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Annual Report 2014

Clare College Cambridge Contents

Master’s Introduction...... 3

Teaching and Research...... 4–5

Selected Publications by Clare Fellows...... 6–10

College Life...... 11–14

Access & Outreach...... 15

Financial Report...... 16–17

Development...... 18–20

List of Master & Fellows...... 22

Captions...... 23

2 Master’s Introduction As Clare’s new Master it is a pleasure for me to write my first tour at the end of August 2014, hard on the heels of a number of concerts in Malta. This winter the introduction to the Annual Report. I have been welcomed most Choir sang at the Library of Congress in Washington DC and in New York. warmly to the College by the students, Fellows and staff, and also by alumni whom I have met at various events which have I mentioned challenges – and there are many facing us. As more University resource is diverted solely taken place since my installation back in October 2014. for research purposes, Clare and other Colleges must position themselves strategically to safeguard undergraduate teaching in the University. We also contribute to research, and this is becoming more It is no easy task to follow in the footsteps of Professor Tony valuable, especially in the arts and humanities as Research Council funding has declined. Badger and other illustrious predecessors as Master of Clare. The College is on a sound financial footing, and continues to Another great challenge which I face during my Mastership is the onerous task of refurbishing Old excel academically but, as Tony highlighted in his introduction to Court. Due to this College (in common with many others) historically not factoring depreciation of the last Annual Report, we face a number of uncertainties in the its buildings in its accounts, we have no sinking fund to maintain Old Court. Paul Mellon’s generous coming decades, not all unique to this College. bequest to Clare of £4million produces £140,000 annually which is probably a tenth of what should have been spent (or set aside) annually on keeping the buildings in good repair. As many know, we As Master, I am committed to continuing our mission of ensuring have embarked on a fundraising campaign to raise the funds needed to renovate the Court. I am that no student is deterred from applying to Clare because of delighted that Witherford Watson Mann and Henry Freeland are working together on this to produce financial constraints. I am proud to have joined a College which an imaginative improvement to the buildings, and not merely a refurbishment. The challenge to raise at on this subject has really put its money where its mouth is, and least £25 million to do this is enormous, and we look to our alumni and friends to support College to which devotes a huge amount of resource from its Fellowship and its fundraising efforts to make sure enable us to improve the beautiful buildings that are the heart of Clare. Partnership for Schools is a success. We welcomed eight students from our target areas to the College this year, up from none ten years ago, a direct measure of the scheme’s success in widening participation. This brings me to another momentous event to be marked in my Mastership. In the next academic year, 2015/16, it will be 50 years since this College, in an act of great altruism, founded Clare Hall. Academically Clare excels – I am delighted to report that this summer Clare moved up several places The decision was taken at a time when the funding situation was very different to what it is now, and in the Baxter tables, to seventh place. A special mention should go to the lawyers who were top of with the benefit of hindsight this decision may have its critics. However, the founding of Clare Hall their table of results, and to our first-year students who came second only to rinityT College overall. has contributed hugely to the graduate community and research capacity in Cambridge and this is We are also doing particularly well in economics, engineering, and modern and medieval languages. something worth celebrating. It is a sobering thought that, with the anniversary coming up, the issue of It is encouraging that many of the best-performing subjects are those where the College has sought funding and housing graduate students in the University is as salient as ever. to expand the teaching support available; something to which many alumni have contributed through donations to fund College teaching Fellowships. I am confident that as a strong community with committed Fellows and staff, and a loyal base of alumni and supporters, we will be able to meet these strategic challenges leading up to our 700th anniversary. Our Fellows continue to win awards – Dr Rachael Harris was awarded a Pilkington Award for We will approach that significant milestone on a firmer financial footing - and we aim to continue to excellence in teaching last summer. She has made a huge contribution to the College and the University deliver excellence in teaching and research for the next 700 years. in the teaching of Arabic, and her work has been described as the cornerstone for teaching of the language in the University. She is the twelfth Clare Fellow to receive a Pilkington Award, a measure of the emphasis we as a College place on teaching.

College music is flourishing as ever – the Choir continues to produce wonderful concerts and in the last year has recorded two CDs, one of which, ‘Veni Emmanuel’, reached number 4 in the UK classical Lord Grabiner QC charts. The Choir travelled to Georgia, Tennessee, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas for a seven concert Master 3 Teaching and Research

Undergraduate Numbers 2013–14 Undergraduates by country/region of origin Examination Results 2014 In 2014, Clare moved still further up the intercollegiate rankings. Year Year Year Year Years Our warmest congratulations go to the students who worked Subject Total UK 1 2 3 4 5-6 so hard to get such stellar results, but they would not have EU achieved these high marks without excellent teaching and the Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic 2 1 2 5 Overseas support of all the staff at Clare. Particular congratulations go Archaeology & Anthropology 7 3 3 13 to the lawyers, who continue to excel, and to our first years, Architecture 1 2 2 5 whose performance was particularly good. Clare performed Asian & Middle Eastern Studies 2 2 2 2 8 strongly in both Arts and Sciences; and particular subjects where our students performed exceptionally well are MML, Chemical Engineering 4 6 4 14 7% Economics, and Engineering. We also continue our trend of Classics 5 5 5 1 16 4% ‘adding value’ – of moving cohorts of students up the tables Computer Science 2 4 4 10 during their time in Cambridge: our finalists ranked very highly when assessed over the period 2012-14. Economics 5 6 6 17 Engineering 9 8 8 5 30 Teaching and Fellows English 11 10 10 31 Geography 1 3 3 7 A number of Clare Fellows have been promoted into senior academic positions: Dr Marina Frolova-Walker (Music) and Dr History 8 8 9 25 Jonathan Goodman (Chemistry) have been made professors; History of Art 1 1 1 3 Dr Hubertus Jahn (History), Dr Wendy Pullan (Architecture), Land Economy 5 3 2 10 and Dr Helena Sanson (Italian) have been made Readers, and Law 2 5 5 12 Dr Nathan Crilly (Engineering) and Dr Sian Lazar (Archaeology & Anthropology) are now Senior Lecturers. We are also very Linguistics 2 3 2 7 pleased to report that Dr Rachael Harris (Director of Studies Management Studies 1 1 in Arabic) won a Pilkington Prize for outstanding teaching – the Mathematics 8 10 11 8 37 twelfth occasion such a prize has been won by a Clare Fellow in as many years. Medical and Veterinary Sciences 16 14 12 18 60 89% Modern & Medieval Languages 8 7 7 9 31 Clare has been fortunate to be able to appoint some outstanding Music 4 4 4 12 new academic Fellows: Dr Alyson Tapp (Russian Literature), Dr Nicholas Zammit (Economics), Dr Edgar Turner (Zoology), Dr Natural Sciences 26 22 46 18 112 Lucy Colwell (Chemistry), Simon Buczacki (Medicine), Dr David Philosophy 2 1 2 5 Essex (Mathematics), Alysia Blackham (Law), Dr Heike Laman Politics, Psychology & Sociology 1 5 5 11 (Pathology), and Dr Paloma Gonzalez-Bellido (Neuroscience). Theology 4 2 2 8 Research Fellows appointed in 2014 are Rowan Leary (Material Science) and Arno Pauly (Computer Science). Total 136 135 145 56 18 490 4 Graduate Student Numbers 2013–14 PhD theses successfully defended by Clare graduate Ponting, D J: Computational studies towards the prediction of skin students 2013-14 sensitization Raffan, E: Rare syndromes of perturbed Insulin action and production: Research postgraduates 237 Allen, A L: Sites of transformation: urban space and social difference in application of exome sequencing and characterization of their cellular contemporary Brazilian visual culture Taught postgraduates 21 phenotypes Bellasio, C: Energetics of maize C4 physiology under light limiting Total 258 Rogers, J M: Coupled folding and binding of intrinsically disordered conditions proteins Birch, J G: Kin selection: a philosophical analysis Roshan, A: Stochasticity and order: studies of keratinocyte proliferation Bird, K: Dysregulation of the polycystic kidney disease pathway in breast Ross, A: Post-revolutionary politics in Prussia, 1848–1858 cancer Postgraduates by country/region of origin Rutgers, D I: Multilingualism and metalinguistic development in context: Boland, E J D: Jets, mixing, and topography in the southern ocean a comparative analysis of metalinguistic mediation in the learning Bradley, R W: Characterization of the electrogenic activity of the of German as a foreign language by pupils following a Dutch-English cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 UK bilingual education programme and pupils following a regular Byng, G T G: Planning and paying for parish church construction in the EU programme in the Netherlands later Middle Ages Schowengerdt, I B: A comparative study of girls recruited from single- Overseas Deadman, B J: New tools for flow chemistry and the machine assisted sex, extracurricular math and engineering programmes and boys and synthesis of pharmaceuticals girls recruited from high schools: implications for using extracurriculars Frake, J C: Investigations of mesoscopic device physics using high to close the STEM gender gap frequency electronic techniques Schreiber-Kounine, L: The gendering of witchcraft in early modern Goodwin-Tindall, J: Synthesis of the macrocyclic core of (-)-Rhizopodin 30% Germany Hacket Pain, A.J: Investigations into the response of European Beech Shepley, P: Water injection to assist pile jacking (Fagus sylvatica l.) to climatic variability using dendrochronology Soderberg, N: The emergence of Cretan palatial society and He, W T: Credit market under the risk-based capital requirement architectural perspective Hodson, N: Identifying novel components of clathrin-mediated Sofroniew, N J: Investigation of neural coding in mice using tactile endocytosis virtual reality Holvey, R S: Fragment-based approaches towards inhibitors of the Sohns, O L: Lyndon Baines Johnson and the Arab-Israeli conflict TPX2-importin-a protein-protein interaction Swafford, A D: Aetiology, early diagnosis, and therapeutic strategies in Jennings, J N: A new computational model for multi-cellular biological type 1 diabetes systems Thompson-Walsh, C D: Semantics and extension of a biological Kraus, K T: Psychological knowledge in Kant’s critical thinking modelling language Love, N K: The metabolic regulation of retinal progenitor cell Williams, R C: ‘Mirror of eternity’: image and identity in Clare of Assisi’s proliferation and differentiation theology of personhood Martin, R E: American civil liberties, fear and conformity, 1937–1969 Wu, L: Structural studies of the HOTAIR-PRC2 interaction and its 19% McKenzie, Z J: Automorphisms of models of set theory and extensions 51% implications for targeting the epigenome of NFU Zeb, M A: Electronic stopping power of slow ions in solids from first Phelps Bondaroff, T N: Direct enforcement on the high seas: the principles strategy of The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society Ziauddeen, H: Investigations in health neuroscience: examining the role of brain reward systems for the treatment of overeating and obesity 5 Selected Fellows’ Publications

Professor Phil Allmendinger Dr Paul Bristowe Professor Paul Cartledge Professor Giancarlo Corsetti Allmendinger P, Haughton G, Knieling J, & Othengrafen Kang L, Ramo, DM, Lin Z, Bristowe, PD, Qin J, & Chen, Cartledge, P: “General Introduction”, to Jameson, M H: Corsetti G, Kuester K, Meier A, & Mueller G: “Sovereign F: Soft Spaces of Governance in Europe: A Comparative C: “First principles selection and design of mid-IR nonlinear Cults and Rites in Ancient Greece. Essays on Religion and risk and belief-driven fluctuatiouester.”Journal of Monetary Perspective (London: Routledge, 2015). optical halide crystals.” Journal of Materials Chemistry C, 1 Society (Cambridge: CUP, 2014). Economics 61 (2014) pp53-73. (2013), pp. 7363-7370. ISSN 2050-7534 Metzger J, Allmendinger P, & Oosterlynck S: Displacing Cartledge, P: foreword to Azoulay, V: Pericles of Athens, Acconcia A, Corsetti G, & Simonelli S: “Mafia and Public the political: democratic deficits in contemporary European Jiang X, Zhao S, Lin Z, Luo J, Bristowe PD, Guan X, & Chen [trans. Lloyd, J]. (Oxford & Princeton: Princeton UP, 2014). Spending: Evidence on the Fiscal Multiplier from a Quasi- territorial governance (London: Routledge, 2014). C: “The role of dipole moment in determining the nonlinear experiment.” American Economic Review 104(7) (2014), Cartledge, P: “Grote’s Sparta/Sparta’s Grote”, in optical behavior of materials: Ab initio studies on quaternary 2185–2209. Haughton G, Allmendinger P, & Oosterlynck S: “Spaces of Demetriou, K [ed]: Brill’s Companion to George Grote and molybdenum tellurite crystals.” Journal of Materials Chemistry neoliberal experimentation: soft spaces, post-politics and the Classical Tradition. (Leiden: Brill, 2014). Corsetti G, Dedola L, & Leduc S: “The International C, 2 (2014). pp. 530-537. ISSN 2050-7534 neoliberal governmentality.” Environment and Planning A, 45 Dimension of Productivity and Demand Shocks in the US (2013), 217-234. [Winner, Association of European Schools Eurich NC & Bristowe PD: “Thermodynamic stability and Professor Nicola Clayton Economy.” Journal of the European Economic Association of Planning Best Paper of 2013.] electronic structure of -Ni 6Nb(Al,Ti) from first principles.” 12(1) (2014), 153–176. μ Ostojić L, Legg EW, Shaw, RC, Cheke LG, & Clayton NS: Scripta Materialia, 77 (2014), pp. 37-40. ISSN 1359-6462 “Can male Eurasian jays disengage from their current desire Professor Neil Andrews Dr Adrià de Gispert to feed the female what she wants.” Biology Letters, 10 Mr Simon Buczacki Andrews, N: Contract Law [2nd edn] (Cambridge: CUP, (2014), 20140042. Allauzen C, Byrne W, de Gispert A, Iglesias G, & Riley M: 2015). Buczacki , SJA & Davies RJ: “ Colon resection – is standard “Pushdown Automata in Statistical Machine Translation. ” Greggor AL, Clayton, NS, Phalan B, & Thornton A: technique adequate?” Surgical Oncology Clinics of North Computational Linguistics, Volume 40, Number 3, (2014) “Comparative Cognition for Conservationists.” Trends in America. 2014 Jan;23(1), 25-34. pp687-723. Professor Andrew Balmford Ecology and Evolution, 1842 (2014), 1-7. Buczacki SJA & Davies RJ: “The confounding effects of de Gispert A, Tomalin M, & Byrne W: “Word Ordering with Laurance WF, Clements GR, Sloan S, O’Connell C, Taylor AH, Cheke LG, Waismeyer A, Meltzoff A, Miller R, tumour heterogeneity and cellular plasticity on personalised Phrase-Based Grammars.” Proceedings of the 14th European Mueller ND, Goosem M, Venter O, Edwards DP, Phalan Gopnik A, Clayton NS, & Gray RD: “Of babies and birds: surgical management of colorectal cancer.” Colorectal Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics B, Balmford A, van der Ree R, & Burgues Arrea I: “A global complex tool behaviours are not sufficient for the evolution Disease 2014 May; 16(5):329-31. (EACL), Gothenburg, Sweden, April 2014. strategy for road building.” , 513 (2014) 229-233. of the ability to create a novel causal intervention.” Carranza T, Manica A, Kapos V, & Balmford A: “Mismatches Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B, (2014) Xiao T, de Gispert A, Zhu J, & Byrne W: “Effective Dr Jason Carroll between conservation outcomes and management 281, 20140837. Incorporation of Source Syntax into Hierarchical Phrase- based Translation.” Proceedings of the 25th International evaluation in protected areas: a case study in the Brazilian Rosell M, Nevedomskaya E, Stelloo S, Nautiyal J, Poliandri MacLean EL, Hare B, Nunn CL, Addessi E, Amici F, Conference on Computational Linguistics (COLING), Dublin, Cerrado.” Biological Conservation, 173 (2014) 10-16. A, Steel JH, Wessels LF, Carroll JS, Parker MG, & Zwart W: Anderson RC, Aureli F, Baker JM, Bania AE, Barnard AM, “Complex Formation and Function of Estrogen Receptor Ireland, August 2014. Garnett T, Appleby MC, Balmford A, Bateman IJ, Benton Boogert NJ, Brannon EM, Bray EE, Brent LJN, Burkart in Transcription Requires RIP140.” Cancer Res. (2014), TG, Bloomer P, Burlingame B, Dawkins M, Dolan L, α JM, Call J, Cantlon JF, Cheke LG, Clayton NS, Delgado in press. Dr Maciej Dunajski Fraser D, Herrero M, Hoffmann I, Smith P, Thornton PK, MM, DiVencenti LJ, Fujita K, Herrmann E, Hiramatsu C, Toulmin C, Vermuelen SJ, & Godfray HCJ: “Sustainable Owens TW, Rogers RL, Best SA, Ledger A, Mooney AM, Jacobs LF, Jordan KE, Laude JR, Leimgruber KL, Messer Dunajski M & Tod P: “Self-Dual Conformal Gravity.” Comm. intensification in agriculture: premises and policies.” Science Ferguson A, Shore P, Swarbrick A, Ormandy CJ, Simpson EJE, Moura ACdeA, Ostojić L, Picard A, Platt ML, Plotnik Math. Phys (2014) 331, 351–373. 341 (2014) 33-34. PT, Carroll JS, Visvader JE, & Naylor MJ: “Runx2 is a novel JM, Range F, Reader SM, Reddy RB, Sandel AA, Santos LR, Dunajski M & Krynski W: “Einstein--Weyl geometry, regulator of mammary epithelial cell fate in development Scgumann K, Seed AM, Sewall KB, Shaw RC, Slcoombe K dispersionless Hirota equation and Veronese webs.” Math. and breast cancer.” Cancer Res. 74(18) (2014), 5277-86. E, Su Y, Takinoto A, Tan J, Ruoting T, van Schaik CP, Virányi Professor Bob Blackburn Proc. Camb. Phil. Soc. (2014) 157, 139-150. Z, Visalberghi E, Wade JC, Watanabe A, Widness J, Young Ji Z, Mohammed H, Webber A, Ridsdale J, Han N, Carroll Blackburn RM, Jarman J, & Racko G: “Occupational J, Zantall TR, & Zhaom Y: “The Evolution of Self Control.” Dunajski M, Gutowski J, & Sabra W: “Enhanced Euclidean JS, & Sharrocks AD: “The forkhead transcription factor Segregation: Its Vertical and Horizontal Dimensions”, in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (2014) doi: supersymmetry, 11D supergravity and SU (∞) Toda FOXK2 acts as a chromatin targeting factor for the BAP1- Razzu, G (Ed) Gender Inequality in the Labour Market in the 10.1073/pnas.1323533111 equation.” J. High Energy Phys (2013), 2013:89. UK (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014) containing histone deubiquitinase complex.” Nucleic Acids Res. 42(10) (2014) 6232-42.

6 Dr Fiona Edmonds Dr Jonathan Fawcett Foley AM, Willeit M, Brovkin V, Feulner G, & Friend Tyzack JD, Mussa HY, Williamson MJ, Kirchmair J, & Glen RC: AD: “Quantifying the global carbon response to volcanic “Cytochrome P450 site of metabolism prediction from 2D Edmonds, F: “The Emergence and Transformation of Bodner GE, Taikh A, & Fawcett JM: “Assessing the costs and stratospheric aerosol radiative forcing using Earth System topological fingerprints using GPU accelerated probabilistic Medieval Cumbria.” The Scottish Historical Review, 93 benefits of production in recognition.”Psychonomic Bulletin Models.” Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 119, classifiers.”Journal of Cheminformatics, 6 (29) (2014). (2014), pp195-216. & Review, 21(1) (2014) 149–154. (2014) 1-11. Edmonds, F: “Saints’ Cults and Gaelic-Scandinavian White NC, Fawcett JM, & Newman AJ: “Electrophysiological Dr Paloma Gonzalez-Bellido Influence around the Cumberland Coast and North of markers of biological motion and human form recognition.” Dr Tamara L. Follini the Solway Firth”, in Sigurðsson JV & Bolton T (eds.): NeuroImage, 84 (2014) 854–867. Gonzalez-Bellido PT, Wardill TJ, Ulmer KM, Buresch KC, Celtic-Norse Relationships in the Irish Sea in the Middle Ages Follini, T: “Speaking Monuments: Henry James, Walt & Hanlon RT: “Expression of squid iridescence depends on Whitman, and the Civil War Monuments of Augustus Saint- environmental luminance and peripheral ganglion control.” 800-1200 (Leiden: Brill, 2014), pp 39-63. Dr Andrew Ferguson Gaudens.” Journal of American Studies 48:1 (2014), pp. 1-25. J Exp Biol. 217, (2014), 850-858. Edmonds, F: “St Cuthbert, St Columba and Ireland: Kurebayashi H, Sinova J, Fang D, Irvine AC, Skinner TD, Peng H, Tang J, Xiao H, Bria A, Zhou J, Butler V, Zhou Z, Movements of Relics in the 870s”, in McGuire NR & Ó Wunderlich J, Novák V, Campion RP, Gallagher BL, Vehstedt Dr John S Gibson Gonzalez-Bellido PT, Oh SW, Chen J, Mitra A, Tsien RW, Baoill C (eds.): Rannsachadh na Gàidhlig 6 (Aberdeen: An EK, Zârbo LP, Výborný K, Ferguson AJ & Jungwirth T: “An Zeng H, Ascoli GA, Iannello G, Hawrylycz M, Myers E, & Clò Gàidhealach, 2013), pp 1-29. antidamping spin–orbit torque originating from the Berry Cytlak UM, Hannemann A, Rees DC, & Gibson JS: Long F: “Virtual finger boosts three-dimensional imaging and curvature.” Nature Nanotechnology 9, 211 (2014) “Identification of the calcium entry pathway involved in microsurgery as well as terabyte volume image visualization Dr Paul Edwards deoxygenation-induced phosphatidylserine exposure in red Skinner TD, Wang M, Hindmarch AT, Rushforth AW, Irvine blood cells from patients with sickle cell disease.” Pflugers and analysis.” Nat Commun 5:4342 (2014). Weaver JM, Ross-Innes CS, Shannon N, Lynch AG, AC, Heiss D, Kurebayashi H, & Ferguson AJ: “Spin-orbit Archiv (European Journal of Physiology), 465 (2013), Forshew T, Barbera M, Murtaza M, Ong CA, Lao-Sirieix P, torque opposing the Oersted torque in ultrathin Co/Pt 2652-2660. Professor Jonathan Goodman Dunning MJ, Smith L, Smith ML, Anderson CL, Carvalho bilayers.” Appl. Phys. Lett. 104, 062401 (2014). B, O’Donovan M, Underwood TJ, May AP, Grehan N, Hannemann A, Cytlak UM, Gbotosho OT, Rees DC, Grethe G, Goodman JM, & Allen CHG: “International Lambert NJ, Edwards M, Ciccarelli C, & Ferguson AJ: “A Hardwick R, Davies J, Oloumi A, Aparicio S, Caldas Tewari S, & Gibson JS: “Effects of ortho-vanillin on potassium chemical identifier for reactions (RInChI).”Journal of Charge Parity Ammeter.” Nano Lett., 14 (3), 1148 (2014).” C, Eldridge MD, Edwards PA, Rosenfeld N, Tavaré S, transport of red blood cells from patients with sickle cell Cheminformatics (2013), 5, 45. disease.” Blood Cells, Molecules & Disease 53 (2014), 21-26. Fitzgerald RC, & the OCCAMS Consortium: “Ordering Ellwood AR, Price Mortimer AJ, Goodman JM, & Porter MJ: Dr Andrew Friend of mutations in preinvasive disease stages of esophageal Hannemann A, Cytlak UM, Rees DC, Tewari S, & Gibson “Reversal of facial selectivity in a thia-Claisen rearrangement carcinogenesis.” Nat Genet 46 (2014), 837-843. Friend AD, Lucht W, Rademacher TT, Keribin R, Betts R, JS: “Effects of 5-hydroxymethyl-2-furfural on the volume by incorporation of a vinylic bromine substituent.” Org. Cadule P, Ciais P, Clark DB, Dankers R, Falloon PD, Ito and membrane permeability of red blood cells from Biomol. Chem. 11 (2013), 7530-7539. Professor Milad Elharathi A, Kahana R, Kleidon A, Lomas MR, Nishina K, Sebastian patients with sickle cell disease.” Journal of Physiology 592 Grayson MN & Goodman JM: “Lewis Acid Catalysis and Ostberg S, Pavlick R, Peylin P, Schaphoff S, Vuichard N, (2014), 4039-4039. Elharathi, M: Political Islam in the Contemporary World Ligand Exchange in the Asymmetric Binaphthol-Catalyzed Warszawski L, Wiltshire A, & Woodward FI: “Carbon (Center for Strategic Studies, Kurdistan, Iraq, 2014). Propargylation of Ketones.” J. Org. Chem.78 (2013), residence time dominates uncertainty in terrestrial Professor Robert Glen 8796–8801. Elharathi, M: “Libya and NATO: Revolt, Upheaval, vegetation responses to future climate and atmospheric Uprising.” World Affairs Journal, Vol.18,No.2, 2014. CO2.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111, Torella R, Li JH, Kinrade E, Cerda-Moya G, Contreras (2013) 3280-3285. AN, Foy R, Stojnic R, Glen RC, Kovall RA, Adryan B, & Professor Neil Greenham Elharathi, M: “Libyan Foreign Policy during Qaddafi’s Rule.” Bray SJ: “A combination of computational and experimental Tabachnyk M, Ehrler B, Bayliss S, Friend RH, & Greenham Middle East Journal, (Shu’un al-Awsat) Winter 2014, pp150- Foley AM, Dalmonech D, Friend AD, Aires F, Archibald approaches identifies DNA sequence constraints associated NC: “Triplet diffusion in singlet exciton fission sensitized 171. A, Bartlein P, Bopp L, Chappellaz J, Cox P, Edwards NR, with target site binding specificity of the transcription factor pentacene solar cells.” Applied Physics Letters 103 (2013), Feulner G, Friedlingstein P, Harrison SP, Hopcroft PO, Jones CSL.” Nucleic Acids Res 42 (16), (2014), 10550-10563. 153302. Dr Patricia Fara CD, Kolassa J, Levine JG, Prentice IC, Pyle J, Vázquez Koutsoukas A, Lowe R, Kalantar Motamedi Y, Mussa HY, Riveiros N, Wolff EW, & Zaehle S: “Evaluation of biospheric Bayliss SL, Chepelianskii AD, Sepe A, Walker BJ, Ehrler B, Fara, P: “A temporary liberation.” Nature (511), (3 Jul 2014), Klaffice W, Mitchell JBO, Glen RC, & Bender A: “In Silico components in earth system models using modern and Bruzek MJ, Anthony JE, & Greenham NC: “Geminate and pp 25-7. Target Predictions: Defining a Benchmarking Data Set palaeo-observations: The state-of-the-art.” Biogeosciences nongeminate recombination of triplet excitons formed by and Comparison of Performance of the Multiclass Naive Fara, P: “A Social Laboratory.” History Today (Feb 2014) 43-9 10, (2013) 8305-8328. singlet fission.”Physical Review Letters, 112 (2014), 238701. Bayes and Parzen-Rosenblatt Window.” Journal of Chemical Fara, P: “From Euclid to Einstein”: review of Pask, C: Information and Modeling, 54 (7) (2014), 2180-2182. Magnificent Principia: Exploring Isaac Newton’s Masterpiece (Prometheus Books, 2013). Physics World, Feb 2014, pp38-9. 7 Selected Fellows’ Publications

Morgenstern FSF, Rao A, Bohm ML, Kist RJP, Vaynzof Y, Professor David Hodell Knighton T & Ros-Fábregas E: New Perspectives on Early Dr Clemens Matthiesen & Greenham NC: “Ultrafast charge- and energy-transfer Music in Spain (Kassel: Reichenberger Edition, 2014). Dixit Y, Hodell DA, & Petrie CA: “Abrupt weakening of the Matthiesen C, Stanley MJ, Hugues M, Clarke E, & Atatüre dynamics in conjugated polymer:cadmium selenide summer monsoon in northwest India ~4100 years ago.” M: “Full counting statistics of quantum dot resonance nanocrystal blends.” ACS Nano 8 (2014), 1647. Geology, 42(4), (2014) 339-342. Professor Ottoline Leyser fluorescence.”Scientific Reports 4 (2014) 4911. Salmon J, Ward S, Hanley S, Leyser O, & Karp A: Professor Howard Griffiths Hodell DA, Crowhurst S, Skinner L, Tzedakis PC, Margari Hansom J, Schulte CHH, Le Gall C, Matthiesen C, Clarke E, V, Channell JET, Kamenov G, Maclachlan S, & Rothwell “Functional screening of willow alleles in Arabidopsis Hugues M, Taylor JM, & Atatüre M: “Environment-assisted Royles J, Amesbury MJ, Convey P, Griffiths H, Hodgson G: “Response of Iberian Margin sediments to orbital and combined with QTL mapping in willow (Salix) identifies quantum control of a solid-state spin via coherent dark DA, & Leng MJ: “Plants and soil microbes respond to recent suborbital forcing over the past 420 ka.” Paleoceanography, SxMAX4 as a coppicing response gene.” Plant Biotechnology states.” Nature Physics (2014), doi:10.1038/nphys3077 warming on the Antarctic Peninsula Current Biology” 23 28 (2013), 1–15. Journal 12: (20144), 480-491. (2014) 1702–1706. Hodell DA, Lourens L, Stow DAV, Hernández-Molina Leyser, O: “Moving beyond the GM debate.” PLoS Biology Dr Kirsty McDougall Owen NA & Griffiths H: “A system dynamics model 12 (2014) e1001887. J, Alvarez Zarikian CA, & the Shackleton Site Project McDougall, K: “Assessing perceived voice similarity using integrating physiology and biochemical regulation predicts Members: “The “Shackleton Site” (IODP Site U1385) on de Jong M, George G, Ongaro V, Williamson L, Willetts multidimensional scaling for the construction of voice extent of crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) phases” New the Iberian Margin” Scientific Drilling, 16, (2013) 13–19. B, Ljung K, McCulloch H, & Leyser O: “Auxin and parades.” International Journal of Speech, Language and the Phytologist 200, (2013), 1116-1131. strigolactone signaling are required for modulation of Law 20.2 (2013), 163-172. Mitchell MC, Meyer MT, & Griffiths H: “Dynamics of Dr Hubertus Jahn Arabidopsis shoot branching by N supply.” Plant Physiology Nolan F, McDougall K, & Hudson T: “Effects of the Carbon-Concentrating Mechanism Induction and Protein 166 (2014), 384-395. Jahn, H: “The Bronze Viceroy: Mikhail Vorontsov’s Statue telephone on perceived voice similarity: implications for Relocalization during the Dark-to-Light Transition in and Russian Imperial Representation in the South Caucasus voice line-ups.” International Journal of Speech, Language and Synchronized Chlamydomonas reinhardtii.” Plant Physiology in the Mid-19th Century.” Russian History 41 (2014), Dr Helen Lima de Sousa the Law 20.2 (2013) 229-246. 166, (2014) 1073-1082. pp163-180. Lima de Sousa, H: “Playing Chinese Whispers: The Official ‘Gossip’ of Racial Whitening in Jorge Amado’s Tenda dos Dr Marta Mirazon Lahr Dr John Guy Mr Aylmer Johnson milagres.” Forum for Modern Language Studies, Special Issue Seguin-Orlando A, Korneliussen TS, Sikora M, Malaspinas Guy, J: Henry VIII: The Quest for Fame [Penguin Monarchs’ “Literature and Gossip” 50:2 (April 2014), pp196-211. Johnson, A: Plane and Geodetic Surveying [2nd Edition] AS, Manica A, Albrechtsen A, Ko A, Margaryan A, Moiseyev Series].(London: Allen Lane, 2014). (CRC Press, 2014). Lima de Sousa, H: “Exiliados de Brasil: el intelectual V, Goebel T, Westaway M, Lambert D, Khartanovich V, Wall alienado en ‘Os Brasileiros’ de Darcy Ribeiro.” In Bloch JD, Nigst PR, Foley RA, Mirazon Lahr M, Nielsen R, Orlando Professor William Harris Dr Philip Jones A, & del Rosario Rodríguez M (eds.): La Guerra Fría y las L, & Willerslev E: “Genomic structure in Europeans dating Almeida AD, Boije H, Chow RW, He J, Tham J, Suzuki SC, Américas (Mexico: U de Colima P, 2013), pp 85-106. back at least 36,200 years.” Science Express 10.1126 (2014). Alcolea MP, Greulich P, Wabik A, Frede J, Simons BD, & & Harris WA: “Spectrum of Fates: a new approach to the [Trans. into Spanish by Ortoll, S] Jones PH: “Differentiation imbalance in single oesophageal Raghavan M, DeGiorgio M, Albrechtsen A, Moltke I, study of the developing zebrafish retina.”Development 2014 progenitor cells causes clonal immortalization and field Skoglund P, Korneliussen TS, Gronnow B, Appelt M, Gullov May; 141(9):1971-80 Professor Donald Lynden-Bell change.” Nature Cell Biol 16 (2014): pp615-622 HC, Friesen M, Fitzhugh W, Malmstrom H, Rasmussen Love NK, Keshavan N, Lewis R, Harris WA, & Lynden-Bell D & Katz J: “Thought experiments on S, Olsen J, Melchior L, Fuller BT, Fahrni SM, Stafford Jr T, Alcolea MP & Jones PH: “Lineage analysis of epidermal Agathocleous M: “A nutrient-sensitive restriction point gravitational forces.” Monthly Notices of the Royal Grimes V, Renouf MAP, Cybulski J, Lynnerup N, Mirazon stem cells.” Cold Spring Harbor Perspect Med 4: (2014) is active during retinal progenitor cell differentiation.” Astronomical Society, 438 (2014), 3163. Lahr M, Britton K, Knecht R, Arneborg J, Metspalu M, a015206 Development. 2014 Feb;141(3):697-706. Cornejo OE, Malaspinas A-S, Wang Y, Rasmussen M, Lynden-Bell, D: “The torqued cylinder and Levi-Civita’s Frede J & Jones PH: “Development. Permission to Raghavan V, Hansen TVO, Khusnutdinova E, Pierre T, Novorol C, Burkhardt J, Wood KJ, Iqbal A, Roque C, metric.” Classical and Quantum Gravity, 31, (2014) 2001. proliferate.” Science 342 (2014) 1183-1184 Dneprovski K, Andreasen C, Lange H, Hayes MG, Coltrain Coutts N, Almeida AD, He J, Wilkinson CJ, & Harris WA: Yahalom A & Lynden-Bell D: “Variational principles for J, Spitsyn VA, Götherström A, Orlando L, Kivisild T, Villems “Microcephaly models in the developing zebrafish retinal Professor Tess Knighton topological barotropic fluid dynamics.” Geophysical and R, Crawford M, Nielsen FC, Dissing J, Heinemeier J, neuroepithelium point to an underlying defect in metaphase Astrophysical fluid dynamics,108,(2014), 667. Meldgaard M, Bustamante C, O’Rourke DH, Jakobsson progression.” Open Biol. 2013 Oct 23;3(10):130065. Knighton, T: “John Brande Trend (1887-1958) and his M, Gilbert MTP, Nielsen R, & Willerslev E: “The Genetic musical tier hispanicum.” Music & Letters 95/4 (2014). Prehistory of the New World Arctic.” Science 345: 1020 Knighton, T: “La última trayectoria de los Reyes Católicos.” [in press]. Andalucía en su historia, 12/46 (2014), pp82-87. 8 Foley R & Mirazon Lahr M: “The role of ‘the aquatic’ in Dr Arno Pauly Ross, G (director), The Dmitri Ensemble, & the Choir Sinclair A, et al: Spanish chapbooks [Collection of 4,500 human evolution: constraining the aquatic ape hypothesis.” of Clare College, Cambridge: Lux de caelo: Music for items in the Cambridge University Digital Library] (2014). Le Roux S & Pauly A: “Infinite sequential games with real- Evolutionary Anthropology, 23 (2014), 56-59. Christmas (Harmonia Mundi USA, 2014) [CD] valued payoffs.” Proceedings of LiCS 2014, 2014. Dr Martin Smith Dr Terence Moore Kawamura A & Pauly A: “Function Spaces for Second- Dr Helena Sanson Order Polynomial Timey.” Proceedings of CiE 2014, (2014) Smith MR & Ortega-Hernández J: “Hallucigenia’s Moore, T: “Locke’s Error?” Think 14:39 (2015), pp77-85. LNCS 8493. Sanson, H: “Femina proterva, rude, indocta [...], chi t’ha onychophoran-like claws and the case for Tactopoda.” insegnato a parlar in questo modo? Women’s ‘voices’ and Nature, (2014) online (doi:10.1038/nature13576) Jiang X & Pauly A: “Efficient Decomposition of Bimatrix linguistic varieties in written texts (Italy, 16th-17th centuries)”. Dr Rory Naismith Caron J-B., Smith MR, & Harvey THP: “Beyond the Games” [Extended Abstract]. Proceedings of SR 2014, The Italianist, special issue, 34/3 (2014), 400-17. Naismith, R: “The Social Significance of Monetization in Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 146, Burgess Shale: Cambrian microfossils track the rise and the Early Middle Ages.” Past & Present 223 (May 2014), 2014. Sanson, H: “Simplicité, clarté et précision’: Grammars of fall of hallucigeniid lobopodians.” Proceedings of the Royal pp3–39. Italian ‘pour les Dames’ and Other Learners in Eighteenth- Society B 280, (2013) 20131613. and Early Nineteenth-Century France.” Modern Language Naismith, R: “Gold Coinage and its Use in the Post-Roman Dr Andrew Preston Smith, M R: “Ontogeny, morphology and taxonomy of the Review, 109/3 (2014), 593-616. soft-bodied Cambrian ‘mollusc’ Wiwaxia.” Palaeontology 57, West.” Speculum 89 (2014), pp 273–306. Preston A, Engel JA, & and Lawrence MA (eds): America in (2013) 215–229. Naismith, R: “London and its Mint, c.880–1066: a the World: A History in Documents from the War with Spain Dr Roger Schofield Preliminary Survey.” British Numismatic Journal 83 (2013), to the War on Terror (Princeton: Princeton University Press, Schofield, R: “Still more things to forget, in the wiping of Professor Anthony Snodgrass pp44–74. 2014). Henry Patenson’s bottom in the Exchequer.” Moreana, Snodgrass, A: “The Meaning of the Greek cemetery, from Preston, A: “Monsters Everywhere: A Genealogy of National Volume 51 No 195-196, (2014) pp29-43. Professor Gordon Ogilvie Security.” Diplomatic History 38:3 (June 2014), 477-500. the Bronze Age to the Iron Age.” in Koehl, R (ed.): Amilla: The Quest for Excellence. Studies Presented to Guenter Ogilvie, G I: “Tidal Dissipation in Stars and Giant Planets.” Preston, A: “A Foreign Policy Divided Against Itself: George Dr Robert Semple Kopcke in Celebration of his 75th Birthday (Instap Academic Annual Review of Astronomy and Astrophysics, vol. 52 (2104) Shultz vs. Caspar Weinberger.” In Johns, A L (ed): A Payne F, Colnaghi R, Rocha N, Seth A, Harris J, Carpenter Press, 2013), pp311-320. pp171-210. Companion to Ronald Reagan (Malden, Mass. and Oxford: G, Bottomley WE, Wheeler E, Wong S, Saudek V, Savage Snodgrass, A: “The Classical World.” Chapter VIII.11 in Guilet J & Ogilvie GI: “Global evolution of the magnetic Wiley-Blackwell, 2014) pp546-564. D, O’Rahilly S, Carel JC, Barroso I, O’Driscoll M, & Renfrew C & Bahn P (eds): The Cambridge World Prehistory field in a thin disc and its consequences for protoplanetary Semple RK: “Hypomorphism in human NSMCE2 linked (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014), vol. 3, systems.” Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Dr Wendy Pullan to primordial dwarfism and insulin resistance.” J Clin Invest. pp1958-1976. Volume 441, Issue 1, (2014) pp852-868. Pullan W, Sternberg M, Kyriacou L, Larkin C, & Dumper M: 2;124(9) (2014), 4028-38. Jouve L & Ogilvie GI: “Direct numerical simulations of an The Struggle for Jerusalem’s Holy Places (London and New Weedon MN, Ellard S, Prindle MJ, Caswell R, Allen Dr Dorothy J. Thompson inertial wave attractor in linear and nonlinear regimes.” York: Routledge, 2013) HL, Oram R, Godbole K, Yajnik CS, Sbraccia P, Novelli Thompson, D J: “Kleruchic land in the Ptolemaic period.” In Journal of Fluid Mechanics, vol. 745 (2014), pp223-250. G, Turnpenny P, McCann E, Goh KJ, Wang Y, Fulford J, Pullan W & Baillie B (eds): Locating Urban Conflicts: Keenan JG, Manning JG, & Yiftach-Firanko U (eds): Law and McCulloch LJ, Savage DB, O’Rahilly S, Kos K, Loeb LA, Ethnicity, Nationalism, Everyday Life (Basingstoke and New Legal Practice in Egypt from Alexander to the Arab Conquest. Prof Lawrence Paulson Semple RK, & Hattersley AT: “An in-frame deletion at the York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013). A Selection of Papyrological Sources with Introductions and polymerase active site of POLD1 causes a multisystem Paulson, L C: “A machine-assisted proof of Gödel’s Commentary (Cambridge and New York: CUP, 2014), Pullan, W: “Bible and Gun: Militarism Jerusalem’s Holy disorder with lipodystrophy.” Nature Genetics 45(8), incompleteness theorems for the theory of hereditarily pp363–371. Places.” Space and Polity 17.3 (2013), pp335-56. (2013), 947-50. finite sets.”Review of Symbolic Logic 7 3 (2014), 484–498. Thompson DJ & Vandorpe K: “Prostima-fines and crop- Bridge JP, Holden SB, & Paulson LC: “Machine learning Mr Graham Ross Professor Alison Sinclair control under Ptolemy VIII. BGU VI 1420 reconsidered for first-order theorem proving: learning to select a good Ross, G (director) & the Choir of Clare College, in light of the new Schubart-column to P.Haun.inv. 407.” heuristic.” J. Automated Reasoning 53 2 (2014), 141–172. Sinclair A & Lacey V: Wrongdoing in Spain and England in Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 190 (2014), 188–198. Cambridge: Veni Emmanuel: Music for Advent (Harmonia the Long Nineteenth Century. [Exhibition at the Cambridge Jackson P, Sogokon A, Bridge J, & Paulson LC: “Verifying Mundi USA, 2013) [CD] University Library] (2013), available online via Thompson DJ, Martin C, & Clarysse W: “A demotic tax list hybrid systems involving transcendental functions.” In Ross, G (director) & the Choir of Clare College, https://exhibitions.lib.cam.ac.uk/wrongdoing/ from the Thebaid”, in Dodson A, Johnston JJ, & Monkhouse Badger JM & Rozier KY (eds): NASA Formal Methods W: A Good Scribe and an Exceedingly Wise Man: Studies Cambridge: Stabat Mater: Music for Passiontide (Harmonia Sinclair A & West G: Wrongdoing meets Modernity in Spain. (Springer LNCS 8430, 2014), pp188–202. Mundi USA, 2013) [CD] in Honour of W. J. Tait (London: Golden House, 2014), [Exhibition at the British Library] (2014). pp25–56. 9 Selected Fellows’ Publications

Dr Flavio Toxvaerd Dr Ruth Watson Chen F & Toxvaerd F: “The Economics of Vaccination.” Watson, R: “Literacy as a Style of Life: Garveyism and Journal of Theoretical Biology, 363 (2014) 105-117. Gentlemen in Colonial Ibadan.” African Studies 73:1, (2014) pp 1-21. Dr Edgar Turner Dr Toby Wilkinson Peh KS-H, Lin Y, Luke SH, Foster WA, & Turner EC: “Forest fragmentation and ecosystem function.” Chapter 8 in Kettle Wilkinson, T: The Nile: Downriver Through Egypt’s Past and CJ & Koh LP (eds): Global Forest Fragmentation (CABI, Present (London/New York: Bloomsbury/Knopf, 2014). 2014), pp143-174. Wilkinson, T: “Dynasties 2–3,” in Wendrich, W (ed.): Luke SH, Eggleton P, Fayle TM, Turner EC, & Davies RG: UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology (Los Angeles: University of “Functional structure of ant and termite assemblages in California Los Angeles, 2014). old growth forest, logged forest and oil palm plantation in Wilkinson, T: “Touch screens and Tut-mania.” The Times Malaysian Borneo.” and Conservation (2014) Literary Supplement, 19 September 2014, p17. DOI 10.1007/s10531-014-0750-2 Dr Nigel Woodcock Professor Lorraine K Tyler Treagus JE, Treagus SH, & Woodcock NH: “Discussion of Clarke A & Tyler LK: “Object-specific semantic coding in The structural interpretation of domainal trace lineation: an human perirhinal cortex.” Journal of Neuroscience, 34(14) example from the Mona Complex, Anglesey.” Journal of the (2014), 4766-4775. Geological Society 170 (2014), 627–30. Davis SW, Zhuang J, Wright P, & Tyler LK: “Age-related sensitivity to task-related modulation of language-processing Professor Jim Woodhouse networks.” Neuropsychologia, 63, (2014) 107-115. Butlin T & Woodhouse J: “Friction-induced vibration: Model Meunier D, Stamatakis EA, & Tyler LK: “Age-related development and comparison with large-scale experimental functional reorganization, structural changes and preserved tests.” J. Sound Vib. 332, (2013) 5302-5321. cognition.” Neurobiology of Aging, 35 (2014), 42-54. Lynch CM, Woodhouse J, & Langley RS: “Sound radiation from point-driven shell structures.” J. Sound Vib. 332, (2013) Dr Hendrik van Veen 7089-7098. Choudhury HG, Tong Z, Mathavan I, Li Y, Iwata S, Zirah Galluzzo PM & Woodhouse J: “High-performance bowing S, Rebuffat S, van Veen HW, & Beis K: “Structure of an machine tests of bowed-string transients.” Acta Acustica antibacterial peptide ATP-binding cassette transporter in united with Acustica 100 (2014), 139-153. a novel outward occluded state.” Proc Natl Acad Sci USA (2014) 111(25):9145-50. Legault J, Woodhouse J, & Langley RS: “Statistical energy analysis of inhomogeneous systems with slowly-varying Jin Y, Nair A, & van Veen HW: “Multidrug transport protein properties.” J. Sound Vib. 333, (2014) 7216-7232. norM from vibrio cholerae simultaneously couples to sodium- and proton-motive force.” J Biol Chem. 23;289(21) (2014):14624-32. Schaedler TA, Thornton JD, Kruse I, Schwarzländer M, Meyer AJ, van Veen HW, & Balk J: “A Conserved Mitochondrial ATP-binding Cassette Transporter Exports Glutathione Polysulfide for Cytosolic Metal Cofactor Assembly.” J Biol Chem. 289(34) (2014) 23264-74. 10 College Life

Sports Others: Music Full Blues: ■■ Carys Redman-White - Tae Kwon Do Women’s Captain The Clare College Music Society (CCMS) is the only college music ■ Lisanne Schoutens - Handball (first team) society ambitious enough to hold regular concerts in the West Road ■■ Alex Defroand - Hockey ■ ■ Louisa Salmon - Blue Boat Spare Concert Hall and, under President Ben Michaels (2012), CCMS ■■ Clare Parrish - Field Hockey ■ ■■ Peter McCourt - Varsity Hurling & Gaelic Football presented a series of exciting and varied concerts throughout the ■■ Dale Waterhouse - Swimming year. The Michaelmas Term concert featured Mozart’s Requiem ■■ Rachel Boyd - Blondie Colours ■■ David Labonte - Handball conducted by the Director of Music, Beethoven Symphony No. 1 ■■ Esther Momcilovic - Rowing conducted by Joel Sandelson (2013), and the première of Giles Other Achievements ■■ Jack Atherton - Golf Swayne’s trombone concerto for thirteen instruments, Double Act, ■■ James Chettle - Cross Country Clare Boat Club: May Bumps 2014 did not quite live up to the composed for Michael Buchanan (2011) and conducted by Patrick ■■ Katrin Harding - Orienteering heights of 2013, but both men’s and women’s first VIIIs are well Milne (2011). The Lent Term concert presented Beethoven’s Egmont Overture with Joel Sandelson, Britten’s Simple Symphony ■■ Matthew Knox - Hockey placed in the first divisions (9th and 4th respectively). The Men’s IV won University Fours and Cambridge Autumn Head. The women’s conducted by Hugo Popplewell (2011) and Tchaikovsky’s ■■ Melanie Abegglen - Women’s Football 1st VIII were the 4th and the men’s 1st VIII were the 12th Fastest Symphony No. 5, conducted by Naomi Woo (2013). The May ■■ Nick Evans - Men’s Lacrosse College in Fairbairns. Tim Rademacher (2012) is currently trialling Week concert presented an eclectic programme of two Rossini ■■ Quentin Gouil - Athletics for the Cambridge University Lightweight Rowing Club. overtures, operatic arias featuring soloists from the Chapel Choir, ■■ Richard Wheatear - Athletics Villa-Lobos’ Bachianas Brasilieras No. 1 for eight cellos and soprano Clare College Men’s Football: Clare has a First and Thirds football Gabrielle Haigh (2010), and some close harmony arrangements Half Blues: team (nobody knows what happened to the Seconds) which play in performed during the interval. In addition to the regular Monday ■■ Chloe Colliver - Mixed Lacrosse the Cambridge University College Divisions 2 and 7, respectively. lunchtime recitals in Chapel, CCMS staged Pergolesi’s La serva ■■ Frances Turrell - Water Polo Both teams are blessed with playing their home fixtures on the padrona in the College Chapel. In West Road Concert Hall, Music ■■ Georgie Frank - Riding manicured pitches at Clare’s sports ground on Bentley Road, where student Patrick Milne conducted a fully-staged performance of Cambridge United also train. The Thirds have a more relaxed Mozart’s Don Giovanni with the University Opera Society, which ■■ Harriet Boswell - Golf attitude of ‘turn-up-and-play’ whilst the Firsts have weekly training featured a number of soloists from the Chapel Choir. ■ Harry McAleer - Rugby League ■ sessions, this year held at Chesterton Sports Centre. That said, the ■■ Jack Malde - Rugby Fives emphasis is on enjoyment of the game more than anything else. ■■ Jodie Green - Netball Both teams also compete in Cuppers, the collegiate knock-out ■■ Joe Hughes - Powerlifting tournament. ■■ John Ockenden - Orienteering Clare Mixed Lacrosse retained its spot in the top inter-college ■■ Jonathan Waite - Pistol and Smallbore Rifle league in 2014 and continues to be a very popular sport within the ■ Lawrence Rowles - Judo ■ College. We are known as one of the most fun and welcoming ■■ Madzia (Magdalena) Kowalski - Triathlon sports, with the lacrosse social undoubtedly being a highlight of the term! Several of our team members (who started playing lacrosse whilst at Clare) now play at University level.

11 College Life

Chapel Choir Recording of the Month). The Choir’s recording of Handel’s Magladene, Corpus Christi, St John’s and Trinity Colleges. A massed Coronation Anthems and Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne with choir performance of Tippett’s A Child of our Time took place in Following a busy and successful summer of 2013, the Choir the European Union Baroque Orchestra was released in May 2014, King’s College Chapel with Cambridge University Music Society. continued to build on a number of initiatives set up by the Director winning Editor’s Choice in Gramophone, and earning 3* reviews The Director of Music continues to pursue an active programme of Music, including its continuing partnership with the recording in BBC Music Magazine and the Financial Times. In addition, the of visiting schools and welcoming visiting students and choirs to label Harmonia Mundi USA, its representation by Ikon Arts Choir recorded an All Saints/All Souls programme (March 2014) observe or join the Chapel Choir for services, including this year a Management, the continuation of the College’s Masterclass Series, and an Ascensiontide/Pentecost programme (July 2014) for release joint service with singers from Eltham College, London. In spring and the generosity of the ongoing Friends of Clare Music scheme. in 2015. The recording sessions for all the Harmonia Mundi USA 2014 the College welcomed internationally-renowned soprano The Choir’s principal role of providing music for the liturgy in recordings were produced, engineered and edited by Honorary Joan Rodgers CBE to give a masterclass for aspiring singers. Chapel has offered, as ever, an extremely broad range of repertoire Fellow and former Director of Music John Rutter, to whom the New music continues to play a large part in the Choir’s performing for Choir and congregations alike. In addition to the three weekly Choir is much indebted. schedule, most notably through the works of Giles Swayne, the services, the Choir sang Tomàs Luis de Victoria’s Requiem for All The Michaelmas Term ended with the popular Advent Carol College’s Composer-in-Residence, who retired in July 2014. In Souls’ Day and Allegri’s Miserere on Ash-Wednesday. Music for Services in the College Chapel, and a special performance of Easter Term 2014 the Choir premièred new commissions from each term stretched from medieval plainchant to contemporary Bach’s B minor Mass in the Great Hall to a sell-out audience, with Giles Swayne and Graham Ross, as well as from American Nico works, with much in between. Services have included numerous a one-to-a-part period orchestra led by Clare alumna Margaret Muhly and Australian Brett Dean. All the composers worked with solo opportunities for individual members of the Choir, and have Faultless, and with all the solo arias taken by members of the the Choir in preparation for the first performances, and ahead of utilised all four of the Chapel’s keyboard instruments. Additional Choir. The Choir gave another performance of the work at King’s the Choir’s recording of all the works for forthcoming release on instrumentalists have been brought in for such works as Fauré’s Place, London with the Aurora Orchestra under the direction of the Harmonia Mundi USA label. Former Director of Music John Cantique de Jean Racine and Schubert’s Gott ist mein Hirt performed Clare alumnus Nicholas Collon, with the Choir lauded for their Rutter’s Christ is the morning star was commissioned by Graham with members of The Schubert Ensemble, Britten’s Rejoice in the ‘ravishing tone’ (Planet Hugill) and a ‘contribution beyond reproach’ Ross for performance in the Advent Carol Services and the Choir’s Lamb with the Aurora Orchestra, and the première of Nico Muhly’s (Boulezian). The Choir had previously performed with Aurora annual Christmas Concert at St John’s, Smith Square, London. Let all the world in every corner sing for choir, cello and organ, Orchestra in two staged performances of Britten’s Rejoice in the commissioned by Graham Ross and the Choir in 2014. The Dean Lamb at The Apex, Bury St Edmunds and at LSO St Luke’s, London. In summer 2013 the Choir performed in Southend Festival, sang and Director of Music continue to work closely together to plan the The Choir gave a concert in Cadogan Hall, London of Victoria’s Choral Evensong in St Paul’s Cathedral, London, recorded a liturgy, and to oversee the pastoral side of the members of the Choir. Requiem and music for choir and strings alongside the Director of programme of Passiontide repertoire for Harmonia Mundi USA - which went on to receive glowing 5* reviews in the national and In autumn 2013 the Choir released the first recording in its new Music’s instrumental group, The Dmitri Ensemble. The calendar international press - and made return appearances at London’s series on the Harmonia Mundi USA label of works for the church year was rounded off by the Choir’s annual concert at St John’s, Spitalfields Festival, Fenstanton’s Fringe in the Fen festival for year. Veni Emmanuel: Music for Advent reached No. 4 in the Smith Square in London, after which Timothy and Christina Benn Macmillan Cancer Support, and Northamptonshire’s Dingley UK Classical Charts, was hailed as ‘magnificent’ in a 4* review in once again kindly hosted a drinks reception, and a service at St Hall. Two tours across Europe with Lars Ulrik Mortensen and The Times, and formed the basis of a six-concert tour around Mary’s Rotherhithe, London – of which Clare College is a Patron. the European Union Baroque Orchestra saw the Choir perform the USA in December 2014, which saw the Choir perform in In December 2013 the Choir were again invited to sing on Radio celebratory works by Handel in Bruges, Milan, Utrecht, Hagen, Princeton, NJ, Boston, MA, Concord, NH, St Johnsbury, VT, 3’s In Tune to promote the concerts in mid-December, and whilst Darmstadt and London. Cincinnati, OH and Cleveland, OH. In spring 2014, Stabat Mater on tour in the USA Graham Ross was interviewed on Boston’s dolorosa: Music for Passiontide, the second recording in the series, public radio to promote the Choir’s Advent recording. Friends of Clare Music continues to build its resources and was released worldwide, earning praise for ‘immensely beautiful maintain crucial continuing links with the present Choir. This year, singing’ (International Record Review), ‘consummate musicianship’ Collaborations with other Cambridge choirs have this year seen the the Friends have supported the purchase of microphones in the (Gramophone) and ‘an outstanding disc’ (MusicWeb International, Choir sing joint services with the Chapel Choirs of Girton, Jesus, College Chapel, to be installed in Michaelmas 2014 to allow the 12 Choir to webcast Chapel services around the world from January Societies & Arts Gardens Report 2015 onwards. In addition, donations to the Friends scheme has Union of Clare Students: Terri Yoon, UCS President writes: 2014 winter and spring were quite calm weather wise, with hardly supported Clare musicians in numerous musical projects both in a frost to speak of - leading to a traditional timing to spring. Cambridge and outside. The UCS has recently passed referendums on introducing a new Non-Exec position of Sport & Societies Officer and on our Fair The Garden team’s main focus in the first months of 2014 was the 2014/15 promises a full year for the Choir and for music in Trade Policy. The Oriel Exchange, which was renewed last year, is Landscaping of Ashby Court. We undertook major hard landscaping the College, with external performances in St John’s, Smith happening again and we are hoping to welcome Oriel students here works to improve the surface of the paths in the Court, which Square, Royal Albert Hall, King’s College Chapel, King’s Place, later this term. We are also currently in the process of purchasing a had previously been very badly drained and were finished with London, St Mary’s, Lamberhust, Kent, Blackheath Halls, St John’s, new pool table for cellars and installing some better kitchen facilities uneven gravel. The paths are now tarmacked and finished with Waterloo, Blandford, Dorset, with repeat collaborations with for some student accommodation. Especially with the new position rolled-in shingle and a new drainage system. At the same time the Aurora Orchestra, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and The Dmitri introduced above, we are excited to hold elections for the next paths were realigned, and an additional path was created for the Ensemble, a performance of Brahms’s Requiem under Howard Committee who will be serving the college starting next term. use of the resident undergrads: this has separated the students’ Shelley in the annual CUMS Concert in King’s Chapel, and overseas staircases from the very busy visitor foot traffic from the University tours under the direction of the Director of Music across the MCR: Ed Oughton, MCR President writes: Library. This secondary path has been furnished with large benches Netherlands and the USA, making their debut at Washington’s Clare MCR moves from strength to strength, proving itself to be the for students to relax and enjoy the Court and provides a certain Library of Congress in December 2014. most enviable MCR in Cambridge. In 2014, the MCR continued to amount of privacy for them. offer an outstandingly diverse range of academic and extracurricular Graham Ross activities for graduates to engage with: a particular highlight being The planting takes into account the two aspects of Ashby Court: December 2014 the regular ‘Clareity Matters’ events which showcase the best of our one half being in full sun, the other quite shady. The sunny side academic talent. Of course we’ve still been delivering a weekly array has drift planting of Cistus, Lavenders, Santolina and Hydrangea of formals, swaps and special events, including raising money for the ‘Annabella,’ amongst others. The shady side includes plantings of Guide Dogs for the Blind Association through the MCR’s inaugural Daphne ‘eternal fragrance’, Epimedium, Lonicera fragrantissima, ‘Puppy Party’. Indeed, membership of Clare MCR continues to Miscanthus and Dryopteris fern. To make a connection for these be highly coveted due to the friendliness of its members, and the dissimilar plantings we have used large Box Balls randomly planted facilities and location the MCR enjoys in Old Court. We’re excited to help give uniformity to the Court. To give height we have planted for the future of Clare College Graduate Society, especially as the two specimen Acer griseum – the ‘paper bark maple’, and three quality of this year’s scholars is particularly high. species of Birch: Jacquemontii, albosinensis and ermanii. In all, this represents a significant improvement for all users and visitors of Clare Actors continues to encourage Clareites to get involved Ashby Court. with the rich theatre scene here at Cambridge, funding shows at Clare and across Cambridge: so far this year, projects include Once again we have had several enquiries for evening guided tours Michael Frayn’s Copenhagen, Conor McPherson’s The Weir (both of the Gardens. We have hosted a group of German Gardeners at the Corpus Playroom), and a Footlights sketch show set in a and Landscapers, visits by Gardening Clubs from Cottenham, circus. 2015 also saw Clare’s first Freshers’ Play Dr( Faustus) and Fen Ditton, Histon and Wisbeach, and we were also visited by a partnership with Cambridge Student PEN to produce On the members of the European Boxwood Society. Additionally, our Record – a testimonial drama based on the experiences of six annual Garden Open Days for the National Gardens Scheme and journalists fighting against censorship; the profits from which Clare the British Red Cross were great successes. Actors has agreed to donate to Cambridge Student PEN. 13 College Life

The 2014 May Ball Committee had an unusual request: the and Archive services were very ably run over the summer vacation provision of ‘botanicals’ from the garden to be used in a one- by Julie Hope, Deputy Librarian and Claire Butlin, Library and off distillation of gin for the May Ball. Along with the traditional Archives Assistant. Rosemary, Bay Leaf, and Lavender, we supplied some Perovskia, a shrub with highly aromatic foliage which the distiller said had never The new Forbes Mellon Librarian, Catherine Reid joined the before been used in Gin distillation. So a first for Clare! A gift of a College in September 2014. Catherine was previously Librarian in miniature bottle of the said Gin did help sweeten the request for Lucy Cavendish College and prior to that worked in scientific and a rather large Dodgem fairground ride that was erected on the engineering libraries. Michaelmas Term 2014 has been busy in the Fellows’ lawn for the Ball. Library, with students making very good use of the study space and services. A new drop-in enquiry service has been initiated to The remaining summer weather was thankfully quite traditional with provide help with finding, accessing and using electronic resources many spells of unbroken sunshine and warm temperatures, which such as ebooks and ejournals. One of the most popular services led to the herbaceous borders displaying brilliant colour and growth is Doughnut Fridays where students join library staff for coffee which lasted well into autumn, receiving many favourable comments. and doughnuts in the Library Common Room. The Library now provides news of service developments and information resources Forbes Mellon Library & the College Archive on Twitter and can be followed @ClareFMLib. During the 2013/2014 academic year the Forbes Mellon library The new College Archivist, Alexandra Browne, took up her post continued to build on the strength of its collections. Approximately in October 2014. Alex has moved from a post in local authority 1,200 books were added to the library and the number of loans archives, and is working part-time in College on a Thursday and increased over the previous academic year. The library continued Friday. During Michalemas term the Archivist and Archives Assistant to provide a welcoming and supportive study environment for have responded to a large number of enquiries. The Archivist has Clare students. also been identifying and providing information from the Archive to support the archaeological investigations relating to the Old Court The staff team saw a great deal of change at the end of the refurbishment project. academic year. The Forbes Mellon Librarian, Anne Hughes, retired in June 2014 after working for the College for 13 years. Catherine Reid The FML, Archive and Fellows’ Library benefited greatly from Forbes Mellon Librarian, February 2015 Anne’s experience and dedication. Some of Anne’s numerous achievements include implementation of a new library catalogue and security system, development of the law reading rooms, appointment of a part-time archivist, and a large number of events and exhibitions based on the collections in the Fellows’ Library. The Archive has also seen a change in personnel, with the part- time College Archivist, Robert Athol, leaving in July to take up a full-time Archivist’s post at Lincoln’s Inn. Under Robert’s direction the profile of the Archive and its collections was raised significantly through projects such as Clare Through Time and collaboration with the English Folk Dance and Song’s Full English Project. The Library 14 Access and Outreach

Efforts have continued to encourage the brightest students, ■■ In September 2014, an inaugural Parents residential; a weekend Education Enrichment in Hackney regardless of their background, to apply to Clare, to other parts of for 15 parents/carers and one of their children. Many of This year saw the continuation of a successful lecture series in Cambridge, or to consider higher education more generally. them came from Tower Hamlets, to sample the facilities of the borough. Several Clare Fellows visited schools in Hackney to Cambridge. deliver lectures in their particular area of interest. This gave students Schools Liaison Team ■■ Continuing to work closely with Tower Hamlets Council and an insight into the depth and breadth of a university education as Hackney Learning Trust, on a regular basis, to run borough- well as the chance to reach beyond the National Curriculum. Dr We are extremely fortunate to have retained our schools liaison wide information events for students, teachers and their Patricia Fara delivered a lecture on women in the history of science. team from 2013: Rebecca Blaylock, who is a recent graduate of parents. Dr Charlie Weiss lectured on the Polytheistic Worlds of Ancient Clare College, continues as Schools Liaison Co-Ordinator, and is Greece and Rome whilst the final lecture was given by Dr Helen assisted by Stephanie Baughen, a graduate of Homerton College, ■ Clare College has worked to engage more closely with parents ■ Thompson on the economy and American politics. We are very as Schools Liaison Officer. The team works through the Tutorial in the 2013-14 academic year. Parents were invited to the grateful to Linklaters for their generous sponsorship of our activities Office, and Clare College continues to boast one of the largest College and received information and guidance regarding the in Hackney. outreach schemes in both Oxford and Cambridge. university and the application process. They were then taken on tours of Clare College, the city centre and Newnham College. The feedback that the Schools Liaison Team received The Clare Access Tour Schools Liaison Programme was overwhelmingly positive, and many parents felt that their In the Easter vacation, the Clare Access Tour ventured to Coventry Rebecca and Stephanie have led efforts to expand and enrich impression of Cambridge had changed significantly. Most and Warwickshire, visiting 14 different schools, and giving around Clare’s liaison activity with schools in the College’s link areas of importantly, a number of parents who had initially expressed 600 school pupils the opportunity to meet Clare undergraduates Tower Hamlets, Hackney, Coventry and Warwickshire. their reservations about allowing their daughters to study away and to learn about higher education and the Oxbridge admissions from East London later felt that they would actively encourage process - all in five days! This longstanding initiative has received The College hosted around 41 visits from school groups from their daughters to apply to study at Cambridge. primary and secondary schools in these link areas, and the School overwhelmingly positive feedback, which is a testament both to the Liaison Officers and Fellows have made a further 42 visits out to Access Tour and the Schools Liaison Programme more broadly. schools themselves. The Clare Partnership for Schools Now in its fourteenth year, the Clare Partnership for Schools Community and Charitable Activities Highlights of a very full programme included:- works with pupils of all ages in the London borough of Tower In 2013-14, Clare Bermondsey trust sponsored Isobel Scott- Hamlets to raise aspirations and to encourage the pupils to make ■■ Continuing with a year-long STEM (scientific subjects) Barrett, who graduated in 2013 in Asian and Middle Eastern informed choices regarding higher education. The annual mentoring enrichment programme for sixth formers in Hackney, in Studies, to undertake a placement at Bede House in Southwark, programme for sixth form students is particularly successful, with partnership with BSix Sixth Form College, culminating in a London. Bede House helps vulnerable members of the local many students gaining places at leading universities. Clare remains residential (4 days) event during August. community and those with learning disabilities. Currently (January deeply grateful to its three corporate partners, KPMG, Clifford 2015), Danielle Cohen (2011) is with them, working in the Bede ■■ In September 2013, three courses of 96 students attending Chance and Morgan Stanley, for their active and on-going support Starfish Domestic Violence and Hate Crime project. For more ‘Year 10 Residential’, each group having 24 hours ‘packed and for supplying suitable mentors. We are also very grateful for information please visit www.bedehouse.org.uk. full of activities’ to sample the facilities of Clare College and the support of the David Ross Foundation, whose involvement some university museums. Attendees came from 12 different is invaluable in furthering our work, and also to Andy and schools, embracing Tower Hamlets, Hackney, Coventry and Dominie Walters (both 1975), whose generous gift now provides Warwickshire. endowment funding to partially underwrite the scheme.

15 Financial Report

The College continues to be in sound financial health but must Operating Budget 2014/15 Income now meet several major challenges as we anticipate that the Funding the College’s activities comes from four main sources: Total operating income is expected to be £12.1 million for the refurbishment of Old Court will cost more than £25 million, and academic fees, student rents, conference income and endowment year ended 30 June 2015. there is growing pressure for the College to provide additional income. In addition, new donations every year of £4 million make financial support for graduate and undergraduate students. The a very significant contribution to covering the costs of bursaries and Income £m College forecasts a surplus of £0.1 million for 14/15 and expects major building refurbishments. The donations are not shown in the the surplus to remain at this level for the coming 3 years. Academic Fees 3.0 income chart as most donations go directly into the College’s capital Accommodation 2.7 Old Court has been at the centre of College life for many accounts and therefore only the income from the endowment is Catering and Conferences 3.7 generations of Clare students. For many it is their first memory of shown as operating income. Clare when they matriculate, for others it brings back memories of Endowment 2.7 dining in Hall, listening to the choir in the Chapel or simply having a Depreciation Policy Total 12.1 fun evening in the JCR bar. There is an urgent need to refurbish Old Court: repairs to the roof have been delayed for many years owing Clare has for many years adopted a depreciation policy that values to the cost and we have been advised that the wiring across much all operational buildings at historic cost, where freehold buildings of the Court must be replaced. To ensure that future generations and the cost of major refurbishments are depreciated on a straight of students continue to experience what architects agree are line basis over 50 years and 25 years respectively. This policy has amongst the most important buildings in Cambridge we must raise significantly understated the true value of operational buildings and £25 million. This will be a major challenge but one that we simply the resulting depreciation charge because many buildings, including 22% 25% cannot afford to lose. the whole of Old Court, are valued at zero. Earlier this year the Audit and Finance Committees agreed that all operational assets The College is also determined to achieve financial independence in should be revalued at the estimate replacement cost and that the order to preserve small group teaching for undergraduates and also depreciated replacement cost method should be adopted as a to ensure that talented students from low income backgrounds are depreciation policy. This change in accounting policy will result still able to come to Clare. The College spends almost £7,500 per in an increase in the annual depreciation charge by more than annum on each undergraduate student’s education. The students £1.0 million per annum. are paying more than half of this cost themselves, with annual fees of £9,000 but the College only retains half the fees and pays the residue to the University to cover its educational costs. As a result the College subsidises the cost of education for undergraduate student by almost £3,000 per annum each year. 31% 22% At present almost a third of all British undergraduates at Clare are receiving bursaries, of which almost half are receiving the maximum bursary as their family household income is less than £25,000. It is clear that in the future there will be a need for substantially increased bursary provision. Increased levels of debt for students Academic Fees Catering and Conferences will also inevitably lead to heavy pressure on Clare’s hardship funds. Accommodation Endownment 16 Expenditure* The Endowment Forecasts Total operating expenditure is expected to be £12 million. The endowment is currently valued at more than £89 million, The College’s financial projections for the next five years show well ahead of the level before the recession. The asset allocation the need for a considerable increase in the level of donations to is reasonably conservative with 60% invested in global equities, £7.8 million by 2017, as the College concentrates its fund-raising Expenditure £m 25% in UK property, 2% in Private Equity, and 13% in corporate initiatives on the refurbishment of Old Court. Education 4.8 bonds and cash. The long-term target allocation is 80% in global equities and 20% in commercial property. Clare’s endowment Accommodation 3.0 drawdown of £2.7 million reflects the policy decision to distribute Budget Forecast Forecast Catering and Conferences 3.3 between 3.5% and 4.0% of the trailing three year market value of 2014/15 2015/16 2016/17 Administration 0.9 the endowment. In this way, the endowment supports the work of the College while being protected against inflation, preserving the £m £m £m Total 12.0 capital for the future. Operating Income 9.4 9.6 9.7 *depreciation is included in all of the budget lines in The College took advantage of an historic opportunity in October Endowment drawdown 2.7 2.8 2.9 the table rather than expressed as a separate figure 2008 to enter into an inflation swap on a £15 million loan for 40 years. The inflation-linked interest rate of 1.09% was unusually low 12.1 12.9 12.6 7.5% due to the turbulent market conditions at that time. This presented a very significant opportunity to invest in global equity tracker funds Operating Expenditure 12.0 12.3 12.6 at a low point in the equity market cycle. Clare expects to achieve a real return of over 4% pa, which would almost double the size of Surplus 0.1 0.6 0 27.5% the endowment by 2048. The inflation-linked borrowing has had a promising start, showing a surplus of almost £5 million. Donations 4.0 4.5 7.8 40% Historic Buildings Old Court Refurbishment 1.0 2.0 2.0 The College aims to spend 1.5% of the insurance value of the College’s operational buildings each year on the maintenance and Other capital projects 2.9 2.5 0.5 repair of its operational buildings and fabric. This amounts to an annual budget of £2.7 million. In recent years the College has met this target with extensive refurbishments taking place in Memorial Increase in funds 0.2 0.6 5.3 Court and the Colony, and £5.8 million spent in 2012/3 on the 25% development of new graduate housing on Newnham Road. The refurbishment of Old Court will cost more than £25 million. Following the appointment of Witherford, Watson and Mann, the winners of the 2013 Stirling Prize as architects for the project, the Academic Fees Catering and Conferences College intends to start this major renovation in 2017.

Accommodation Administration 17 Development

Development Old Court fully has taken place. This includes the cost of entirely In our new development phase, we seek to raise at least another replacing the roof, and creating disabled access to the dining and £10 million for bursaries for undergraduate and postgraduate Clare’s development programme aims to achieve what is and has social areas of Old Court. students. In this last year, we have had a magnificent gift of always been the College’s main mission: to sustain and enhance the £800,000 in shares kindly donated by alumni Andrew Walters College as a place of education, learning and research, for current and We seek the help of alumni and friends to enable us to raise funds (1975) and Dominie Walters née Warren (1975) which will provide future generations. We are delighted that the current development for this important renovation project - we have the benefit of the bursaries for UK/EU students and help to support Clare’s outreach campaign, launched in 2013, has so far raised over £9million of its Mellon fund, which supports some essential maintenance, but and access programme. £50million target, with very strong support coming from alumni. We this only generates £160,000 per year. As the main part of the are proud that as well as giving generously, our alumni participation is College endowment is needed to provide for teaching staff and Additionally, we aim to increase the funding endowment for also one of the highest figures of any Cambridge College with 20% of student support and £1million of our endowment income is spent undergraduate bursaries - near to £2million is currently endowed alumni making a gift at least once a year. each year on simply maintaining Old Court, we cannot use up our for the support of undergraduates, but as the Cambridge Bursary endowment capital for this vital project. Scheme subsidy for College bursaries is being scaled down, Alumni and friends are a central part of Clare’s development and Colleges will have to make up the shortfall. In Clare’s case this crucial to the future success of the College and we thank all donors One particularly generous donor to Clare was Dr Colin Forbes - requires another £2 million of undergraduate bursary funding. for their ongoing support. alumnus, geologist, and Elizabeth de Clare Fellow, who sadly died in May 2014. Dr Forbes was an immensely generous benefactor We see this as an important target to ensure that students are well Securing our endowment: a sustainable future to College – and as a geologist, had a great appreciation of the supported financially while at College and those from lower-income fabric of Old Court. As a token of the College’s thanks, a porphyry backgrounds are not deterred from applying. Lady Clare revolutionised the college’s fortunes in 1338 by giving cobble stone in Old Court, which Colin had always pointed out Clare its endowment. As part of our campaign we aim to bolster the to fellow students as being of especial geological significance, was ‘Study and teaching’: a world-class education College endowment by at least £10 million - the current endowment, engraved with his initials before being cemented back into place in a of £89 million, supports all elements of College life by contributing small ceremony; as it turned out this was only a few days before his In order to continue to deliver a world-class undergraduate around £3million per year to the College’s operating income. By death. We remain profoundly grateful for his generosity to Clare. education, we intend to add a further £10 million to the increasing the endowment, we will secure our future and be more endowment to safeguard the provision of small-group teaching independent of changes in government funding of Higher Education. through the College-based supervision system. We urgently need ‘Discover and acquire’: recruiting the best students to continue to support teaching in arts subjects, as some teaching Old Court refurbishment: Clare has been immensely successful in recruitment, remaining a posts in Modern Languages, English, and Economics are no longer popular college for applicants in spite of the increase in fees brought being funded by the faculties. The College seeks endowment of In the last year, Clare has appointed the 2013 Stirling Prize winners, in in 2012. We continue to have a large number of bursaries to fellowships to guarantee excellent teaching provision continues in Witherford, Watson Mann to work on the renovation of Old attract the brightest and best regardless of financial background. these areas. Court. They have created various schemes, one of which will Our outreach programme, Partnership for Schools, is the best of be chosen by the Governing Body as its preferred option in May any college in Cambridge thanks to the work of the Schools Access We will continue to seek to enhance the tutorial system by 2015. All the schemes will update the services and fabric of Old and Liaison team and generous support from our funding partners, encouraging support for the Nicholas Hammond Foundation Court so it thrives as the heart of College for many years to come, Clifford Chance, KPMG and Linklaters. (a separate registered charity). This foundation has enabled the and the options enhance the provision of teaching, dining and appointment of a dedicated Careers Tutor, to prepare Clare accommodation for students, fellows, staff and visitors to Clare. We also receive support from many individuals, and support from students for increasingly competitive graduate recruitment. Careers the David Ross Foundation and the Thompson Educational Trust, initiatives have been very successful and have led to better links We now estimate that the project will cost at least £25million, for which we are extremely grateful. between alumni and current students. now that a more thorough estimate of the costs of renovating the 18 We are also now seeking more help for internships which alumni The College Chapel Choir had an extremely busy year with A lifelong relationship could offer to current students. An issue which has arisen is that several tours to the USA, including one which took in several The support and involvement of alumni in the life of the College students now are expected to have work experience when of the Southern US states in the summer- as mentioned by the brings great benefits to the students of today and tomorrow (just graduating, and this is sometimes only possible for those who Master in his introduction. The Choir also performed at the as alumni benefited in their own time from the generosity of their have access to good networks. The current Hammond Careers Library of Congress in Washington DC in December 2014 and we predecessors). In return, continues to be committed to provide Tutor, Dr Jason Carroll, has developed a scheme whereby College were extremely grateful to alumni in the SC area who provided opportunities for alumni to maintain and develop their lifelong matches students with internships- we are now looking for more homestays. They then went on to give a special recital for alumni in relationship with the College, to meet old friends, and to enjoy the alumni to offer these in their workplaces, having secured some in New York at the Penn Club, again many thanks to all those alumni intellectual distinction of Clare’s fellows and graduates. With advice law firms and University laboratory research. and friends of College who hosted them. and support from the Alumni Council and its Events Committee, Additionally we continue to seek further funding for graduate Clare Gala Day, taking place in June again featured talks by Professor Clare’s alumni programme is the most comprehensive of any students. Thanks to the generosity of the Eirik Foundation we have Tony Badger, the outgoing Master, on ‘Gone with the Wind’, and Cambridge college- and we continue to expand our activity in our the Nigel and Judy Weiss Studentship which funds up to two PhD by Dr Toby Wilkinson, former Development Director on his book new campaign phase. Events during 2013-14 included: students a year. We are also fundraising for the endowed Tony ‘The Nile’. Professor Nicky Clayton spoke about her research. ■ Reunion Dinners for 1980/81, up to and including 1951, 1952- Badger Studentship in American history, which is a tribute to the ■ 55, 1990,91 and 2000/01 were held between March and former Master. A US-based alumnus has pledged to give $1 for Clare in Whitehall, a new network for alumni in the Civil service September- a very busy year as the additional events for older every $2 donated for this specific purpose. was launched in November 2014. A drinks reception was held in Henry VIII’s former wine cellar part of the old Whitehall palace, year groups are so popular. which is now currently under the Ministry of Defence. We ■■ The Benefactors’ Dinner was held in January 2014 and Samuel ‘The precious pearl’: enriching lives are grateful to Stephen Jolly for hosting the event and acting as Blythe Society lunch in May 2014 The Clare City Network hosted Andrew Sentance (1977) who Chairman of Clare in Whitehall. ■■ London drinks were held at Knight’s Templar, the Porterhouse read economics at Clare at a dinner for those working in the and the Alice. We were delighted to host Dr Raghuram Rajan, Governor of the financial sector. Andrew gained an MSc and PhD at the London Reserve Bank of India to give the distinguished lecture in economics ■■ Parents’ Day was held in February School of Economics, and is a business economist who served as a in December 2014, with Masaki Shirakawa, a former governor ■■ A celebration of ten years of Partnership for Schools took member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee from of the Bank of Japan as discussant. Dr Rajan spoke about his place in February 2014, hosted by Clifford Chance, one of the 2006 until 2011. He is currently a Senior Economic Advisor for experiences as the governor and the challenges faced by India and Founding Partners of the Scheme PricewaterhouseCoopers and a part-time Professor of sustainable other emerged economies. The lecture and subsequent dinner was business at Warwick Business School. ■■ The Clare City Dinner in March 2014 was generously hosted kindly sponsored by Smithers & Co. by Clifford Chance and Mr Tony Briam (1968) and featured a Andrew spoke about his recently published book ‘Rediscovering talk by Dr Andrew Sentance (1977) Growth: After the crisis’ (November 2013) on how Western ■■ A law networking reception was held at Norton Rose Fulbright economies should go about rebuilding growth after the 2007 in March 2014 financial crisis. The event was kindly sponsored by Clifford Chance ■■ A 5 yearly alumni dinner took place for 1992-95 matriculants and hosted by alumnus Tony Briam (1968). ■■ Book launches were held for Sir Bob Hepple’s (1964 and We were also grateful to alumna Ruth Cowley (1995) for hosting a former Master) book ‘The Young Man with the Red Tie’, for networking event for law alumni at Norton Rose in March 2014. Sir Nicholas Barrington (1954)’s Books ‘Envoy: A diplomatic journey’ and ‘Nicholas meets Barrington’ and Toby Wilkinson’s (2004) book, ‘The Nile’. 19 Development

■■ The MA ceremony was followed by a dinner for MA graduands Thanks in March 2014 The interest, support and involvement of Clare’s alumni and friends ■■ A Reception was held for US alumni in Boston in April 2014 at enrich the whole College community – as they have for nearly 700 the British Consul-general’s residence years – and will continue to do so for generations to come. We are ■■ A dinner took place for US alumni in New York in April, kindly tremendously grateful for all the donations we receive – no matter sponsored by David Coulson (1990) and hosted by Richard how large or small. Contributions to Clare help to secure the Schwartz (1972) to say farewell to Professor Tony Badger College’s future, and enable us to provide a world-class education ■■ The annual Clare Gala Day was held at the end of June 2014, for all our students. and featured a morning of lectures as well as informal musical and children’s entertainment. ■■ A special concert took place for Ruth and Tony Badger at West Road concert hall in July 2014. ■■ A Dinner for New York City based alumni in December 2014 took place at the Penn Club featuring a recital by the Choir. ■■ A dinner was hosted for alumni in Boston, MA, USA in December 2014 by the Bursar and Development Director. ■■ The Clare Distinguished lecture in Economics and Public Policy, kindly sponsored by Smithers & Co. featured a talk by Raghuram Rajan, the Governor of the Reserve Bank of India, with Masaki Shirakawa,a former governor of the Central Bank of Japan as discussant, and attracted over 150 attendees. ■■ The annual meeting and dinner of the Alumni Council took place in September 2014 with added afternoon workshops for Year Group Representatives. ■■ Alumni and college representatives were present on 4 November 2014 when the names of the 194 Clare men who fell in World War One were read out at the Tower of London’s sea of poppies installation. ■■ An alumni gathering was held at the Varsity Rugby Match in December 2014. ■■ The Choir’s annual concert at St John’s, Smith Square in December 2014 was a resounding success and featured music from their latest CD, Lux de Caelo.

20 21 Master & Fellows

As 3 October 2014, by year of election, showing higher 1988 Dr Adrian Travis 2005 Dr William Byrne Dr Hester Vaizey doctorates, external honours, and Fellowships of the British Prof. Gillian Brown CBE LittD Dr Sian Lazar Mr Paul Warren Academy & the Royal Society only. Where appropriate, dates 1990 Dr Jonathan Goodman Dr Helena Sanson 2014 Dr Alyson Tapp of previous election to the Fellowship are indicated in square Prof. Michael Lapidge LittD Dr Flavio Toxvaerd Dr Nicholas Zammit brackets. 1991 Dr Paul Edwards Mr Stephen Jolly Dr Clive Turner Prof. Sir Malcolm Grant CBE LLD Mr Michael Petty Dr Lucy Colwell Master 1992 Prof. Richard Phillips 2006 Prof. David Swensen Dr Simon Buczacki 1993 Prof. Sir Bob Hepple OBE QC LLD FBA [1968] Prof. Roel Sterckx Dr David Essex 2014 The Rt Hon the Lord Grabiner QC 1994 Dr Helen Thompson Dr Fiona Edmonds Dr Alysia Blackham 1995 Prof. Neil Andrews Dr Dorothy Thompson FBA Dr Heike Alysia Fellows Mr Duncan Robinson CBE DL [1974] Dr Ioannis Lestas Dr Paloma Gonzalez-Bellido 1954 Prof. Richard West ScD FRS Prof. Catherine Clarke Dr Robert Semple Mr Rowan Leary 1955 Prof. Timothy Smiley FBA 1996 Prof. Neil Greenham Dr Rodrigo Cacho 1958 Dr Gordon Wright MD 1997 Dr Rachael Harris Dr Andrew Preston Honorary Fellows Prof. Bill Harris FRS 2007 Prof. Henry Gates Jr 1960 Prof. Volker Heine FRS 1967 Prof. James Watson KBE ScD FRS 1961 Dr Michael Bown 1998 Dr Marta Lahr [1992] Dr Andrew Friend Dr Patricia Fara 2008 Prof. Andrew Balmford FRS 1980 Sir David Attenborough OM CH CVO CBE FRS Mr Colin Turpin 1987 The Rt Rev’d Mark Santer Dr Kenneth Riley Prof. Michiel Sprik Prof. Paul Fletcher Dr Douglas Hedley Dr Josip Glaurdic 1989 Sir Walter Bodmer FRS 1962 Dr Roger Tapp 1990 Sir Roger Norrington CBE 1964 Dr Peter Knewstubb 1999 Dr Anna Philpott Dr Colin Russell Dr Tamara Follini The Rev’d Gregory Seach 1992 Sir Nicholas Barrington KCMG CVO 1965 Prof. Nigel Weiss ScD FRS Sir Fred Catherwood 1966 Dr Malcolm Mitchinson MD Dr Wendy Pullan Dr Anne Stillman Dr Celia Duff 2009 Prof. Philip Allmendinger 1994 Sir John Boyd KCMG Dr Robert Blackburn The Rt Rev’d and Rt Hon the Lord Williams of 1970 Dr Roger Schofield FBA [1962] 2000 Dr Paul Bristowe Dr Nathan Crilly Dr Hubertus Jahn Dr Philip Faulkner Oystermouth PC DD FBA Mr John Newton [1961] 1997 Sir Andrew Wiles FRS 1971 Prof. Alison Sinclair Dr Timothy Lewens Prof. David Hodell Dr Nicola Holdstock Dr Kirsty Hughes 1998 The Rt Hon the Lord Wilson of Dinton GCB 1972 Prof. Donald Lynden-Bell CBE FRS [1960] His Excellency Fernando Cardoso LLD Dr Richard Gooder Prof. Marina Frolova-Walker FBA Dr Julian Huppert MP Prof. Robert Glen Dr Rory Naismith 2001 Dr John Rutter CBE DMus 1973 Prof. Andrew Holmes ScD FRS 2002 Sir Tim Hunt FRS 1976 Dr William Foster Prof. Lorraine Tyler Prof. Jaideep Prabhu Prof. Nicola Clayton FRS 2010 Dr Kirsty McDougall 2004 Prof. Dame Frances Kirwan DBE FRS Mrs Elizabeth Freeman 2006 Mr Peter Ackroyd CBE DLitt(hon) Dr Terence Moore Dr Gordon Ogilvie Dr Andrew Carter 2001 Dr Melvyn Weeks Mr Graham Ross Mr Matthew Parris Prof. Anthony Snodgrass FBA Prof. Jonathan Spence CMG 1979 Prof. Jams Woodhouse The Rev’d Roger Greeves Prof. John Robertson Dr Richard Dyball ScD Dr Ruth Watson 2012 Sir FRS Mr Timothy Brown Prof. Sir David Cannadine LittD FBA Prof. Peter Leadlay Prof. Jeremiah Ostriker 2011 Dr Charles Melnyk Mr Donald Hearn 2012 Ms Jocelyn Wyburd Prof. Susan Alcock 1980 Prof. Simon Franklin The Very Rev’d Vivienne Faull Dr Fred Parker 2002 Professor Howard Griffiths Ms Francisca Malarée Dr John Gibson Prof. Giancarlo Corsetti 1981 Prof. Paul Cartledge Elizabeth De Clare Fellows Mr Aylmer Johnson Dr Andrea Manica Prof. Ottoline Leyser CBE FRS 1982 Prof. Rosalind O’Hanlon 2003 Prof. Anthony Badger Dr Andrew Ferguson 2008 Mr Randolph Lerner Prof. Alan Lucas Dr Maciej Dunajski Dr Martin Smith Dr Alan Gillespie CBE 1985 Mr David Howarth Dr Hendrick van Veen Dr Adria de Gispert Mr Ian Riley 1986 Dr David Hartley Dr Charles Weiss 2013 Dr Timothy Chesters 2014 Mr John Spiers Prof. Andrew Thomason Dr John Guy Dr Jason Carroll 1987 Prof. Dominic Scott Dr Elizabeth Foyster Dr Jonathan Fawcett Dr Nigel Woodcock Dr Toby Wilkinson Dr Jessica Goodman Prof. Lawrence Paulson 2004 Dr Philip Jones Mr Clemens Matthiesen Dr Jaqueline Tasioulas Ms Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite 22 Captions

p. 2 p. 15 n Alumnus of the year 2013/2014: Mr Mohammed n Clare’s SLOs – Rebecca Blaylock and Amin (1969) Stephanie Baughen n Lantern in Old Court archway n Student graduating, 2014 n Clare the T-Rex at the Sedgwick Museum n Lerner Court n Main Picture: the West range from the bridge p. 17 p. 3 n Paul Warren (Bursar) n The Master, Lord Grabiner QC n Old Court p. 5 n Summer Avenue n Graduation 2014 p. 19 n Honorary Degree day 2015 n Cobble in Old Court engraved with Colin Forbes’ n Student working in FML initials n Fran Malarée (Development Director) p. 10 n Telephone Campaign n Archway from the Avenue p. 21 p. 11 n The West range and the bridge n Choir in New York, December 2014 n Clare Boat House p. 23 n Spring Flowers n Autumn Bridge n Supervision n Choir n Main Picture: Blossom tree

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