CAIUS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION ANNUAL NEWSLETTER ISSUE 16 - MAY 2013 The CMA President’s Annual Report torms of all sorts batter the poor UK, but the CMA sails on. We had our usual meeting, a little less Swell-attended than usual maybe, but still a day to remember. KJ Patel gave us a fascinating explanation of ethanol toxicity through the lens of a rare inherited illness; Richard Green gave us a potted history of the legal, social and medical battles to make sex-change respectable; Richard Boyd reminded us of some of the things that we had forgotten about membranes (so important!), and we were intrigued by Morris Brown who spoke about somatic mutations in the adrenal glands that underlie some cases of hypertension. Then the high-point: Sir Mark Walport, the then Director of the , Professor Sir Mark Walport KBE FRS FMedSci now the Chief Scientific Adviser to HM Government, delivered the Plenary Lecture: Extraordinary opportunities: from gave us a spell-binding talk on what the current plethora Genome to Health of genetic information is really telling us. And so to at the 2012 CMA meeting. dinner ...

Later on in the year, we were able, because of all your generosity, to help several medical students to travel to remote parts of our world, an experience that they will never forget (is their impact on those they visit similar, one wonders?).

We thought that it was time to think about a different format for our Annual Meeting, and so we sent around a questionnaire. Like all such activities, this was ignored by most of you (we understand...busy people...), but we had sufficient replies to realise that the current format and date were good for most of you, and that you’d like us to invite anyone interesting, not only Caians (in fact, we have never done this). The only change that you wanted (radical lot that you are) was to be able to choose whether you (men) wear black jackets or not at the dinner ... adopted! THE PRESIDENT’S REPORT cont.

o, what do we have for you this year? Talks on predicting outcomes in Parkinson’s disease (Caroline Williams-Gray (née Morley), a rapidly rising Caian young neurologist); on hip Sorthopaedic surgery, and on the treatment of brain tumours (both by Caians: Alister Hart, son-in-law, and Naomi Fersht, daughter, of the new Master: just by chance, you understand ... ); then Susan Bewley, from King’s College London, on ageing and the reproductive system. Finally, you will have a chance to meet and hear the new Regius Professor of Physic, Patrick Maxwell, who will be delivering the Plenary Lecture on oxygen sensing. And, then a drink (or two) in the Master’s Lodge and ... so to the reunion dinner (optional dress as mentioned earlier).

We look forward to seeing as many of you as possible. This year we have reserved a number of rooms in the building, in which you may lay your weary and slightly befuddled heads. But you need to book. See you June 29 - Bateman Auditorium.

Joe Herbert The History of the CMA The CMA was founded in 1997, which coincidentally was the 400th anniversary of Harvey's graduation from the college in 1597. Since then, the CMA has generated considerable enthusiasm and interest. Its intention is to allow Caius medical graduates to keep in touch with one another, and with the college; and to maintain a sense of a Caius medical community after graduation. The CMA also provides a mechanism whereby older members can provide help and advice to Caius students and younger members, for example about career choices. We have had many offers of support and help of one kind or another, which were much appreciated by the young Caian medics.

The CMA Website The CMA website has been updated with details of the forthcoming meeting. It contains downloadable application and standing order fforms. Newsletters dating back to 2004 are also available. Wwww.srcf.ucam.org/cmaw

For general enquiries, please contact Kevin O’Shaughnessy or Julie Deane: c/o Caius Medical Association, Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge CB2 1TA. 2 E-Mail: [email protected] & [email protected] CMA SUMMER STUDENTSHIPS 2012

By James A. FRASER (1994)

n 2012, the CMA offered funding of £90 per week to nine students undertaking research projects over the Long Vacation, one of whom was then successful in obtaining more generous funding Ifrom elsewhere. We were able to fund all applicants who had not previously received CMA funding, though not to two further applicants who had previously undertaken CMA-funded research.

I believe this is now the 10th year of the Summer Studentship scheme. New for 2012 was the wonderful opportunity to carry out a project in Tsinghua University in Beijing. This was offered by Prof. Babak Javid, a Caius Medical alumnus, who arranged funding and supervisors for two of our students. As shown below, the two students who visited Beijing in 2012 found this to be a unique experience.

The relative surety provided by CMA funding allows students to approach prospective supervisors with some confidence that funding problems will not prevent them from undertaking a project, and has now given many students an early taste of research. From 2013, we will offer a somewhat more generous £120 per week to reflect the increasing costs of accommodation in Cambridge, though we continue to maintain the stipend below that available from other sources to encourage students to apply for charity or Research Council funding.

Six students received CMA Summer Studentships:

Charles Earnshaw continued a project that he had worked on in the summer of 2011 under Wellcome Trust funding, characterising the secondary immune response to the mouse parasitic helminth Heligmosomoides polygyrus, under the supervision of Prof. Rick Maizels at Edinburgh University. This work involved investigating the affinity of the resultant antibodies and sequencing their variable regions.

Prem Jareonsettasin worked with Prof. David Zee in the Vestibular/Eye Movement Testing Laboratory at Johns Hopkins University, investigating the influence of MRI magnetic fields on the vestibular rotational sensors of the brain. He then developed a further study to investigate whether magnetic vestibular stimulation could be used to study the adaptive mechanisms of the vestibular system.

Jessie Ke worked with the Alliance for African Women Initiative in Ghana on a project called Operation 100. This aimed to ascertain the level of knowledge about HIV/AIDS and reproductive health issues in Junior High School students and adults in the local communities.

Kristy Leung investigated the expression of different prion protein constructs in transgenic Drosophila under the supervision of Dr Raymon Bujdoso in the Department of Veterinary Medicine. 3 James Patterson worked with Dr Eric Miska in the Gurdon Institute towards two linked goals, using a Caenorhabditis elegans system: first, to elucidate the kinetics of micro-RNAs by using inducible transgenes; and second, to study the potential role of gene expression noise in generating variability in an initially isogenic population, particularly in response to stress.

Luxi Sun aimed to isolate, clone, purify and analyse adenylate kinase from Schistosoma mansoni. During the project, she cloned the gene and inserted it into various plasmids before transferring them into bacteria, producing a protein suitable for serological testing against sera from people infected with varying parasite loads of S. mansoni, and against uninfected controls.

Two students received CMA funding towards their CMA-Tsinghua Summer Studentships:

Yun Huang worked on a project entitled Chromosomal rearrangement and fusion products in lung cancer with Prof. Guo Wei at the Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine Center of Tsinghua University. She aimed to investigate the potential role of chromosomal translocation in tumorgenesis in solid tumours, using next-generation transcriptome sequencing of a sample of lung tumour.

Shivun Khosla worked in Dr Jie Na's laboratory to investigate the role of the transcription factor β- catenin in the mouse embryonic stem cell by identifying its potential nuclear and cytoplasmic interactions and genetic targets. The Wnt/β-catenin canonical signalling pathway has been linked with both mouse and human stem cell proliferation.

Finally, one student was given an Honorary CMA Studentship:

Alex Gibbs was successful in gaining a Grindley award for his project on the detection of pitch with Prof. Brian Moore in the Department of Experimental Psychology.

The CMA is very grateful to all the project supervisors for giving our students such a varied and valuable exposure to research. All the CMA Students will be invited to attend the CMA meeting in June this year, giving an opportunity to discuss their projects with CMA Members.

Vale et Salve

he CMA Committee wish to thank Sir Christopher Hum KCMG for supporting the CMA From The Tutorial Office so enthusiastically during his successful Mastership. We wish Sir Christopher and Lady he CMA Committee wish to congratulate the following undergraduates, who all won THum every happiness in their retirement. prizes last academic year. We are delighted to have Professor Sir Alan Fersht FRS FMedSci as the newly appointed Master, T Ian Gordon-Smith Prize for Medicine: Lu, L and would like to congratulate Professor John Mollon FRS as the new President of Caius. Tucker Prize for Medicine: Huang, Y Anne Pearson Prize for Medicine: Sim, J-W Walter Myers Exhibition for Medicine: Kearney, R S Michell Scholarship for Medicine: Bhatt, N 4 Ackroyd Scholarship for Medicine: Lu, L Ronald Greaves Award for Medicine: Wilson, A P T

Bell-Wade Grants: Ke, J; Lucas, A A Handson Awards: Agarwal, R; Matthews, H E Keighley Award: Jones, E

Hon. Clinical Scholarships: Hines-Green, A; Mirams, J A B; Ng, A Y K C; Rogers, J P; Sim, J-W Hon. Clinical Exhibitions: Kearney, R S; Yao, A C THE ACKROYD FUND By dR julian Sale (1986)

he 2012 Ackroyd scholar is Grace Kiew, whose performance in Part Ia of the MVST Tripos saw her placed second in the University out of some 340 students. Grace is the ninth student Tto receive this award, which provides £1000 per year for the central four years of the medical course.

The Ackroyd endowment, in memory of Harold Ackroyd V.C. (1896), also provides for an annual lecture with the aim of giving the current medical students an opportunity to hear first-hand from leading figures in biomedical research. We have been privileged to host a string of outstanding lecturers and are delighted to congratulate our 2006 lecturer, Professor Sir John Gurdon, on the award of the 2012 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine.

As I am late in writing this report, there are actually two lectures to report on. The 2012 Lecture was delivered by Professor Sir Salvador Moncada of University College, London. Salvador is probably best known for his pioneering work on the identification of nitric oxide as a biological mediator and the mechanisms of its synthesis. However, his enormously engaging lecture focused on his more recent work on how cells regulate their supply of nutrients as they proliferate. Specifically, he discussed how the regulation of levels of a key enzyme in the glycolytic pathway, PFKFB3 (6- phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-biphosphatase 3), helps coordinate nutrient supply with the onset of S phase. Importantly, silencing of this enzyme prevents cells entering S phase and thus PFKFB3 may represent a potentially important target for cancer drug development.

A year on and we have also just hosted the 2013 lecture, the ninth in the series. This was delivered by Professor Kim Nasmyth, Whitley Professor of Biochemistry at the . The title of his lecture was: How are chromosomes held together. Kim gave an absolutely marvellous talk on his work on , a ring-like protein complex that holds newly replicated chromosomes together until cell division, when it is rapidly cleaved allowing the chromosomes to be segregated to the newly forming daughter cells. He took us through a gripping narrative from the earliest observations of chromosomes under the microscope, through the key moments of discovery in his work right through to work published only a week before. His many asides on the nature of science and scientists illustrated wonderfully the vicissitudes and joys of the scientific life.

We are now looking forward to the 10th anniversary of this award and lecture and we hope to maintain the extraordinarily high standard of speakers we attract both for the next lecture and for many years to come.

Harold Ackroyd VC, MC, MD, RAMC (1877- 1917) read medicine at Caius and Guy's Hospital. At the outbreak of the Great War, he joined the Royal Berkshire Regiment and fought in the Battle of the Somme, during which he won the Military Cross for bravery during the capture of Delville Wood in July 1916. He was killed by a sniper during the third Battle of Ypres while tending to a wounded solider in no- man's-land. He received multiple commendations for the Victoria Cross, which was awarded posthumously. In 2004, the Ackroyd family sold the medal and the proceeds of this sale endowed the scholarship and lecture that now bear Harold's name. Harold's medals can now be seen in the Ashcroft Gallery at the Imperial War Museum in London. 5

By MR Prem Jareonsettasin GOING FOR THE GOLD CAIUS MED. SOC. PRESIDENT

aralleling Britain's success in the 2012 Olympics, Caius medical students have been unparalleled in academic, sports and arts domains. Here's a window into the life of Caian Pmedics. Our telos of academic excellence is once again achieved with an array of scholarships and exhibitions awarded across all year groups. Our pursuit of scientific curiosity manifests in the various summer research expeditions undertaken around the globe. Across the pond, James Patterson spent his summer at the Whitehead Institute MIT, investigating the regulation of cancer stem cells, and Prem Jareonsettasin was at Johns Hopkins looking at how MRI induces vertigo, whilst Charles Parker was busy transplanting organs in Pittsburg. In Heidelberg, Cheng Chen undertook research on cardiac potassium channels, and, back at home, Luxi Sun purified a key parasitic protein. After completing their projects at Tsinghua University, Yun Huang, Shivun Khosla and Alexander Sagar traversed the Great Wall of China. Alexandra Griffiths travelled to Guatemala to learn Spanish and worked in surgeries in poor rural communities. Back in Geneva, Eben Jones, during his internship, gained insider insight into how the WHO operates. In an olympian effort, Caian medics have commanded a panoply of sports teams to victory at both college and university levels. Jon Dean, who captained the prestigious Caius Boat Club to the top of the intercollege league, will be coxing Cambridge Light Blues in the Oxbridge Boat Race. Whilst Dhruva Biswas (pictured right) and Junfeng Liu vanquished Oxford in Varsity Taekwondo and Karate matches, Tim Swinn scored the winning goal against Oxford in the recent Hockey varsity. In track and field, Lucy Crossman high-jumped ahead of Oxford in Women's Athletics Varsity Blues match, whilst Abigail Lucas and Holly Weaver continue their impressive run in CUH&H. Look out for Sam Bostock, Ben Langridge and Katie Wren taking on Oxford in the upcoming Vasity Blues Lacrosse matches, Shaneil Patel captaining Cambridge Eton Fives, and Tim Swinn (again!) this time on the cricket pitch against Oxford.

In the arts, Caians have once again dominated the stage in Mr Latimer's beloved Addenbrooke's Pantomime. Amongst our ranks are musical virtuosos – Jiangjan Wang and Vijay Shyam- Sundar, to name a few – performing at leading orchestras. Talent is rife in the Bollywood world of Mastana as well.

We are grateful, as ever, to the CMA for providing us with generous Summer Studentships, and financial support for the skeleton programme. We hope that, with your continued support, Caius will regain and retain its historical status as the best place to study medicine in the world.

6 CMA MATTERS

CMA Committee Members Annual Accounts

♦ Joe Herbert (President) 2012 2011 ♦ James Fitzsimons (Past President) £ £ ♦ Kevin O'Shaughnessy (Hon. Secretary) Cash at bank 12,843 9,641 ♦ Julie Deane (Hon. Treasurer) (1st October) ♦ Arpan Mehta (Newsletter Editor) Income Directors of Studies in Medicine Subscriptions 3,860 3,810 ♦ Julian Sale Donations 5,234 3,485 ♦ Dino Giussani Sale of Ties Bank interest 4 4 ♦ David Riches 9,098 7,299 ♦ Ketan Patel Medical Fellows Expenditure Newsletter 596 835 ♦ Eugene Paykel Student support 5,499 2,160 ♦ Richard Le Page Administration 171 2,004 ♦ Roger Carpenter 6,266 4,999 ♦ Morris Brown ♦ Kay-Tee Khaw CMA Day ♦ James Fraser Income 1,607 4,196 ♦ Helen Mott Cost -1,964 -3,162 Speakers' expenses -132 Member’s Representatives -357 902

♦ Stephen Brearley (Consultants) less chqs clearing -516 ♦ Arpan Mehta (Hospital trainees) unpaid donations -5,234 ♦ Bleddyn Jones (Clinician scientists) ♦ Stephen Gibson (General Practitioners) Cash at bank - 30/9 9,568 12,843 ♦ Prem Jareonsettasin (Undergraduates)

From Stephen Brearley

Following on from the extraordinary achievements of the current crop of Caius medics, the old lags are keeping their end up too. On 4th March 2013, The Doctors' Orchestra gave its fourth concert at London's Cadogan Hall in support of Freedom from Torture. Of the 67 doctor musicians on stage, 10% (approximately) were Caians: Stephen Brearley (conductor; 1971), Chris Aldren (leader; 1980), Chang Ho Yoon (2006), Carole Collins (1980), James Snelling (1993) and Hugh Whitfield (1962). The concert raised over £20k to help support torture survivors. 7 AWARDS THANKS TO PROF. DAVID RICHES

he CMA Committee wish to congratulate the following undergraduates, who all won Tprizes last academic year. Ian Gordon-Smith Prize for Medicine: Kiew, G S-E Tucker Prize for Medicine: Lu, L Anne Pearson Prize for Medicine: Lovick, S A Walter Myers Exhibition for Medicine: Earnshaw, C L H Michell Scholarship for Medicine: Huang, J Ackroyd Scholarship for Medicine: Kiew, G S-E Ronald Greaves Award for Medicine: Khan, M Irving Fritz Memoral Prize for Biochemistry: Kiew, G S-E Catherine Yates Memorial Prize: Lovick, S A (shared) Sahara Essay Prize: Salt, D M

Bell-Wade Grants: Weeks, M W Handson Awards: Christodoulou, A; Lucas A A

Hon. Clinical Scholarships: Boreham, C E G; Khan, M; Matthews, H E Caius Med Soc Garden Party

8 PREVIOUS CMA LECTURES

21 June 1997 • Hot topics in infectious diseases Richard Le Page (1964) • Vitamins, genes and heart disease Morris Brown (1990) • DHEA: the elixir of life? Joe Herbert (1976) • A medical foray in the Valley of a Thousand Hills James Fraser (1994), Stuart Kendrick (1994), Narman Puvanachandra (1994) and Ben Zalin (1994) • Reminiscences of Caius Professor Austin Gresham (1943)

20 June 1998 • Highlights of high altitude medicine Charles Clarke (1963) • Microbial debugging devices David Ellar (1968) • Is there an anti-ageing diet? Kay-Tee Khaw (1991) • The flowers of the stories from the stratum of the physicians: some explorations in early Islamic medicine Nadeem Ali (1994) • The Politics of Health The Rt Hon. Kenneth Clarke (1959) MP

19 June 1999 • How antibodies learn Julian Sale (1986) • Andean insights into fetal hypoxia Dino Giussani (1997) • Exploits of a travelling surgeon Richard Heald (1954) • Aspirin: old questions, new answers Ray Nouraei (1996) • Calcium - A Life and Death Signal Professor Sir Michael Berridge (1961)

24 June 2000 • Depression: Brain and Mind Eugene Paykel (1985) • Genetic Instability and Cancer Ketan Patel (1996) • Neural Decisions and Free Will Roger Carpenter (1973) • Evaluation of a new Colour Scale for measuring Haemoglobin Dunecan Massey (1994) • Towards a Treatment (or even a Cure) for Cystic Fibrosis Professor Alan Cuthbert (1963)

23 June 2001 • Neuronal Plasticity Fiona Arnold (1988) • Vascular Action of Hormones Peter Collins (1973) • Looking at Letters John Robson (1965) • The Rainmaker Mike Adams (1996) • Medical Ethics and Political Correctness: are they compatible? Professor Jean-Pierre Allain

22 June 2002 • Horror Autotoxicus John Todd (1980) • Medicine in Mountain Rescue John Ellerton (1978) • The Eicosanoids and PAF in Glomerulonephritis - pathophysiology…and what happened to Therapy? Nigel Wardle (1953) • Nuclear Transport and Chromosome Breakage in Humans Chelvin Sng (1999) • Prevention of Osteoporotic Fractures from Cradle to Grave Professor Cyrus Cooper (1974) 9 21 June 2003 • Can't pee won't pee Naima Smeulders (1989) • Stigma and the myths of mental19 illness99 Oscar to Hill (1950)2009 • Healthcare in the Happy Isles James Ware (1997) • Hypertension Genes: a modern perspective on the Pickering-Platt debate Kevin O'Shaughnessy (1995) • Mechanisms of Oxygen Sensing in the Body Professor Peter Ratcliffe (1972)

19 June 2004 • Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Heart Ferdia Gallagher (1993) • Repairing the Damaged Spinal Cord James Fawcett • The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Anita Chandra (1993) • Towards a Crystal-clear View of Leukaemias Alan Warren (1991) • Protein Folding, Misfolding and Disease Professor Sir Alan Fersht (1962)

25 June 2005 • Less Invasive Autopsy: possibility or pipedream Andrew Breeze (1993) • Some lesser known but influential Caius Medics Jonathan Roos (1998) • Degenerating Discs: from Newborn Mice to Ageing Backs Julia Flint (2002) • Mind-reading with Brain Imaging Geraint Rees (1985) • Advances in Asthma Management Philip Ind (1968) • Clinical Research and Experimental Medicine Professor Sir Keith Peters

24 June 2006 • Atomic particles in the treatment of cancer: the legacy of Rutherford and Chadwick Bleddyn Jones (1971) • Magnetic Resonance: interactions between proteins involved in cancer Helen Mott (2005) • Human Factors in Medical Disasters Stephen Brearley (1971) • Industry, Empire and Epidemics: Cholera in 19th-century Europe Richard Evans (1998) • Human Obesity: Science versus Stigma Professor Stephen O'Rahilly

23 June 2007 • Trachoma Matthew Burton (1989) • Cholera and sodium deficiency, thirst and sodium appetite James Fitzsimons (1946) • The selection and care of dancers Richard Pearson (1961) • The two sub-systems of colour vision John Mollon (1996) • Taking on the immune system Professor Herman Waldmann

10 21 June 2008 • The perils and pleasures of editing a learned journal Peter Tyrer (1959) • Are we becoming more allergic to food? Pamela Ewan • Prioritising scarce resources;lessons from liver transplant organ allocation Alexander Gimson • Common low-penetrance alleles and breast cancer: their clinical significance Paul Pharoah (1980) • Your floating brain Professor John Pickard

20 June 2009 • Imprinted genes: what they tell us about normal and abnormal development Anne Ferguson-Smith • The impact of modern imaging Adrian Dixon • Autism: new ideas on a common problem Bonny Auyeung • Pre-eclampsia: is it of any relevence to physicians? Lucy Chappell • Prostacyclin and nitric oxide, discovery and biological significance in the cardiovascular system Professor Sir Salvador Moncada

19 June 2010 • Combat casualty care in Afghanistan Lieutenant Colonel Nigel Tai • Causes and prevention of type 2 diabetes Nick Wareham (1993) • Twenty-first century back pain: is it all in the mind? Nick Birch (1979) • Distract and Weld, current maxillofacial surgery Richard Loukota • Recent advances in immunotherapy for cancer Hardev Pandha • Stem cell biology: overcoming the embryo Professor Austin Smith

25 June 2011 • Sudden cardiac death James Fraser (1994) • Hepatitis C - from virus to vaccine Paul Klenerman • Early intervention in schizophrenia Peter Jones • Gynae cancer through the keyhole John Latimer • Is the Government right to abolish the HFEA Martin Johnson

• KATP channels, neonatal diabetes and neurological disorders: from molecule to disease Professor Frances Ashcroft

23 June 2012 • Alcohol and carcinogenesis KJ Patel (1996) • Sex change: medical, legal and social challenges Richard Green • Membranes and transporters Richard Boyd • Hypertension: old problem, modern cures Morris Brown (1990) • Extraordinary opportunities: from Genome to Health Professor Sir Mark Walport

11 THE NEXT CMA ANNUAL MEETING

Programme of the 17th Annual Meeting Saturday 29th June 2013 To be held in the Bateman Auditorium Gonville & Caius College Cambridge

12:30 - 13:30 Optional sandwich lunch in the Green Room, Gonville Court

13:45 - 14:00 Registration and Welcome from the President of the CMA, Professor Joe Herbert

14:00 - 16:00 Predicting outcomes in Parkinson’s disease Caroline Williams-Gray (Department of Neurology, Cambridge)

The Hip Detectives: introduction of new implants into clinical practice Alister Hart (Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University College London)

The implications of reproductive ageing Susan Bewley (Women’s Health Academic Centre, King’s College London)

Recent advances in brain tumour radiotherapy: cyberknives, IMRT, protons and the rest Naomi Fersht (Brain Tumour Unit, University College London) 16:00 - 16:30 Tea

16:30 - 17:00 Business Meeting

17:00 - 18:00 Plenary Lecture by Professor Patrick Maxwell FMedSci The Regius Professor of Physic, University of Cambridge Oxygen sensing from worms to man

18:45 for 19:30 Drinks Reception in The Master’s Lodge, followed by Dinner in Hall (Black Tie optional)

Please ensure that your subscription (£20 p.a.) is up-to-date

This Newsletter has been posted to over 700 Caian medics.medics. However, we received only £386£38600 in respect of subscription money last year (and £3810 in 2011)2011)..

May I ask that the remaining 500 +++ Caians consider joining the CMA, thereby showing your ongoing support and helping to fund our successful Summer Studentship programme. YYYOYOOOUUUURRRR CCCMCMMAAAA NNNENEEEEEDDDDSSSS YYYOYOOOUUUU!!!! CAIUS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION

ANNUAL MEETING & REUNION DINNER

Saturday June 29 th 2013

Name: ...... ………..

E-Mail Address: ...... Please tick all relevant boxes

£20 I wish to become a member of the CMA p.a. I am a member and wish to attend the Annual Meeting (Students and FY1 doctors can attend free-of-charge) £20

I wish to attend the dinner £45

I wish to bring a guest to the dinner £45

Overnight accommodation – Double/Twin/Single (please specify) £40

N.B. There is limited availability (includes breakfast in Hall) per person

Sandwich lunch before meeting (must be pre-booked) £ 6

TOTAL £

NB: There is no dress-code for the Dinner this year (Black Tie is optional)

**Do you have any special dietary requirements ? – please let us know.**

Parking: Parking is available on the Harvey Court site. Please tick box if required: □

We would prefer electronic payment by BACS (using your surname as the ‘reference’) to:

Caius Medical Association Bank Sort Code: 20 17 19 Bank account number: 00942553 and please also e-mail your completed form to : [email protected]

OR please send a cheque payable to ‘Caius Medical Association’ with your completed form to: Julie Deane, CMA Treasurer, Browning House, 3 Tunwells Lane, Great Shelford, Cambridge, CB22 5LJ.

Please note the deadline for bookings is Friday 14 th June 2013

If you have any queries, please do not hesitate to e-mail Julie Deane ([email protected] ).