-Smith Jonathan Chamberlain Paul Bates Stephen Jones Roger Wedlake Stephen Ashworth Claire Chelton Rebecca Boyle Helen Parham Gareth Williams Patrick Beasley Peter Cobley Harry Brunt Brandon Parkes Neil Blundell Rachel Craig Heather Crawford Sarah Parkes Alan Brinson Douglas Crooke Mark Curran Andrew Pauza Reuben Dakin Fiona Rutter

We endeavour to ensure that the list of donors is as up-to-date and as accurate as possible. However, if there are any errors or omissions please contact us on [email protected] 63

Sonia Spathis Johnny Cornwell Natalie Jewell David Metcalfe Sharon Camilletti Laurence Townley Chris Daniels James Lean Nargis Miller Tom Campbell 1990 Alejandro Escobar Alex Mitchell Chris Nicolay Chun Yip Chow Jules Day Nick Hollinghurst Brian Moss Saskia Restorick Jonn Elledge Stephen Goddard Rupert Holmes Jessica Nash Narind Singh Julie Gadaut Jonathan Hadley Matt James Phil O’Donnell Dan Starkey Robert Gibbons Jason Harcup Ben Jameson Caroline Paul Charlie Withers Ben Hardy Tim Hoggarth Nick Reed Lindsay Pyrah 1997 Emma Hart John Lane Susan Rothera † Strahan Wilson James Badcock Geraint Jones Bill Melvin Robert Sorrell 1995 Lynn Dowson Irenka Lennon Peter Ormerod Jeremy Stuber Amy Buckley Phil Gibson Lauri Ora Chris Pickup Pei-San Tan Steve Buckley Jonathan Goulden Nicholas Paul Giselle Rowlinson Olga Votis Mike Burrows Simon Halliwell Andy Shepherd Alec Ryrie 1993 Claudia Cenedese Anna Hancock Mahmut Tuncer Andy Saitch Anonymous Oisin Crawley Ruth Harper Bill Watkins Nigel Skinner Celyn Armstrong Andy Croxson Joel Harrison 2000 Yen Yu Dave Basnett Linda Hayllar Tom Harvey Anonymous x3 1991 Nicky Buckley Dan Houghton Paul Johnston Tahl Artell-Holtzman Anonymous Emily Church Sue Houghton Awais Khan Chris Balmer Ben Brown Pete Church Sean Jauss Alidad Moaveni Jenny Balmer James Chappell Sophie de Laguiche Patrick Lynch Emily Norton Paul Brennan Rafael Chavez-Cartaya Sian Evans Mary Malpas Prudence Rayner Daniel Burridge Rachel Chenery Vicky Giblin David Miller Davina Silver Rebecca Burton Lucy Coles Martin Gostling Suzanne Milner Dan Smith Will Curtis James Halstead Arianne Heinrichs Sam Overend Kate Stalin Rebecca Foreman Vicky Johnston Valerie Hirzel Deborah Record James Wildman Isaac Fung Timothy Kelly Lauren Jauss As Richards 1998 Caroline Griffiths Helen Lamprell Rosie Kert Barbara Rigby Riccardo Bennett- David Hart Lleona Lee Aaron Lee Stevie Roach Lovsey Adam Joseph Rebecca Linssen Stephanie Mills Andrew Wong Caroline Boggust Gabbie Joseph Giménez Simon Moore * Jennifer Zary Nima Farighi John Mason Stephen Penn Neil Palmer 1996 Farrah Gillani Victoria Mason Graham Pullan * Michael Parkinson Anonymous x5 Andrew Lennon Alexandra Mitchell Aviva Schnur Richard Proudlove Jessica Barrett Des McEwan Michael Nabarro Iain Tuddenham Ian Shaw Alan Bird Vikram Nanwani Corinna Parker Robert Volterra 1994 Ed Drew Donna Smith Robert Paton Claire Willis Anonymous Matthew Goldin Peter Stephens Ramesh Perera Edgar Allen Gareth Thompson Aroul Ramadass 1992 Will Hayllar Vicki Bales James Tomlins Carolina Sanchez Anonymous Eleanor James Tim Brewer Lisa Tomlins Reji Vettasseri Razia Ahamed Adam Jobson Simon Grimshaw Matthew Turner Aaron Walder Nick Anderton Nicholas McKay Chris Hancock Henrik Wijkander Joan Barrett Sophie McKay 2001 James Hand Henry Clarke Akhil Mehra 1999 Helen Amos Robert Howard Jonathan Colvin Clare Merrifield Anonymous Ralph Elias Andrew Ing Rob Merrifield Morten Bertelsen Rhys Evans

† Deceased *Fellow 2015/2016 ** Master 64 2015/16 INFORMATION

Laura Harrison Bethan McKay Hannah Consterdine Alice Gutteridge Rose Leyland Rachel Hughes Robert Mundy Abhishek Deshpande Luke Jesson Lindsey Mannion Saul Lemer James Norman Mark Ellul Adam Kirby Joshua Marks Tara Lyons Clare O’Hara Laura Hurley Sean Koh Daniel Montgomery Ben Musgrave Abigail Pounds Joe Oakley Sarah Lebrecht Claire Nicholas David Peters Laura Wastall Mike Pearson Andy McGowan Frederick Parker Phil Reed Louis Yee Rachelle Shintag Priti Nigam Ffion Pugh Tom Robins Pamela Zinn Matthew Webb Alexander Riddick Oliver Raizon Niall Sayers 2004 Steven Wilson Georgia Sams Olivia Read Alex Simpson Tom Bennett * 2006 Hassan Shaikh Rebecca Sage Euan Spence Harriet Clark Doug Chalmers 2008 Jamie Till Tomo Togo Claire Dawkins Michael Chanin Anonymous x2 Sally Woodcock 2002 Hazel Gilkes Fleur Delany Lauren Arthur Robert Woodward Helen Ashdown Sachin Gunga Lara Dose Kate Aufses 2009 Chris Brookes Jenni Halton Emily Dunning Jenny Boon Michael Carson Heeran Buhecha Nicholas Laux Ying-Che Hsieh Fiona Brand Arjun Dasgupta Samia Burridge Andrew Forsyth Chu Chen Shuangzi Guo Graham Cowgill Charlotte Hill Bryony Dean Lindsay Millington Maddy Gowlett Duncan Needham Tristram Hager Robert Sills Ellie Hollingworth Vito Videtta Ian Jacobs-Dean 1,143 2010 Gorazd Kert Hattie Peachey Anna King Ramandeep Singh Caroline Parr donors during the year 2011 Christopher Parr Patricia Blanco Jeff Snyder Oliver Goldstein James Thomas David Lum Lucy Masters Alex Brett Peter Kozelka Kate Willetts Sally McGrath David Molony Laura Carter Ariadne Lyroudia Nadia Medlicott Katrin Rosendahl Kirsten Charles 2003 Aran Rezaei James Munk Yasmeen Rouben Richard Cook Anonymous x2 Christian Von Drehle Caroline Ardron Afi Narh-Saam Jamie Sawyer Oliver Cooke 2012 Simon Beaumont Edmund Perry Winson Tan Alex Cox Paul Ibru Theo Bell Erica Perry 2007 Thomas Crooke 2013 Krishna Chatterjee Lucy Saunders Anonymous Lulu Earle Anna Edgar Bertie Clayton William Sorby Laurie Coldwell Phil Ewels Ben Lock Keira Driansky Jack Thorne * Sophie Daniels Donald Fraser Christina Schneider Owen Fry 2005 Edward Dickson Madeleine Fresko- Brown Audrey Sebatindira David Greenwood Thomas Barlow Jacq Emkes Arisa Harada Edward Tidball Flora Greenwood Angela Brooks Caroline Freeman Amy Holroyd Jordan Jacobs Jason Carey Anna Goodhart David Knowles Margaret Mather Gordon Chan Ben Goodwill

We endeavour to ensure that the list of donors is as up-to-date and as accurate as possible. However, if there are any errors or omissions please contact us on [email protected] 65

2014 Karen & John Marshall Witter Colm McGrath * Charles Black (1955) Cobi Akinrele Millie & John Martin Orimos Isabelle McNeill * David Bowen (1976) Dan Marlowe Ellen Mason Procter & Gamble Gunnar Moller * Jeffery Bowman Katie Williams Alex Morris (USA) James Montgomery * (1955) Jonathan & Karen The Gladys Krieble Simon Moore (1991) * Martin Brand (1958) 2015 Delmas Foundation Myers Jeremy Morris ** David Brewerton Chris Elliott The WYNG (1962) Sue Neil Andrew Murray * Sophie Bindslev Foundation Company Robert Brodie (1971) Mario Nicolaou Ltd Tamsin O’Connell * Leah Hembury (1963) Wayne & Caroline Verizon William O’Reilly * 2016 Padgett Dominic Brooks (1954) Winton Capital Christopher Padfield * Kimberley Watt Barbara Panvel Management Ltd. Ross Cann (1987) Stephen Plant * Michael & Julie Mark Cannon Brookes Friends Partridge Current and Jordan Pober (1960) Kenneth Barry former College John Pollard (1963) * Anne Patterson Fellows and staff Ralph Cantor (1958) Chris & Angie Birkle Lucia Prauscello * Anne Pope James Adamcheski- Guy Carless (1951) Jim & Linda Brandi Carole Price Halson Graham Pullan (1993) * Alec Chadwick (1941) Charles & Caroline John & Jane Richards Andrew Arthur * Pedro Ramos Pinto * Peter Clarke Burrows Alex & Denise Robert Asher * Cristiano Ristuccia * Colin Colston (1958) Ronnie Carless Robertson Lorand Bartels * David Rubenstein Alan Colvill (1975) Andrew Casey, in Nevill & Alison Rogers memory of Andrew Emma Bennett Martin Ruehl * Michael Cowper Medlicott (1961) John & Karen Ruis Tom Bennett (2004) * David Runciman * (1949) Anna-Mei Chadwick Mark Spittles John Biggins * Jan Schramm * Tony Cross (1957) Janet Chan Mark Stockdale John Bradley * Jonathan Steinberg Donald Cullingworth (1966) William & Una Coales Brian & Gaynor Stretch Adam Branch * Rachelle Stretch John Cunningham Jeff Cook Joanna Switalski Ginny Swepson Vladimir Brljak * (1955) Nicole Craven Philip & Anne Tung Brian Cheffins (1986) * Jack Thorne (2004) * Yep David Custance (1955) Jackie & David Tadashi Tokieda * John Clarkson (1981) * Claire Daunton Crawford Ruth Watkins John Trowsdale * Sara Collar Martin Daunton Graciella Edo Grigg Jon & Sylvette Wood Sasha Turchyn * David Erdos * Laurie Davis (1983) Malcolm & Selina Sylvette & Jon Wood Ramji Elliott Phil Ewels (2008) Edward Day (1952) Ben Wright Venkataramanan * Linda & Glyn Evans Paul ffolkes Davis * Rob Deeth (1982) Trusts, Foundations Stephen Watterson * Nick & Kathryn Evans David Fleming (1965) Richard Devitt (1959) and Corporations Thomas Evans Simon Guest * List of Legators Darrin Disley (1991) Including companies Anonymous x21 Michael & Ann Gaunt operating employee Louise Haywood * Andy Downs (1976) Chris & Carol matched giving Alison Hennegan * Jane Andrew (1988) David Duffy (1963) schemes Greenslade Mike Hobson * Kate Arkless Gray Andrew Duncan (1998) David Grimwood Anonymous x2 Clare Jackson * (1968) Roger Backhouse Harry Guest Anglo American David Jeffrey Andrew Dyke (1964) Charitable Foundation (1958) Mark & Carol Hembury Vasant Kumar * Joe Eaton (1961) Avery-Tsui Foundation Fiona Bacon (1986) Michael Herrtage Edmund Kunji * Julian Ebsworth (1960) BNY Mellon Penny Barrett (1978) Emily Hinks Jim Laidlaw (1956) Bob Ely (1950) Environmental Peter Bell (1943) Geoffrey & Kim Services Association John Langbein (1964) Paul ffolkes Davis Holland Nicholas Beresford- Education Trust Sarah Lebrecht (2007) Jones (1962) Michael Flintoff (1944) Louise Lockey Lafayette Photography Lindley Lentati * David Bickley (1959) David Ford (1958) James & Vicky Mackie MedImmune LLC Alexander Marr * Michael Biddle (1958) Frank Gargent (1969) Kathy Mansfield Morgan Stanley Dean Will Matthews * Sue Biddle (1984) Matt Gaskarth (1988)

† Deceased *Fellow 2015/2016 ** Master 66 2015/16 INFORMATION

Philip Gaussen (1956) Richard Jarvis (1960) Roger Payne (1957) Frederic Tunbridge Henry Goldberg Joel Junker (1977) Sam Pedlar (1944) (1944) (1955) Tony Kallend (1956) Anthony Phillips David Tyler (1971) Richard Griffiths Tony Kay (1953) John Pickering (1957) John Waddington (1972) (1960) Adrian Kellett (1957) Charles Potter (1986) Michael Grime (1960) Bill Wade (1960) Ian Kelly (1985) Andrew Powell John Guinness (1956) Gladys Walden-Aspy Nick Kenealy (1960) (1992) Colin Hall (1961) Ellis Wasson (1972) Alan Kerbey Jonathan Prichard Peter Handford (1968) (1971) Jeremy Watt (1967) Thomas Kinsey (1949) Nathanael Caroline Harding- Peter Readman David West (1954) John Kitching (1955) Lloyd Society Gelbard (2001) (1966) Bridget Wheeler The Society recognises Richard Hardwick Peter Lawrence David Rees (1949) (1977) (1982) those who have (1959) Harold Rich (1946) Colin Whitby- remembered the Grant Lewison (1958) Ewan Harper (1958) Ian Rippon (1976) Strevens (1965) College in their will Bob Lunnon (1970) and is named after the Michael Harrison Neil Roach (1949) Edward Wilde (1961) (1959) Edward Lyndon- Master of Trinity Hall Paul Rose (1953) Martin Williams (1966) from 1710 to 1735 David Hartland (1976) Stanford (1956) Graham Ross Russell Geoff Windsor-Lewis whose generosity Colin Hayes (1962) Patrick Mackie (1958) (1956) was fundamental in (1953) Alison Maguire (1990) improving the fabric of Richard Heginbotham Andrew Sandilands Tony Wingate (1951) the College. There are (1966) Graham Martin (1957) (1970) Chris Wiseman currently 170 members, Bobby Hepworth Anthony McMurtrie Robin Sewell (1980) (1956) who are invited to an (1939) (1950) Clive Wouters (1970) annual event in College. David Shipley (1963) Martin Hill (1954) Bill Melvin (1990) George Young (1971) Far from being an act Michael Shipley (1956) David Hinds (1969) David Metcalfe (1996) of finality, the gift of a Neil Slater (1977) legacy is merely the Richard Hine (1965) Basil Middleton (1953) Names in bold Paul Sloane (1969) are new Legators beginning. Legacy gifts William Hodgson Richard Miles (1954) give the opportunity for (1969) Nicholas Sorby 2015/16 a whole new generation Graham Moore (1955) Michael Hood (1957) Duncan Sparkes of students to benefit Frank Morgan (1974) (1979) from the educational David Howe (1960) Roger Newman Susan Stobbs and life-enhancing Michael Howley (1954) opportunities provided Ian Stone (1977) Ruth Hughes (2003) Phil Nias (1976) by Trinity Hall and the Steve Street (1974) College is most grateful Keith Humphreys Ian Nutt (1972) to those who have (1952) David Stross (1942) Paul Orchard-Lisle chosen to remember Giles Hunt (1948) (1958) David Thomas (1962) Trinity Hall in their will. Kit Hunter Gordon Alan Oswald (1963) Derek Thomas (1950) (1976) Stephen Pálffy James Thomas Nicholas Hytner (1956) (2002) (1974) Ben Paster (1970) Nigel Thomas (1955) John Isaac (1944) Nick Patterson (1965) Clive Thorne (1971) Daniel Janner (1976)

Legacies were received from: The Late Kenneth Brown (1935) The Late Henry Gatford (1946) The Late Roger Cowley (1957) and The Late Sheila Gatford The Late Alan Elliot (1951) The Late Nigel Hackett (1952) Sir Nathanael Lloyd The Late Arthur Ferguson (1941) The Late Michael Whear (1941)

We endeavour to ensure that the list of donors is as up-to-date and as accurate as possible. However, if there are any errors or omissions please contact us on [email protected] 67

Trinity Hall Events Our online events calendar can be found at: www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/events Dining Rights and Alumni Benefits Alumni Dining Rights are open to both undergraduate alumni who have received or been invited to receive their MA and graduate alumni who have received their degree and who are not currently in statu pupillari and in residence. Dining Rights entitle those eligible to dine in College free of charge (wines charged at cost) on any four Thursdays or Sundays each year during Full Term. A guest may be brought in place of one of these four occasions. Please book with the Butler on [email protected] or 01223 766333. Alumni are also entitled to discounts on guest rooms and private dinners booked in College, to use our sports facilities and to book our punts during the summer months. Further details can be found at: www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/ alumni/benefits/ CAMCard and University Benefits All alumni who matriculated at Cambridge are entitled to a CAMCard from the University Development & Get Alumni Relations Office. This entitles holders to access the colleges including King’s College Chapel, membership Involved of the University College Centre and The Trinity Hall Review is various discounts at Cambridge hotels, shops and restaurants and punting. produced by the Alumni & For more details see: Development Office at www.alumni.cam.ac.uk Trinity Hall. We welcome any Alumni are eligible for membership feedback on the publication. of the Fitness, Strength and Condition Suite at the University of Cambridge Sports Centre (visit the website: Please contact: www.sport.cam.ac.uk) and can apply [email protected] for access to the University Library and use the University Careers Service. The University Alumni website has further details on their events, the travel programme and University merchandise. Visit the website: www.alumni.cam.ac.uk 68 GET IN VOLVED

Trinity Hall Help our students: Join our career Gifts network We are grateful to any alumni who are willing to offer careers advice to our students and recent graduates.

For further information see www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/ careernetwork

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@TrinityHallCamb www.THalumni.net

We have a variety of College gifts available to alumni including sterling silver cufflinks, mugs, playing cards and the Trinity Hall Dog.

See our full gift range at: www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/giftshop 69 Make a difference: How to support the College

Gifts to the College can be made in a variety of ways, including regularly by Direct Debit or Give As You Earn (GAYE) or as one-off donations by credit card, cheque or charity voucher. It is possible to make an online donation to any of our funds by Direct Debit or credit card via our website: www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/onlinegiving The College is a registered charity so donations made by UK taxpayers are eligible for Gift Aid. Tax-efficient giving is also available from some European countries, Canada and the USA. Alumni in the USA can give tax efficiently via Cambridge in America: www.cantab.org More information about methods of giving can be found on: www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/supporters/ how-to-make-a-gift or please contact [email protected]

Black & White Ball Marking 40 years of women at Trinity Hall Drinks reception Dinner Live music SATURDAY 1 JULY 2017 Open to all alumni. Partners and guests welcome. Booking open in SAVE THE DATE the New Year

www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk/th40 Alumni & Development Office Trinity Hall, Trinity Lane, Cambridge, CB2 1TJ

E: [email protected] T: +44 (0) 1223 332550 F: +44 (0) 1223 765157 W: www.trinhall.cam.ac.uk