EVENTS AND REUNIONS FOR 2 018 /19 ISSUE 18 MICHAELMAS 2018 GONVILLE & CAIUS COLLEGE

Installation of the New Master (Fellows only) ...... Monday 1 October

Michaelmas Full Term begins ...... Tuesday 2 October Commemoration of Benefactors Lecture, Service & Feast ...... Sunday 18 November

First Christmas Carol Service (6pm) ...... Wednesday 28 November

Second Christmas Carol Service (4.30pm) ...... Thursday 29 November

Michaelmas Full Term ends ...... Friday 30 November

Varsity Rugby Match ...... Thursday 6 December Caius Choir Alumni Christmas Carols at St George’s Church, Hanover Square, London ...... Thursday 6 December

Lent Full Term begins ...... Tuesday 15 January

Development Campaign Board Meeting ...... Thursday 26 February

Second Year Parents’ Hall ...... Thursday 14 & Friday 15 March

Lent Full Term ends ...... Friday 15 March

Telephone Campaign begins ...... Saturday 16 March

MAs’ Dinner ...... Friday 22 March

Annual Gathering (1990, 1991 & 1992) ...... Saturday 6 April

Master’s Visit to New York ...... Monday 8 – Friday 12 April

Easter Full Term begins ...... Tuesday 23 April

Stephen Hawking Circle Dinner ...... Saturday 11 May

Easter Full Term ends ...... Friday 14 June

May Week Party for Benefactors ...... Saturday 15 June

Caius Club May Bumps Event ...... Saturday 15 June

Graduation Lunch ...... Thursday 27 June

Admissions Open Days ...... Thursday 4 & Friday 5 July

Annual Gathering (1996, 1997 & 1998) ...... Saturday 6 July

Alumni Weekend ...... Friday 20 – Sunday 22 September

Admissions Open Day ...... Saturday 21 September

Michaelmas Full Term begins ...... Tuesday 1 October

...always aCaian Remembering Stephen Hawking Passing the Caduceus Editor: Mick Le Moignan Reassessing Editorial Board: James Howell, Dr Anne Lyon, Dr Jimmy Altham, Victoria Thompson

Design: Derrin Mappledoram and William Harvey Artwork and production: Cambridge Marketing Limited Women only to Antarctica Gonville & Caius College Trinity Street Cambridge CB2 1TA

Tel: +44 (0)1223 3396 76

Email: [email protected] www.cai.cam.ac.u k/alumni

Registered Charity No. 1137536 ...Always a Caian 1 D a n

W From the Director of Development h i t e It’s my pleasure to welcome you to this, the eighteenth edition of Once a Caia n... , in which we mourn the loss of our best-known Fellow, probably the most famous scientist in the world, and mark with gratitude the retirement of our Master and Senior Bursar. Earlier this academic year we also lost Professor Roger Carpenter (197 3). At Roger’s memorial service in June, the President read from one of John Donne’s Devotions upon Emergent Occasions , ‘No man is an islan d... ’. Conten ts D D D a a a n n The College is diminished by such losses, but it continues, now for 670 years. n

W W W h h h i i i t t t e e Individuals are shaped by it and play their part in shaping it for a year or three – e or, like our Senior Fellow, Michael Prichard, for almost 70 years. Caius is so much 2 4 8 greater than the sum of its parts because we all remain part of it for the rest of our lives. Once a Caia n...... always a Caian. The College’s continuity is re flected in our mutual sense of belonging.

The main themes of this issue are history and travel. We reappraise the achievements of John Caius (152 9) and William Harvey (159 3); we learn about a Roman theatre and sundial unearthed by our DoS in Classics, Alessandro Launaro (2013); we hear the story of the meeting our man at the UN, Francis Vendrell © H S

(1964) had with the fearsome founder of the Taliban in Afghanistan. I report on i o

r R

m C o a y e m a w l

some continuing responsibilities of the College which date back to medieval times. a C r d o

l B l e o g u e n

o d f

S

We hear from two young scientists who have been on a life-changing voyage to u r

1122 g 18 20 e o n s

Antarctica and we celebrate the rare award of the Pushkin Medal to Professor Polly o f

E n g

Blakesley, for arranging a rich cultural exchange with Russia. We congratulate l a n d Duncan Maskell (197 9) on his appointment as Vice-Chancellor of the University of Melbourne. Closer to home, we marvel at the spectacular winter light show, e-luminate Cambridge , curated by James Fox (2010) and we unveil a multi-million pound plan to equip the College with brand new kitchens fit for the 21st century.

About the time you receive this issue, Caius will install Dr Pippa Rogerson as the College’s 43rd Master, the first woman ever to hold the position, only 40 years after 2 A Universal Superhero – remembering Professor Stephen Hawking David Howell Jones (1957), who retires the first admission of women as students and Fellows. Pippa inherits a College that 4 Passing the Caduceus – the Master and Senior Bursar re flect on the past this year as President six years of the Caius Club, at is stronger and surer than ever about its purpose and values – and deeply grateful the Caius Club event for the loyal and generous support it receives from Caians all around the world. 6 Windows of Opportunity – our man at the UN: Francis Vendrell on the last day 8 Si Monumentum Requiri s... Michael Prichard’s magnum opus on Caius of the May Bumps, leaving 12 Heartbeat – one of our first and greatest scientific researchers: William Harvey no room for doubt about 14 A New Challenge – Duncan Maskell leaves Cambridge for Melbourne which College 16 Classics for a New Age: Alessandro Launaro digs Ancient History he supports 18 Cambridge e-luminated – by James Fox, a man of many colours James Howell (200 9) 20 Why Antarctica? Two Caians on a unique leadership programme Director of Development 22 To Russia with Love – Rosalind Polly Blakesley wins the Pushkin Medal 24 Kitchen Refurbishment – a vital undertaking for the College “Your gift to Caius also counts towards the 26 Thanks to our Benefactors Dear Worl d... Yours, Cambridge Campaign” 34 CaiNotes 36 Advowsons and Livings – James Howell revisits some of the College’s historic responsibilities

Cover photos by Alessandro Launaro, Sir Cam, Maddie Mitchell and James Howell

e it h W n a D 2 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 3 L u c

the nature of black holes, those forbidding y

To the world at large, W a

prisons which were once supposed to be so r d Stephen Hawking (196 5) deep and dense that no matter, nor even was a legend, an light, could ever escape from them. Lecturing to alumni in Cambridge, thirty years ago, inspiration and the Stephen wondered fancifully if black holes most celebrated might be a gateway to another universe, but then he found a chink in their armour: since scientist of our they emit radiation (now fittingly known as age, who defied Hawking Radiation) he showed that even black holes must inevitably shrink and fade medical science to away in the course of time. As his student fulfil his own destiny. and friend, Professor Fay Dowker, pointed out, in an eloquent tribute at his funeral in To Caians, he was also Cambridge, ‘This brilliant, creative, transformative discovery means that black w the most loved and w w holes – objects made of pure spacetime – . g o z

e obey the same laws of thermodynamics treasured member of our r o

g The Dean, the Revd. Dr Cally Hammond (2005) leads the procession into Great St Mary’s Church, followed . c that govern chemical reactions and steam o

m by six Caius Porters carrying Stephen’s coffin College family. engines’. Time was a constant fascination for Royal Society, to call for urgent action on Notwithstanding his public persona and ost of us need pen and Stephen. In 1963, when he was 21, the climate change, which he saw as the most the statesmanlike support he gave to serious paper or a calculator doctors who first diagnosed his amyotrophic serious threat to our planet and human causes, Stephen was also a family man and to solve any but the lateral sclerosis (or Lou Gehrig’s disease), existence. dedicated to his children and grandchildren. simplest mathematical gave him two years to live. Stephen added 53 Space travel was another fascination. The exceptional stresses he endured would problems. Stephen had years to that estimate – the exact span of his He believed humanity must establish have tested any marriage and his story was Mto carry out incredibly complex calculations Fellowship at Caius. Time was also the subject settlements on other planets – and eagerly sympathetically told in the feature film in his head. His imagination admitted no of his best-selling book, A Brief History of accepted an invitation to experience The Theory of Everything , starring Eddie limits, reaching out to the edges of the Time, which he described as ‘probably the weightlessness in person, on a space travel Redmayne and based on Jane Hawking’s universe and back to the beginning of time. least-read, most-bought book ever’. training course in the USA. For that, he even memoir. After his death, his children chose His disability was a savage personal tragedy, He was generous with his own time, missed the official opening of the Stephen to remember one of his gentler re flections: but it seemed to open windows to other, always ready to encourage anyone else who Hawking Building at Caius by the University’s ‘It would not be much of a universe if it compensatory abilities, denied to lesser had been stricken by a disability. Indeed, he Chancellor, Prince Philip – but filmed a wasn’t home to the people you love’. mortals. became a public champion for the rights of handsome apology for his absence, which The College was Stephen’s second home In his own field of cosmology, he the disabled, always grateful for any help he was shown on screen at many times life-size. and it was wonderfully appropriate that six combined fresh insights in gravitational had received, such as that from the National Stephen really was larger than life. He Caius Porters, led by the Head Porter Russell physics and quantum mechanics, to reassess Stephen experiencing weightlessness when training for space travel on Zero G’s parabolic aircraft in 2007 Health Service, which he supported strongly was well aware that he had become, for his Holmes, carried his coffin into Great St throughout his life. He was grateful to Caius, grandchildren’s generation, almost a Mary’s for the funeral, attended by the D

a not only for his Fellowship, but for making character from science fiction, with his Master, Master-elect and most of the n

W

h special efforts to accommodate his needs, mechanical voice and ubiquitous wheelchair. Fellowship. There will be many memorials to i t e such as the lift that enabled him to dine Several appearances as a cartoon character in this remarkable man, in Cambridge and regularly at High Table. The Simpsons and Futurama and one as the elsewhere. The tribute from Caius will take He never forgot that, when he was taken only living person ever to feature in Star Trek: the form of a simple engraved flagstone set ill in Switzerland in 1985 and lost the ability The Next Generation conferred iconic, almost outside his old room, K2 in Caius Court, to speak, the College chartered a plane to fly superheroic status on him, which appealed bearing, as he wished, his equation on the him home and organised a roster of students enormously to his sense of humour. entropy of a black hole and the admonition: to read to him in Addenbrooke’s Hospital. He ‘Remember to look up at the star s... and not A l a n

repaid that debt many times over by agreeing down at your feet’. F e r s

to host an intimate, annual dinner for h Stephen followed Isaac Newton in t members of the Stephen Hawking Circle, serving as Cambridge University’s Lucasian donors who had given Caius at least £50,000. Professor of Mathematics, for thirty years, Each year, he spoke to about a dozen from 1979 to 2009. It is fitting that his members and their partners about his life at mortal remains now lie beside Newton’s, in Caius, sat patiently for photographs with Westminster Abbey. At an age when most each couple and presented them all with are setting out on life’s journey, Stephen was personally thumb-printed copies of A Brief cruelly condemned to live in a black hole History of Time . that few can truly imagine. He believed, He used his celebrity to gain support for however, not in God, but in the proposition: the many causes he believed in. This rather ‘where there is life, there is hope’ and he shy, reserved undergraduate, deprived of triumphed over adversity by proving that, mobility and speech, became one of the great however black the hole, a little radiation can science communicators of our time. He escape from it. Stephen radiated more joined forces with his old friend, Professor warmth, wit and wisdom than most of us Lida Kindersley carving the memorial flagstone Martin Rees, the Astronomer Royal and to be placed outside Stephen’s old room, K2 in could manage in a thousand lifetimes. We All members of the Stephen Hawking Circle and their partners came to celebrate Stephen reaching fifty years as a Fellow of Caius in 201 5 former Master of Trinity and President of the Caius Court shall not see his like again. 4 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 5 Y D a a o n

L W i a h n i g t e

The Senior Bursar, Dr David Secher (197 3) and the Master, Professor Sir (196 2). Far right, the Master's Caduceus, presented by Dr Caius The Senior Bursar-elect, Mr Robert Gardiner and the Master-elect, Dr Pippa Rogerson (198 6)

D a n W h i Passing the Caduceus te n the coming academic year, Caius through. Alan says: ‘Caius has each is distinguished in different ways, in For David Secher, looking back Bursar is ‘to ensure that tutors can support dedication of the Investments Committee. will have not only a new Master, had an enormous effect on me, both in academic and non-academic spheres.’ They on his time as Senior Bursar, financial students in need’. Six years on, the endowment has grown by Dr Pippa Rogerson (198 6), the first terms of success and in the happiness I’ve are: the late Professor Patricia Crone (199 0), considerations were naturally uppermost, Early in his six years as Bursar, David £80 million, restoring Caius to its position as woman to be Master in the 670 had in my life’. the Islamic historian; Julie Deane (198 4), the but he was also keen to use his experience declared, in the College’s campaign one of the four or five wealthiest Cambridge years of the College’s history, but With impeccable timing, Alan became entrepreneur and founder of the Cambridge in management to improve the managerial brochure, Caius to the Future : ‘Caius needs at colleges.’ aIlso a new Senior Bursar, Robert Gardiner, Master exactly fifty years after coming up Satchel Company; Carolyn Fairbairn (198 0), structure of the College. He appointed the least £200 million more in its endowment, Another of the successes of their joint who has been Bursar at Murray Edwards to Caius as an undergraduate and he Director-General of the Confederation of College’s first communications officer, who at current valuations, if it is to continue to terms of office is the development of twelve College (formerly New Hall). addressed graduands at his final Dr Caius British Industry; and Christine Langan (198 4), has been most in fluential in modernising offer its students the same benefits that new houses at Gillies Close, in east Their predecessors, Professor Sir Alan Dinner fifty years after receiving his PhD Head of BBC Films. the College website and communications previous generations have enjoyed.’ He Cambridge. The name commemorates Sir Fersht (196 2) and Dr David Secher (197 3) here. He has an excellent rapport with Alan was surprised to realise that what all round; and David rationalised the knew from day one that he would be Harold Gillies (19 01) who developed many have been a formidable team for the past six students and at the start of the academic he will miss most is conferring degrees on administration elsewhere. When the retiring when he reached the statutory age of the techniques of modern plastic surgery, years. As they both fully intended, they leave year, he exhorted all final year students to graduates: ‘especially as I now have the Latin Domestic Bursar left, the College took the of 70, so there was never any question of when treating wounded soldiers in the First the College in an even stronger position than do especially well in the Tripos: ‘if not for word-perfect! Well, you try saying “ Te etiam opportunity to change the system, so that achieving the whole of that target during World War. they found it. Alan says his first task as you, then for me, because I want to go out admitto ad eundum gradum ” 150 times!’ the new Operations Director, Jennifer Philips his own tenure, but he wanted to set the The endowment has always held a mix Master was to make sure David agreed to be in a blaze of glory!’ The tactic worked He is, however, looking forward to the (199 6) would be independent on a day-to- College on an ambitious and strategic of financial investments and property, but Bursar: ‘I worked very hard to persuade him, brilliantly because, as he announced at the next phase of his life ‘with real enthusiasm’. day basis, but ultimately responsible to the course, based on sound principles of David joined forces with Alan, whose time because I thought he was the ideal choice’. Dinner, 93% of them graduated with either He is moving across Caius Court to K2, Senior Bursar. Jennifer coxed the University financial management. on the Investment Committee had been David says: ‘I never aspired to be Bursar, a First or a 2:1. Stephen Hawking’s old room, where he hopes Women’s Blue Boat and various Caius VIIIs. Caians of all ages rose to this challenge marked by a strong preference for the latter, because I don’t have the financial Alan says he is ‘a long-term supporter of to be doing some teaching and organising Her husband, Patrick Heck (199 4), a and gave generously. Over 27% make to exploit the College property, which has qualifications that most Colleges look for, equal opportunities for women and I’m seminars for undergraduates in Natural consultant at Papworth Hospital, is also a donations to the College every year – a proved successful. When they took office, the but Alan was very persuasive. He said we proud that we now fly the Rainbow Flag at Sciences. ‘I’ll also be active on the Research Caian, as is her brother, so she too knew the higher percentage than any other Oxbridge endowment was worth about £120 million. would make a good team and he thought Caius. I’m also particularly proud of the Fellowship Committee and I’m setting up a College well. David has also ‘worked hard to college. Alan and David are hugely It has grown every year and is now over at that stage it would be helpful to have increase in the number of women Fellows fund to support Caian undergraduates and ensure that communications between the appreciative of this generosity. David also £200 million, so considerable progress has a Bursar who knew the College well.’ during my time as Master and the election postgraduates in research projects and Tutorial Office and the Bursary work pays tribute to ‘the invaluable help of the been made – but they have thoughtfully left Both men are Caians through and of four Honorary Fellows who are women: conference travel.’ efficiently’. He believes a top priority for any Endowment Manager, Nicky Robert, and the some work for their successors to do! 6 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 7 D a

n backed militias burned much of Dili and

W h i

t forced a third of the population into West e Timor. In reaction, two weeks later, the Security Council authorised the deployment of an Australian-led multinational force. In this case, the UN played a vital role. Nothing has given me greater satisfaction Windows of than this outcome. And it happened because we seized that window of opportunity. They don’t remain open for long – and if you miss the moment, the opportunity is gone.’ Francis had been a traveller and a citoyen du monde from his youth: his childhood at a Jesuit School in Franco’s Spain instilled a deep distrust of Opportunity authoritarian regimes. He says he was ‘always a hopeless Anglophile’ and got into trouble at school for rubbing out the slogan by Mick Le Moignan (2004) ‘Gibraltar for Spain’ that another pupil had Francis Vendrell (196 4) with Dr Anne Lyon (20 01) the College’s previous Director of Development chalked on the blackboard. As a Law student The Peacemaker: at Barcelona University, he joined a ost of us have views on after all constitute half of humanity.’ Three expensive cars, large mansions and second clandestine political party, the Catalan international affairs weeks after this meeting, Omar issued a homes in Dubai and elsewhere. The Taliban Christian Democrats. Francis Vendrell (1964) and world politics but fatwa banning the farming and trading of believed they were not oppressing women He completed a second Law degree at few are able to play a opium poppies as unIslamic. but protecting them: in the mi d-1990s, they King’s College, London and Part I of the UK

D significant part in the As Francis sees it, the unique window of gained popular support by saving young girls Bar exams. Then his father, a Spanish a n

W great game. Francis Vendrell (196 4) used his opportunity for peace in Afghanistan came in and boys from being raped by the warlords. barrister, asked Lord McNair (190 6) to

h M i t e studies in History and International Law to September 20 01, when terrorists flew They then punished the perpetrators. facilitate his admission to Caius to do a do just that, in the course of his 3 4-year hijacked passenger planes into the twin The UN’s power is quite limited – and Master’s in International Law. Francis did career with the United Nations. In diplomacy towers of the World Trade Center. At the Francis learned to acknowledge those that but first completed Part II of the and conflict resolution, Francis believes the time, he was conducting a mediation limitations early in his career. The Secretary- History Tripos under the supervision of Neil windows of opportunity are few and far- between the Taliban, the Northern Alliance General has ‘an inherent right of good McKendrick (195 8). He remembers that time between: they tend to open without warning leadership in Tajikistan, the former Afghani offices’ whenever there is a dispute between as ‘the two happiest years of my life.’ and will soon slam shut if they are not seized King, who was in Rome, and other Afghan states or within a state. In 1983, Javier Perez After so many years of education, the at once. exile groups. After 9/11, he realised it was de Cuellar offered his good offices to need for gainful employment was looming For Francis, the highlights of a life spent only a matter of time before the Taliban fell, mediate on the question of East Timor larger. He spent his summer vacations trying to bring peace to some of the world’s and told UN-HQS they needed to have a between Portugal, the former colonial power, working as a junior at a law firm in South bloodiest warzones included receiving multi-national force ready to step in before and Indonesia, which had invaded the Africa, but he didn’t want to move there personal threats from Chile’s murderous the Northern warlords could seize power. Territory and annexed it in 1976. For many permanently because of apartheid. ‘With dictator, General Pinochet, mediating For whatever reasons, his request fell on years Indonesia adamantly opposed a UN- qualifications in Spanish and British law, I between combatants in Guatemala, deaf ears. organised referendum. They claimed that the feared being pigeon-holed as a commercial Nicaragua and El Salvador, helping to win ‘I was very upset by the way the inhabitants had chosen to be part of lawyer – and I didn’t particularly care for independence for East Timor, and acting as Americans handled it. They just filled the Indonesia through an ‘Act of Free Choice’ this.’ He applied to the UN but was told the UN Secretary-General’s Personal coffers of the warlords. They should have told conducted in 1969, following the there was ‘no position available’, so he went Representative to Taliban-ruled Afghanistan. them: “You can keep your money and not go Netherlands transferring West New Guinea to Papua New Guinea for a year, to lecture In 2000, Francis was one of the few to jail, but give up your weapons and stay to Indonesia. In fact, only Indonesian- on British and Australian constitutional law. Christians ever to meet the founder, supreme out of politics.” To bring about disarmament, appointed district councils had been asked to It was his supervisor in International Law, commander and spiritual leader of the you need a well-armed and disciplined force express their views on the Territory’s future. Eli Lauterpacht, a Fellow of Trinity, who Taliban, Mullah Mohammed Omar, who with authority. The US became distracted by The UN never recognised Indonesia’s wrote to a friend and secured him a position immediately asked him: ‘Why does the world Iraq. Afghanistan was left to fester and it was annexation of East Timor, although several with the UN. hate the Taliban?’ Realising he would have promoted as a success, which it was not. To member states did, including Australia and He started there on 1 February 1968 and only one chance to answer this question, effect change, you have to have the support Canada. The window of opportunity came 15 stayed till 1 February 2002, leaving Francis gave him four reasons: ‘First, you’ve of the people: you need to improve their years later, with the Asian financial crisis of disappointed with the tragically missed given refuge to the world’s most wanted lives and end corruption. And put an end to 1997. President Suharto was replaced by the window of opportunity in Afghanistan – but fugitive, Osama bin Laden. I understand the impunity. Instead, we’ve spent hundreds of less experienced Habibi. Francis and his team he bounced back and became Special Pashtun duty to be hospitable to a guest, but billions of dollars in that country and mediated an agreement between Portugal Representative of the EU to Afghanistan in he has exceeded your hospitality. Secondly, achieved so little.’ and Indonesia, providing for a ‘popular July of that year and continued until 2008. your country produces most of the world’s Asked to evaluate the relative merits of consultation’ (a referendum by another These days, he divides his time between opium poppies, the basis of heroin. This is the Taliban and the warlords, Francis returned name, to save face for Indonesia) in which all homes in London and New York, where he destroying our young people. Thirdly, some of to the yardstick of corruption, saying that adult Timorese, including those in exile, could has been a Director of the Caius Foundation, the punishments you impose, even if when he visited the former Taliban Foreign vote. In August 1999, 99.6% of those eligible the College’s US charity, for fourteen years. approved by Sharia law, offend most of the Minister, he found him living in a modest voted and 79.5% chose to break away. And he still travels widely, being much in rest of the world – especially when carried house, with none of the trappings of wealth, ‘Then all Hell broke loose! Because it demand as a lecturer on international out in public. And finally, there is your whereas members of the Northern Alliance seemed the Indonesians had believed their affairs, whose knowledge is based on unconscionable treatment of women, who tended to have extravagant lifestyles with own propaganda. The Indonesian army- personal experience, rather than textbooks.

8 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 9

N o r

he College has been Michael describes Caius’ statutes as expulsion, the former subject f dismissed had been o ‘‘ l k

remarkably fortunate in the characteristically rigid, to the point of to a fine of 6s 8d. The same M responsible for the College’s u s

a rip-roaring tale of e

skills and dedication of its in- fussiness. They demanded practices which statute also contains the first u money, and he had lost m s

house historians, who have were already becoming old-fashioned in approval of college sports: S confidence in their care of e

financial manipulation r v i told us not only what Caius’ own day and in due course were ‘It shall be permissible, c that money. In 1545, when e

( A

‘‘ n happened and when, but also how and why and corruption. consigned to oblivion, such as the however, to practise with Caius returned from Padua T c i e n

our College evolved as it did. requirements to converse in Latin and dress bows in the fields, or play t and resigned his fellowship,

H o

John Caius (152 9) himself brought the in a manner which Caius unrealistically with balls in college, provided u there had been £600 in pure s e ,

Annals of the College up to date, as well as Only a brave historian would have risked deemed appropriate for all future time. For it is done in suitable places M gold in the Treasury. When u s e writing the Annals of the Royal College of following in Venn’s footsteps, but Christopher failure to speak Latin, the penalty was ‘loss and without causing a u he assumed the Mastership, m

o

Physicians and a History of the University . Brooke (194 5) was that man, painting what of commons’ – a serious deprivation for a nuisance to the college.’ f fourteen years later, he

T h e

John Venn (185 3) made a comprehensive William Wade (193 6) called ‘a splendid hungry young man. In addition, all members Equally detailed t was outraged to find only f o r d

study of all available archival materials, panorama of college society’ in his highly were required to live in perpetual and governance was applied to L £4-16s left. His overriding i f e culminating in the publication of the first informative 1985 History , now available free honest celibacy and junior members had to the senior members and even ) concern during the first three volumes of the Biographical History of charge for download as an ebook from the be back in their rooms by eight o’clock the Master (the usual English seven years as Master – the between 1897 and 1901. Venn included the Caius website. every evening. term was ‘keeper’). Claims for period when the disputes Latin texts of both Gonville’s and Bateman’s In 2 010, the quincentenary of Caius’ birth The uniform required was an ankle- travel expenses on occasional and expulsions occurred – Statutes as well as Caius’ Statutes in Vol. III . prompted an invitation to the Senior Fellow, length black gown, worn over a cassock, forays to inspect the was to restore a comforting Michael Prichard (195 0) to prepare the first with a surplice, the appropriate academic College’s manorial lands were balance to the Treasury. English translation of the Latin Statutes of hood, if the wearer had a degree, and a only allowed: ‘provided that Michael’s view of Caius, Gonville, Bateman and Caius, with a square black cap, all to be worn in town the college is not charged for the man, is much more commentary. The result is a as well as in College. Frilly shirts, loose more than the expenses of sympathetic than Venn’s. He magnificent, 640-page book whose boots, conspicuous ruffles and pointed hats the keeper, one fellow, one sees Caius as a remarkably dimensions, at first sight, put me were all outlawed on pain of a fine, for manservant for the keeper vigorous worker, deeply hurt in mind of the Omnibus edition major pensioners, of 6s 8d, or for scholars, and three horses. For if the by the criticism he suffered of Jeeves and Wooster stories, of 3s 4d. keeper is not well off, one over the expulsions. He felt which P G Wodehouse ‘We decree that no member of your manservant will suffice: if he those who had broken the himself described as ‘a college shall frequent backstreet taverns or is affluent and wants more, Statutes no longer trackless desert of prin t... wine-shops, except on the occasion of a visit he is to pay for the rest belonged. He spent most of almost the ideal by a parent or guest, and then only once or himself. The keeper should his time in London earning paperweight’. Potential twice a year at mos t... We also decree that look for honour from his money, (for he’d given much readers can be assured they shall not go to inns to see travelling office rather than profi t... of his money to the Dr John Caius (152 9), the College’s Third Founder that Michael’s book is no players (who for the sake of gain perform and should perform his office College), visiting patients, desert and far from foolish plays for the foolish rabble); nor in a spirit of generosity rather running the Royal College of trackless – it is, in fact, a shall they attend bullfights, bear-fights or than possessiveness. Whoever is not of this prematurely aged, of somewhat feeble Physicians and doing a great deal of work for rip-roaring tale of dog-fights.’ mind is unworthy to be keeper. For whoever health, and apparently of gloomy and the College in the capital, managing the financial manipulation Library books were not to be torn, seeks the care of the college seeks a work irritable constitutio n... a great admirer of estates he’d given the College, fighting and corruption. Seemingly maltreated, left open or off their shelves or of charity. Accordingly, he should promote the past, with little sympathy for new actions in court with tenants who’d become arid subject matter, the marked in any way. (This rule has stood the learning and the common good, and views, whether religious, political or obstreperous – so he had to have Fellows in house-rules devised for the test of time and still applies.) No animals practise frugality in every way, both by educationa l... at heart a decided Roman Cambridge whom he could rely on. He’d College in pre-Shakespearean could be kept in college, whether for observing the college’s existing property Catholic – and moreover, a man who was been a loyal citizen under Henry VIII, Edward times become a gateway to the hunting or fowling or as pets ‘lest the minds and by making future additions to it.’ locked in perpetual con flict with the VI, Mary and Elizabeth. He was friends with past, a fascinating insight into the of the students are distracted from their Foreseeing future challenges to his Puritan Fellows of the day, who raided his the Lord Chief Justice, Lord Burghley, and medieval world and the minds of studies’. There was a prohibition on putting statutes, Caius appointed his old friend, rooms, in the last year of his life, for Matthew Parker. They didn’t regard him as Caius and his contemporaries, up archery targets, laying out tennis courts Matthew Parker, by then Archbishop of ‘popish’ vestments and belongings and a threat, just an antiquary with a love of leavened with enlightening or tossing an axe within the boundaries of Canterbury, to resolve any uncertainties. burned them in the very Court that Caius the past. comments and asides. the college, the latter offence on pain of Less than a year after Caius’ death, the had just donated to the College. With characteristic thoroughness, Master, Thomas Legge, and the Fellows When he began his study of the Michael made a forensic examination, not petitioned Parker in unctuous terms: ‘Since Statutes, Michael Prichard tended to share only of the Statutes, but of the Pandects, the Michael Prichard making a point in characteristically forceful fashion by the authority vested in you by your that view: he was initially quite angry series of records of College resolutions and position you are able to reach a judgement with John Caius, because he was so decisions which was started by Caius and is through your authority and skill in extraordinarily sanctimonious in justifying one of the very few records surviving from identifying and evaluating doubts, whereby his harsh punishments for misbehaviour. his time. The Pandects tell a very clear story. all occasion for contention and quarrels in However, Michael later came to the view Michael believes the atmosphere changed the future may be summarily cut short, we that Caius was not just another old- radically from the first half of Caius’ SiS MMoMonMonuMonumMonumeMonumenMonumentMonumentuMonumentumm implore your ruling in these matters which fashioned pedant, disapproving of the Mastership to the second: once he had are as opaque to us as they are clear to manners and morals of the young – he was expelled the unsympathetic, old guard, your acuity and wisdom.’ The footnotes are subconsciously justifying to himself the college life became much more harmonious. one of the joys of this book – and here arbitrary expulsions of Fellows for which he Caius now had Fellows he could trust while Michael notes acerbically: ‘a phraseology by had been much criticised by Parker and he was away in London, like Henry Holland Requiris,RequirisRequiriRequirRequiRequReqReR CircumspiceCircumspicCircumspiCircumspCircumsCircumCircuCircCirCiC the Master and fellows that Uriah Heep Cecil. He was not a crypto-Papist and none (155 6), who controlled the finances would have been hard pressed to equal’!) of the dismissed Fellows is known to have impeccably as Bursar for four years, between Most Caians have unconsciously been a Puritan. 1566 and 1570, and handed over some of by Mick Le Moignan (2004) absorbed the picture of Caius proposed by The trouble, then, was not religious, but those duties to Stephen Perse (156 5) when

e Venn and not really contradicted by Brooke: bursarial: the Fellows whom Caius he stepped down. it h W n a D

10 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 11

D a

This book is of much more shared in it. The first charge n

W ‘ ‘ h i

than historical interest because upon the fund was a fee of t e it shows Caius, not normally £1 to the bursar, followed by The book is a triumph known for his progressive small payments to some (but of scholarship and a great views, defining the College apparently not all) of the ‘‘ from the outset as a charitable scholars on Dr Caius’ own pleasure to read. trust, just as we know it today. foundation, leaving the bulk He aimed to establish a strict of the corn money to be financial regime, as much as a divided into fourteen shares, the Chancellor for determination, the constitutional one. Statute 63 two for the Master and Fellows objected to the Master, William reads (in Michael’s translation): twelve for the senior fellows, Branthwaite, claiming a right of ‘negative ‘When we say “for the with the bursar taking as his voice’ (veto) in a fellowship election. In benefit of the college” in this perquisite any fractional reply, he questioned their entitlements and and other places in the surplus remaining from the provoked a disdainful, cocksure riposte: ‘The statutes, we do not mean for division. The junior fellows College chest hath a proper allowance to the benefit of the individual and the other scholars itself, which as it was ever sufficient for the members of the college, but received nothing.’ The bursar common charge so the fellows never for the benefit of the college took an additional 5s out of diminish it, therefore they have always as a corporate entity (of each individual’s share. thought that pensions designed for the whose wealth the counting- There were many other maintenance of scholars or fellows are not house is the guardian) to be aspects to this to be converted to the filling of chests!’ held not so much for our unconscionable racket. The The sense of personal entitlement is benefit as for that of our rents paid on College striking, especially in the context of a formal posterity. For nothing belongs properties had to go into the response to a charge of serious misconduct. to any member personally, College Chest – so they were They have clearly forgotten Caius’ definition either individually or left at roughly the same of ‘the college as a corporate entity’, if collectively, apart from his amount for centuries. Instead, indeed they ever understood it. Little stipend, livery, payments increasing charges (‘fines’) wonder, that in the two centuries following for services, distributions were levied on tenants Caius’ death, the College failed to attain the (of largesse) and offices. Joshua Reynolds’ portrait of John Smith (1731), who managed the College finances in whenever the College granted prosperity that his meticulous statutes were Everything else shall be kept exemplary fashion during his long term as Master, from 1764 until his death in 1795 or renewed a lease, typically designed to promote. in common for the corporate every seven years; the One shining exception Michael notes as uses of the college, for the collective needs monasteries) should be paid in corn or the proceeds were again distributed between the having been undervalued by Venn is John of our own and future times, to be a equivalent value of a set amount of wheat Master and the twelve seniors, with the Smith (1731), who did much to repair the provision against possible calamities, heavy and malt, linked to future market prices. The Master taking a double share. Here, too, the College finances as Bursar, then President misfortunes, vexatious lawsuits, becoming Act directed the proceeds ‘to the use of the Bursar kept a little extra for his trouble in and finally Master over the period 1750 to ornamentation, essential building repairs, Relief of the Commons and Diett of the said collecting the funds, the Registrary benefited 1795. Smith, who will be familiar to Caians purchases of income-producing properties, College s... onlie.’ The surviving file of the from the same process and the Steward from his portrait by Joshua Reynolds, shared and other communal exigencies of this kind.’ College’s Corn Rolls (1657 -67) ‘provides us presumably profited separately from buying the third founder’s insistence on strict What Michael describes as ‘the crucial with our earliest illustration of the way in food and other supplies in the town. accounting and the maintenance of a rule underpinning this principle’ is that no which the corn money was divided between Catechist, Librarian and Praetor Rhetoricus sufficient surplus to meet repairs and other member, whatever his status, should be the fortunate members of the college who (Humanities Lecturer) were all remunerated necessary calls ( usus extraordinarios ) upon entitled to any surplus income beyond the out of students’ fees. the college’s finances. Sad to say, only eight stipend and allowances expressly given to The two Deans, having delegated to years after Smith died, became them in the statutes. Caius could not have others the irksome duty imposed on them by Master and proceeded to squander the Perse Michael Prichard (195 0), the Senior Fellow been clearer or more specific about this: When we say ‘for the Caius, to give lectures every morning in Fund on Martin Davy! Awareness of ‘We do not wish the rents of our college to be Chapel on Aristotelian logic and moral irregularities reached Henry Bickersteth KC at the age of 22, in 1950, Michael served as yesterday’s Law Reports in The Times , mostly shared out among the fellows to the detriment benefit of the College’ in philosophy, awarded themselves the (180 2), (later Lord Langdale), a non-resident Director of Studies and College Lecturer in European Directives and so on. He regards of our college .’ ‘‘this and other places in ‘exceptional perquisite’ of keeping all the senior Fellow who had become one of the Law until 1990, succeeding Philip Grierson current judgments, compared with those of Astonishingly, from soon after Caius’ fines that Caius had authorised them to levy four managers of the trust in 1823. Appalled (193 7) as President in 1976 and as Senior Lords Denning, Wilberforce and Diplock, for death and for the next 300 years, almost the statutes, we do not on students for lateness or absence from by what he learned, Bickersteth went to Fellow in 2006. He also directed law studies example, as distinctly less attractive to study. without exception, the Master and the mean for the benefit of Chapel. The Bursar, contravening a specific Cambridge at once, tried and failed to for Newnham, so, he says: ‘I had mixed In 1995, when he retired from his twelve ‘senior fellows’ chose to ignore this instruction to keep in his possession no more persuade Davy and the other managers to supervisions from 1960!’ He was a long-term University position, Michael was invited to stricture, awarding themselves generous the individual members than £5 from the Chest, took to investing cease the illegal distributions and Praelector Rhetoricus, Senior Tutor from return to the legal chambers he left in 1952,

‘dividends’ from what should have been the of the college, but for the whole amount for his own benefit and immediately paid back every farthing of 1980 to 1989 and principally instrumental in at 4 Stone Buildings, Lincoln’s Inn, to help a

College’s income, in most cases without the simply restored the principal (minus profits) excess he had received, with interest at 4%. introducing computers into the College in Caian QC with a case involving Elizabethan payments passing through the bursarial the benefit of the college to be counted on the appointed days, twice This is a rare example of the sort of the early 1980s. ‘The Bursary kept their quill and Stuart Exchequer documents. He had to accounts . They quickly found ways of as a corporate entity... a year. behaviour John Caius expected from his pens!’ he adds, with a smile. It was his work become familiar with Elizabethan Secretary ‘ circumventing Statute 63, starting with ‘ On the rare occasions when allegations beneficiaries. on Vol VII of the Biographical History that Hand, the hand in which most of the college’s ‘corn money’. to be held not so much of this profiteering surfaced in public, the The book is a triumph of scholarship and convinced him that the College must records were written in Caius’ time. So, almost The Corn Act of 1576 was designed to beneficiaries simply brazened it out, a great pleasure to read. The College owes a computerise its record-keeping. by chance, the Senior Fellow was one of the protect Oxbridge colleges from inflation and for our benefit as for that appealing to the defence of ancient usage: huge debt of gratitude to Michael for He gave up teaching, he says, not few persons in College well-suited to take on price variation by stipulating that for all new of our posterity. ‘It’s been going on since before Caius’ time, completing a long labour that few others because he didn’t want to go on, but because this formidable task – effectively, giving a leases, one-third of the ‘olde rents’ (those I’m told, and besides, all the other colleges could have performed at all, let alone with the character of the law taught had changed. twenty-first century voice to Dr Caius and the applying before the dissolution of the do it!’ In Allen’s Case of 161 7, which went to such distinction. First elected to a Fellowship Undergraduates now felt they needed other founders. How could he refuse? 12 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 13 Heart beat

©

R o y a by Mick Le Moignan (2004) l

C o l le g e

o f

S u r g e o n s

o f

E n g he radical scientific l ‘take no gift or reward’ a n d breakthrough achieved for his services. He by William Harvey lived modestly in (159 3) was London with his wife The fine portrait (above, centre) bears the name William Harvey and was once thought to be by Rembrandt. It was given to the College in 1798. Sir Geoffrey Keynes extraordinary. Through (they had no (brother of Maynard and the authority on Harvey portraiture) discovered the only authenticated portrait of Harvey in mid-life (above left) by Daniel Mytens and Tcareful observation and research, Harvey children) and exhibited it at the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) in 1948. Caius contributed to its purchase for the National Portrait Gallery in 1976. The third portrait (above, right) is thought to have been painted after Harvey’s death by an unknown artist from the studio of Peter Lely in the 1670s and is part of the RCP’s collection. overturned medical dogma that had continued to work Sadly, Keynes dismissed the College’s portrait as ‘bearing no resemblance to Harvey’. Dr John Casey (196 4) reasons that, as with Christian iconography, by long been universally accepted for more than at Bart’s for most of association and familiarity, the Harvey portrait has ‘become Harvey’ for the Caian community 1,500 years. the rest of his life. J a m

Harvey came up 64 years after John In 1615, he was e s

A corrosion cast H o

Caius (152 9) and had an almost identical appointed the Lumleian w

of the blood vessels e l career. Like Caius, after graduating from of the heart. The blood Lecturer, which required l Cambridge, he went to Italy, to study is replaced with resin and the him to ‘spread light’ on the medicine at Padua University. He graduated surrounding tissue is then dissolved away, subjects of anatomy and surgery in a leaving an accurate 3-D model of the veins as MD there, returned to take his Cambridge and arteries. This image is reproduced by kind series of public lectures for an initial period MD and was elected to a College Fellowship. permission of the Royal College of Surgeons of seven years. Harvey conducted public He moved to London, served as a Royal of dissections of the bodies of recently Physician to James 1 and Charles 1, became executed criminals, for the benefit of large (like Caius) the finest British anatomist of Galen believed blood was concocted numbers of students, in three separate his generation and a major benefactor to the (‘cooked’) in the liver and then carried sessions, starting late in the day to delay Royal College of Physicians (RCP). It was due through the veins to all other parts of the decomposition, since there was no to Harvey’s influence (and his generous gift body, where it was completely consumed, as refrigeration. He also vivisected animals of £20,000 for building works) that the RCP its nutrients were used to create flesh and because he believed the behaviour of the became the leading institution of British other matter. He thought some blood was heart could only be understood by studying medical research. What pleasure it would regenerated in the heart, considered the seat it in action. He encouraged Fellows and have given Caius to know how spectacularly of emotions and the essential human spirit, students at the RCP to carry out their own well Harvey used the opportunities he had and dispersed through the arteries to bring investigations. provided. ‘life’ to other parts of the body. He proved his theory by using a ligature When Harvey began his studies, medical The Flemish physician, Andres Vesalius on the upper arm to restrict blood flow – science accepted almost without question (151 4-156 4), a contemporary of Caius at and then demonstrated by tracing a finger the precepts attributed to Hippocrates Padua who studied anatomy and dissected along the main artery and vein that blood (c.46 0- 375 BC) and later advanced and human bodies, questioned some of Galen’s can only flow away from the heart in expanded by his disciple, Galen of Pergamum hypotheses, but it was Harvey who first arteries and only towards it in veins (see (c.12 9- 216 AD), physician to successive proved, against implacable opposition, that illustration). Roman Emperors. Galen regarded anatomy the heart was solely responsible for The publication, at the book fair in as the basis of all medical knowledge and circulating the blood. Harvey’s scientific Frankfurt in 1628, of his treatise on the used dissection and vivisection of primates methods were impeccable: he made no circulation of the blood, De Motu Cordis , and pigs to develop his theories (since assumptions, instead basing all his attracted a storm of criticism from his peers dissection of human corpses was forbidden conclusions on experiment and observation. but Harvey weathered it and eventually by the Roman religion). He accepted He did not rush to publish, but circulated his enjoyed the satisfaction of seeing his Hippocrates’ theory that illness resulted revolutionary ideas for several years among contentious arguments widely accepted. In from an imbalance of the four humours his colleagues and invited them to test, 1649, he published De Circulatione The famous illustration in De Motu Cordis of the experiment by which Harvey proved that blood can only flow away from the heart through the arteries and towards (blood, black bile, yellow bile and phlegm) question or refute them. Sanguinis , to answer the attack of one of his it through the veins, so the motion is circulatory and proved that the arteries carried blood, When Harvey first joined the RCP in most persistent critics, Jean Riolan, and a not air, as people had believed for 400 years. 1604, its principal function was to prosecute book he published two years later, Essays on ‘to search and study out the secrets of their great predecessor and benefactor. most courageous Caians of our own time, He also distinguished between arterial and unqualified physicians. He was elected to a the Generation of Animals , is considered the nature by way of experiment’. The first Between January and July this year, the it is fitting to recall what courage Harvey venous blood, conducted brilliant, pioneering, Fellowship (FRCP) three years later and in basis of modern embryology. Harveian Oration was given in 1656, just a 500th anniversary of its foundation, the RCP displayed in challenging the prevailing experimental studies of the nervous and 1609 accepted the position of Physician in In 1654, Harvey made a further year before Harvey’s death. It is still presented a magnificent exhibition as a doctrine of the medical establishment. respiratory systems and observed the charge at St Bartholomew’s Hospital, where donation to the RCP, to pay for an annual delivered every year and at the subsequent tribute to Harvey’s achievements. In this A few years earlier, such unorthodox views workings of the valves of the heart. he was expected to care for the poor and to oration that would encourage its members dinner, all stand to make a ‘silent toast’ to year, when we mourn the loss of one of the could put a man in mortal danger. 14 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 15

this has stood me in good stead for giving focus: he took care to explain that a talks at scientific conferences and all sorts bacterium, unlike a virus, which cannot Duncan Maskell (1979) of other things.’ exist outside a host, is ‘a proper, Having gone straight from the sixth independent, living entity’. has never been one to form to Caius, he admits he found the He was enjoying himself at Imperial, transition difficult and ‘failed to thrive’ in his living in Kew with his wife and new-born refuse a challenge. first term and a half, but after one son, but, not for the first or the last time, supervision on the Biology of Cells, Tom ap ‘head-hunters’ called to ask him back to He believes ‘you’ve got to Rees (196 4) asked him to stay behind and Cambridge. ‘And you don’t turn down gave him a gentle but telling piece of advice: your alma mater when it invites you to be take your opportunities ‘You’ve got a lot of talent but you’re not a Professor at 35!’ So he became the first working hard enough!’ By his third year, Marks & Spencer Professor of Farm when they come along’. Duncan had worked out what he really Animal Health, Food Science and Food wanted to do and spent most of his time at Safety in the Department of Veterinary the Department of Pathology, working on a Medicine. Previously, he had researched Part II project on Salmonella . the pathogens that cause disease in He stayed at Caius to do a PhD in the humans, but ‘humans are just another same area, supported by Wellcome Biotech, animal!’ so he branched out into this new which was set up like a university research area. ‘It’s not so different: understanding lab, but with an industry budget. They how infection happens in humans helps appointed him as a research scientist when you to understand how it happens in he finished, and he says: ‘I felt like I never other animals and vice versa.’ It turned A New left academia.’ A postdoctoral project at the out to be a particularly fruitful field Institute for Molecular Medicine in Oxford because ‘This was 1996 and the start of followed, on the bacteria that cause the genome revolution.’ childhood meningitis, and then he took up a In 2004, his colleagues invited Duncan by Mick Le Moignan University Lectureship in Biochemistry at to apply to be Head of the Department of (2004) Imperial College, London, where he started a Veterinary Medicine. ‘Of course, I said no, major programme on the bacteria that on the grounds of not being a veterinary Challenge cause whooping cough. Bacteria are his surgeon! But they asked again, so I

aving already risen to it was a comprehensive school and thinks where he and his wife will be living. Peter Cowlett (1979) on trombone. Duncan Maskell on clarinet; just two of the Eight Hot Keys dizzy heights on the ‘It was very good for me, meeting all sorts His mother played piano to grade 8 and Cambridge University of people from all walks of life.’ The school encouraged him to learn clarinet and career ladder, as had previously been a grammar school, so saxophone, which led to other interesting thought long and hard about it and said I’d do Pro-Vice-Chancellor some of the staff still had an Oxbridge experiences at Caius. Early on, Michael Law it for five years.’ Nine years later, in response H(PVC) Planning and Resources, with overall mindset and encouraged him to apply. He (197 9) put together a jazz band, the Eight to another approach, he took the next step oversight of a turnover of about £2 billion knew of Gonville & Caius from University Hot Keys, which included Duncan and seven and became Head of the School of Biological and the University’s massive building Challenge : he’d been intrigued by the other Caians from the same year, including Sciences. He enjoyed the job and says he programme, including the North-West pronunciation of Caius. Peter Cowlett on trombone and Julian would like to have continued but, two years Cambridge Development and Cavendish III, He came up in the first year of co- Flowers on guitar. later, the position of Senior PVC came up and the new home for the Department of education. He remembers meeting ‘a small A band was formed that went to the he found that challenge irresistible. Three Physics, Duncan has now accepted an cohort of absolutely amazing women’, is still Edinburgh Festival to play for a show that years later he has now been appointed as the invitation to be the new Vice-Chancellor in touch with one or two of them and sank without trace, but which featured VC at the University of Melbourne. Both VCs of the University of Melbourne from formed lasting, deep friendships with quite a Simon Russell Beale (197 9). The band played he served under at Cambridge paid generous October 2018. few of the men. ‘The best thing about college a late-night slot which was very popular, so tributes to his contribution to the University According to the current Times Higher life was meeting all sorts of different people on coming back to Cambridge it was and wished him well in his new appointment. Education rankings, Melbourne is Australia’s – and of course, I learned that the differences expanded into the 78RPM Big Band, in which Duncan is not the first Caian to take up top university and the fourth-best in Asia. are often more interesting than the Caians David Grubb and Grant Llewelyn also a senior position in the Antipodes. The Duncan will not divulge his plans for the similarities.’ He and his friends trialled for played. 78RPM was very popular, playing celebrated statistician and geneticist, Sir University just yet, because he wants to the College’s football team, found they were many gigs, and usually every night during Ronald Fisher (190 9) joined the Australian base them on what he sees and hears when not good enough and so set up a 2nd XI, May Week, including once managing four CSIRO and the University of Adelaide when he gets there, but, although it is already which he now describes as something of a May Balls in one night. he retired in 1956. More recently, Professor riding high, he’s sure there is still ‘room for ‘Band of Brothers’. By then, Duncan was a veteran of stage Tony Smith (197 2) went back to New improvement’. ‘I was never any good at sport,’ he says, performance, having sung in the Good Zealand to be PVC and Dean of the Law His own journey began in Barnet, at a ‘but it was always a big part of my life.’ One Friday performance of the St Matthew School at the Victoria University of time when his father could still claim it was highlight was refereeing the football Cuppers Passion at the Festival Hall and in particular Wellington. At least one other VC in the in Hertfordshire, rather than North London. Final at Grange Road and he is looking a solo at the age of 11 in the Queen ‘Group of Eight’ top Australian universities is His parents were a plumber and an audio forward to attending the highly athletic, Elizabeth Hall in a concert for Benjamin also a Cambridge graduate. Running the Gonville & Caius College 2nd Football XI (198 0- 81) ‘Band of Brothers’: Back Row (left to right) typist in the radiology department of the ‘Australian Rules’ (AFL) variant of the game Britten’s sixtieth birthday. ‘Nothing else’ he Steve Riches (197 9), Duncan Maskell (197 9), Jim Henderson (198 0), Pete Cowlett (197 9), Mike Davy (198 0), University of Melbourne is probably Duncan’s local hospital, who both rose to highly that is practically a religion in Melbourne. He says, ‘has ever seemed so daunting! But Rod Vanstone (197 8), Lindsay Bray (197 8), Martin Prior (197 8), Andy Quine (197 8) (capt.), Tim Owen (197 8), biggest challenge yet – but if any of those responsible positions. He categorises his knows he’ll have to choose allegiance to an something clicked. That was the cathartic Mike Mendl (197 9), Dave Tullett (197 9) head-hunters calls to ask for his phone background as ‘aspirational working class’. AFL team and suspects it will have to be first time that helped me not to fear being Played 16, Won 9, Drawn 2, Lost 5. Goals For 52, Against 14 number, it might be wise for them not to He went to Queen Elizabeth’s School when bottom-of-the-league Carlton, the suburb on stage in front of a large audience, and Also played: Keith Le Goy (198 0), Christopher Lawrence (197 8) pass it o n... 16 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 17

r Caius would be delighted: it must have been ‘a town of no great the attitude of the local people: at first, they take many years to complete. The Faculty of particularly moved when one of the local Fellowship at Darwin College, first as a Latin has not yet replaced importance, with the usual forum, theatre, had said ‘We’re glad you’re here, so you can Classics of Cambridge University, with contractors, asked to stop work because of a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow and English as the lingua franca public buildings, etc.’ They started digging a prove there’s nothing there and then we can generous support from several other shortage of funds, chose to continue and later as a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow. around the Courts, but the small trench to test results – and only 30 cm get on with developing the land.’ He charitable bodies, including the Leverhulme donate his own fees to the project, to the He knew Caius as one of the founders of study of Classics is under the surface, they found the tops of remembers a farmer who came to see the Trust, the Arts & Humanities Research value of €8,000. ‘It was,’ he says, ‘a wonderful Darwin (with Trinity and St John’s) and Dundergoing a renaissance, under the guidance high walls, with scratchmarks from the ancient walls emerging from the earth – and Council, the British Academy, the Isaac example of a non-professional sharing the supervised some Caius students. In 2013, of a dynamic Director of Studies, Dr ploughs that had gone over them repeatedly. started to weep at the realisation that his Newton Trust, the McDonald institute for excitement, not an academic, but an when he accepted a permanent position as Alessandro Launaro ( 2013). Further down, there were the seats and steps own plough had caused the damage. ‘So the Archaeological Research and the British enthusiast.’ a University Lecturer, the College invited When Alessandro joined Caius, there were of what turned out to be a sizable theatre local community not only accepted but School at Rome, has so far contributed two- Alessandro’s alma mater in his native Italy him to be a Fellow and Director of Studies in seven undergraduates reading Classics across (55m x 31m) that might have seated 1,500 started caring about their own history.’ There thirds of the overall funding and the Italian was Pisa University, but he came from an Classics. The College’s long-retired classicist, the three and four-year courses; now, there people (equivalent to almost the whole are clearly implications for the town’s future government, through the local office of the Anglophile family and spent time as an Richard Duncan-Jones (196 3) was delighted are 14 and there will be 18 in the coming population of today’s Comune ). Moreover, it prosperity as a tourist destination, as the dig Soprintendenza (SABAP-LAZIO) and the local Erasmus Exchange Student at Leicester with the appointment. Alessandro won more academic year. Caius students have had no was clear that it once had a roof – and of the uncovers more and more about its distant council of the Comune Pignataro Interamna University and a Visiting Graduate Student in admirers when he gave a special Lower Seconds since he became Director of 160+ Roman theatres excavated in Italy, only past. have provided the remaining one-third. Cambridge University. Following his PhD he presentation about his work to the College’s Studies and there were two First Class about a dozen were covered over in this way. Funding is always an issue for what has Nevertheless, there are always going to went back to Leicester as a Leverhulme major donors before the Benefactors’ Dinner degrees last year and two more this year. Alessandro observed a dramatic change in turned out to be a major project, which will be hard times, and Alessandro was Visiting Fellow, before landing a Research in 201 7. Alessandro believes: ‘Classics is not just The most exciting discovery made to about reading the ancient texts: it involves date at Interamna Lirenas has a curious thinking about the whole civilisation and relevance to Caius. It is a 2,000-year-old looking at the whole range of clues people sundial, intact, well preserved and recording left to the way they lived and viewed the the name and details of the benefactor who world. Sure, I can read Cicero – but I’m provided it for the town: M(arcus) NOVIUS equally interested in learning about the lives M(arci) F(ilius) TUBULA {Marcus Novius of people we don’t know about yet. New Classics for a New Age Tubula, son of Marcus}. The engraving on the knowledge is available and there are a vast curved rim of the dial records that he held range of avenues to finding it. Then we can the historic Roman office of TR(ibunus) read the ancient texts again, casting them PL(ebis) {Plebeian Tribune} and paid under new light and achieving a further level for the sundial D(e) S(ua) of understanding.’ PEC(unia) {with his His way of breathing new life into own money}. Classics is to combine ancient history with archaeology, ‘to try to make sense of disparate evidence’. Students are invited to work as volunteers for four weeks each summer on an archaeological dig at For Interamna Lirenas on the River Liri, about 80 Alessandro and miles southeast of Rome, within sight of the his students, this is Benedictine Abbey of Monte Cassino. exciting, not only because Together with his colleague Martin Millett, they have uncovered the identity of a Alessandro started work on this project in The excavation hitherto unknown public official, but because 2010, examining a 25 hectare site with of the Roman it tells them that such men from the theatre at Interamna geophysical prospection and field surveys – Excavation site at Interamna Lirenas in the shadow of Monte Cassino Matt Coote ( 2015), Telephone Campaigner in Lirenas, showing the outlying towns could make a name for literally, walking over ploughed fields, looking 2017 and 2018, with Alessandro after receiving location where the themselves in the imperial capital. ‘Various for evidence of ancient, buried settlements. his First Class Honours degree in Classics sundial (below) was found considerations about the name and style of Because of its prominent, strategic lettering place the sundial’s inscription at a position, the Abbey has been demolished time (mid 1st century BC onwards) by which many times over, first by the Lombard the inhabitants of Interamna had already invaders in 580 and most recently by Allied been granted full Roman citizenship.’ Other bombers in 1944. Leftover shrapnel from the evidence suggests they may have been under latest conflict did interfere a little with the the patronage of Julius Caesar himself. The magnetometry Alessandro’s team used to sundial even gives a clue about the donor’s detect subtle variations in the soil (bricks that character: as Alessandro observes, the have been exposed to high heat, for example, advantage of choosing a sundial to celebrate are more magnetic). Once, they detected his promotion was that his fellow-citizens what they thought was a very big building, would often look at it, to check the time! with a huge magnetic anomaly at one corner. When they first discovered it, the At first, they thought it must be an sundial, carved from a limestone block (54 x unexploded bomb from World War Two, but 35 x 25 cm) was lying face-down on a layer after further tests with ground-penetrating of clay. As he lifted one edge, Alessandro radar, they now think it was a lime kiln, used could not see the engraved surface of the to process stone when the town was stone, but a perfect mirror image of it, demolished at the end of antiquity as its imprinted on the clay. It was one of those population was moving to safer places. precious, magic moments of discovery that By 2012, that large building was make all the hard work of archaeology confirmed to be a theatre. They still thought Dr Alessandro Launaro ( 2013) enjoying the sunshine on the Backs worthwhile. 18 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 19

rom 9-14 February this year, the sixth annual e-luminate Cambridge festival was guest curated by Caius Fellow and DFirector of Studies in the History of Art, Dr James Fox ( 2010). James is well-known for opening people’s eyes, hearts and minds to the joys and excitement of colour. His ground-breaking BBC-TV series A History of Art in Three Colours (Once a Caia n... Issue 12, p.12) was recently repeated and his book The Meaning of Colour is also being published this year by Penguin (Allen Lane). James said: ‘I’ve been dazzled and delighted by e-luminate Cambridge since it started in 2013. It floods Cambridge with light at a dark time of the year and makes us see this beautiful city with fresh eyes.’ James worked alongside Founder and Artistic Director of the festival, Alessandra Caggiano. The installation The Colours of Caius College was designed by French light artist Patrice Warrener, using the Chromolithe technique to give the impression that the façade had been painted with vibrant, glowing colours, thus enhancing the beauty and splendour of Alfred Waterhouse’s design and showing the nineteenth century building in a spectacular new light. Pioneered by Warrener 30 years ago, the Chromolithe technique highlights architectural features by painting them in light, rather than masking them with a projected image. This unique process transforms buildings into bold frescos, bursting to life with colour and light. Other Cambridge landmarks to be bathed in light and colour included the Senate House and the Fitzwilliam Museum. Sadly, at the time of going to press, there is doubt about continuing funding for the festival into 2019.

e-luminate Cambridge Curator Dr James Fox

All photographs © and reproduced by kind permission of Sir Cam Top right: The Bridesmaid by John Everett Milais 20 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 21

Dr Madeline Why ‘Maddie’ Mitchell (2010)

Antarctic a? All the members of the 2018 Homeward Bound expedition to Antarctica gather to make an important declaration n February and March 2 018, two Hannah Laeverenz-Schlogelhofer ( 201 0) Sciences. Maddie grew up in regional backgrounds. They included social been fascinated by Wilson’s Antarctic flag, level of awareness and connectedness. I live young Caian scientists went on a has been at Caius for the past eight years, Australia and completed her first degree at entrepreneurs, policy makers, teachers, still preserved in a wooden frame next to at a very fast pace. This trip has shown me life-changing expedition to first as a Natural Sciences undergraduate one of Melbourne University’s residential vets and doctors. About a third were early High Table in Hall. Before setting off, she how important it is to take time for Antarctica. It was the second voyage specialising in Chemistry and then at the colleges. She appreciated the strong MCR at career researchers, one third mid-career visited the College Archive to see Wilson’s reflection, to externalise your insights of the Homeward Bound scheme, Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Doctoral Caius, where she made friends working in and one third well established. One of the paintings of Antarctica. through others and share those re flections.’ fIounded by Australian leadership activist, Training Centre (NanoDTC). She is just many different fields. Maddie is a plant top scientists on the ship was Susan Scott, The voyage was not an official research Maddie also felt the predominance of Ms Fabian Dattner, with three experienced completing a multi-disciplinary PhD in molecular physiologist: she studies how from the Australian National University in trip, so no samples could be collected, but women on board helped to create space for women Antarctic scientists, to encourage microbial ecology, exploring how algae and plants grow and respond to their Canberra. She was one of the principals the Antarctic element was important to participants to contribute where they could and extend participation and leadership by bacteria mutually exchange nutrients. Based environment, including at the level of genes of the large team that shared the 2017 both of them – and not only because of the and learn from each other: women in the STEMM subjects (Science, in the Physics Department’s Biological and and proteins. At Cambridge, she investigated Nobel Prize in Physics for detecting connection with their own research. Much ‘The official leadership group provided Technology, Engineering, Mathematics and Soft Systems research group, she also the super-efficient photosynthesis processes gravitational waves, the minute distortions of Antarctic research is related to the crucial course content but wasn’t hierarchical. Medicine) on a global scale. The aim is collaborates with researchers in the achieved by algae, with the eventual aim of of space-time predicted by Albert Einstein issues of climate change and sustainability, Feedback was welcomed. It was a safe space. ‘to heighten the in fluence and impact of Department of Plant Sciences and at re-engineering the photosynthesis of other 100 years earlier. so they had group discussions on renewable We formed strong connections and took women in making decisions that shape Stockholm University. crops to improve yields. In February 2017, once their places were energy and plastic pollution and discussed decisions together, taking in other people’s our planet’. Hannah uses experiments and After gaining her PhD, Maddie returned confirmed, the participants started getting what they, as women and scientists, could perspectives. One example was the way we Competition for places on the mathematical modelling to trace how to Australia, where she is a Postdoctoral to know each other via monthly conference contribute to resolving such problems. debated whether to risk rough seas to visit Homeward Bound program is intense. Only carbon flows between two different Fellow at Australia’s CSIRO in Canberra. The calls run by experts in leadership, science Sign ificantly, the first woman to visit the remote British Antarctic Survey Station 80 or so are chosen each year, from all over organisms, with the aim of designing aim of her current research is to develop communication and the Antarctic. A year Antarctica got there more than a hundred at Rothera (67° S.) Some were sick, so at the world, and the experience is likely to communities of micro-organisms for more novel plant-based fibres that will provide a later, they convened in South America to set years after the first man! As Hannah first we decided not to go. Instead, we went lead to a lifelong commitment. Over the efficient algal growth. biodegradable alternative to artificial, sail for the Southern Ocean. explained: out in Zodiacs and saw Orcas. The next day, one-year program, which culminates in the The aim of this research is to explore synthetic textiles. Both Hannah and Maddie were ‘Antarctica has no indigenous people, so the weather had cleared so we went after all Antarctic expedition, participants form the potential of algae to solve a multitude The Homeward Bound program aims to conscious of the Caius connections with anyone who goes there becomes a and had a great time. We also analysed and bonds with each other and are inspired with of problems, particularly for the production help women scientists to develop the Antarctica via Edward Wilson (18 91), who spokesperson for it. Everyone on the ship learned from the decision-making process. a new sense of their own abilities and of food supplements or pharmaceuticals. network, skills, tools and confidence they died with Scott on the return journey from was aware of that responsibility. We all We formed some very strong relationships, potential. They become part of a global Madeline ‘Maddie’ Mitchell ( 201 0) came need to take the next steps on their the South Pole, and another Australian, became disconnected from our everyday individually and collectively. I’m sure we’ll network of women scientists who expect to to Caius at the same time as Hannah, but as ‘leadership journey’. The women selected had Frank Debenham (1913), Founder Director of lives, so we were completely present with keep in touch, over the years to come, and support each other for the rest of their lives. a postgraduate, to take a PhD in Plant a wide variety of ages, nationalities and the Scott Polar Institute. Hannah had always each other. That helped us to reach a new we’ll always have each other’s backs.’

A moment of quiet contemplation in an icy landscape Penguins expressing their feelings and keeping each other warm Hannah Laeverenz-Schlogelhofer ( 2010) 22 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 23 To Russia With Love by Lucy Ward

Achieving a state honour is a great achievement in one’s own country: decoration by another nation is a still rarer accolade. So much the

D Clockwise from top left: Polly with her a n

W more exceptional, then, the award of a Pushkin father’s namesake, Professor (194 3), Master 198 8-96; h

i Polly at Caius; Polly on Graduation Day with two close friends, Philippa Haden t e Medal of the Russian Federation to art historian (198 9) (now Philippa Tadele) and Tessa Harvey (198 9), both of whom are Professor Rosalind Polly Blakesley (198 9) holding godmothers to Polly’s children her book, The Russian Canvas Professor Rosalind Polly Blakesley (198 9)

he prestigious medal, granted she came up to Caius to study Russian and to still-Communist Russia: ‘I was mesmerised painting that emerged in Russia over the paintings from the Tretyakov, the idea of a the UK and the latter’s British counterpart all by the Russian government, Italian, though she switched in the second by the mysterious riches of this slightly grey preceding two centuries. ‘I aim to get away partner exhibition emerged – particularly attended the event. recognises contributions to year when the call of History of Art became space – by the preposterous scale of it all.’ from this idea of Russia either being out in appropriate as both galleries were celebrating ‘It was a constellation of people who were Russia in the arts and culture, too strong to resist. Her love of Russia was At Caius, where she followed in the the cold doing its own thing, or desperately the 160th anniversary of their foundation in unable to have that sort of meeting on a education, humanities and already embedded, however: she had taken footsteps of her father Peter Gray (195 6), trying to follow a lodestar of artistic 1856. The Moscow gallery opted to explore a public stage,’ Polly recalls. ‘An exhibition like Tliterature, as well as ‘the rapprochement and up Russian with the encouragement of her she was ‘incredibly happy as a student – innovation in the West.’ In fact, she argues, much broader timeframe, borrowing 49 that generates knowledge and understanding mutual enrichment of cultures of nations linguist godmother while at school in the I made the friends who are now my those decades saw remarkably accelerated paintings – including the celebrated Chandos of its subject matter, but it can also enable and peoples’. For Polly, a specialist in Russian 1980s, ‘in the midst of Gorbachev mania.’ children’s godparents, rowed in the first eight artistic growth, as artists such as portraitist portrait of Shakespeare – for a show forms of human interaction that might not art, the honour reflected two highly Taught by an inspiring former GCHQ and was rag rep, which was a licence to do Ivan Vishniakov and landscape painter Arkhip spanning three centuries, From Elizabeth to otherwise take place. Cultural dialogue significant contributions: the exhibition Russianist who would pack his young mischievous and joyous things’. A summer Kuindzhi tested their local and national Victoria . provides a vital way of understanding another Russia and the Arts: The Age of Tolstoy and linguists into an ageing Morris Traveller to stay in Voronezh, where she was able to write identities while working in ‘close and often ‘It was consistently productive and society, and never more so than when the Tchaikovsky , which she curated at the attend Russian talks, plays and exhibitions, her dissertation on a local artist, confirmed competitive dialogue with European exciting,’ Polly recalls. ‘We asked for some of political situation is strained.’ National Portrait Gallery (NPG) in 2016, and she was smitten further by a visit aged 17 her taste for scholarship, and – her course developments’. Russia’s most cherished paintings, including In an age frequently characterised by her prize-winning book The Russian Canvas , firmly set – after graduation she moved to While her book uncovered past Vasily Perov’s Dostoevsky, the only portrait mutual misunderstanding and political ©

an account of the remarkable rise of Russian S Oxford to pursue a PhD in Russian 19th- connections between Russia and the West, of the author done from life, and Ilya Repin’s mud-slinging, the connection between t a t e

painting in the 18th and 19th centuries. century painting. the Russia and the Arts exhibition aimed to unforgettable painting of Mussorgsky on his communities that the exhibition built is T r e t Both achievements have won widespread y Now Head of the Department of History build new links and understanding through deathbed. These are iconic Russian works more precious than ever. Just as many a k o v

acclaim: the exhibition – which saw the NPG of Art at Cambridge and a Fellow of the exchange of art. As a trustee of the that any Russian school child knows. I England fans found their World Cup travels G a l l partner with Moscow’s State Tretyakov e Pembroke College, she has spent much of her National Portrait Gallery, Polly raised the remember thinking we’re being pretty feisty in Russia provided cultural as well as r y ,

Gallery for a pioneering portrait-swap – M academic career seeking to rebalance prospect of a possible Russian portrait asking for all of this. The Tretyakov curators sporting insights, so Polly’s book and o s c attracted almost 70,000 visitors (far o Western perceptions of Russian art that ‘too exhibition as long ago as 2011. Under rightly wanted to know why we had selected exhibition have highlighted the fact that w exceeding its target) and generated warm often focus only on icons or Kandinsky. The inspired guidance from then NPG Director each portrait, but with one exception [a Russians, who venerate Pushkin, are not cross-cultural diplomacy at a time of frosty most cursory glance at these two poles Sandy Nairne, her initial ‘wildly ambitious painting on metal withheld only because of always so very different from Brits, with political relations between Russia and the reveals that some pretty remarkable stuff vision’ covering decades gradually focused concerns over its condition] they let us their love of Shakespeare. UK. Meanwhile the book, with its focus on a must have taken place in between.’ down to a period from the 1860s to 1914, borrow everything we wanted. There was The award of the Pushkin Medal – ‘an neglected yet seminal period in which The Russian Canvas , the product of a ‘when all the artistic disciplines came real trust.’ incredible honour and very unexpected’ – was Russia’s artists developed from underrated decade of work (‘my daughter’s lifetime’), together in unprecedented dialogue involving At the opening of the NPG exhibition, a richly deserved recognition of the work of craftsmen to proud professionals, was focuses on the period from the foundation of musicians, performers, writers, painters and even before sky-high attendance figures one art historian and the gallery that took a equally ground-breaking in setting these the Academy of Arts in 1757 to the patrons. I ended up curating a tightly confirmed huge public interest in Russian art, risk on her enlightened vision. But it also uniquely Russian painters squarely in their assassination of Alexander II in 1881. In this conceived show which highlighted those top-level political support for the project was represents the potential of artworks to pan-European context. book, Polly sought to draw attention back in collaborations and the myriad ways in which clear. Despite deep tensions between the two challenge misleading perceptions and foster The closeness of the UK-Russian cultural time from the Avant Garde to reveal to non- these various artists sparked off each other countries over Moscow’s interventions in mutual understanding and new lines of connection underpinning Polly’s work is Fyodor Dostoevsky by Vasily Perov, the only portrait Russian audiences an astonishing history of in the closing decades of imperial rule.’ Eastern Ukraine and Crimea, the Russian communication between people – a symbol embodied in her own academic background: of the author painted from life complicated, conflicted, often spectacular As plans developed to borrow 26 deputy prime minister and ambassador to of hope in difficult times. 24 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 25 D Y a a o they heat the food!’ The number and nuts, seafood, gluten and dairy products and n

L W i a h n i g complexity of meals produced has increased other rapidly changing needs. The whole t e considerably, putting extra strain on task has become much more complex and inadequate ventilation systems and causing the Caius Catering Manager, Ricardo Soares, unacceptable levels of humidity for the and his team, have succeeded in rising to staff. Food prepared on the ground floor these challenges despite the serious failings must be transported to the first and second of existing facilities. floors and kept warm until served. For Caius, it is not simply a matter of There are a number of important feeding staff, Fellows and students. Members benchmarks to be applied to the proposed of the Sub-Committee are keenly aware of facilities. They must enable the College to the importance of the tradition of dining in comply easily with current safety standards Hall, how it shapes the community and and working conditions for staff and with all helps it to prosper. Unlike some other current regulations on food hygiene and colleges, Caius has continued a minimum preparation. The new kitchens are intended dining requirement (MDR) under which to serve the College for the next fifty years: students pay for and attend a certain there is no doubt that all these legal and number of dinners each term to maintain a other requirements will grow more exacting collegiate dining atmosphere. The kitchen in the years to come, so there must be room project is ‘a catalyst to encourage dining in for manoeuvre and further improvements. College’ and the Sub-Committee has Think how tastes and standards have engaged with students to ensure that their changed over the past few years: everyone preferences will be met by the new values fresh food more highly. Caterers must arrangements. offer vegetarian or Vegan alternatives, they The plan at this stage is for work to must cope with religious diets, allergies to start in the summer of 2 019, immediately The Kitchen Build Sub-Committee (left to right) Mr Andrew Gair, Estates Manager; Mrs Jennifer Phillips Jennifer Philips (199 6), Director of Operations (199 6), Operations Director; Professor Axel Zeitler (2005), Chairman; Mrs Jane Howson, Operations Director’s Secretary; Dr Duncan Hewitt (2 015); Dr Helen Mott (2005); Mr Ricardo Soares, Director of Catering. Dr Elizabeth Harper (198 3) did not attend this meeting. On the screen is a plan for the that will cut demand by avoiding waste of marquee outside the Harvey Court JCR that will house First Hall in academic year 2019-20 energy.’ They are reluctant to put additional

Y ventilator and extraction systems on the roof a o

L

i because of noise pollution. Staff facilities will a n

g Kitchen Refurbish ment be improved, the storage areas will be rationalised and the inwar d/outward flow D a

f an army marches on its stomach, n after the Open Days in the first week of from the main entrance to the kitchen will

W h i

does a college think on its t July. Most catering will move to Harvey be brought up to modern standards. e stomach? Or to put it more Court, with a possibility that the Cavonius The lift system will be completely elegantly, intellectual and physical Centre may be temporarily adapted to upgraded and the curiously angled ‘dumb activities are equally dependent on house formal Hall. First Hall will be replaced waiter’ currently used to serve High Table pIroper sustenance. by a cafeteria service in a marquee outside decommissioned. If the City Conservation Replacing the kitchen in a domestic the Harvey Court JCR. Once the officers and Historic England permit, the home can be a traumatic upheaval for the refurbishment is completed, the plan is to Servery beside the Hall will be enlarged and residents. Refurbishing the College kitchens offer a cafeteria-style option at Harvey adapted with a new roof design to improve is more like a military operation – and that Court on a handful of nights each week working conditions and doors at the far end is how the Kitchen Build Sub-Committee is and to bring new life to the JCR for to facilitate service flow. The Pantry on the approaching it, well-armed, with good students by providing a daytime first floor, which serves the Fellows’ Dining intelligence, proper preparation and plenty café service. Since most first and Room, the Panelled Combination Room and, of time for reconnaissance. second year students either live out of term, the ‘White’ Room, will also be Occasional visitors and guests who on the West Caius site or redesigned and made more fit for purpose. Y

a come to Caius for winter feasts and summer gravitate to it, there is an This is a massive undertaking and not o

L i a buffet lunches may be surprised to learn opportunity to provide one the College has entered into lightly. The n g how urgently the proposed new facilities are additional service there and cost of building works and the improvements needed. For many years, successive teams of possibly to extend it to to facilities will run to many millions. The chefs and kitchen staff have worked members of other colleges Sub-Committee is doing all in its power to heroically to provide course after course of working on the Sidgwick site. minimise expenditure, while not exactly mouth-watering delicacies – but behind the The main kitchens at the cutting corners, as they are determined to scenes, it has been a challenging task to Old Courts will switch build state-of-the-art kitchens, to serve the prepare, store and serve several hundred from gas to electric College for half a century. Their first major meals simultaneously, at the right time and induction cooking, to decision was to postpone the project by a temperature, because of the outdated reduce humidity and full year, in order to save substantial fees for design of the kitchens. the need for outside consultants and instead to employ a The College kitchens were last ventilation, so there considerable amount of in-house expertise refurbished half a century ago, in the 1960s. will be a dramatic from both Fellows and staff members. According to the Chairman of the Sub- change in power requirements. Axel advises As Axel says: ‘It’s a great journey we’re on Committee, Professor Axel Zeitler (2005): that ‘Sustainability is a big item on the – and it will become tremendously more Cramped conditions in the current Caius kitchens ‘The ovens now heat the kitchens more than Ricardo Soares, Director of Catering agenda. The aim is to come up with a design nerve-wracking and exciting next year!’. 26 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 27

Mr M L Holman Mr A P Pool * Sir Keith Stuart The Rt Hon Lord Broers Mr J A G Fiddes † Mr N K Halliday Mr G J A Household † The Rt Hon Sir Mark Potter Mr A J Taunton Dr D I Brotherton Mr M J W Gage Dr M A Hopkinson * † Professor A J Kirby Dr R Presley † Professor B J Thorne Dr G M Clarke † Dr J Gertner † Mr J L Hungerford Mr J D Lindholm * Mr H J H Pugh Mr F J W van Silver The Reverend J E Cotter * Mr M D Harbinson Dr R H Jago † Thank You! Dr R G Lord Mr P W Sampson † Mr J B R Vartan His Hon Peter Cowell † Mr P Haskey * Mr N T Jones * Mr P A Mackie Canon A J Stokes Revd J L Watson Mr J M Cullen Mr E C Hunt Dr D H Kelly * Mr B J McConnell † Dr J R R Stott Mr A Wells * Professor R J B Frewer Mr R T Jump * † Dr P Kemp Dr H E McGlashan Professor J N Tarn † Dr C H Gallimore † Dr A B Loach † Mr M S Kerr † Gonville & Caius College Development Campaign Benefactors Canon P B Morgan † Mr O N Tubbs † 1959 (5 7.14%) Mr N Gray Mr A W B MacDonald Dr R Kinns Mr B M Nonhebel The Rt Hon Lord Tugendhat † The Reverend Kenneth Anderson Dr D F Hardy Professor R Mansfield Dr V F Larcher Mr A J Peck Mr A S Turner Dr D J Beale Dr R Harmsen Professor P B Mogford Dr R W F Le Page The Master and Fellows express their warmest thanks to all Caians, Parents and Friends of the College who have generously Mr J A Pooles Mr C B Turner Professor D S Brée Dr R M Keating † Dr R M Moor Mr D A Lockhart made donations since 1 July 2014. Your gifts are greatly appreciated as they help to maintain the College’s excellence for Mr J J C Procter † Revd Prof G Wainwright Mr J A Brooks Dr P M Keir Mr A G Munro Mr J W L Lonie Mr J V Rawson Dr D G D Wight Dr D E Brundish † Mr A Kenney † Professor R J Nicholls † Miss C D Macleod future generations. Mr J Owens Mr J d’A Maycock Dr R M Pearson Mr C T McCombie A

1919 l

The Reverend Peter Tubbs * Dr J E Godrich a Mr C H Pemberton † Mr W S Metcalf n

Dr W E B Lloyd * His Honour Judge Vos † Dr N J C Grant F Mr M J Potton Dr J R Parker † e r Revd P T Hancock † s Sir M E Setchell Mr M J Pitcher † h 1934 1947 (22.22%) Canon A R Heawood * † t Mr D E P Shapland Mr J M Pulman Professor R A Shooter * Mr F N Goode † Mr J P M Horner † Mr D Shepherd Dr J S Rainbird Mr J M S Keen † Mr G S Jones * Mr D C W Stonley Mr P A Rooke † 1935 Mr R J Sellick * † Professor L L Jones † Dr R I A Swann Mr I H K Scott Maj Gen I H Lyall Grant Mr A C Struvé Professor P T Kirstein Mr J Temple Mr P F T Sewell Mr M H Lemon Dr I G Thwaites * Mr C T Skinner 1936 1948 (30.30%) Mr I Maclean * † Mr R E G Titterington Dr J B A Strange Dr P M M Pritchard * Dr P C W Anderson † Mr E R Maile † Mr V D West † Professor D J Taylor † Dr A R Baker * † Mr P T Marshall * Mr P N Wood Sir Quentin Thomas 1938 Mr A C Barrington Brown * Mr P S E Mettyear † Mr R J Wrenn † Mr P H Veal † Mr R E Prettejohn * Mr D G Blackledge Mr J K Moodie † Mr D J Walker Mr P J Bunker Mr B H Phillips * 1962 (60.24%) Dr R F Walker 1939 Mr E J Chumrow * Mr O J Price Mr M S Ahamed Mr A V Waller Dr J P Clayton * † Mr T Garrett † Mr S Price Dr J S Beale † Mr J D Wertheim Mr J P Phillips Mr L J Harfield † Mr D M Sickelmore * Mr D J Bell † Dr J R C West † Mr R C Harris † Mr W A Stephens Dr C R de la P Beresford † Dr M J Weston 1940 Professor J F Mowbray † Revd T J Surtees † Mr J P Braga Mr A N Wilson * † Dr J E Blundell * Mr J E Sussams † Mr P S L Brice † Mr R F Crocombe * † 1949 (54.05%) Mr A R Tapp † Mr R A C Bye † 1964 (4 7. 25%) Mr A A Dibben * The Hon H S Arbuthnott † Mr S R Taylor † Mr J R Campbell Mr P Ashton Dr R F Payne * † Mr A G Beaumont † Mr P E Walsh † Dr D Carr † Mr D P H Burgess † Dr D N Seaton † The Rt Hon Lord Chorley * Mr C H Walton † Mr P D Coopman † Mr J E Chisholm Mr F P S Strickland * Mr K J A Crampton Mr P Zentner † Mr T S Cox Dr H Connor Mr R D Emerson Col M W H Day † Professor R A Cottis 1941 (5 7. 14%) Dr J H Gervis * 1952 (56.90%) Mr N E Drew Dr N C Cropper Mr D M C Ainscow * Mr J J H Haines Dr A R Adamson † Mr W R Edwards Mr H L S Dibley Mr H C Hart † Mr M J Harrap † Mr C G F Anton * Mr M Emmott † Mr R A Dixon Mr C S Kirkham * Mr E C Hewitt † Professor J E Banatvala † Professor Sir Alan Fersht Mr N R Fieldman Mr J W Sleap * Mr J C Kilner * † Mr G D Baxter Mr J R A Fleming Dr P G Frost Mr C E C Long * † Lt Gen Sir Peter Beale † Mr T M Glaser † Mr A K Glenny 1942 (8 4.62%) Mr A M Morgan Dr M Brett The Telephone Campaign Team (from left to right): Sean Jones (2 015), James Dr C A Hammant Mr G A Gray † Mr K V Arrowsmith † Mr J Norris † Mr D Bullard-Smith † Howell (2 009),Matt Coote (2 015), Thomas Wemyss (2 016), Olivia Goody (2 015), Mr A D Harris † Dr R J Greenwood † Mr D E C Callow * † Mr K J Orrell Mr C J Dakin † Anna Boyle (2 017),Henry Mitson (2 015), Tom Nott (2 017), Conor Beale (2 017), Mr C J D Robinson † Mr R Willcocks Mr H R G Conway Dr J A Lord * † Mr D Hjort † Professor N D F Grindley † Mr A A Green * Mr W R Packer Mr H J A Dugan Professor D K Robinson Professor G R Woodman * Mr J L Cookson * Dr P Martin † Dr J B Hobbs Professor J D H Hall † Dr G A Jones * † Mr P M Poole * Dr A J Earl * James Darnton (2 017), Deepa Kylasam Iyer Sundara Rajan (2 017), Jonathan Mr I Samuels Dr A Wright Dr A G Dewey Mr M B Maunsell † Professor A R Hunter † Mr M J Hall * Mr J M Norsworthy * Mr A W Riley † Mr C B d’A Fearn * † Lancaster (2 016), Victoria Thompson, Marissa Green (2 012); Lucy Ward, Belen Mr I L Smith Mr T H W Dodwell Dr H F Merrick † Mr P A C Jennings † Professor K O Hawkins Dr R H B Protheroe † Dr D A Thomas * Mr G Garrett † Tejada Romero and Reiss Akhtar (2 016) Mr R R W Stewart 1958 (5 7.83%) Mr J E Drake † Mr J A Nicholson Mr J W Jones Mr B D Hedley Professor E M Shooter Mr J F Walker Dr T W Gibson † Mr D F Sutton Mr C Andrews † Mr B Drewitt † Dr C H R Niven Dr D M Keith-Lucas Professor Sir John Holman Mr J M Sword * Mr D H A Winch * Mr E S Harborne Mr A A Umur Professor R P Bartlett Revd T C Duff † Mr M O’Neil Professor J M Kosterlitz † Mr J Horsfall Turner * † Mr M A H Walford * Mr J A G Hartley † Professor C du V Florey Mr D I Cook † Professor K G Davey † Dr J B L Webster Mr J E Bates * † Rt Revd D R J Evans † Mr P Paul Mr F J Lucas † The Reverend Canon R W Hunt Mr F T Westwood * 1950 (52.83%) Sq Ldr J N Hereford * Mr G H Gandy † Dr R A F Cox Dr R A Durance † Mr H de V Welchman † Mr A D Bibby Professor V Fallah Nowshirvani Professor A E Pegg † Dr P J Mansfield Dr S L Ishemo Mr P J Braham * Mr D B Hill † Mr B V Godden † Mr P H C Eyers Dr M D Fuller Dr R D Wildbore † Dr J F A Blowers † Mr G A Geen † Mr A C Porter Mr A R Martin Mr A Kirby † 1943 (60.00%) Mr D R Brewin Mr E J Hoblyn Dr P R Goldsworthy * Professor J Fletcher † Dr F R Greenlees Mr J P Woods Mr T J Brack † Dr J A Gibson † Dr J D Powell-Jackson Mr J R Matheson * Dr R K Knight Dr R Barnes Mr M Buckley Sharp Mr W H Ingram * Mr H J Goodhart † Professor J Friend Professor R E W Halliwell Dr D L Wynn-Williams † Mr J P B Bryce Mr T A J Goodfellow * † Dr A T Ractliffe † Mr W J McCann Dr T Laub † Wg Cdr D H T Dimock Mr J G Carpenter † The Revd D K Maybury * Mr B A Groome Dr A E Gent † Mr D A Jackson Mr J D G Cashin † Mr D N C Haines Mr P G Ransley Prof Sir Andrew McMichael † Dr H M Mather Dr W M Gibson † Mr R G Dunn † Dr C W McCutchen † Mr C G Heywood † Professor N J Gross Professor J J Jonas 1957 (62.03%) Professor A R Crofts Mr P M Hill Dr R A Reid † Dr C D S Moss Mr S J Mawer Professor R Harrop * Mr G H Eaton Hart Lord Morris of Aberavon Mr M A Hossick Professor R J Heald Dr T G Jones Mr A B Adarkar Mr K Edgerley Mr A E H Hornig Mr D J Risk * Revd Dr P C Owen Professor D V Morgan * Mr A G H House † Mr W J Gowing † Mr P J Murphy † Mr C B Johnson Mr J D Hindmarsh Mr M E Lees † Mr W E Alexander Mr A W Fuller Mr M J D Keatinge † Mr C W M Rossetti Mr T K Pool Mr J R Morley Dr C Kingsley † Dr A C Halliwell Dr M J O’Shea * Dr D H Keeling † Mr R A Hockey † Mr J H Mallinson Dr I D Ansell † Mr W P N Graham Dr C J Ludman Dr B M Shaffer Dr R N F Simpson † Mr R Murray † Dr D N Phear Professor J C Higgins * Mr S L Parsonson † Professor J G T Kelsey Mr R J Horton * † Mr C D Manning Dr N D Barnes Professor F W Heatley † Mr H J A McDougall Revd P Smith † Mr R Smalley † Mr A K Nigam † Dr P W Thompson * Dr O W Hill Mr P S Pendered Mr M G MacD Kidson * Mr R W J Hubank † Mr J R S McDonald * Mr D H Beevers Mr D M Henderson † Mr N G McGowan Dr F H Stewart Mr R B R Stephens Mr J H Poole Mr A M Wild Dr M I Lander † Dr M J Ramsden † Mr J E R Lart † Mr A G Hutheesing * Mr J J Moyle † Mr J C Boocock Mr J A Honeybone Mr R G McNeer Mr R P R Tilley * Mr A M Stewart Dr W T Prince Professor N L Lawrie * Professor M V Riley Dr R A Lewin Mr D W James Dr P J Noble † Dr T R G Carter Professor J O Hunter † Mr C J Methven † Mr H J M Tompkins Mr J D Sword † Dr D L Randles 1944 (21.05%) Mr G S Lowth † Dr N Sankarayya Mr R Lomax † Mr J S Kirkham Dr J P A Page Dr J P Charlesworth † Mr N A Jackson Mr M M Minogue Dr M T R B Turnbull † Mr W J G Travers Dr C N E Ruscoe † Mr D J Hyam † Mr D L H Nash † Mr C F Smith Dr D M Marsh † Mr R W Marshall Mr C H Prince The Reverend David Clark Mr J G Jellett Dr C T Morley Professor P S Walker † Mr F R G Trew † Mr J F Sell Mr C D Neame * Dr S W B Newsom † Mr J de F Somervell † Mr B Martin Mr R W Montgomery † Mr A B Richards Professor A D Cox Mr J R Kelly † His Honour Judge Mott Professor M S Walsh Mr M G Wade Dr R Tannenbaum Mr W T D Shaddick Mr A G C Paish † Mr R P Wilding † Dr H Matine-Daftary † Col G W A Napier Mr G T Ridge Mr M L Davies † Dr G N W Kerrigan † Mr P Neuburg Mr G C Watt Mr D R F Walker † Mr A N Taylor Mr M R Steele-Bodger Mr D S Paravicini Mr C D Willis Dr M J Orrell † Mr D J Nobbs * † Mr D M Robson Dr T W Davies † Mr G D King Mr B M Pearce-Higgins Mr A A West † Mr D W B Ward † Mr K S Thapa Mr J A Potts † Mr D H O Owen Mr B C Price Dr A P Rubin Mr E J Dickens Dr P E King-Smith Dr G P Ridsdill Smith Mr D H Wilson † Mr G J Weaver Mr R A Wallington 1945 (38.89%) Mr G D C Preston † 1953 (52.94%) Mr T I Rand Mr R M Reeve † Mr J D Taylor † Dr A N Ganner Dr A J Knell Mr J H Riley † Mr N J Winkfield Mr H N Whitfield † Dr T B Wallington Dr J S Courtney-Pratt * Dr A J Shaw Dr N C Balchin * Mr J P Seymour † Sir Gilbert Roberts † Mr H W Tharp † Professor A F Garvie † Dr R P Knill-Jones The Revd D G Sharp Mr R D S Wylie † Mr R G Williams Dr F J M Walters † Mr K Hansen Mr D A Skitt Mr S F S Balfour-Browne † Mr P T Stevens Mr T W J Ruane Mr G Wassell † Mr J D Henes † Mr E A B Knowles Mr G S H Smeed Dr G R Youngs † Mr R G Wilson † Mr R C Wells † Mr R K Hayward * Mr D B Swift * † Mr D W Barnes Dr D A Templeton Mr R J Silk Dr P J Watkins † Very Revd Dr M J Higgins † Mr R D Martin † Mr J E Trice Dr A M Zalin † Mr F R McManus Mr S P Thompson † Mr I S Barter Mr J A Whitehead * Mr M H Spence Mr A S Holmes Mr T W McCallum Dr P Tyrer † 1963 (60.24%) 1965 (53.92%) Mr D E Rae * † Canon Dr S H Trapnell Professor R J Berry * Professor J S Wigglesworth * Mr D Stanley 1956 (70.91%) Mr J D Howell Jones Mr C P McKay † Dr I G Van Breda 1961 (51.22%) Dr P J Adams † Dr P J E Aldred Dr F C Rutter † Mr W A J Treneman Mr C S Bishop Mr P E Winter Mr K Taskent Professor D Bailin * Professor F C Inglis † Dr D R Michell Mr D J Wagon Mr C E Ackroyd Dr T G Blaney † Dr J E J Altham † Dr J C S Turner † Mr L F Walker † Mr K C A Blasdale † Mr P E Thomas † Mr C P L Braham Mr A J Kemp † Mr R W Minter Mr F J De W Waller Professor G G Balint-Kurti Dr B H J Briggs Professor L G Arnold † Revd P Wright † Mr J Y Cartmell 1954 (56.72%) Mr J A Cecil-Williams † Mr A J Lambell Sir Douglas Myers * Dr A G Weeds Mr A D Bell Mr P J Brown Professor B C Barker † 1946 (78.57%) Mr P L Young * † Mr T Copley * Professor M P Alpers 1955 (50.77%) Mr G B Cobbold Mr T F Mathias † Mr T S Nelson Mr J T Winpenny Professor Sir Michael Berridge Dr C R A Clarke Mr A C Butler Mr G Aspden * Mr C H Couchman * Mr D R Amlot Mr C F Barham † Dr R Cockel Dr R T Mathieson † Dr J V Oubridge Dr M D Wood Mr M Billcliff Mr E F Cochrane Mr D E Butler Dr D A P Burton 1951 (48.53%) Mr P H Coward Mr J Anton-Smith † Mr M W Barrett Dr J P Cullen Professor A J McClean Mr E A Pollard * Mr P J Worboys Professor R S Bird Mr R M Coombes † Mr R A Charles Mr D V Drury * † Mr L C Bricusse Dr P M B Crookes † Dr J K Bamford Dr J H Brunton † Mr J A L Eidinow Mr C B Melluish Mr G D Pratten † Mr P A Bull Dr J R Dowdle The Rt Hon Sir Christopher Clarke Dr J R Edwards † Mr G H Buck † Mr G R Cyriax * Mr D G Batterham Mr A R Campbell † Professor G H Elder † Mr D Moller Mr F C J Radcliffe 1960 (5 7. 47%) Dr M D Dampier Professor M T C Fang Dr C M Colley † Professor J T Fitzsimons Dr A J Cameron † Dr D Denis-Smith † Mr D W Bouette Dr M Cannon † Mr J K Ferguson Mr M F Neale Mr M Roberts Mr J G Barham † Mr J O Davies Dr S Field Mr G B Cooper Mr K Gale * Mr P R Castle Mr P R Dolby † Mr D J Boyd Mr D J Clayson Mr M J L Foad Mr A W Newman-Sanders † Mr M P Ruffle † Mr B C Biggs † Dr J Davies-Humphreys Dr H P M Fromageot The Rt Hon Lord Emslie Mr G R Kerpner † Mr R N Dean Mr G M Edmond Professor C B Bucknall † Professor P D Clothier † Professor J A R Friend Mr T Painter Sir Colin Shepherd Mr A J M Bone Dr J S Denbigh † Mr J E J Goad † Mr J H Finnigan Mr I M Lang * Revd N S Dixon * † Mr B Ellacott Dr R J Cockerill † Mr A A R Cobbold † Mr R Gibson † Mr R D Perry † Dr F D Skidmore Dr A D Brewer Mr R J Dibley Mr A J Grants * Sir A J Habgood Mr H C Parr Mr R B Gauntlett † Revd H O Faulkner † Mr G Constantine Dr C K Connolly † Dr H N C Gunther Mr G R Phillipson Mr A Stadlen Mr R A A Brockington Mr D K Elstein Mr P M G B Grimaldi Mr B Harries * 28 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 29

Mr J Harris Mr C F Corcoran Dr D R Glover Mr C J Marley Mr G Markham † Dr C Ma Mr P J Radford Mr R J Pidgeon Mr D L Melvin Dr S A Atwell Dr D A Hattersley Mr P G Cottrell Mr O A B Green Dr D R Mason † Dr C H Mason † Mr A J Matthews Professor T A Ring † Mr M H Pottinger † Mr T J Morris Dr M A S Chapman Revd P Haworth † Mr G C Dalton Mr J D Gwinnell † Mr J R Moor † Mr P B Mayes † Dr P B Medcalf Dr G S Sachs Dr B A Raynaud Mr S Moss Mr G A H Clark His Hon Richard Holman † Dr W Day More than 300 Mr J M Harland Mr D J Nicholls Mr J G A McClean Dr S J Morris Mr A J Salmon Mr P J Reeder † Mrs A S Noble Mr S Cox Mr R P Hopford † Mr A C Debenham Mr N Harper † Mr R E Perry † Professor D Reddy † Dr D Myers † Dr L F M Scinto Mr M H Schuster † Dr R A A O’Conor Dr D J Danziger Mr I V Jackson Mr G J Edgeley Caian have told us Mr D P W Harvey Mr M D Roberts Mr H E Roberts Mr D C S Oosthuizen † Mr M J Simon Revd A G Thom † Mr T Parlett Mr J M Davey † Dr R G Jezzard † Dr M C Frazer Dr M B Hawken Mr S J Roberts Mr N J Roberts Mr R B Peatman Mr K G Smith Mr P A F Thomas Dr J G Reggler Mr P M de Groot Mr K E Jones Mr B J Glicksman ‘th‘at they are leaving Mr J W Hodgson Dr P H Roblin Dr J J Rochford Mr J S Price Professor R Y Tsien * Dr D Townsend † Professor C T Reid † Mr N D J Denton Dr R R Jones Mr P E Gore † Professor J A S Howell Mr J Scopes Dr D S Secher Professor S Robinson Dr P A Watson † Mr R W Vanstone Ms A M Roads Dr M Desai Professor A S Kanya-Forstner Mr T Hashimoto Mr S D Joseph Professor A T H Smith † Mr A H Silverman Mr S J Roith Mr D J White † Dr P Venkatesan Dr C M Rogers Mr D P S Dickinson Dr I G Kidson Mr D G Hayes a legacy to Caius in Mr C A Jourdan † Mr M J Spinks Mr C L Spencer Dr R H Sawyer Dr A N Williams Dr W M Wong Mr E J Ruane Mr J L Ellacott Mr J R H Kitching Dr W Y-C Hung Mr N R Kinnear Dr T D Swift † Mr W C Strawhorne Mr P L Simon † Mr M J Wilson † Mr D W Wood † Dr K C Saw Mr R Ford †

Dr H J Klass Mr M D Hutchinson their Will. These gifts Mr M J Langley Professor N C T Tapp * Mr S P Taylor Dr S G W Smith Mr L M Wiseman Mr P A Woo-Ming † The Reverend Dr N R Shave Mr P G Harris The Hon Dr J F Lehman † Mr J R Jones Professor M Levitt Mr P J Taylor Mr G S Turner Dr J A Spencer * Mr R C Woodgate * † Professor P C Taylor Mr A W Hawkswell

Dr M J Maguire † Mr N G H Kermode are exempt from tax Mr R T Lewis The Revd Dr R G Thomas † Dr A M Vali Mr P C Tagari Professor E W Wright 1979 ( 40.58%) Professor R P Tuckett Mr W S Hobhouse † Dr C B Mahood Mr R J Lasko Professor J MacDonald Mr R E W Thompson † Mr D K B Walker † Mr S Thomson † Dr R Aggarwal Mr N A Venables Mr C L M Horner Dr P J Marriott † Mr D I Last † Mr B S Missenden † Dr A F Weinstein † Mr L J Walker Mr J P Treasure † 1978 (4 2. 86%) Mr D J Alexander Ms B M F Want Mr R H M Horner and could reduce the ‘‘ Dr W P M Mayles Dr I D Lindsay † Dr S Mohindra Mr S T Weeks Mr J S Turner Mr J C Barber Dr M G Archer Professor E S Ward Mr P C N Irven † Mr J J McCrea Mr D H Lister Mr A J Neale 1973 (4 2.16%) Dr R M Witcomb The Rt Hon N K A S Vaz Dr T G Blease † Mr T C Bandy † Professor P G Xuereb Mr B D Jacobs His Hon Judge Morris Mr R J Longman inhertance tax rate on Mr J C Needes Dr A P Allen Professor O H Warnock Dr G R Blue † Dr R M Berman Mr A W R James Mr T Mullett † Dr G S May Mr C G Penny * Dr S M Allen 1975 (40.00%) Mr A Widdowson † Mr M D Brown † Mr A J Birkbeck † 1980 (22.22%) Professor T E Keymer Mr A R Myers Mr T W Morton the rest of your estate Professor D J Reynolds Mr P R Beverley Mr E J Atherton Mr D S Bulley Dr G M Blair Mr A M Ballheimer Dr R L Kilpatrick Dr J W New Dr E A Nakielny Mr W R Roberts Mr A B Brentnall Dr R G Bailey 1977 (4 0.19%) Mr B J Carlin Dr P J Carter Dr L E Bates † Mr P W Langslow Mr A H Orton Mr W M O Nelson from 40% to 36% Mr J S Robinson Mr N P Carden Dr R Baker-Glenn Mr P J Ainsworth Mr C J Carter † Mr D A Chantler Dr N P Bates † Ms F J C Lunn Mr C F Pinney Mr A M Peck Mr B Z Sacks Professor R H S Carpenter * Dr C J Bartley Mr J H M Barrow Mr J M Charlton-Jones Mr P A Cowlett Mr C R Brunold † Mr P J Maddock Dr C A Powell Professor N P Quinn Dr R D S Sanderson † Dr S N Challah Mr P S Belsman Mr S T Bax Mr S A Corns Mr W D Crorkin Dr C E Collins Dr M Mishra Mr R N Rowe Mr S D Reynolds James Howell (2009) Dr S A Sullivan † Mr J P Cockett Mr H R Chalkley Mr R Y Brown Mr M J Cosans Dr A P Day Mr A W Dixon Mrs P L Naccarato * Mr A C Scott Mr J S Richardson Fellow and Director of Development Dr S W Turner Professor P Collins Mr S Collins † Dr M S D Callaghan Mr A D Cromarty Mr N H Denton Dr S L Grassie † Mr T G Naccarato Dr R D Sharpe Mr P Routley Mr N F C Walker * Mr S P Crooks † Sir A E Cooke-Yarborough Dr P N Cooper Dr A J Davidson Mr N G Dodd Mr P L Haviland † Dr A P G Newman-Sanders Dr D J Sloan Mr M S Rowe Professor R W Whatmore † Mr M G Daw † Mr J M Davies Dr S W Cornford Dr A P Delamothe Mrs C E Elliott Mr T L Hirsch Dr O P Nicholson Dr O R W Sutherland Professor J B Saunders Professor G Zanker Dr P G Duke Dr M J Franklin Mr G Nnochiri † Mr M L Thomas Mr H J A Scott Mr P C English Mr N R Gamble Ms C L Plazzotta D A l a 1971 (41.94%) a Mr D S Thompson Mr G T Slater † n Mr A G Fleming Mr M H Graham Mr G A Rachman n

W F

Mr I D K Thompson † Revd Dr J D Yule † Dr J P Arm Mr R Fox Dr A J W Gray * e Mrs B J Ridhiwani h r i s t h

Professor J S Tobias e Mr M S Arthur Mr F R Grimshaw Dr D G B Hamilton Mrs M Robinson t Mr H Weatherburn 1968 (55.42%) Mr H A Becket † Dr J A Harvey Professor J F Hancock Dr R M Roope Mr I R Whitehead Dr M J Adams † Mr R N Beynon Mr J R Hazelton Mr D A Hare Mrs D C Saunders † Mr A T Williams Mr P M Barker Mr S Brearley † Mr D J R Hill Mr R L Hubbleday Mr T Saunders † Mr C H Wilson Mr P E Barnes Dr M C Buck Mr G N Hill Mr R F Hughes Dr A Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg Mr D V Wilson Dr F G T Bridgham Dr H H J Carter Dr R J Hopkins Dr N Koehli Professor F R Shupp Lt Col J R Wood Mr T J G Coleman Mr A Charlton Mr F How Mr D Marsden Mr G J W Spickernell Mr A C Cosker † Mr J A K Clark Dr W F Hutchinson * † Dr R G Mayne † Dr D M Talbott 1966 (53.33%) Mr J P Dalton Dr R C A Collinson Mr W A Jutsum Mr K M McGivern Mr K J Taylor † Mr M J Barker Mr M D K Dunkley Mr J A Duval † Mr S A Kaufman Dr M J Millan Mr C J Teale Mr J D Battye Mr J C Esam † Professor A M Emond Mr K F C Marshall † Mr K S Miller † Ms L J Teasdale † Mr D C Bishop Mr C Fletcher Mr J-L M Evans Mr J S Morgan Mr G Monk Ms A M Tully † Dr D S Bishop † Mr J M Fordham Dr T J Gibbs Mr J S Nangle Professor A J Morgan Mr C J R Van de Velde Professor D L Carr-Locke Mr S M Fox Dr S H Gibson Dr S P Olliff Revd M W Neale * † Professor C R Walton Mr P Chapman † Mr R J Furber Mr L J Hambly Dr G Parker Dr C C P Nnochiri Mr R A Warne Dr C I Coleman † Mr J E J Galvin Professor D M Hausman Professor T J Pedley Dr H C Rayner † Dr E A Warren Dr K R Daniels † Mr D P Garrick † Professor D J Jeffrey Mr J F Points † Mr D J G Reilly † Dr B A Weskamp Dr T K Day † Dr E M Gartner * Professor B Jones Mr A W M Reicher Mr P J Roberts Ms S Williams Mr C R Deacon † Mr D S Glass Dr P Kinns † Dr A F Sears Professor J P K Seville Mr D P Dearden † Professor C D Goodwin Dr G Levine Dr D Y Shapiro Mr G R Sherwood † 1982 (42.59%) Mr R S Dimmick Dr T J Haste Dr J M Levitt Dr W A Smith Dr F A Simion Dr A K Baird Mr P S Elliston † Mr G McC Haworth Dr P G Mattos † Mr J Sunderland † Canon I D Tarrant Mr D Baker † Mr J R Escott † Dr G W Hills Mr R I Morgan † Mr J W Thomas Dr J M Thompson † Mr J D Biggart † Mr M N Fisher Dr P W Ind Mr L N Moss Mr H B Trust Mr B J Warne † Dr C D Blair Mr W P Gretton Revd Fr A Keefe Mr N D Peace † Mr D G Vanstone Mr R S Wheelhouse Dr H M Brindley Mr M Hamid Mr D J Laird Mr S R Perry Mr R A Wallace Mr J R Wood Dr N C Campbell Mr D R Harrison † Professor R J A Little Professor D I W Phillips Mr G A Whitworth Sir William Young Mrs T M Campbell Dr L E Haseler † Dr D H O Lloyd † Dr M B Powell Dr M Clark Mr R E Hickman † Dr R C H Lyle Mr P J Robinson 1974 (45.30%) 1976 ( 46. 96%) Mr P A Cooper Mr R Holden Mr B A Mace Mr A Schubert Dr D F J Appleton Mr G Abrams Mrs N Cross Dr R W Howes Mr J I McGuire † Mr T W Squire Professor A J Blake † Mr D Barham Dr M C Crundwell Professor R C Hunt Dr J Meyrick Thomas Dr P T Such † Mr R Z Brooke † Mr J J J Bates † Mr G A Czartoryski Dr W E Kenyon Mr J A Norton † Mr P A Thimont Mr H J Chase Mr S J Birchall Mrs A J Davidson Professor S L Lightman Mr M E Perry Mr A H M Thompson † The Revd Dr V J Chatterjie Dr H D L Birley Mr A R Flitcroft Dr W J Lockley Mr I F Peterkin Dr S Vogt † Professor C Cooper Mr N G Blanshard † Dr P A Fox † Mr G G Luffrum Dr T G Powell † Derek Ingram (197 4), Fellow of the College and Mr S V Wolfensohn Dr L H Cope Mr N S K Booker Mr D A B Fuggle Mr D C Lunn Mr S Read former Director of Studies in Engineering, who Mr C G Young Mr M L Crew Mr L G Brew † Dr I R Hardie Dr P I Maton Professor P G Reasbeck Mr S Young * Dr N H Croft † Mr T C Brockington Dr R M Hardie died in 2 016. His seven figure legacy to Caius will Dr Pippa Rogerson (1986), Professor Sir Alan Ferst (196 2) and Dr John Vallance (198 5) at the State Library Dr A A Mawby Professor J F Roberts Mr M D Damazer Dr H M Christley of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia in April 2 018 Mrs C H Kenyon † Professor P M Meara † Mr E Robinson support further generations of Caian Engineers as 1972 (35.40%) Professor J H Davies Dr M P Clarke † Mr M J Kochman Mr P V Morris Mr P S Shaerf well as the general endowment of the College Mr A B S Ball † Dr M A de Belder The Reverend Canon B D Clover Mr P Loughborough Dr K T Parker Mr P J E Smith Mr D R Barrett Mr J R Delve Mr D J Cox Mr S H McD Denney Dr P G Dommett † Mr J Erskine † Dr E M L Holmes Ms E F Mandelstam Mr K F Penny Mr V Sobotka Mr J P Bates † Professor A G Dewhurst † Dr J S Daniel Dr D Eilon Dr J Edwards † Professor T J Evans Dr J M Jarosz Mr D J Mills Mr S Poster † Dr G S Walford Mr D Heathcote Mr C R J Westendarp Dr D N Bennett-Jones † Dr E Dickinson Cllr R J Davis † Mr P T Fincham Dr J A Ellerton Dr J R Flowers Mr S J Lowth † Professor M Moriarty † Dr H E R Preston Mr C Walker Mr J S Hodgson † Dr N H Wheale † Mr S M B Blasdale † Mr C J Edwards His Honour The Chief Justice Professor K J Friston † Mr R J Evans † Mr S R Fox Dr J Marsh Dr J N Nicholls Mr J N B Sinclair Dr D P Walker † Mr D R Hulbert Professor D R Widdess Mr N P Bull Professor L D Engle V A De Gaetano Mr A L Gibb † Mr P G S Evitt Mr P C Gandy † Dr K Martin Mr D H O’Driscoll Dr R L Stone Mr P E Wallace Mr T J F Hunt Mr C J Wilkes Mr I J Buswell Mr J C Evans Mr P H Ehrlich Dr D J Gifford Mr T J Fellig Ms C A Goldie Professor J R Montgomery † Mrs R E Penfound † Mr J A Strachan † Dr P R Willicombe † Mr S B Joseph Mr D A Wilson † Professor J R Chapman Mr R J Evans The Hon Dr R H Emslie † Mr K F Haviland Professor P M Goldbart Mr J B Greenbury Mr A N Norwood † Professor J M Percy Mr N E Suess Mr A Keir † Mr P J G Wright † Mr C G Davies † Dr M G J Gannon Mr A G J Filion Mr P C Headland Mr A B Grabowski Dr M de la R Gunton † Dr N P O’Rourke Mr R J Powell Mr D Swinson † 1969 (43.33%) Dr I R Lacy † Mr P A England Professor J Gascoigne † Dr M J Fitchett Mr N J Hepworth Mr A D Halls Mr N C I Harding † Dr J N Pines Dr C E Redfern Dr A M Turner Dr S C Bamber † Mr C J Lloyd 1970 (4 7.78%) Mr J E Erike Mr C D Gilliat Mr S D Flack Mr R M House † Dr E Hatchwell Mr R P Hayes † Mr R N Porteous † Professor S A T Redfern Mr P C Turner Dr A D Blainey Mr S J Lodder Mr R B Andreas Mr P J Farmer † Dr J S Golob Mr M Friend Professor G H Jackson Mr N P Hyde Mr T E J Hems † Lord Rockley Ms M K Reece † Mr J F Wardle † Mr S E Bowkett Mr R G McGowan Mr J Aughton † Mr C Finden-Browne † Mr P A Goodman † Dr K F Gradwell Mom Luang Plaichumpol Dr C N Johnson † Ms C F Henson Ms J S Saunders † Professor D Reynaud Mr W J Watts Mr A C Brown Dr T J Meredith Mr D Brennan † Mr R H Gleed † Dr P J Guider † Dr G C T Griffiths Kitiyakara * Mr P R M Kavanagh Dr A D Horton Mr J M E Silman † Professor A Roberts Mr D F White Dr R M Buchdahl Dr T F Packer * Dr C W Brown Mr I E Goodwin Mr S J Hampson Dr F G Gurry Mr K A Mathieson Mr D P Kirby † Dr J C Hoskyns Mrs M S Silman † Mr J P Scopes Mr S M Whitehead † Mr M S Cowell † Mr A N Papathomas Mr R Butler Mr A D Greenhalgh Dr M C Harrop Professor J Herbert Mr K H McKellar † Mr S P Legg Dr J M Ibison Professor M Sorensen Mr A A Shah Mr J M Williams † Dr M K Davies Dr C M Pegrum Dr D D Clark-Lowes Mr P G Hadley * Mr P G Hearne Dr A C J Hutchesson † Dr P H M McWhinney † Mr R A Lister † Mr B J Isaacson Dr A F Tarbuck Mrs A J Sheat Mr S H Dunkley Dr D B Peterson Mr G J H Cliff † Mr R S Handley † Dr W N Hubbard Dr S T Kempley Herr N J S Murray Dr D R May Ms C J Jenkins † Professor J A Todd † Dr J H Sheldon 1967 (4 8.10%) Dr M W Eaton † Mr P J M Redfern Mr R P Cliff † Mr P K C Humphreys Mr D G W Ingram * Mr J D A Lander Mr H N Neal Dr A A M Morris Professor P W M Johnson † Mr R L Tray Mr M R Smith Mr G W Baines Mr R J Field † Mr I Taylor Mr D Colquhoun † Mr A M Hunter Johnston Mr N Kirtley Mr R A Larkman Dr R P Owens † Dr J B Murphy Mr P J Keeble Dr C Turfus † Ms O M Stewart Mr N J Burton Professor J P Fry Mr A P Thompson-Smith Mr J Edmunds Professor W L Irving Mr R I K Little Mr M des L F Latham Professor A Pagliuca † Mr C C Nicol Dr M E Lowth † Mrs E I C Strasburger † Dr R J Collins Dr C J Hardwick † Mr P B Vos † Mr P S Foster Mr J K Jolliffe Mr P Logan † Mr S H Le Fevre Dr K W Radcliffe Mr A J Noble † Dr C M Mallet 1981 (40.77%) Dr J G Tang † Mr R F Cooke Professor A D Harries Mr A J Waters Mr L P Foulds † Mr P B Kerr-Dineen Mr R O MacInnes-Manby Professor C J Lueck Mr I M Radford † Mr T D Owen † Mr A D Maybury Mrs J S Adams Dr M E C Watson 30 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 31

Dr P S Watson 1985 (34.62%) Mr J W Stuart † Professor N R Asherie † Dr S Francis Mr J D Hall Professor F E Karet Mr D P Somers Dr D J Crease Ms K M Marsh 1997 (24.43%) Miss L M Devlin Professor M J Weait † HE Mr N M Baker † Dr A J Tomlinson Ms T N Ayliffe Mr G R Glaves † Dr C C Hayhurst Professor K-T Khaw Mrs R C Stevens † Dr D J Cutter Mrs J K Matten Mr J E Abdo, Jr Mr G T E Draper Mr A M Williams Mrs L E Barlow Dr M H Wagstaff † Dr G M D Bean Dr A J Hart Dr A D Henderson † Mrs R R Kmentt Mr R O Vinall Mr N Q S De Souza Canon Prof J D McDonald Ms A Ahmad Zaharudin Mr P M Ellison Mr W I Barter Mr S A Wajed Dr I M Billington Mr S M S A Hossain Mr I D Henderson † Dr R F M Langlands Mrs J M Walledge Ms V K E Dietzel Mr L J McGee Mr G H Arrowsmith Mr A Fiascaris 1983 (3 7.01%) Ms C E R Bartram Professor J Whaley Dr M Bisping Dr P M Irving Mr R D Hill † Dr H J Lee Mr L K Yim Mr D R M Edwards Mrs P C M McGee Mr A J Bower † Ms S Gnanalingam Dr R F Balfour † Dr I M Bell † Mr T H Whittlestone Mr K J Brahmbhatt Mrs L Jacklin † Mr M B Job Mr I J Long Dr J C-M Yu Dr T C Fardon † Mr D E Miller † Mr J D Bustard † Mr M A Halliwell Dr J E Birnie Mrs J C Cassabois Mr R C Wiltshire Mr H A Briggs † Mr N C Jacklin † Mr H R Jones Mr D F Michie Dr J A Fraser Dr D N Miller † Dr M T Calaresu Mr A P Holden Mrs K R M Castelino Mr A H Davison Mr J P Young Dr A-L Brown Mr G W Jones † Dr P A Key Dr H R Mills 1993 (25 .86%) Mr S S Gill † Dr M A Miller † Miss J M Chrisman Mr B Holzhauer Professor S-L Chew Dr J P de Kock Mr C Zapf Mr J C Brown † Mr T E Keim Mr D H Kim Mr R J Moyes Dr H Ashrafian Mrs C E Grainger Mrs C H Mirfin Mrs C Chu Ms J M James Professor J P L Ching † Professor E M Dennison † Mr N J Buxton Mr J P Kennedy † Dr S H O F Korbei † Mrs L P Parberry † Mrs F C Bravery Mrs E Haynes † Dr K M O’Shaughnessy Mrs R V Clubb Mr A F Kadar Mr H M Cobbold † Mr M C S Edwards † 1987 (40.00%) Ms H J Carter Mr J J-H Kim Dr N G Lew Mr D R Paterson † Dr A C G Breeze † Mr R J M Haynes † Mr S M Pilgrim Ms R F Cowan Dr C M Lamb † Dr S A J Crighton † Mr J M Elstein † Mr J R Bird † Ms C Stewart † Dr V A Kinsler Ms A Y C Lim Mr D A Rippon Ms A J Brownhill Dr P M Heck Dr P Rajan Mr A J D Craft Mr M W Laycock † Dr A Dhiman † Mr K J Fitch Mr O R M Bolitho Mrs M E Chapple † Mr J R Kirkwood † Dr M B J Lubienski Ms I A Robertson Dr C Byrne Ms C E Kell Dr B G Rock Dr K O Darrow Mr N O Midgley Dr N D Downing Mr M J Fletcher Dr K L Bradshaw Mrs A I Cleeve Dr H H Lee Mr J S Marozzi † Miss V A Ross Mr P M Ceely † Dr A P Khawaja Mrs G Rollins Mr I Dorrington Mr J W Moller Dr D Emery Mrs E F Ford † Mr N A Campbell Dr S R De Dr S Lee Miss M L Mejia Professor A F Routh Mrs A C T Chambers Mr A S Kocen Ms T J Sheridan † Mrs J R Earl † Associate Professor M Monjerezi Mr A L Evans † Mr J D Harry † Mr R Chau Mr B D Dyer Dr R B Loewenthal Mr T Moody-Stuart † Mr A Smeulders † Mr P I Condron Mrs R A Lyon Miss A C B Smith Mrs P G Eatwell Dr H D Nickerson Mr M J Evans Professor J B Hartle † Mr N R Chippington † Mr N D Evans Mrs L C Logan † Mr G O’Brien Mr J A Spence Dr E A Congdon Dr D C O Massey Mr M J Soper † Dr E J Fardon † Dr C Parrish † Sir T M Fancourt † Ms P Hayward Dr E N Cooper Dr N L Fersht Mr I M Mafuve Mr S T Oestmann † Mr J G C Taylor Dr E C Corbett Mr J R Niblett Mr S S Thapa Dr P J Fernandes Mr G M T Pasinetti Mr P E J Fellows † Mrs S L Haywood Mrs H J Courtauld Mr E T Halverson Mr R M M McConnachie Ms M E J Pack Ms G A Usher Mr B M Davidson Mr P A J Phillips Dr G Titmus Dr S P Fitzgerald Mr M A Pinna † Dr W P Goddard † Mr P G J S Helson † Mr A J Coveney † Dr E N Herbert Mr B J McGrath Dr C A Palin Mr M J Wakefield Dr R J Davies Professor S G A Pitel Mrs S A Whitehouse Mr J Frieda Mr A M Ribbans Professor D R Griffin Mr J A Howard-Sneyd Mr M J Curran Mr L D Hicks Mr P J Moore † Dr J M Parberry † Mr C S Wale † Mr O S Dunn Mr P D Reel † Dr C H Williams-Gray Mr R R Gradwell Dr J D Stainsby † Mr W A C Hayward † Dr C H Jessop Dr L T Day Ms A E Hitchings Ms J H Myers † Mr R Rajagopal Mr M N Whiteley Mr P A Edwards Mr P H Rutkowski Miss M B Williamson Dr D M Guttmann † Professor T Straessle Mr J St J Hemming Dr L J Kelly Dr H L Dewing Ms R C Homan † Mr H T Parker Dr S J Rogers Mrs M J Winner Mr M R England Dr M J P Selby Mr N J Woodmansey Dr A E Helmy Mr J H T Tan Mr R M James Mr C L P Kennedy † Dr K E H Dewing Dr A D Hossack † Dr S L Rahman Haley Dr S Sarkar Mr S J Wright Dr A S Everington Professor P Sharma Mr E G Woods Professor C E Holt † Professor V P Tomasevic Mr S J Kingston Mr W P L Lawes Mrs V A Donajgrodzki Dr O S Khwaja Dr A J Rice Mr R A Sayeed Dr I R Fisher Mr L R Smallman Dr X Yang Mr L T L Lewis Mrs K L Tuncer Mr J F S Learmonth † Mrs C F Lister † Dr M D Esler † Dr A P S Kirkham † Mr N J C Robinson † Mr P C Sheppard 1992 (2 9.14%) Dr A Gallagher Dr P J Sowerby Stein Mr S S Zeki Mr A W J Lodge Mr A R R Wood Mrs H M L Lee † Mrs N M Lloyd Mr N M Farrall Mr F F C J Lacasse Mrs C Romans † Mr L Shorter † Dr M R Al-Qaisi Dr F A Gallagher Professor M A Stein Mr G D Maassen Mr P J Wood Mr J B K Lough Ms D M Martin Mrs S A Farrall Mr F P Little Mr J C Roux Dr J Sinha † Ms E H Auger Mrs N J Gibbons Dr K-S Tan 1996 (20.83%) Dr S G Manohar Dr P D Wright † Dr R C Mason Ms J M Minty Mr C P J Flower Ms V H Lomax Mr S C Ruparell † Professor M C Smith Mrs L C Bailey Mr J C Hobson Dr R R Turner † Mr S T Bashow Dr E A Martin Ms Y Yamamoto Mr A J McCleary The Revd N C Papadopulos Ms V E McMaw † Dr C D F Zrenner

Mr M D B Mills Professor E S Paykel A Dr A L Mendoza l a

n 2000 (2 9.14%)

Ms H J Moody Dr R J Penney Dr S Nestler-Parr F e

Mr R H Moore Mr J W Pitman r Ms L E North Mr S M Alikhan s h

Dr L S Parker Mr M H Power t Miss R N Page † Mr R D Bamford Mr R M Payn † Dr D S J Rampersad Mr P S Patel Dr M J Borowicz Mr J A Plumley Professor I D W Samuel Ms E D Sarma Mr H J C J Bulstrode Mr A B Porteous Mr R Sayeed Dr J H Steele II Mr J F Campbell Dr J Reid Miss J A Scrine † Mr S J Stretton Mrs R A Cliffe † Mr G Robinson Dr A M Shaw Mr B Sulaiman Mr M T Coates † Mrs S D Robinson † Mr E J Shaw-Smith Dr R Swift Mr S G Dale Mrs N Sandler Dr P M Slade † Dr K S Tang Dr A D Deeks Mr C J Shaw-Smith Dr G P Smith Mr A Thakkar Miss J L Dickey Mr H C Shields Mrs E M Smuts Mr J P Turville Mr E W Elias Dr C P Spencer Dr C C Stevens Mr T J Uglow Mr T P Finch Revd C H Stebbing Mr B M Usselmann Mr E D H Floyd Mr A G Strowbridge Mr W D L M Vereker 1998 (20.23%) Dr C Galfard Mr R B Swede † Mr M J J Veselý Mr I Ali Dr W J E Hoppitt Mr C H Umur † Mrs J S Wilcox † Ms H M Barnard † Mrs J M Howley Ms H E White † Mrs A K Wilson † Mr J N Bateman Dr N S Hughes Mr P G Wilkins Ms I U M Wilson Dr V N Bateman Mr J M Hunt Dr K M Wood Ms J M Wilson Mr D M Blake † Mr G P F King Dr S F J Wright † Mr R C Wilson † Mr A J Bryant Mrs V King Dr I B Y Wong Dr D M Calandrini Mr A B Koller 1984 (3 4.13%) Dr E F Worthington † Mrs L E Cathrow † Miss M Lada Dr H T T Andrews † Dr A M Zurek Dr A P Y-Y Cheong Dr R Lööf Dr K M Ardeshna Mr D W Cleverly Miss C N Lund Mr A E Bailey 1986 (32.45%) Mr F W Dassori Dr I B Malone Mr D Bailey Ms R Aris Mr B N Deacon Dr H J Marcus Mr R A Brooks † Dr M L A Bhasin Dr P J Dilks Dr A R Molina Mr G C R Budden † Ms C B A Blackman Mr J S Drewnicki Dr A G P Naish-Guzmán Dr S E Chua Professor K Brown Caians at the reception for the Master and Master-elect in Wellington, New Zealand in April 2018 Mr J A Etherington † Major D N Naumann Professor H W Clark Mr H D E Clark Dr S E Forwood Mr H S Panesar Mrs N J Cobbold † Mr J H F & Mrs A I Cleeve Mrs S P Baird † Mr C E G Hogbin † Mr A R J Wightman Mrs R S Baxter Ms C A Frances-Hoad Mr D D Parry † Dr A R Duncan † Mr A J F Cox Dr A J Forrester † Ms N S Masters Mr A M P Russell † Professor S A R Stevens Mr J P A Ball Dr R C Holt Mr M A Wood Mrs S E Birshan Mr D G Hardy Mr O F G Phillips † Professor T G Q Eisen Professor J A Davies † Dr G M Grant † Dr M C Mirow † Mrs D T Slade Dr M H M Syn Mr A J Barber † Dr N J Iosson Dr Q J Zhang Dr J R Bonnington Revd Dr J M Holmes Dr C J Rayson Dr A S Gardner † Professor J Day Dr P E Grieder Dr A N R Nedderman † Dr N Smeulders Mr C Synnott Ms S F C Bravard Dr A Kalhoro Miss A L Bradbury Mr A R Hood Mr C E Rice Mr D J Goulandris Mrs J P Durling Mr J W M Hak Mr S P T O’Connor Professor L Smith Dr J C Wadsley † Mr P N R Bravery Dr G A J Kelly 1995 (29.32%) Miss C E Callaghan Dr C C C Hulsker Mr M O Salvén † Mr J W Graham Mr M A Feeney Ms C M Harper † Mr M B Pritchett Mr J A Sowerby Dr G D Wills Mr N W Burkitt Mr C S Klotz Dr R J Adam Mr K W-C Chan Ms K Lam Mr A K T Smith Dr N J Hamilton Professor R L Fulton Brown † Mr S L Jagger Mr S Shah Dr K M Strahan Ms R M Winden Ms J R M Burton † Dr A B Massara Mr C Aitken Maj J S Cousen Mr M H Matthewson Miss C E Smith Dr M Harries Dr K Green Dr M Karim Mr W A Shapard Mr A S Uppal Mr N R Campbell Dr S B Massara Professor M C Baddeley Mr J R F Dalton Ms E Milstein Mr H F St Aubyn Dr J C Harron Mr R J Harker Ms M L Kinsler Mrs R J Sheard Ms S Vassilikioti 1991 (31 .85%) Mr C R G Catton Mr T P Moss Mr M E Brelen Mr G D Earl † Dr N A Moreham Mrs K E Symons Mr L J Hunter † Mr T Hibbert Dr P Kumar † Dr R M Sheard Mrs E H Wadsley † Mr M W Adams Mr P E Clifton Professor A D Oliver Dr R A J Carson Mrs J H J Gilbert † Mr H R F Nimmo-Smith † Mr J A P Thimont Mr M A Lamming Dr M P Horan Mr D M Lambert Mr A D Silcock Mrs T E Warren † Ms J C Austin-Olsen Ms S S A Crocker Dr A J Penrose Ms S S-Y Cheung Professor D A Giussani Mr A J Pask Dr M Tosic Dr J R B Leventhorpe † Professor J M Huntley Mr W E Lee Dr R C Silcock Dr G A Webber Dr R D Baird † Mr W T Diffey Mr R B K Phillips † Mr C Chew Mr I R Herd Ms J L Rankin Dr G S Vassiliou Mr G C Maddock † Dr H V Kettle Mr S P Leo Mr A J Smith Ms G A Wilson Dr A A Baker Dr I Forde Dr J F Reynolds † Ms H Y-Y Chung Dr S J Lakin Mr P S Roberts Mr E W J Wallace Dr K W Man Professor J C Knight Mrs M M J Lewis Mrs A J L Smith Dr S C Zeeman Dr P Bentley Ms A M Forshaw Mrs L Robson Brown † Mr J A Crawford Dr O A R Mahroo Professor R P L Scazzieri Dr D W A Wilson † Mr A D H Marshall † Professor M Knight Dr J O Lindsay Mr R D Smith Mr C S Bleehen † Dr E M Garrett † Dr R Roy Mrs E B Del Brio Miss F A Mitchell Dr O Schon Ms A J McBurney Mr B D Konopka Ms E A C Lock Revd J S Sudharman 1990 ( 34. 84%) Mr C R Butler Mr R A H Grantham Mr C A Royle Dr M J L Descamps Professor J D Mollon Ms S C Thomas 20 01 (32.39%) Mr S Midgen Ms A Kupschus † Dr P Matthews Ms T W Y Tang Dr C E H Aiken Mr A M J Cannon Dr N D Haden Professor A P Simester Dr K J Dickers Mr J J A Perks Mrs J C Wood Dr S Abeysiri Mrs H C Nicholson Professor J C Laidlaw † Ms P A Nagle Dr R M Tarzi Mr M C Batt † Mr D D Chandra † Mrs F M Haines Dr T Walther Mrs J A S Ford † Ms J N K Phillips Mr R A Wood Dr M G Adam Mr E P O’Sullivan Mr R Y-H Leung † Mr T J Parsonson Ms F R Tattersall † Dr T P Bonnert Dr N-M Chau Ms K A Harrison Mrs K Westphely Dr Z B McC Fritz Dr S Rajapaksa Mr D J F Yates † Mr P J Ambrogi Mr I Paine * † Dr A P Lock Mr S L Rea Mrs L Umur † Mrs E C Browne Miss C M Cutler Mr O Herbert Ms S T Willcox Dr K F Fulton Mr A J T Ray † Mrs E S Austin Mr A D Parr Dr G H Matthews Dr W P Ridsdill Smith Mr A G Veitch Professor A M Buckle Dr C Davies Dr S L Herbert Mr R J Williams Mr C K Goater Mr J K Rea 1999 (26.35%) Mr D S Bedi Mr J R Pollock † Dr D L L Parry Dr J L Roche Miss C Whitaker Mr C H P Carl Mr T R C Deacon Dr D J Hodson Dr F A Woodhead Dr M R Gökmen Ms V C Reeve † Mr P J Aldis Miss A F Butler Mrs J Ramakrishnan Mr S K A Pentland Ms J M Rowe Dr P Wingfield Mr M H Chalfen Dr A H Deakin † Mr E M E D Kenny Mrs A J Worden † Dr S J Hamill Mr J R Robinson Mr I Anane Mr J J Cassidy † Dr R E G Reid Mr H T Price Dr J Sarma Ms J B W Wong Mr C S Chambers Mrs C R Dennison Professor C Kress Mr T J A Worden † Professor J Harrington Mr D Scannell Dr A Bednarski Dr J W Chan † Dr K S Sandhu † Mr C H Pritchard Dr M Shahmanesh Dr F J L Wuytack † Ms V N M Chan Dr S Dorman Mr J Lui † Dr E A Harron-Ponsonby † Mr D C Shaw † Mr R F T Beentje † Dr C J Chu † Dato’ R R Sethu Dr R M Rao Mr D W Shores † Professor L C Chappell Dr A Dunford Mr A K A Malde 1994 (25.00%) Mr A J G Harrop † Mr C C Stafford Miss C M M Bell † Mr E H C Corn Dr R A Shahani Dr P Rogerson Mr B R Tarlton 1989 (30.49%) Mrs Z M Clark Ms V J Exelby Mr T P Mirfin Mr M N Ali Mr J R Harvey Mr C M Stafford Mr D T Bell † Mr H C P Dawe Mr P M E Shutler Mr H J Rycroft Mr J M L Williams Dr L C Andreae Dr A A Clayton Dr C S J Fang † Dr C R Murray Mr J H Anderson Dr N J Hillier Mr A H Staines Mr P Berg Dr M G Dracos † Mrs K S Slesinger Dr J E Sale Dr S C Williams Mr J J E M Bael Mr I J Clubb Dr S C Francis † Mr M R Neal Professor G I Barenblatt † Ms L H Howarth Mr P M Steen Dr C L Broughton † Mr N A Eves Dr M R Temple-Raston Mr J P Saunders † Dr T J A Winnifrith Mr S P Barnett Professor P Crone * Mr I D Griffiths Mr R L Nicholls Dr R A Barnes Dr A E Jenkins Mr D J Tait † Mrs J E Busuttil † Mrs A C Finch † Mr M L Vincent Professor J Saxl Mr A N E Yates † Dr C E Bebb Mr P E Day Mr A Heckmann Mrs J A O’Hara Ms I-M Bendixson Dr A L Jones Mr B T Waine † Ms J W-M Chan Mr D W McC Fritz Professor C Wildberg Professor A J Schofield † Professor M J Brown † Mr S G P de Heinrich Mr N W Hills Dr K M Park Professor D M Bethea Ms M C Katbamna-Mackey Mr M-H Wong Dr N R Clark Dr T J Gardiner Mrs K L Wilson Mr J R C Sharp 1988 (3 7.67%) Dr E A Cross † Dr D S Game Dr A J Hodge † Mr R A A Qureshi Dr W E Booij Ms J Kinns Mr C G Wright † Mr J A Cliffe † Miss E Goulder Dr H E Woodley Ms V H Stace Dr P Agarwal Mr J R F de Bass Mrs C L Guest Mr A R Horsley Dr M S Sagoo Mrs C H S Catton Miss N A Lewis Mr K F Wyre † Mr J D Coley † Mr C M J Hadley Dr S H A Zaidi Mrs E D Stuart † Dr M Arthur Dr N F elMasry Mr A W P Guy Dr J P Kaiser † Mr J D Saunders Dr L Christopoulou † Mr B J Marks Ms H B Deixler Miss L D Hannant 32 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 33

Dr D P C Heyman Dr E A L Chamberlain Mr H P Vann Dr J P Edwards Dr C E Sogot Mr M T C Coote Mrs L M Bernstein Mr & Mrs P Coleman Professor M Z Gordon Mr A M Leitch Mrs K E Plumley Dr C Taylor Miss E A Holloway Ms S K Chapman Dr C T Wakelam Miss A E Eisen Mr A D Stacey-Chapman Mr A D B Decas Mr C R & Dr P M Berry † Mr & Mrs M P Collar Mr & Mrs N Gordon & Ms M E Strowbridge Mr & Mrs C J Pope Mr V Telesca & Mrs P Del Rosso Mr O A Homsy Ms V J Collins Dr E Evans Mr J P J Taylor Ms J E Dick Mr & Mrs S M Bhate Mr D Collins Mr & Mrs I Goulding Mr & Mrs H Lennard Mr & Mrs S Potter Dato’ C Q Teo Dr A-C M L Huys Dr T E Cope 2005 (25.86%) Mr A D Felton Miss S E Tchokni Mr S R Fawcett Mr R L Biava Mr & Mrs P A Connan Dr P W Gower & Dr I Lewington Mr & Mrs M Lentrodt Mr & Mrs N E Potts Mr & Mrs T Thebe Mr A S Kadar Dr B J Dabby Ms P D Ashton Ms L E Jacobs Miss M C Green Mr & Mrs T Bick Mr & Mrs C Constantinou Mr & Mrs D R Graney Mr & Mrs J R Leonard Mr & Mrs S Purcell Mrs E T Thimont † Mr A J Kirtley Dr S De Smet Dr D P Chandrasekharan Mr P G Khamar 2010 (15.74%) Mr P Jareonsettasin Mr & Mrs L P Bielby † Dr S Cooper Ms E Gray Mr & Mrs A W Leslie † Mr & Mrs K Purohit Mr J E Thompson † Mr D G A Lano Mr P Dimitrakopoulos Miss D H Chen Dr F P M Langevin Mr C J Andrews Mr N Jones Mr & Mrs C P Bignall Mrs S C Coote Mr & Mrs A Green Mr & Mrs J M Lester † Mr E Quintana † Mrs V P Thompson Dr M J Lewis Mr A L Eardley Mr K Chong Dr G J Lewis Mr J Boeuf Mr A Kalyanasundaram Mr & Mrs S K Binning Mrs C A Copley Mr & Mrs S Green Dr & Mrs L R Lever Mr & Mrs K P Quirk Dr A Thrush & Dr H Bradley Mr C Liu Dr T L Edwards Dr G C Clarke Mrs J F Lewis Mr M A R Brown Mr T Koops Mr & Mrs T N Birch Mr & Mrs A Corsini Mr & Mrs I T Griffiths † Mr & Mrs W M Lewis Mr J G S Willis & Ms P A Radley † Mr & Mrs G Tosic Dr P A Lyon † Miss C O N Evans Dr J M Coulson Miss A E Lucas Mr J M I Byrne Mr D Lilienfeld Mr G Bisutti & Dr J E A Chin Ms D A Crangle Dr P Gu & Ms S Zhong Mr & Mrs P J Lewis Mr & Mrs B M Radomirescu Mr & Mrs I K Treacy Professor P Mandler Miss E M Foster Mr D G Curington Miss F E Matthews Dr C Chen Dr K-C Lin Dr A & Dr A B Biswas Mr & Mrs S J Crossman Mr & Mrs L J Haas Mr S Lewis Mr A Palmer & Mrs M Raisman Mr & Mrs P Treanor Dr S K Mankia Mr S N Fox Miss E M Fialho Dr A B McCallum Dr D G Costelloe Mr J J L Mok Mr & Mrs J W Blythe Dr & Mrs T G Cunningham Mr & Mrs G Hackett Mr & Mrs A Lilienfeld Mr S Ralls Mrs W G Tsien Mr M Margrett Mr T H French Miss J M Fogarty Mr G E G Moon Miss H R Crawford Mr D M O’Shea Dr R M J & Ms L A Bohmer Mr & Mrs I J Curington Mr & Mrs T Hajee-Adam Mr & Mrs M A Lindsay Mr A Rasul & Dr T Nazir Mr & Mrs B P Uprety Mr A S Massey † Mr T W J Gray Dr E Y M G Fung Mr D T Nguyen Dr J M Dean Mr M C Owen Mr & Mrs K Bolton Mr S & Reverend P J Cuthbert Mr & Mrs A M Hall Dr T Littlewood & Dr K Hughes Mr & Mrs D H Ratnaweera Mr & Mrs M S Uwais Dr A C McKnight Mr J K Halliday Miss Y B Gill Miss S K A Parkinson Miss R A Desa Mr H A Potts Mr M E H Booker Mr & Mrs C D’Almeida Mr & Mrs K Hall Mr & Mrs M C F Lock Mr & Mrs S M Reed Mr & Mrs M J Van Dam Mrs J C Mendis Mr J M Harper Miss K V Gray Dr S X Pfister Miss A A Gibson Miss A P C Romana Dr & Mrs J J C Boreham Mr & Mrs M J Daniels Mr T & Dr H Halls Mr A M P Lodha Mr & Mrs A J Reizenstein Mr & Mrs N A M Van Der Ploeg Mr R J G Mendis Dr R J Harris Dr P Hakim Dr T J Pfister Dr S Gupta Mr J M Schnitzer Mr & Mrs S H Bostock Mr C H Jones & Mrs E L Davies Ms E Hamilton Dr N M Lofchy & Ms C E Ashdown Mr & Mrs M P Reynolds Mr & Mrs S Varathanatham Professor R J Miller Mr M P N Harwood The Revd Dr C Hammond Mr I A Rahman Mr T S Hairettin Mrs E S Shooter Mr & Mrs M S Bowkis Mr & Mrs N Davies Ms M Y Han Mr & Mrs P H Loh Professor & Mrs J Rhodes Mr & Mrs A G Vaswani Mr D T Morgan Miss A V Henderson Mr J S B Hickling Miss S Ramakrishnan Miss A C M Hawkins Ms T Silkstone Mr J Boyle & Dr P Mills Dr & Mrs S D’Costa Mr & Mrs M S Handley Mrs P A Low * Mr G D Ribbans Mr & Mrs P M Village Mr H M I Mussa Mr T S Hewitt Jones Dr H Hufnagel Mr D G R Self Mr W R Jeffs Dr H R Simmonds Mr B J Bridgen Dr & Mrs H P B T De Silva Mrs R A Hanson Mr & Mrs A S Lowenthal Mr & Mrs M Richardt Mr & Mrs A Voice Miss W F Ng Dr M S Holt Mr J McB Hunter † Mr D M Sheen Miss L M C Jones Mr R Sondarajan Ms J A Bridgen Brigadier & Mrs A J Deas Mr & Mrs N P Hardman Dr Y L K Lui Mr & Mrs A E Riley Mr & Mrs G Vollaro Mr J Z W Pearson Mr R Holt Mr G Jaggi Dr H L Slack Mr S D Kemp Miss K Songvisit Mr & Mrs G Britton Mr & Mrs J P Delaney Mr & Mrs H Hardoon Mr D K S Lum & Ms M M W Chua Mr & Mrs D E Ring Mr & Mrs T R Wakefield Dr R C Peatman Mr D C Horley Mr M T Jobson Dr B D Sloan Mr P Kumar Mr H J R Thompson Mrs N S Brooker Mr & Mrs M Delaney Mr M Haroche & Prof A Crémieux Professor D Luscombe Mr & Mrs J P Roebuck Mrs A J Walker Mr A L Pegg Mr J P Langford † Dr E D Karstadt Dr A M Taylor Dr J A Latimer Miss S A Trotter Mr S Brookes Mr & Mrs D Dewhurst Mr & Mrs J K Harrison Mr L C L Ma Mr & Mrs D I Rose Mrs S Walker Miss A M Porter Dr A R Langley Ms A F Kinghorn Mr M H Taylor Dr I L Lopez Franco Mr T C Venkatesan Mr & Mrs R C P Brookhouse Mr & Mrs R H C Doery Mr C Hart Mrs M M Macdonald Mr & Mrs A C Rowland Dr B Walton Dr R A Reid-Edwards Miss J S Lee Dr K Langford Mrs R E Tennyson Taylor Miss L J Mason Mr A R J Ward-Booth Mr & Mrs P Brosnahan The Revd Dr A G Doig Mr & Mrs Hutchings-Hay Mr D F Macpherson * Mr A Roy Dr G & Dr K Warner Dr C L Riley Mr M M Lester Mr T Y T Lau Miss S I Thebe Miss C E Oakley Mr N D Worsnop Mr & Mrs A Brown Mr & Mrs P Dorrington Mr & Mrs R Heinsohn Mr & Mrs P J Magee Mr B Thompson & Mrs N Rucker Mr & Mrs R B Webb Miss A E C Rogers Miss Z W Liu Dr E Lewington-Gower Miss J F Touschek Miss J A Parkinson Mr D Zikelic Mr & Mrs R C Brown Mr & Mrs D P Drew Ms P Hickox Dr & Mrs H Malem † Professor J Rushton Dr M L Weinberg & Ms R E Folit Mr C G Scott Miss J Lucas Dr S A Li Dr V Vetrivel Dr P M Hill Dr K S & Dr V Manjunath Prasad Dr & Mrs S M Russell † Ms J Weir

Mrs J M Shah Mr C A J Manning Miss F I Mackay Dr P F F Walker D Mr & Mrs Y P Ho Mr A Maquieira Mr & Mrs P M Sagar Mr & Mrs A S Wells a

Mr K K Shah Dr D J McKeon Dr A H Malem Mr O J Willis n Mr J & Dr J Hollerton Mr & Mrs M M Marashli Mr & Mrs V Sajip Mr & Mrs P Wells

W

Dr S J Sprague † Mr K N Millar Mr A J McIntosh Dr S E Winchester h Mr N C Holloway Mr & Mrs P C Marshall Mr & Mrs M Salt Mr & Mrs G A Wemyss i t Mr M R P Thompson Dr C D Richter Dr E M McIntosh Dr F Xie e & Mrs I N Terrisson Professor N Marston Dr & Mrs G Samra Ms J E White Miss F A M Treanor Ms C O Roberts Mrs K M McIntyre Mr J D Home Mr R Westmuckett Mr I Sanpera Trigueros Mr & Mrs T C J White Mrs S J Vanhegan Miss V K C Scopes Mr P D McIntyre 2008 (21.31%) Mr & Mrs M N H Hore & Ms C E Martin & Ms M D Iglesias Monrava Mr & Mrs N Y White Dr C C Ward Mrs J K Scott Dr T J Murphy Mr N V Bhatt Mr & Mrs N A Horley Mr & Mrs J M Martyn Mr & Mrs M D Saunders † Mr S White Dr R A Weerakkody Miss N N Shah Mr R R D Northcott Ms L Bich-Carrière Dr R C J Horns & Dr L Y Chak Mr W P & Dr J O Mason Mr M Savage & Ms K M Fletcher Dr A Wilkins Dr H W Woodward Miss Z L Smeaton Mrs F R O’Neill Miss L C Borkett-Jones Mrs Y R Horsfall Turner Mrs D L Maybury Mr & Mrs A S Schorah Mr & Mrs P Wilkinson Ms M Solera-Deuchar Mr L J Panter Dr J M Bosten Mr & Mrs W G P Houghton Mr & Mrs C McAleese Dr & Mrs A J V Schurr † Mr A Willman 2002 (31 .45%) Mr T N Sorrel Mrs E L Rees Dr K V Bramall Dr J & Dr V How Mr & Mrs R A McCorkell Mr & Mrs G Scott Mrs A S Willman Mr C D Aylard † Dr A E Stevenson Mr J L J Reicher Miss J A Buckley Mrs A E Howe † Mr & Mrs A T Mckie Mr T Scott Mr & Mrs S Wilson Mrs E R Best † Mr J L Todd Dr R G Scurr Mr O T Burkinshaw Ms L Howell Mr J Mergen & Mrs L M Durbin Mr B Scragg Mr & Mrs W R Wilson † Dr E Z Blake Dr V C Turner Dr N Sheng Dr N Cai Mr & Mrs M Howells Mr P Middelkoop Mr & Mrs T J Scrase Mr & Mrs K Withnall Ms S E Blake Dr R C Wagner Mr Y P Tan Mr F A Carson Mr A M Howes & Mrs E Wijnberg Mr & Mrs D A Scullion Mr & Mrs W K W Wong Dr J T G Brown Mr D A Walker Mr J F Wallis Mr C-W Cheung Mr & Mrs H S Huang Mr & Mrs P D Midgley Mr & Mrs A Scully † Mr & Mrs M Wood Mrs S J Brown † Mrs J A Walker Mr J H Willmoth Dr O R A Chick Mrs P M Hudson * Mr & Mrs J Miller Mr & Mrs M D Seago Mr & Mrs M P Wooder Dr N D F Campbell Miss K A Ward Mr C Yu Miss C Y Clark Miss S J Hullis Mr & Mrs J P Miller Dr & Mrs E S Searle Mr & Mrs M Woodward Miss H M Cooke Mr C S Whittleston Mr K J Zammit-Maempel Mr A Y K Cordero-Ng Mrs J A B Hulm † Mrs R Miller Mr & P S S Sethi Mr & Mrs P M Woodward Miss C F Dale Mrs S S Wood Professor J A Zeitler Mrs S A Cox Mrs L M Hyde Mr D J Mills Mr & Mrs M S Shaw Dr A R & Dr H A Wordley † Mrs J H Dixon † Miss V E Wright Mr H G Füchtbauer Mr J Ingram Mr & Mrs J E Mills Ms G Shepherd Mr & Mrs D Wright Miss A L Donohoe † Professor Z Yang 2006 (18.60%) Mr J E Goodwin Mrs C E Jackson-Brown Mr & Mrs R J Mitson Dr & Mrs J V Shepherd Mr J Xiong & Ms H Zhou Mr J-M Edmundson Dr C Zygouri Dr D T Ballantyne Dr M A Hayoun Mr & Mrs N Jacob Mr & Mrs F E Molina Mr & Mrs J D Sherlock-Mold Professor Q Xu & Dr Y Hu † Dr J D Flint Dr T F M Champion Miss N Khan Ameli Dr & Mrs T Jareonsettasin Mr A J & Dr A M Moorby Mr M Shevlane Mr & Mrs Y Yamamoto Mrs P E Fox 2004 (26.47%) Miss Y T T Chau Mr K R Lu Dr & Mrs D Jeffreys Mrs H Moore Mr & Mrs J C Shotton Ms E S G Yates * Mrs K M Frost Ms A L F Alphandary Mr H Z Choudrey Dr A W Martinelli Mrs K Jones Mr J E Moore Mr & Mrs D P Siegler † Mr B T Yefet & Mrs A E Arovo Mrs J H Gilbert † Mr S R F Ashton Mr R D Cox Miss F McDermott The Development Office Team (from left to right): Mr M D Jones Mr T Morelli & Mrs C di Manzano Mr R & Dr S Sills Ms L Yerolemou Mrs J L Gladstone Mr M G Austin Mr B E N Crowne Mrs K J McQuillian Marissa Green (2 012), Naomi Clarke (2 013), Victoria Ms M A Brown Mrs S J Duffy Mr R E Jones Mrs J Morgan Mr S K Sim & Mme N H Tan Ms A Yonemura Prof E A Gonzalez Ocantos Mrs A J Blake Mr P C Demetriou Dr S J Methven Thompson, Belen Tejada Romero, Sam Cooper, James Mr R Brown Mr & Mrs D Dunnigan Mr R F E & Dr V Jones Mr & Mrs D J Moseley Mr & Mrs C H Simpson Mr S P Young Mr S D Gosling Miss P J McB Brent Mr M A Espin Rojo Miss J Miao Howell (2009), Lucy Allen (2 012), Rachel Knoght and Mrs S Brown Mrs C E Edwards Mr J Mathew & Mrs G Joykutty Professor & Mrs J T Mottram Mr & Mrs I E Simpson Mr K Yuen Mr N J Greenwood † Mrs H L Carter Mr R J Granby Dr J A B Mirams Lucy Ward Mr & Mrs N W Bruce-Jones Dr M R & Dr K M Edwards Mrs A V Jump Mr & Mrs P J Muir Mr & Mrs S Singh Dr R M Zelenka Dr A C Ho Mr S D Carter Mr S J Harrison Mr D G W O’Brien Mr M A Buckley Mrs C E Edwards Mr & Mrs E Kay Mr & Mrs G I Murrell Mr M S H Situmorang Dr & Dr S A Zia Mr O J Humphries Mrs R C E Cavonius Mr I Hoo Mr J M Oxley & Mrs N A Cheney Dr G El Oakley Mr & Mrs A Keen Mrs L Naumann & Mrs S T I Samosir Mr S M Zinser Mr T R Jacks † Dr T M-K Cheng Miss B G Johnson Miss A H W Pang Dr H Shakeel Parents and Friends Mr & Mrs M C Burgess Mr & Mrs H Elliot Ms J N Keirnan † Mr & Mrs T Neal Mr & Mrs T S Sivaguru Ms E L Jaffray Ms Z S C Cheng Mr V Kana Miss L C Parker Dr L Sun Professor J V Acrivos Mr & Mrs D Burrell Mr & Mrs J C Elms Mrs A Kelly Professor P E Nelson † Mr & Mrs P Skarung Corporations, Trusts Mrs H C C Jones-Fenleigh Dr A Clare Miss N Kim Miss E C Robertson Miss R Sun Mr & Mrs P Aflalo Mr & Mrs J W Butler † Mr & Mrs J Emberson Mr & Mrs P Kemp Mr & Mrs P F Newman Mr H W Skempton & Foundations Ms H Katsonga-Woodward Dr C W J Coomber Mr L de Kretser Dr J P Rogers Mr M C Teichmann Mr & Mrs J Afolabi Mrs S Butler Mr P Evans † Mr J A Kerr & Ms C Smeaton Dr C R J C Newton Mr T C F B Sligo-Young Amgen Miss H D Kinghorn † Dr R Darley Miss Y N E Lai Mrs W C Ryder Miss J D Tovey Mr K Aherne Mr & Mrs A R Caine Mr & Mrs P J Everett Professor I Kershaw Mr & Mrs V X Nguyen Mrs M M D Slipper Apple Dr M J Kleinz Dr A V L Davis Mr S Matsis Mr T W L Searle Dr E Y X Walker Mr A M Aldridge Mr I W Carson Mr & Mrs J H Fallas Mr & Mrs M P Khosla Dr P C & Dr S A North Mr T Smeeton Ball Corporation Mrs M F Komori-Glatz Mr B C G Faulkner Dr O Music Mr Y Shan Mr J W Warner Mr & Mrs D A W Alexander & Ms S L Hargreaves Mr & Mrs M J C Faulkner † Ms Y Kim Ms T D Oakley & Ms A Waddington Bank of America Mr T H Land Dr L C B Fletcher Mr E P Peace Dr M C Stoddard Mr M S Wells Mr & Mrs S V Ali Mr & Mrs P Carson Mr & Mrs R Faull Mr P J King Mr P J O’Brien & Mrs S M Nicholl Mr & Mrs J R M Smith Barclays Bank Mr R Mathur Mr R J Gardner Mrs H C Pepper Mr I Y Wang Miss C M C Wong Mr & Mrs G I Andrew Mr G Casale & Mrs K Miskolczy Ms R Fay Mrs M Kirkham Mr & Mrs X Odolant Dr R Smith BP International Ltd Ms E J McGovern Mr R Hamlin Mr J R Poole Dr A P T Wilson Mr & Mrs D F Andrews Sir Geoffrey Cass Mr C Ferris & Dr A E Walker Mr R Klahr & Ms B Gasparovic Mr & Mrs E P Oldfield Mr S Smith BT Foundation Mr P S Millaire Miss J L Impey Mr E C D Rice Miss S R Wilson-Haffenden 201 1 ( 7.00%) Mr & Mrs A Anilal Mr & Mrs D M Cassidy Lady Fersht Ms R E Knight Mr & Mrs P Osprey Dr & Mrs D J Sorrell Caius Club Mr C J W Mitchell Mr M S Knight Miss H K Rutherford Mr X Xu Mr F A Blair Professor E J Archer * † Mr M J Cassidy Ms M Fessa Mr M Koblas Professor L Pace Mr P J Sparkes Caius Lodge Mr C T K Myers Mr M J Le Moignan Mr W J Sellors Mr A J C Blythe Mr & Mrs R H Ashenden Mr & Mrs M Cator Dr Y Fessas Mr & Mrs N Kochan & Mrs E Piemonte & Ms S A Richmond CCA (Caius Choir Alumni) Dr G E C Osborne Ms C L Lee Mr S S Shah 2009 (1 5.15%) Miss L G Bolton Mr & Mrs J Aspinall Mr & Mrs D I Chambers Mr & Mrs R B Filer Mr & Mrs P Kordzinski Mr & Mrs S G Panter † Mr G T Spera Deutsche Bank Dr A Patel Mr W S Lim Dr S K Stewart Miss R Ashraf Dr O J Claydon Mr J M Aste & Dr K S Beizai Mr & Mrs N F Champion Mrs C L Fitzgerald Ms C E Kouris Mrs E A Paris & Professor J C Ginsburg General Electric Dr A Plekhanov † Ms C M C Lloyd-Griffiths Dr E P Thanisch Mr G M Beck Miss H Daniels Mr & Mrs T M F Au Mr & Mrs A C F Chan Mr & Mrs H D Fletcher † Mrs M Kruger Mr & Mrs A Parker Mr & Mrs M Spiller Goldman Sachs & Co Mr S Queen † Dr E F Maughan Mr Y Y Wang Dr M J Booth Mr M Frame Mr & Mrs K Azizi Mr & Mrs J D Chan Mr & Mrs T Fletcher Dr A & Dr U Kumar Dr R Parmeshwar & Dr K Shrestha Mrs J L Stanford Google Mr R E Reynolds Ms G C McFarland Mr H L H Wong Mr L W Bowles Mr L J Knowles Dr S & Dr S Azmat Dr & Mrs M D Chard Mr & Mrs L G F Fort Professor & Mrs B G Kunciw Mr & Mrs A Parr Mr & Mrs G Stewart † Irving Fritz Memorial Fund Professor D J Riches Mr P E Myerson Mr S Xu Mr E D Cronan Mr I Manyakin Mrs J Baker * Mrs R A Chegwin Dr & Mrs D Frame Mr W Lacey Mrs B Parry † Mr & Mrs J R Stuart MBNA International Bank Mr A S J Rothwell Dr H O Orlans Mr C-H Yoon Ms A E Earnshaw Mr K M Mathew Mr P & Dr G Balendran Mr & Mrs L Chen Mr G Frenzel Ms E M Lacovara Miss E H Parton Mr & Mrs R Sturgeon Michael Miliffe Memorial Mr D A Russell † Ms Z Owen Ms H Zhu Dr C L H Earnshaw Mr S C Molina Mr & Mrs A M Bali Mr R T C Chenevix-Trench Ms I Frenzel Mr M J T Lam Mr & Mrs S Patange Mrs K Suess Scholarship Fund Dr R E Shelton Mr J W G Rees Miss J G Gould Miss Y Qin Mr & Mrs N J Balmer Dr C Cheng Ms L Frisby Mr & Mrs D W Land Mr K G Patel † Mr & Mrs C Suggitt Mondrian Investment Partners Ltd Dr N Sinha Dr C Richardt 2007 (2 4.73%) Mr C A Gowers Mr A C G Shore Mr & Mrs R W Bardsley Mr & Mrs A P Chick Mrs A Fritz Mr & Mrs S Langhorn Mr & Mrs V A Patel Mr P Sun RBS Dr S Ueno Mr A J S Sharp Miss M B Abbas Mrs A W S Haines Mr J R Singh Mr & Mrs S S Barter † Mr & Mrs Z M Choudrey Mrs K Gale Mr & Mrs C D Last Mr & Mrs G D Patterson Mr J T Sutcliffe Redington Ms C A L Wasse Mrs L R Sidey Dr M Agathocleous Mr J H Hill † Miss M H C Wilson Mr & Mrs H R Bartlett Dr K M Choy Mrs G M Gerard Mr & Mrs K W Lau Mrs E A Peace Mr & Mrs R J Sweeney Sanford C. Bernstein Limited Ms L L Watkins Mr G B H Silkstone Carter Mr P Y Bao Mr J R Howell Mrs J H Bates Mr & Mrs T J E Church Mrs J Gibbons Mr & Mrs P D Law Dr D L & Dr E M Pearce Mr & Mrs P R Swinn Sir Simon Milton Foundation Mr A J Whyte Mr B Silver Mr H Bhatt Dr J Ke 2012 onwards Mr & Mrs A Baucutt Mr & Mrs I P Clarke Mr C J & Dr C Glasson Mr & Mrs T M Lawrence Mr & Mrs G S Pedersen Mr R Tait Symantec Mr C J Wickins Dr S M Sivanandan Dr K J Boulden Miss J Li Dr L K Allen Dr & Mrs J G B Baxter Mr & Mrs N Cockerton Mr & Mrs J I Goddard Mr & Mrs S D Leibowitz Ms B Pfeffer Mr & Mrs A G Tatton Tun Suffian Foundation Dr R Sun Dr E J Brambley Mr A W C Lodge Mr B Balendran Mr P Baxter 2003 (32.20%) Mr G Z-F Tan Mr H Y Chen Mr C J McKeon Mr J D Bernstock Dr A S Bendall Mr R B Allen Ms E M Tester Miss K Chong Mr R H Morton Dr D J P Burns Mr & Mrs M A Bennett Bold represents Membership of the Court of Benefactors. The current qualification for full membership of the Court of Benefactors is lifetime gifts to the College of £20,000. Mr J E Anthony Dr C J Thompson Mr S J A Coldicutt Miss C Nielsen Mr Y Y C Chan Mr & Mrs M Bennett Percentage figures in brackets after the matriculation years show the percentage of each year participating in benefaction to the College Mr T A Battaglia Mrs E S L Thompson Dr J P A Coleman Dr O C Okpala Tan Sri Dr J Cheah Mr J Bentley Mr A R M Bird Miss N J M-Y Titmus Miss N R Di Luzio Dr H E Orrell Miss X Chen Mr A K N Bernhardt † The Ten Year Club consists of Caians and friends of the College who have made donations every year for the past ten years * deceased Mr C G Brooks Dr I van Damme Mr D W Du Dr D M Salt Professor P Chinnery & Ms A P Brogan We also wish to thank those donors who prefer to remain anonymous 34 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 35

s Doing the Dab Dining with graduands at the traditional Dr Caius Dinner, before Graduation in June 2018, the Master, Professor Sir Alan

e Fersht (196 3), took the opportunity to familiarise himself with one or two of the latest disco-dance moves. Students A True Blue watching Sir Alan’s valedictory address were delighted by the natural ease with which he performed a dramatic manoeuvre Dr Mike Franklin (197 5), CUBC Archivist, writes: know as ‘the dab’, where the dancer drops his head into one crooked elbow while stretching out the other arm in triumph. t No Caians rowed in the four famous victories over Oxford on Boat Race Day 2018, but one made a major contribution from beyond the Usain Bolt does a version of the dab, which has become an Internet meme. grave. A legacy from Ian Lang (194 6) paid most of the cost of the gleaming, new Empacher shell in which the men’s Blue Boat glided to Sir Alan congratulated graduands on completing their various courses, in which 93% of Caians achieved Firsts or 2:1s. their three-length victory. Ian was Captain of Boats at school and rowed at six in the victorious Blue Boat of 1947, a rare distinction for a

o The congratulations were mutual. The students were hugely impressed that the Master was so adept in executing a move freshman at the time. The next year, he was not selected for the Boat Race, although later chosen to be ‘spare man’ for the British eight that few people over 21 would know about. The next day, they demonstrated their affection again: realising it was the last at the Olympic regatta in Henley in August 1948. Cambridge had a surfeit of stroke-siders time Sir Alan would be graduating students, they waited to give him a rousing round of applause as he left the Senate House. and CUBC’s records reveal that Ian failed to make the transition to bow-side. J

a Nevertheless, he was elected President for 194 8-9, when three Olympic Ian Lang’s m e N

s daughter

medallists were available for selection. He was destined never to row again in the H

o anointing the w

i Race, being forced by the new National Service Act to resign the Presidency in e

l new CUBC l January 1949, on call-up to the RAF. He returned in Lent 1951, took his BA in one shell named of the precursors of Land Economy and became a land agent. Ian’s major legacy after her

a was to CUBC, but he also left money to the Caius Boat Club and the Chapel. The father

n i new CUBC shell arrived in time for use in practice and was formally named by l k n a r Ian’s daughter at a ceremony on ‘the hard’ in Putney at the start of Tideway week. F e ik

C M C U B C M i c k

L e

M o i g n

The Caius Box a n The President of the Royal Albert Hall, Jon Moynihan, has kindly provided information on the provenance of the Caius Box, which is available for a wide range of performances by Members and Associate Members of the Court of Benefactors. Box 22, in the centre of the Grand Tier, is regarded as the finest in the house. The Hall’s Archivist, Suzanne Keyte, has revealed that the Box was originally purchased in 1871 by the 2nd Duke of Wellington, the son of the victor of Waterloo. On his death in 1884, it was passed down through the family until the 4th Duke sold it in 1924 to William Tapp (187 7). When Tapp died in 1936, his Will established a Trust into which he put the Box and property in London, valued at more than £200,000, to A sight to gladden Cambridge eyes: the Light Blues leading Oxford down the Thames in the 2018 Boat Race provide for his surviving family members and to endow Scholarships and Fellowships at Caius, particularly in Law and Jurisprudence. Today, the Tapp Trust is worth £16 million and is the largest restricted fund in the College endowment. Arguing the Point Winning the Michael Barratt (195 5) attended the Reception at the State Library in Sydney in April 2018 and Cold War presented a couple of historic documents to be conveyed to the College Archivist, James Cox. The first was his Bumps Supper programme from 1956, a time when the Boat Club Treasurer The Hon John Lehman, President of the US Caius was one M J Prichard, Esq. LLB. The menu features an intriguing delicacy ‘Grassy Corner Foundation, is so far the only Captain of the Caius Boat Club Pudding’, the recipe for which is sadly lost. Michael also handed over a flyer for the who has managed to row his way to an appointment as Secretary Cambridge Union, advertising the third debate of the Easter Term of 1959: ‘This House to the US Navy (1981 -87), although others are hoping to emulate this disapproves of Her Majesty’s Government’s policy in Africa’. attractive career path. John has just published a fascinating book about the This prompted the Proposer, Lord Tugendhat (195 7) to recall how the subject arose: ‘The period of world history in which he had a close personal involvement, Oceans debate was a memorable one that I doubt could happen now. Some months beforehand my Ventured – Winning the Cold War at Sea . mother fetched me at the end of term and we had lunch at a pub – the Bath, I think, then John details the strategy carried out under Ronald Reagan’s presidency, to build the US very upmarket. As I was inveighing against the wickedness of British policy in Nyasaland, Navy ‘s strength back to 600 ships and 15 aircraft carriers and then to deploy them close enough the man at the next table turned round and told me I was speaking nonsense. It was Alan to the USSR to provoke a similar investment in response. He argues that the additional pressure on the Lennox-Boyd. We chatted for a while and I asked him to continue the debate at the Union, Soviet economy produced precisely the result intended, bankrupting the whole system and leading directly which he did. In the event Gordon Walker scratched and Arthur Bottomley took his place. to the fall of the Berlin Wall and ultimately the USSR itself. I can’t see a cabinet minister behaving today as Lennox-Boyd did then. My side won the John’s message is crystal clear: ‘The lesson of this book is that we must restore the capability of our naval forces and sailors not because debate and it was that, I think, which enabled me to go on to become President.’ we might have to go to war with North Korea, Russia, Iran or some other adversary but because we must prevent having to go to war at all.’ Readable Realpolitik from a genuine insider. 36 Once a Caian...... Always a Caian 37

n the 21st century the College, or the College crest appearing in Living Church Postcode our College has stained glass windows or embroidered on active relationships hassocks (kneelers). In some cases Ministers Mutford St Andrew’s, Mutford (1354) NR34 7UY that date back to have been interred in their Churches, and Hockwold cum St James’, Wilton (1354) IP26 4LP the middle of the their association with the College is Wilton and St Mary the Virgin, Weeting (1632) IP27 0QZ 14Ith century. In 1354 prominently recorded. At Wilton, a Weeting St Peter’s, Hockwold (1664) IP26 4HZ William Bateman, Gonville’s gravestone in the chancel floor reads ‘ Sacred Oxborough with All Saints’, Foulden (1354) IP26 5AA Bishop and executor, to the Memory of Edward White Clk, A.M, Late Foulden St John the Evangelist, Oxborough (1734) PE33 9PS arranged for the Fellow of Caius & Gonville Coll, Cambridge. appropriation of the Rector for 23 years of Hockwold cum Wilton, Mattishall All Saints’, Mattishall (1370) NR20 3QF rectories at Mutford, who departed this life Octbr 21st. 1805 .’ Some Bincombe with Holy Trinity, Bincombe (1570) DT3 5PA Foulden and Wilton to the years ago, Geoffrey Smeed (195 9) sent me a Broadwey St Nicholas’, Broadwey (1692) DT3 5LW College. These advowsons, picture of a memorial to the Rev William the right to present a Atthill (179 0) in Brandiston Church in Bratton Fleming St Peter’s, Bratton Fleming (1667) EX31 4SB nominee for appointment Norfolk, where the College was also referred Hethersett St Remigius’, Heathersett (1705) NR9 3JW to a vacant ecclesiastical to as Caius & Gonville. Lavenham St Peter and St Paul, Lavenham (1713) CO10 9QT benefice or church living, The most potent demonstration of these also gave the College important historic relationships can be Denver St Mary’s, Denver (1716) PE38 0DP control over the income experienced on a daily basis in the College Long Stratton St Mary‘s, Long Stratton (1725) NR15 2RL that was derived from Chapel during term time, when all our Blofield St Andrew and St Peter, Blofield (1736) NR13 4NA the parish. Bateman’s purpose was and their incumbents feature in the to shore up the finances of Gonville Hall, as College’s monthly cycle of prayer used at Brooke and St Margaret’s, Kirkstead (18 11) NR15 1ER Deed of Entitlement to the living St Peter’s, Brooke (1921) NR15 1JX of Mutford, issued in 1354 under Morning Prayer. the seals of Bishop William Bateman Beachampton St Mary the Virgin, Beachampton (1818) MK19 6DT and the Cathedral Priory of Norwich Swanton Morley All Saints’, Swanton Morley (1896) NR20 4PB Worthing St Margaret’s, Worthing (1896) NR20 5 HR Advowsons by James Howell (2009) Chatteris St Peter & St Paul, Chatteris (1909) PE16 6BA Stockport St Mary’s, Stockport (1910) SK1 1YG two thirds of the tithes from these parishes College Livings and the dates on which they would come to the College, with the final were acquired. Postcodes are included and third being used to support the vicar. A tithe there is a bottle of Port for the first Caian who was traditionally one tenth of the produce of can provide photographic evidence of having visited all 22 churches each parishioner, either from the agricultural & Livings J a

harvest or output from other trades. m e s

These three parishes were in Bateman’s through the Dean, the Revd Dr Cally benefactor, as the doors are located in the H o w own Diocese of Norwich, though Wilton, Hammond. A recent challenge is how to nave of the church. By contrast at Mutford, e l l which was enlarged to become the parish of exercise this responsibility when there is the congregation were delighted to show me Hockwold with Wilton and Weeting in the pressure to consolidate a number of rural the recently installed new chancel door J a m seventeenth century, is now in the Diocese of parishes into a single joint benefice, looked which has been paid for by the College. e s

H o

Ely. Following on from Bateman’s gift, which after by a single priest. In the past if two Over the centuries, the College has w e l places him amongst our greatest benefactors parishes were merged, patronage would be acquired further livings, both large and small. l as well as being our second Founder, further exercised by rotation but increasingly this is The Perpendicular Church of St Peter and St The church of St Peter and St Paul, Lavenham, where the College has been sole patron since 1713 J parishes became associated with the College. being replaced by having a single vote on a Paul in Lavenham is one of England’s largest a m e s

In 1370, the advowson of Mattishall was board. This dilutes the role of the Patrons, in wool churches, whilst St Margaret’s Worthing H o acquired and these four Norfolk parishes favour of the Bishop, and erodes the is a smaller example of a Norfolk Round w e l became the mainstay of the endowment of relationship the College has had with the Tower Church. Although there is a l the College, until it began to attract parish for centuries. Interestingly, the concentration in the Norwich Diocese, benefactions from individuals, such as the parishes often appreciate the value of an outlying parishes include Bincombe in Dorset three wealthy women, Elizabeth Clare, Anne independent voice in making appointments. where the College also has a significant Scroop and Joyce Frankland, who provided In cases where the College is Lay Rector landholding as a result of a Manor purchased for Fellows and students, mainly in divinity, there is also a financial liability for the by Dr Caius; another is Bratton Flemming in to sing masses for their souls. upkeep of the Chancel, that portion of the Devon where Bartholomew Wortley (167 0) What was designed to provide the building near the altar, typically separated was Rector for 44 years following his College with an income is now, six centuries from the nave by steps or a screen. I saw retirement from the Fellowship; St Mary the later, a responsibility. The right of Lay Rectors examples of this when I visited Foulden and Virgin in Beachampton is now on the edge of to collect a tithe from a parish has been Mutford in June and July this year. In 2013 Milton Keynes; and St Mary’s Church in the abolished and instead clergy stipends are the College paid for the restoration of the market place of Stockport, Greater now funded by the giving of congregations Chancel roof at Foulden, but more recently Manchester, is one of the livings most At the Service of Dedication of the new bird screens through the Parish Share. As Patron, Caius when the Parochial Church Council wanted recently acquired by the College, in 1910. at All Saints’ Foulden (left to right): Andy and does retain the right to be involved whenever to install bird screens in the North and South In many of these churches there are Nadine Marrs of Foulden; dioscesan architect Mrs the parish is seeking to appoint a new entrances to the Church, they were obliged visible signs of the connection to Caius. Ruth Blackman; James Howell; the Revd David Hanwell, Priest-in-Charge 200 6-2013; and Sylvia minister. This is handled by the College’s to finance them themselves through local These can be lists of previous incumbents, James Howell (2009) with members of the congregation of St Andrew’s, Mutford, outside the new chancel Turtle, whose father was Vicar of Foulden in the Chapel and Patronage Committee, usually fundraising and the generosity of a often indicating those who were members of door installed this year and paid for by the College 1940s and who generously founded the new gates