The Aularian newsletter 2008 - St Edmund Hall
Transcription
The Aularian newsletter 2008 - St Edmund Hall
The Aularian SPRING 2008 • ISSUE 15 ST EDMUND HALL OXFORD From the Principal A fter a seemingly endless and very wet autumn and winter, spring seems to have suddenly burst upon us - the snowdrops are providing a white carpet at the feet of the statue of St Edmund in St Peterin-the-East for the first time and he has been much photographed by visitors and tourists. Students are to be seen reading and revising on the benches in the graveyard and enjoying the warmth of the sun for the first time this year. In the autumn the garden behind St Peter-in-the-East was completely redesigned and replanted and we all look forward with anticipation to the first flowerings of the new plants and shrubs. This remodelling of the garden followed designs by Sarah Ewbank and was made possible by a very generous donation from the Broadbent family - all of this was conscientiously overseen by the Hall’s Garden Fellow, Andrew Kahn. The scaffolding around the top quad will be going down at the end of term to reveal a new lecture theatre and common rooms occupying the under-utilized space between the Kelly and Emden towers. The completion date has been delayed by the heavy rains which we have had during the winter, but we hope to start using these facilities at the beginning of Trinity Term. As is so often the case, a project which started as a simple and economic solution to a longstanding problem has increased dramatically in price and fallen behind schedule and our sincere thanks go to the donors who have kept faith with the project and allowed us to bring it to a successful completion. In particular I should like to thank Jarvis and Connie Doctorow for their leading donation for the main Hall and Martin Smith and the Martin Smith Foundation for allowing the College to reallocate an earlier donation for the promotion of arts in the Hall to help us complete the common rooms. These common rooms will be available to both junior and senior members of the College. They will not only provide a physical and symbolic linking of the current SCR and JCR spaces but also have wonderful views over the Old City Wall and the trees of New College. I hope that those undergraduates who have suffered the disruption and noise over the last few months will be more understanding and sympathetic when they see the full benefits of the new facilities. As these developments came to fruition it gave me the opportunity to rethink my own future at the Hall and after some thought and consultation with my wife, who has been wonderfully supportive during my time here, I announced at the end of last year that I shall be retiring in September 2009 when I will have completed ten years as Principal. Since my first meeting with alumni at the Summer Reunion in 1999 I have been asked many times whether I was enjoying the job and the question was phrased in such a loyal and concerned manner that I found it difficult to give an economical and accurate answer which would have satisfied their expectations. I can say with complete honesty that I have given my considerable energy and complete commitment to the College and tried to do the job to the best of my ability since 1999. I gain some satisfaction from the new buildings and refurbishments which have been completed during my time here. I have also enjoyed the interactions with the students and have marvelled at their sporting and cultural talents, but it is now time to pass the baton to someone who may come in with a fresh enthusiasm for the role. Tony Blair provided us with a very good example of how not to plan your departure. I hope that by giving a clear statement of my retirement date I have given the College ample time to choose a successor. I wish the new Principal and the College every success and look forward to being a reader rather than the author of the introduction to The Aularian. Professor Mike Mingos, FRS Inside The Aularian ‘Living at this Hour’ Celebrating Milton 400 years on Big Brother is Always Watching The reality of Big Brother; one student’s TV experience Oxford in Arabia The 1958 expedition to the ‘lost’ island of Socotra Exotic Plants Flourish at the Hall The Head Gardener on the Hall’s most unique plants The Hall Goes Green Paying with Plastic Recounting the days of College Money Photographic Highlights of the Hall’s Charter Year Hall Around the World 2 The Aularian - Spring 2008 The Aularian Trivia Competition Read The Aularian, answer the following questions, and become eligible to win one of three Charter Lecture prizes listed below. 1. Aularians reside in how many countries? Wisteria Season, St Edmund Hall by Suzy Styles (Experimental Psychology, 2004) The Vice-Principal on the Principal’s Retirement in 2009 A ppreciation is not an emotion that wells naturally in academics, least of all at Oxford, except perhaps at funerals! But notwithstanding my own professional deformation, it is in this case easy to admire a consummate performance in someone else: Mike Mingos is a splendid Principal who has been guiding us through not just interesting times but very troubled waters, representing faithfully the views of a Governing Body which have not always coincided with his own. Among his most notable achievements have been the warm relations with Old Members, which have never been better. Mike has had a correspondingly resounding success in raising funds for the Hall which continues to expand physically by new buildings and intellectually by the academic achievements of recent years which now surely match the Hall’s sporting prowess, past as well as present (we won Rugby Cuppers 2008!). Although we are financially on a sounder footing, we are not yet safeguarded in terms of all the fellowships for which we would like to have funding (for example in German!). But further challenges impend where we shall need resolute and clear-minded guidance like that which we have had from Mike. We shall also miss Stacey who has done so much for the internal well-being of the College as a community by her warmth, common sense and kindness, which have made the Hall feel like a family, indeed, like home. Mike’s decision to go now should give us all pause for thought about our present situation in a university climate of constraint and reform. It comes more abruptly than we would have wished, and comes with a sense of regret on Mike’s part that much more could have been achieved if the fellows had been able to commit more fully to the fundraising and alumni relations activities of the Hall. It is undoubtedly true that a Head of House can call on fellows much less easily now than in the past, since the stresses and demands of fulfilling research and administrative obligations in the University have increased. We wish Mike could have felt able to stay longer, we applaud his and Stacey’s achievements, and feel for their frustrations. The man or woman taking over will have to cope with radical changes across the University which will reach to the heart of its governance and teaching practices and to the personal bonds formed through them in the past. Anyone we appoint will need to confront these challenges with eyes wide open. Chris Wells 2. Which Aularian (current student) was named ‘Oxford Sportsman of the Year’ in 2007? 3. Which Oxford native recently reappeared in the churchyard? 4. Whose harsh interrogation earned an Aularian artist a £5,000 prize? 5. Where can you find the Island of the Dragon’s Blood? 6.How many Aularians have become ‘connected’ online at www.aularianconnect.com? The following prizes will be awarded to the first three correct entries drawn at random: A signed hardback copy of On Royalty by Jeremy Paxman A signed hardback copy of Barbarians by Terry Jones Four signed paperbacks by Nicholas Evans: The Horse Whisperer, The Smoke Jumper, The Loop, and The Divide Email your answers to The Alumni Relations & Development Office at aularianconnect@seh.ox.ac.uk or post them to The Alumni Relations & Development Office, Queen’s Lane, Oxford, OX1 4AR. The closing date for receipt of entries is Friday 30 May 2008. The three winners will receive their prize shortly after the closing date. A NOTE of thanks to all those who contributed news, articles, and photos for the 2008 edition of The Aularian. This year’s edition is twice the size of its predecessors and we hope your enjoyment reading it is equally enhanced. We sought to augment the publication by inviting Aularians to share their unique stories and perspectives and were delighted by the number of Old Members and current students who volunteered their time and energy to contribute. We would like to feature even more Aularian-authored articles in forthcoming issues, and so please let the Alumni Relations & Development Office know if you would like to contribute to next year’s edition. We hope that you will enjoy this new and improved issue of The Aularian and that it will remind you of the wonderful place that the Hall was, is, and will continue to be. The Aularian - Spring 2008 3 college news Hall Rower to Man Dark Blue Boat The 154th Oxford v Cambridge Boat Race will take place on Saturday 29 March 2008. Cambridge won the 153rd Boat Race (7 April 2007) by one and a quarter lengths in a time of seventeen minutes and forty-nine seconds. St Edmund Hall is proud to have two representatives on this year’s squad. Aaron Marcovy (D.Phil Fine Art, 2007) sitting in 4 seat in the Blue Boat, and Andrew Wright will be at 5 seat in the Isis Boat (reserve crew) Aaron is an American, originally from Cleveland, Ohio, attended Columbia University in New York City, then resided in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania prior to coming to Oxford. He has designed the logo to appear on the Oxford kit at the Boat Race, and has also been commissioned to build a Boat Race sculpture with ITV. Norham St Edmund Graduate Seminars David Priestland The Norham St Edmund graduate seminars are now in their second year, and are proving to be very successful – both as a forum for graduate students to discuss their work, and as a convivial social occasion. Following a buffet supper, two students, normally one from the sciences and one from the humanities, give talks on their research; the floor is then open for discussion and questions. A wide range of topics has been discussed. Papers this year have included: ultrasound and the treatment of liver cancer; the rhetoric of Martin Luther King; river management in China; Czech surrealism in the 1920s; the culture of indigenous peoples in Canada; the use of art in education in Cambodia; the building of Chicago; and corruption in the developing world. MCR Magazine Debuts in Michaelmas Meredith Root-Bernstein (Biodiversity, Conservation & Management, 2004) This academic year, Teddy Hall MCR has launched The Chough, a magazine produced by MCR members to share their talents and interests. Originally suggested by recent MCR president Catherine Blair, the magazine’s first issue came out in eighth week of Michaelmas Term 2007. The editors of The Chough—myself, Jean Foster and, starting in Hilary Term, Emy Reimao—hope to showcase the range of intellectual, literary and artistic pursuits that are characteristic of MCR members. While forums such as the graduate seminar series give us a chance to find out about each others’s research projects, The Chough will hopefully help to spark conversations in the MCR about our many other interests. The Michaelmas issue of The Chough included photography, essays on language and film, a report on sustainable energy prospects in Chile, poetry in translation and a book review. We hope to have a similar mix of submissions for the Hilary issue, and we are particularly interested in publishing writing about and images from science and engineering. The first issue was printed in full colour, but unfortunately the MCR budget only stretched to fifteen printed copies, which were distributed around college. Our plans for the future include producing a PDF version that will be posted on the MCR website, and finding funds to purchase a proper formatting program. If you are interested in receiving a PDF version of the next issue of The Chough, please email Meredith Root-Bernstein at: mrootbernstein@googlemail.com A Piece of Hall History Jones Day Book Awards This academic year saw the first Jones Day Book Awards for first and second year law students at the Hall, and for BCL and MJuris students. The College is grateful to the law firm, to partner Ian Lupson (1979), and to Stewart Douglas-Mann (1957) and Richard Fishlock (1957), for making these awards possible. The winning team in 2007 was Serena Lee and Benjamin Toms, while the runner-up team was Edwin Chappell and Joanna Knights. This sketch of a St Edmund Hall student room (Staircase IV, Room 5) drawn in 1884 by an unknown artist, comes to us courtesy of Douglas Botting (English, 1954) who occupied the same room in the 1950s. The room remains in use today and looks out over the Front Quad. 4 The Aularian - Spring 2008 college news Portrait of Sir Stephen Tumim The College has acquired a portrait sketch of former Principal Sir Stephen Tumim by the celebrated artist Maggi Hambling, known in particular for her bold and memorable portraits of Dorothy Hodgkin, Max Wall, Stephen Fry, Quentin Crisp, George Melly, A.J.P. Taylor, and many others, and for her memorials to Oscar Wilde in Adelaide Street, London, and to Benjamin Britten (Scallop) on the beach at Aldeburgh. St Edmund Hall Art & Craft Week Participant in Oxfordshire Artweeks 19 - 24 May 2008 12.00-5.00 p.m. most days Pontigny Room SEH is once again holding an exhibition of artwork by anyone connected to the Hall. You are invited to show your original pieces of art (maximum of three) such as paintings, drawings, wood/metal/ glass/craft works, sculptures, photography, etc., at this exhibition. Entries will not be for sale directly and will be returned after the show. Entry forms from michael.mingos@seh.ox.ac.uk Exotic Plants Thrive in Hall Beds Susan Kaspar, Head Gardener W hile the British climate is not known for being hospitable to tropical and exotic plants, the high walls of St Edmund Hall provide warmth and shelter for many of our garden beds. With this in mind, several rare and exotic plants have been introduced to the Hall’s protected borders to add to the overall interest of the garden. Among St Edmund Hall’s exotics is the beschorneria yuccoides, a native of Mexico and described as somewhere between an agave and a yucca and planted along the southern bed of the Wolfson Hall. Ours flowered for the first time in 2006, sending up a two-meter efflorescence with rose-coloured bracts and taking several months to reach its full height. In autumn, the main plant slowly died, leaving behind a colony of young rosettes which will flower in the coming years. That same spring the temperamental Chilean fire bush, embothrium coccineum, located in the raised bed between White Hall and Besse, also burst into orange/red flowers along its branches, giving a stunning display after a seven-year maturation. The lapageria rosea and alba vines climb up warm shaded walls and produce waxy blooms of shades from red to pure white at the end of summer; sometimes flowering well into December. In 2006, the flowers from all three of our vines were hand-fertilized using a small artist’s paintbrush. The meticulous work was rewarded when the vines produced large seedpods, which took a year to ripen. The mature seeds were sown immediately after collection in late September 2007, thus retaining the protective moisture from the pods and now the first leaves of the new plants are emerging. We are hoping for interesting colour-variations when the new plants bloom in three to four years. By far the most exciting and important recent occurrence in the garden is the reappearance of dactylorhiza fuchsia, the common spotted orchid, in the churchyard. This is a British native plant, which at one time must have carpeted large areas of grassy meadow in and around Oxford. Its reappearance may be due to the gardening practice of leaving areas of grass uncut from the spring to late summer, letting plants such as the orchid establish and set seed. I look forward to the development of a small colony growing up among the gravestones and adding a pastoral note to the churchyard. Photographs from top to bottom: Beschorneria Yuccoides; Chilean Fire Bush (Embothrium Coccineum); Common Spotted Orchid (Dactylorhiza Fuchsia) The Aularian - Spring 2008 5 college news ‘Living at this Hour’ Celebrating Milton 400 Years On S t Edmund Hall English Fellow, Dr Sharon Achinstein, has curated the Bodleian Library’s winter exhibition, Citizen Milton, a tribute to John Milton, perhaps the most important Englishlanguage poet of the seventeenth century and one of the first advocates of civil liberties. In celebration of the 400th anniversary of his birth, and focusing on the ever current idea of ‘citizenship’, the exhibition tells a story through word and image of this great writer’s abiding ideas, linking his artistic and political activities. Milton, the author of the greatest epic poem in English, Paradise Lost, was also a reforming prose writer, a member of a revolutionary government, and the victim of censorship, whose daring positions we now consider vital to modern governance. An advocate of freedom of the press, transparency in government, public debate, education for liberty, the right to divorce, the disestablishment of the church, and the abolition of monarchy, Milton espoused positions radical even by today’s standards. The display presents Milton’s major works in important and beautiful editions from the Bodleian Library’s collections, including the rare first edition of Areopagitica and the first twelve-book edition of Paradise Lost, printed in octavo format, with a portrait engraving made by William Dolle. A unique aspect of the display explores the relationship John Milton enjoyed during his lifetime with the Bodleian Library through its Librarian, John Rouse. On display are the author’s own presentation copies of his prose and early poetic works, as well as two original manuscript poems written by him as he made the gift. It was the Bodleian Library which hid and saved Milton’s works when in 1660 the government ordered his books to be burnt. The exhibition also looks at Milton the man through the display of objects such as his own writing case, donated by a descendant. In addition to showing Milton’s original manuscripts and first publications, the exhibition concentrates on the lasting power and influence of Milton’s works and his activity in subsequent political and artistic movements, from the later debates over copyright to the French Revolution. Highlights of this section include: Blake’s original illuminated engraving of his Heaven and Hell; Shelley’s unpublished notebook doodles and poetic fragment on Milton; Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, in As well as curating the exhibition, which runs until 26 April 2008, Dr Achinstein has created an associated website guide: www.cems.ox.ac.uk/citizenmilton which she chided Milton for his poor view of women; and, perhaps the earliest written response to Paradise Lost, a letter written by Sir John Hobart soon after publication of the work which proclaimed its sublimity. Milton’s ideas and words have developed a flourishing afterlife, providing inspiration for the works of renowned artists, type-makers and illustrators such as John Martin, Mary Groom, Arthur Rackham, and Samuel Palmer, whose magnificent painting ‘The Prospect’ is being lent by the Ashmolean Museum. Very recent interpreters of Milton, including the poets Geoffrey Hill and Tony Harrison, and the novelist Philip Pullman, who gave a speech at the opening of the exhibition, also have their works represented. 6 The Aularian - Spring 2008 college news The Hall Goes GREEN Dr Ernest Parkin, Bursar A s we prepare Teddy Hall to face the challenges of the Twenty-first Century, a major problem we will face is rising energy costs. For economic, political and environmental reasons, it is important that the College control its growing use of energy and reduce its carbon footprint. These challenges are particularly difficult because the older buildings were given electric lighting and central heating during a period when energy costs were relatively low. Even the “newer” buildings – Emden, Kelly, and Wolfson -- date from the period immediately before the 1973 OPEC Oil Embargo. Their design reflected the low cost of gas and oil at that time. Alumni who have lived in student rooms in Kelly and Emden will recall that in winter the heat is always on. The resident controls it by opening and closing a wooden flap. From today’s perspective, this method is inexcusably wasteful, but at the time it was a cost effective way of providing controllable heat. In every building, the College has updated the original installations. For example, Emden, Kelly and Wolfson were converted from oil to gas, and Besse and Whitehall were connected to the main plant room. This was a good move, as it used a cheaper energy source, reduced pollution, and achieved economies of scale by linking the buildings to one plant room. Similarly, incandescent lighting was replaced with fluorescent to reduce consumption. In Kelly and Emden, the College is almost finished replacing the original track lighting, which used incandescent bulbs, with better halogen lighting and a 33% cut in consumption. However, much remains to be done. In the last year we have replaced the original control circuitry for the Wolfson ventilation system with new. We have discovered that the motorised valves which distribute heat have corroded and so the system does not respond. Their replacement is scheduled for spring 2008. At the same time, new developments in lighting allow us to reduce electrical consumption. For example, second generation fluorescents allow us to provide low energy lighting without the sickly white pallor of first generation bulbs. For task lighting, LED fixtures offer the possibility of reducing energy consumption by 80% in specific applications. At the same time, we are exploring passive measures to avoid waste. The age of our buildings and the compromises made when uses have changed mean that we waste much of the energy we consume. We are seeking to install better windows, weather-stripping, and insulation whenever we refurbish a space. Using low energy lighting during remodelling is another way we are reducing consumption. Visitors to the Pontigny Room, which was refurbished in January 2008, will see what can be done. The two lighting circuits – a bright one for seminar use and a subdued one for dining – use less energy than the original inflexible system. In Kelly and Emden, the College is almost finished replacing the original track lighting, which used incandescent bulbs, with better halogen lighting and a 33% cut in consumption. In the near future, we expect to introduce more innovations. The College has commissioned a design for remodelling the Wolfson dining hall, which incorporates energy-efficient overhead lighting. In accommodation and teaching rooms we are committed to using today’s technology to reduce our consumption and waste of energy. For financial reasons we are focusing our attention on applications with a payback period of less than ten years, but this may change if political initiatives accelerate the process. For example, the current government has proposed a ban on incandescent bulbs by 2011, but Ireland and Australia have set more ambitious schedules. Other technologies on the horizon may make sense for Teddy Hall. The College insisted that our architects evaluate solar panels and geothermal energy generated by heat stored beneath the Earth’s surface for the new Jarvis Doctorow Hall. These had to be ruled out for practical reasons, but another low energy solution was found. Where we have more open area, as at NSE, geothermal heat may well prove the solution when we have to replace the boilers at our three large properties. The biggest obstacle to solar panels at all our properties is planning permission, but as green issues rise to the top of the political agenda, the Council’s objections may grow less firm. By monitoring emerging technologies and evaluating each maintenance decision for its energy characteristics. Teddy Hall is mindful of its responsibilities to its members and the planet. All of these improvements are expensive. We are actively searching for Government and charitable grants to implement energy conservation measures and alternative technologies. Input from members or friends of the College who are active in these fields would be most welcome. The Aularian - Spring 2008 7 JCR President Report 2007 was a tremendously busy year at the Hall, as the fiftieth anniversary of the awarding of our Royal Charter was celebrated in fine fashion. Particular highlights for JCR members were the lectures given by Jeremy Paxman and Terry Jones; those fortunate enough to get tickets were treated to highly informative and amusing talks, which were reflected upon at great length over the subsequent drinks reception and dinner! The year has also been extremely successful in the art and cultural spheres, centering on Arts Week in Trinity Term. An enormous range of activities was jcr and mcr news organised brilliantly and was a huge success, the week culminating with the John Oldham Society performance of Ibsen’s Ghosts, which was a true showcase of the thespian talents of a number of students of the Hall. The students studying Fine Art have had a particularly busy year: whilst one of their number has hit headlines nationally for her appearance in the reality TV programme ‘Big Brother’, collectively they make up almost a third of the students who have been invited to do a show of Modern Art in Oxford, a prestigious invitation the results of which we all await with great anticipation. On the sporting side, the Hall has shown great strength across a range of sports, and achieved considerable success at both College and University level. In College sport we savoured Cuppers success in athletics, swimming, mixed lacrosse, and rugby sevens, whilst performing strongly across all three terms in league competitions. The rugby club had an eventful season, agonisingly losing out to Keble in the Cuppers final at Iffley Road following strong showings in the league and earlier rounds of cuppers. Special mention should go to the Women’s 1st VIII, who retained their position at the Head of the River with a commanding display MCR President Report This past year has again been a busy one for the MCR, both academically and socially. Continuing the trend of recent years, Michaelmas Term saw our membership increase, and the MCR now consists of approximately 230 students, including 200 graduates. The MCR has coped well with this expansion, and it remains a caring and close-knit community. To help cope with the swell in numbers, it was decided last year to increase the size of the Committee to seven members, and we now additionally have an Assistant Steward and an Information Officer. We have continued the custom of MCR members presenting their research at Graduate Seminar Nights. These are now hosted at NSE by Dr David Priestland, and are a wonderful showcase of the academic work undertaken by our members. We have recently heard presentations on a wide variety of topics spanning medicine, politics, education, science, and economics. It is rumoured within the MCR that these nights are good to attend; aside from hearing about our friends’ research, the food available is well worth the effort! A committed group of members decided last year that a new MCR constitution was required, so as to clarify official procedures and to create greater financial oversight of the accounts. Their draft document was passed by referendum in Trinity 2007 and ratified by Governing Body this term. The Committee welcome the changes that it has brought, despite the extra reporting burden that it demands. The social atmosphere in the MCR has thrived. The Freshers’ Week Events were well attended, and we continued to host events which seem to be part of a muchloved and recently established tradition; the Welcome and Farewell Parties, Medieval Feast, and Wine and Cheese Night were thoroughly enjoyed by all who attended. As a new event for the term, and to contribute to the Charter Celebrations, we organised successful exchange dinners with Fitzwilliam, our sister college in Cambridge. The numbers for those attending the Christmas Party were staggering, and Charlie Southern (History, 2006) at Summer Eights. There have also been a number of outstanding individual performances, with Hall students winning Blues in rowing, cricket, athletics, football, boxing, swimming, lacrosse, and karate, not to mention a whole raft of half Blues. Particular congratulations should go to Richard Hildick-Smith, who was named ‘Oxford University Sportsman of the Year’ in 2007. The undergraduate community at the Hall has enjoyed a fantastic year, with a range of sporting, cultural and social activities catering for all tastes. Another energetic and enthusiastic intake of freshers in October has been quick to get involved in college life, and has already enriched the social environment of the College. The JCR committee once again worked tirelessly to deliver a brilliant freshers’ week which saw the welcome return of bops to the Wolfson Hall, a Teddy Hall institution of legendary status throughout the University! On a similar note, we look forward enjoying a summer event in College in Trinity Term for the first time in two years. Teddy Hall continues to thrive as a College - a fantastic place to work and socialise, retaining that distinctive character which gives its students every opportunity to flourish in all areas of university life. Ben Chad (Mathematics, 2005) required the Steward to make a personal plea to the Chef to prepare lamb for over 150 guests! So far, this year has proved to be a success. We hope that this trend continues in Hilary and Trinity Terms, that members reap the rewards of their academic work, and that friendships are not easily forgotten as we slowly drift along the Cherwell and away from Oxford over the summer months. 8 The Aularian - Spring 2008 mcr research report Aston Martin Rust Martin Rust (Materials Science, 2004) describes his postgraduate work with the Aston Martin Vanquish and superplastic metals 1. 2. M y favourite lecturer once told me that every scientist needs a one sentence explanation of their research that does not involve any technical terms whatsoever. This is for use in polite company to overcome the normal glazed-eye response that generally meets the phrase ‘I’m a materials scientist.’ Here is mine: I work on the science behind the making of the body of the Aston Martin Vanquish (fig. 1). Completely accurate, devoid of any scientific terms and sexy enough to be interesting to almost anyone, this phrase has served me well during my doctoral studies here at Teddy Hall. Usually the listener (or in this case, the reader) is mildly intrigued and willing to endure a slightly more technical explanation to satisfy their curiosity. This generally involves the question: ‘But what do you actually DO?’ In order to answer that question, I must usually first explain what the field of Materials Science is and how it affects the average person. Materials Science is the study of the interaction between the processing, properties, and performance of materials in everything from shirts to space shuttles connecting related areas of chemistry, physics, and engineering. An incredibly wide range of methods and equipment are used to determine the properties and performance of an even wider range of materials. In Oxford, the Materials Department has groups working in such diverse areas as metals for the next generation of nuclear reactors, nano-materials for quantum computers, bio-materials for bone implants, and dozens of other high-tech fields. Much of this research utilises the department’s world-famous capabilities in electron microscopy and atomic-level materials characterization. My own project joins different electron microscope techniques to study the deformation of superplastic metals--special materials that are able to stretch very far without breaking under the combined conditions of high temperatures and low rates of deformation. Because of their properties, these materials are used in a variety of applications where complex shapes are needed, such as the fan blades in a Rolls-Royce jet engine. Additionally, as these materials can be formed using air pressure and relatively cheap dies, instead of costly conventional forging equipment, they are particularly attractive for low-production applications like railway carriages and luxury cars. While these materials have been used commercially for forty years, the physical mechanism by which their amazing deformations are achieved is still unknown. In other words, we still do not know exactly how or why they work. This makes it difficult to predict if a material will behave superplasticly and to solve engineering problems arising during forming. It also makes it particularly hard to improve forming methods to lower costs and increase through-put. Previous research has generated several conflicting theories, mostly because the techniques available for study were inadequate to see and characterise key micro-scale interactions. My research aims to resolve these conflicts and find the mechanism behind these materials. To reach this goal, I have developed a new characterisation technique to study these materials at the micro-scale during deformation. First, I use a specialised electron microscope called a Focused Ion Beam (FIB) to machine grids of varying spacing on to large-scale metal specimens, including several cut from the bonnet of an Aston Martin Vanquish. The FIB uses a beam of metal ions to knock atoms off the surface of the specimen and can be used to ‘machine’ features smaller than 100 nano-metres in size. After machining, I stretch specimens under a variety of superplastic conditions and then study the resulting deformation in a scanning electron microscope (fig 2). The images provide an incredible amount of data on the material movement and physical interactions and are combined with other techniques that give detailed structural and chemical data to form a complete picture of what has happened. I have already presented results from this research at conferences in China, Canada, the UK, and Germany to great reviews and am very hopeful that, when this project is complete this summer, our data will finally provide a full picture of the mechanisms behind superplasticity. The Aularian - Spring 2008 9 college sports update MEN’S RUGBY The Hall made an uncharacteristically poor start to the season, and we were severely hampered by the absence of key players away on University duty. However, our fresh-faced recruits were able to stem the tide and Hall finished fourth in the First Division. We knew, however, that we must improve. The second league saw a number of cancelled games owing to poor weather. Hall began to show some glimpses of their true capabilities and finished in a comfortable third position. The domination of Keble, however, was beginning to grate. Next up was Cuppers. For the first time this year the Hall was able to field a fullstrength side, with numerous University players returning to the fold. Our first game saw Hall defeat Linacre/Wolfson by a resounding 80 points to nil. This was followed by a titanic clash with Univ. under the floodlights of Iffley. Hall ran out 27-12 winners. It was commented by numerous officials at OURFC that they had witnessed the best game of college rugby in over twenty years. Our semi-final annihilation of St. Peter’s would have made many an old member weep. An absolutely ruthless forwards’ display set the platform for our backs to run riot. The final score was 56 points to 7, and saw Hall book their rightful place at Iffley once again. The final was our chance to join the immortals of the Teddy Hall Pantheon. There was tremendous self-belief within the side. We were going to win; Keble were going to lose. And win we did! Numerous old members packed the stands MEN’S ROWING Oliver Gingell (2005) The winter was a tough time for the men’s rowing team; owing to lots of rain the river was too high and consequently we could not get as much training time as we would have liked. The lack of experience was made up for, however, with a very enjoyable Easter vacation training camp held in Cork, Ireland. Here we managed a week’s rowing in sunny conditions which set us up nicely for a successful summer term. First we entered Bedford regatta; in a tough division we won four races and advanced to the semi-finals before losing out to a very fast crew. Following this success we had high hopes for summer eights. After rowing over the first day, the second day produced a very exciting, but ultimately disappointing race, as we were bumped by Keble after coming painfully close to catching Exeter in front of us. We suffered another bump the next day but recovered well to row over on the final day to leave us 11th in division 1. Phil Satterthwaite (2006) to watch Hall hold their nerve against a monstrous Keble pack, racking up seven tries in a final score of 46 points to 36. One old member was moved to comment that Teddy Hall could have beaten England that evening. I’m inclined to believe him! Next up for us is the traditional season ender: Cuppers sevens. Last year, Hall truly dominated this event, all the while demonstrating greater levels of skill than any other college outfit could muster. Hopefully this year we can retain our title, firmly underlining the dominance of the Hall in all matters rugby. The bedrock of this year’s team has been a group of wily old campaigners from the third and fourth years. They have been ably supported by an outstanding group of second years and a committed set of WOMEN’S ROWING The weather seems to have defeated rowing this term as the Christ Church novice regatta was cancelled owing to high stream and river levels. This proved to be a most disappointing result as the Hall had produced some of its most promising novice rowers for years. A week before the regatta the two crews were given the chance to get some valuable racing expe- freshers. A special mention must go to Jay Taylor who played in his third Cuppers final this year; I am incredibly proud to have sent him off into the big wide world with one last win! Helen Taylor (2004) rience whilst competing in Nephthys regatta. Against many other novice college crews, both boats performed well in the first round with the B crew winning a closely fought race and the A crew rowing five lengths clear of their opposition. The next round proved to be a tougher affair with the B crew losing by two lengths and the A crew losing to the eventual winners by only a length. The novice squad will now join with the seniors, who have been training hard over the term both on land and in a IV, to create the 1st Torpid and lower crews. Looking ahead to the summer, we will have many rowers returning to the fold including four university squad rowers and a blues swimmer. Combining them with the eager and talented novice squad, it looks encouraging that the Hall will dominate the river once more. WOMEN’S FOOTBALL The 2007/ 08 season has seen our squad bolstered by considerable American talent in the shape of Jean Foster, Billie Koopervas, and Stevie Bergman whilst fresher recruits Lou Cantwell, Rose Manley, and Jane Rudderham have proved invaluable. More popular than ever and the fastestgrowing sport at the Hall, women’s football has also enjoyed the addition of numerous finalists. With fitness coach and team favourite Ben Toms alongside new coach Chris Watkin, the season looked full of promise. And, so far, this has proved to be the case. Unbeaten in both the league and Cuppers competitions we are fast gaining a reputation as formidable opponents. Former captain Mari Tomos is our leading goal scorer, having found the net in every one of her appearances, while Lou has been a rock at the back in all of our Helena Heaton (2006) matches. Special mention must also go to Jean who scored a hat trick in our stunning 6-2 defeat of Catz/Balliol MCR as well as Cressie Holmes, who, back from her year abroad in Paris, marked her return with two goals in our hard fought victory over Cuppers favourites, Osler Green. With training twice a week, even in conditions resembling a mud bath, we are a dedicated, close-knit squad and look set to go far this season. To regain our touch after Christmas a match against the men’s thirds is on the cards, although their captain keeps avoiding the issue – perhaps that is saying something…?!! Next term sees the crucial knockout stages of Cuppers and the conclusion of the league, so fingers crossed for the business-end of the season! 10 The Aularian - Spring 2008 college events Our Charter Year in Photos More than 575 Aularians attended Hall events in 2007, our anniversary year. Here are just a few photographs from the events that drew in the Aularian crowds. The Charter Lecture Series, sponsored by the Martin Smith St Edmund Hall Arts Trust, brought (from left to right) Jeremy Paxman, Terry Jones, and Nicholas Evans to the Hall. The SEHA made a gift of Rodney Munday’s sculpture of St Edmund, which was installed in the gardens of St Peter-in-the-East. Ibsen’s Ghosts was resurrected by John Cox and the John Oldham Society during the Charter Weekend. The Charter Ball recaptured the 1950s. The Charter Arts Celebration, sponsored by the Martin Smith St Edmund Hall Arts Trust, brought together Aularians for an evening of music and poetry. Clockwise from top left are James Harpham, Jonathan Van Tulleken, Kevin Crossley-Holland, Natalie Raybould, and the St Edmund Hall Choir conducted by Stephen Carleston. The Aularian - Spring 2008 11 college events Nicholas Evans Charter Lecture T he final lecture in the series celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Hall’s Charter saw Nicholas Evans, author of The Divide, The Loop, The Horse Whisperer and The Smoke Jumper sharing a series of fascinating insights on his life and career with a packed Old Dining Hall. Dedicated Charter Lecture fans seeking a career in the arts will by now have noticed common thread, running through the lives of Nicholas Evans and his predecessor in the series, Terry Jones: early success in – followed by total neglect of – rugby. Evans, Head Boy and Captain of Rugby at school, walked into his interview and was met not by the expected spin-pass, but by the darklymuttered phrases, ‘oh, another bloody gladiator’. He took the hint, ‘didn’t touch a sporting implement in his time here’, and spent three years engaged in more profitable pursuits; he took to scrawling ‘Matriculation Makes You Blind’ along Queen’s Lane, and, most significantly, acting; a bit-part in a touring production of ‘Hamlet’ took him to America, rekindling a childhood passion for the West which would emerge later through the American narrative voice of his novels. Alastair Hird (English, 2005) After leaving Oxford, Evans turned away from his law degree, entering the ranks of the Thompson empire as a cub journalist. From an early placement on the Newcastle Evening Chronicle, he slowly manoeuvred himself towards arts journalism, then screenwriting; despite initial success, he found himself Nicholas Evans (Law, 1969) and his former Law tutor moving deeper into debt. Professor Sir David Yardley at the third Charter Lecture He stumbled across the about people; writing it led him through practice of horse whispering at dinner, a difficult passage of life, just as healing overhearing the words at the other end a horse can heal its owner. Indeed, his of the table; seeing the potential of the reputation as ‘the animal man’ has been concept, Evans decided to abandon a bugbear: admittedly, making wolves screenwriting as a vehicle, a move which, central to The Loop was ‘a bad idea’, ironically, led to the shooting of Robert though he ‘didn’t even put a mosquito in Redford’s ‘The Horse Whisperer’, a film the next two, to shake the tag’. which had a huge impact on Evans’s Literature fans should keep an eye out career, for both good and ill, increasing for the appearances by several sheep his profile whilst tying him forever to a in his next book; the post-lecture meal distorted version of his work. featured exquisite lamb, and it’s bound to He was at pains to point out that the have had an influence. book is not a book about horses, but 2007 Reunion Event Photos 1967 Gaudy 1970-1976 Gaudy 1957 50th Anniversary Lunch 12 The Aularian - Spring 2008 alumni news HALL AROUND THE WORLD You can find Aularians on 6 continents and in 107 countries across the world, so chances are that no matter where you are, there is an Aularian neaby. Aularian Connect, the Hall’s online alumni database, makes it easier than ever to get in touch and stay in touch with fellow Aularians. Aularian Connect is free, secure, and available exclusively to St Edmund Hall alumni. Looking to get back in touch with friends from College? Search for Aularians by name. Thinking of organising a reunion? Use the database to search by matriculation year. Moving to a new city? Find Aularians in the area. Pondering a career change? Contact an Aularian for career advice. Planning a holiday? Take a look at the dozens of holiday homes, tours, and more on offer by Aularians on Aularian Connections. Move house or change jobs? Update your details quickly and easily online. To date, more than 4,380 Aularians have published information on Aularian Connect with more logging in everyday. To log on, visit www.aularianconnect.com Where on Earth? There are Aularians all over, but here are the countries where you can find at least ten: Australia Belgium Bulgaria Canada China Czech Republic Mexico France Germany Greece India Ireland Italy Japan Malaysia New Zealand The Netherlands Singapore Spain Sweden South Africa South Korea Switzerland UAE USA Your College Needs You International, Regional & Year Group Volunteers Wanted! St Edmund Hall alumni are based in over a hundred countries from Albania to Zimbabwe. Working with the St Edmund Hall Association, the Alumni Relations & Development Office hopes to facilitate a programme of regional, international, and year group events designed to help alumni to keep in touch with each other and the Hall. These might include drinks parties and networking events, dinners, talks and seminars and perhaps even sporting events! The organisation of such a programme requires enthusiastic alumni to organise Aularians in San Francisco, hold an informal preevents on a local level, with the support Christmas gathering at a local brewery. of the Alumni Relations team at the College in the background. We would like to see all Aularians continue their association with the College and the St Edmund Hall Association and also keep in touch with their contemporaries and other Old Members. With your help, we hope to provide all Aularians with just such opportunities. If you would be willing to act as a regional, international, or year group organiser, or have any other ideas for alumni events and activities please get in touch with the Alumni Relations & Development Office. Alternatively log on to www.aularianconnect.com and sign up in the Opportunities to Help the Hall section of the site. After meeting at the SEH New York dinner in November, Yves Desgouttes (Geochemistry), Ingrid Bengtson (PPE) and Benjamin Beck (English) got together for a day of skiing in beautiful conditions and an apres-ski slope-side dinner at Jackson Hole Mountain Resort in Wyoming. The Aularian - Spring 2008 13 alumni news St Edmund Hall Association Report Y ou are selected, you spend three years bouncing from one excitement to another, and afterwards, you wonder what might have been achieved if it had not all been such fun. Familiar? Thus the presidency of the St Edmund Hall Association passes. Surprisingly there were three achievements during my tenure. They required masterly skills of active non-intervention and passive interference in processes initiated by my predecessors. Thanks to them, and to all our supporters, we now have Aularian Connect, the truly amazing statue of St Edmund, and the potential of opportunities to visit (by arrangement) the crypt of St Peter-in-the-East! I hope too that the concept of year group leaders for Aularians will find favour and support. It will enable contacts to be maintained and revived when wanted and in whatever form appeals at the particular time. The range of activities in the last three years followed the patterns of the centuries. The London Dinner continues as it was, is, and will be, and is great fun to be at. There are grand meetings of the Executive Committee. Watching the ‘Syndicate’ at eights week is an experience which is different. Summer Reunions and Gaudies are generous, gentle and enjoyable. I happened upon 2007 which was the Friends of the Boat Club T he Friends of St Edmund Hall Boat Club have raised thousands of pounds over the fifteen years since they were formed: all that money has gone towards equipping the Boat Club, paying for coaching, and defraying incidental expenses such as transport costs. As a result, the Hall now has one of the best equipped college boat clubs on the Isis. We have been very fortunate in securing sponsorship from Jones Day, one of the most recognized and respected law firms in the world; this has taken the form of funds for new equipment and for rowing kit which proudly bears the firm’s logo. Many Friends have generously contributed to an endowment fund for the benefit of the Boat Club which, after including Gift Aid tax relief, now amounts to close on £100,000. Will Hatcher (History, 1962) 50 (or 750th, as you will) anniversary of our charter and status as “college.” There were charter lectures and dinners, events and memorabilia and the great Charter Weekend which celebrated the perfectly timed installation (just) and unveiling of St Edmund in the churchyard. It has been a great joy for me to have had the pleasure of contact with very many old and new friends. Throughout the period, we enjoyed unfailing courtesy and great support from the Principal and the Fellows. The Alumni Relations and Development Office, primarily Betony, contributed helpfully with both energy and tolerance. Now I return to the semi-retirement of the Oxford University Society (Shropshire Branch) where we have a committee of two (including the officers!) which meets without fail every five years at least. I give my very best wishes to my successor, Jon Shortridge, and my genuine thanks to all who played a part, however large or small, in maintaining and strengthening the spirit of the Hall over the last three years. th Darrell Barnes (Modern Languages, 1963) The Friends’ Annual Dinner is held every year at the beginning of Michaelmas Term and this year will be held on Friday 17 October. This is an opportunity to meet current crew members, to catch up on Boat Club progress as well as to dine in the Old Dining Hall. We have been occupied recently with drawing up an appropriate constitution for the better governance of the Friends and hope that this will soon be enacted. We try to produce a Newsletter for the Friends once a term, containing news of the latest Boat Club successes (the Newsletters can now be downloaded from the Hall website - follow the Alumni link). We are always looking for new faces on the Friends’ Management Committee and so if you have time to spare and would like to be involved, please contact Dick Fishlock at richardfishlock@hotmail.com or Darrell Barnes at darrellb@metronet.co.uk Aularian Golfing Society - 2008 Fixtures The second season of the newly established Society, with some fifty members, is about to get underway. If you have not already signed up but would like to be involved in any of the events on the list below, please email development.office@seh.ox.ac.uk 11 April Oxford Alumni Inter-Collegiate Tournament & Dinner in College (optional), Frilford Heath GC 22 April AGS Spring Meeting, The Berkshire GC May/June (tbc) Match v St John’s College, Royal Mid-Surrey GC 29 July AGS Summer Meeting or Match v Fitzwilliam College Cambridge, Wimbledon Park GC 29 August AGS Oxford Meeting & Dinner in College (optional) Studley Wood GC (tbc) 16 September Match v Corpus Christi College, Huntercombe GC 14 The Aularian - Spring 2008 aularian contribution Aularians Off the Beaten Path Jessica Hatcher (Modern Languages, 2001) I think nearly everyone who goes to Oxford University will agree that it gives you the opportunity to meet the most remarkable people - a springboard for life. My mum entertained the thought of me settling down with a Windsor after a long and dreamy-spires courtship, while dad thought I’d go into advertising – a projection of his creative unfulfillment? Either way, it’s not what you know, it’s who you know, and as far as they were concerned, I was bang on track. Imagine then how they felt when I announced I was quitting my job, getting a “shock/horror” vocational qualification, gulp, and planning to spend four months cycling around rural Africa. Oxford, or more specifically Teddy Hall, had once again trumpeted opportunity into my path, only this time the opportunity in question was neither lucrative nor conducive to grandchildren. Barty Pleydell-Bouverie, a great friend from Teddy Hall who is one is one of the few from my year still to be at the Hall (doing a D.Phil in neuroscience), had an idea. Barty loves Africa, see. You catch it like a bug, I am told. And Barty caught it pretty bad some years ago. Having spent several years working on various development and conservation projects across the continent, he has designed a 5,000 mile unsupported bicycle expedition that would visit and support the work of twenty different rural conservation projects dotted around Southern and East Africa - taking in eight countries, from Namibia to Kenya. All too often, African conservation projects have had a detrimental socio-economic impact on the communities that are affected by them (for instance the impact of relocation from protected reserves, or the economic effects of restricted hunting). Current practice now aims to support community-based initiatives that place education and poverty reduction as central aims alongside conservation. Barty has carefully picked twenty of such schemes that are well managed and are creating conditions where both the wildlife, and the communities that depend on it, can flourish. Early comparisons to Ewan MacGregor in the Long Way Down were flattering but misplaced, and Barty was determined the expedition would not to be a ‘gap-year’ challenge or a small-time fundraiser – he once raised upwards of £30,000 by running a marathon through a game reserve in northern Kenya and is not one to set ‘realistic’ targets. In this case, £100,000 will only just be enough to provide each of the projects visited en route with the sort of long-term financial support structure that would allow them to develop at their own pace; over and above that will be better. Prince William is the Royal Patron of Tusk Trust, the African conservation charity with which Barty has organised the Cycle of Life. When Prince William heard of the expedition he offered his endorsement and persuaded us to team up with another of his patron charities, Centrepoint, which is the UK’s leading youth homelessness charity. As a result, the expedition has offered some of the young people from Centrepoint the opportunity join us, something that it is hoped will change their lives forever. Barty, Chris Stephens (another Africaphile and first-class engineer who prefers to dwell on his Hall rugby career) and I (please note, I have never been to Africa) are thus being joined on the expedition by two young people from Centrepoint, together with their keyworkers. It will be an incredible convergence of perspectives as we delve into rural African communities without the distraction and limitation of motor power. At sixty miles per day, it should take us a little under four months. We depart on 10 April and hope to make it a story worth following. Take a look at our website www.cycleoflife2008.com and find us on facebook, use the web to chart our progress, and help us make a difference by giving generously – all donations go straight to the field. We will also be holding a launch evening at some point, so look out for that. Oh, and if you see my parents, tell them it’s a good thing. The Aularian - Spring 2008 15 aularian contribution Listening & Hearing Yann Lovelock (English, 1960) discusses some aspects of the public faith agenda Yann Lovelock leads the alms round during a period of monastic training at the Staffordshire Buddhavihara Temple in August 2007 I n the period when St Edmund Hall was founded, it would have been a bold man who advocated interfaith dialogue as a theological tool. Such activities were only possible between the likes of St Francis and the Sultan of Egypt, or those in the far-flung Mongol dominions. Nor in 1960 was it a subject I discussed with my Aularian contemporaries John Austin and Matthew Joy. There was no question of dialogue between an irreverent black-clad Beat poet and the kind of visibly committed Christian that in those days we used to call ‘the grey men’. Besides, my upbringing was in a fundamentalist sect with very decided views on the errors of Anglicanism. The next time I met that pair was in Birmingham forty years later. John was by then Bishop of Aston and had a special interest in interfaith dialogue. Matthew had an interfaith role too, having established friendly relations with the predominating Muslims in his parish. Our paths crossed because I was emerging as the Buddhist interfaith adviser in the city. Each of us had acquired a social conscience in the meantime and had made a critical assessment of what our own faiths should be contributing to achieve social harmony. The crisis brought about by 9/11 therefore found us better prepared than many. Even earlier, Government had had a policy of religious consultation. As that moved into higher gear, suddenly we were of interest to local authorities as people with solutions. There are problems about how you approach interfaith relations at different levels. In Birmingham we have had a Council of Faiths since 1973 which has had periodically to reinvent its role according to changing circumstances. There are several strands to its membership which are difficult to reconcile. Some just want to listen, others are mostly interested in advocating their own position; then there are supporters who believe in the process of dialogue but not in taking part, and finally there are the networkers and facilitators. Nowadays, too, there is tension between those keen to engage in the civic process and those wary of any political involvement. This surfaced, for instance, when our Council of Faiths became involved in helping to organise the rally held in Birmingham after the 2005 London bombings. The Anti-War Alliance and Respect were poised to take it over as a political platform; the Council of Faiths collaborated with Islamic Relief, the Young Muslims, and the Islamic Society of Britain in keeping it unconfrontational. Shortly afterwards we were awarded a seat on the Birmingham Strategic Partnership. Multi-faith consultation is the proper name for dialogue on social policies with local, regional and national government. Theoretically each ‘representative’ is there to advocate the position of their faith but out of the process grows trust and respect for each other as common values emerge. It soon becomes When St Edmund Hall was founded, it would have been a bold man who advocated interfaith dialogue as a theological tool. clear that people of faith have a shared outlook which it is vital for the various authorities to understand if there is to be any sort of fruitful co-operation. The need for ‘faith literacy’ in public bodies is increasingly discussed nowadays. What is important to those of us devising courses is that this involves more than learning about the beliefs and cultural practices of others. Faiths are lumped together with the voluntary sector since one third of all social provision is delivered by faith associations. The difference, however, is that religious conviction inspires the latter where Rotarians (say) act purely out of humanitarian concern. This has its bearing on how much outside direction faiths will tolerate in return for official funding. The recent clash between Government and the Catholic Church over gay adoption (and the way this was manipulated by the media) arose because of lack of understanding. ‘Consultation’ may involve listening but does not guarantee hearing; to achieve that there must be a process of dialogue. Equally important (but more problematic) is intra-faith dialogue. The Network of Buddhist Organisations was formed in 1994 to encourage precisely this but it was not long before Government was casting a speculative eye in its direction. Buddhists may be notoriously uncentralised and achieving consensus among them practically impossible, but here was an ecumenical organisation ready to look at almost anything. Our secretary’s email address was soon being added to ministerial data-bases. Article continues on page 17 16 The Aularian - Spring 2008 aularian contribution Oxford in Arabia Douglas Botting (English, 1954) L ife, I have found, tends often to be one damn bend in the river after another. This was certainly true of my Oxford career at St Edmund Hall. After passing the entrance exam to read English, I was obliged to do two years National Service in the Army, and in due course was commissioned as an infantry subaltern and posted to the King’s Africa Rifles in East Africa - first in Kenya, where the regiment was engaged in containing the Mau Mau terror war, and later to Uganda, where one day I happened to have lunch with the newly crowned Queen of England at the source of the Nile. I loved Africa, and especially its Indian Ocean coast, and when I finally came up to the Hall I still longed to get back there and struggled in vain to sign up for courses more relevant to my interests. But neither Arabic nor anthropology were available to undergraduates, and so while I wrestled my way through medieval literature and Anglo-Saxon, I joined the Oxford University Exploration Club. There I was received very cordially, and advised that if I proposed to go off on some far-away expedition I should decide where to go exactly and to do what precisely, and where the hell I thought the money was coming from. So it was, by pure chance, while idly flicking through a world atlas and putting a ring round every island round the African continent, I came across a place I had never heard of - Socotra, off the Horn of Africa. Not only had I never heard of it but nor had anyone else. More than that, it wasn’t even in my ancient edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica. This surely was the place I was looking for - remote, unknown, unexplored since the 19th century. Though I didn’t know it, this was to usher in a monumental change in my life - and for that matter Socotra’s. While remaining an undergraduate on the one hand, I became a postgraduate project director (so to speak) on the other, deal- Douglas Botting in the expedition headquarters - the stable in St Aldate’s - surrounded by all the stores and equipment to be shipped out to the Arabian Sea. A typical splinter group on a trek to the interior. From left to right, Professor Peter Shinnie, Dr Richard Lister, John Weakley, Douglas Botting, and three Socotran donkey drivers. ing with government departments at home and abroad, and research directors at other Universities, including American ones. Having drawn up a pioneer field research programme involving anthropological, linguistic, archaeological and zoological research, together with international media projects, I managed to raise BBC interest in a documentary TV series (only youthful David Attenborough’s second job in his brief career back at BBC TV HQ to date) to be shot by me, plus a book as well. Though the Hall didn’t yet know it either, the college became the organisation centre for the first scientific exploration of this remote and extraordinary Arabian island in the modern era. My little room above that of Graham Midgley (my English Literature tutor) in the Front Quad became the Expedition HQ. And as boxes of supplies and equipment donated free by British firms began to pile up in the Hall’s front entrance, it soon became evident we would have to find our own planning and storage HQ, and both John Weakley (the other Hall undergraduate on the expedition, reading French) and I moved into a deserted stable in St Aldate’s, with our office and camp beds in the hayloft and our stores in the horse pens. Most amazingly, from starting as a modest undergraduate adventure, the project was fast becoming a major postgraduate field research expedition. The original team included American medic Dr Baruch Blumberg (later Master of Balliol and winner of the Nobel Prize for Medicine) and Professor Ahmed Abou-Zeid (Head of the Department of Anthropology at Cairo University). But for reasons we were yet to discover, both the American and Egyptian academics were banned by the British Government, and I replaced them with two Cambridge medics, Dr Neil Orr and Dr Richard Lister in addition to two other scientists - Dr Michael Gwynne, biologist (Oriel, later Head of the The Aularian - Spring 2008 17 Continued from page 15 Listening & Hearing by Yann Lovelock A Socotran Bedouin cave home. Dr Orr is sprinkling DDT to get rid of the itchy fleas. Douglas Botting met the Bedu on the right again when he returned to the island nearly forty years later. When the Bedu was asked if he knew who Douglas was, he replied, ‘Yes, he’s one of the six giants, his job was pictures.’ UN Global Environmental Monitoring Service) and Prof Peter Shinnie, archaeologist (Christ Church, formerly Head of Antiquities for the Sudan Government). Eventually the crunch came. To fulfil my obligation to the expedition and all its backers (the University of Oxford included) I would need a sabbatical year when I got back. Though this was an odd request from an undergraduate, to my eternal gratitude, the Principal, John Kelly, agreed. The next seemingly insuperable problem was getting there. No ships could land there in the summer monsoon. There was a rough dirt airstrip on the island but no planes normally flew there. And from our humble horse stable in St Aldate’s I wrote to the topmost British airman of all - the Supreme Commander of Allied Air Forces in Europe - begging him to help. It seems the words ‘St Edmund Hall, Oxford University’ did the trick. The Supreme Commander replied by return post. Of course the RAF should help, he wrote. He would fix it. And so we went. The RAF flew us to the island. Camels and donkeys carried us up and around its primordial mountains and desert plains through the monsoon weather. The Stone Age bedouin cave-dwellers of the island’s ancient wild uplands became our friends. The scientists did their researches. I shot my film. All was going well in this fantastic lost world when we received an unexpected emergency radio message from the Aden Government via the two-man Bedouin Legion outpost marooned on the island: ‘Oxford Expedition uplift immediately two RAF planes arriving two days time’. When we got back to Aden we were informed that only one ship was now sailing to the UK via Suez until further notice and we had been booked on it as distressed British subjects travelling first class free of charge. Only when we finally got home was the mystery finally explained. British, French, and Israeli forces had invaded the Suez Canal Zone. Britain was now at war with Egypt. We had been squeezed on the last ship to get through the Canal and sail home. And so this pioneer research expedition, which had kick-started world-wide interest in this forgotten island, published its scientific results, my documentary films (the first about the island) were broadcast on BBC TV and around the world, and my book Island of the Dragon’s Blood, the first book about the island since the 19th century, was published in Britain and America - and a signed copy of the recently published new paperback edition (‘a work of genius’, The Observer) is now in the Hall library! Having helped set up a regional Buddhist council in 2002, I joined the NBO three years ago to act as its Information Officer and Interfaith Co-ordinator. This year alone I was renominated as Buddhist representative to the Inter Faith Network’s executive and continued to attend a Government faith think tank and a committee advising the Equalities and Human Rights Commission. After briefing on the new immigration procedures, I reported these to our membership in accessible language. I have consulted them on the Health Service’s proposals for Near Death Care and reported back the results. I have given a presentation to the Cohesion and Faith team at the Department for Communities and Local Government on the complexity of Buddhist organisations in Britain. I have written an essay for the Institute for Public Policy Research about the Buddhist attitude to citizenship, nationality, multiculturalism, and secularism. After decades of neglect, and in the new demographic circumstances of the 21st century, authorities are now hungry for information about this newly realised marker of self-definition. So far as I can learn, this is set to continue, whichever party is in power. Whether those of us in the minority faiths will be able to keep up with the demand, or think the results worth while, is more debatable. It soon becomes clear that people of faith have a shared outlook which it is vital for the various authorities to understand if there is to be any sort of fruitful co-operation. 18 The Aularian - Spring 2008 aularian contribution Big Brother is Always Watching Amy Jackson (Fine Art, 2005) Amy Jackson was chosen to be one of twelve housemates on E4’s reality series Big Brother: Celebrity Hijack which ran from 3 January to 28 January 2008. The series brought together a group of British 18 to 21 year olds, all with a special talent, competing to avoid ‘eviction’ from the House and a £50,000 prize. Amy is a multi-award winning conceptual artist pursuing her BA in Fine Art at the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art. She finished the Big Brother competition in third place. R eading through a fifty-page contract I knew I could be signing my life away. I read and understood that anything E4 wanted to do was out of my hands and, as the 40-page rule book stated that ‘Big Brother can change the rules at any time.’ It was certainly a gamble, but sensible thought and fears aside I signed my soul away on the dotted line. Walking into the House for the first time the bright lights and bold colours were overwhelming. The atmosphere was tense and awkward, like a party in which no one has met yet. There was no sound, only polite and guarded conversation, in which everyone was well aware was being watched. At first the House resembled a playground. Excited, we ran united around the rooms exploring new spaces and eyeing up the décor. By the next day the House seemed less like a playground and a lot more like a prison. For hours at once we were locked, with no explanation into one particular room. None of the rooms had locks we could control, a coloured eye stood above each doorway. Red for closed, green for open. Initially the moving cameras in every corner, on every wall, behind every mirror felt inescapable. I was guarded, wary, and The moving cameras in every corner, on every wall, behind every mirror felt inescapable. I was guarded, wary, and watched whilst others, singers, musicians, performers, revelled on the stage. watched whilst others, singers, musicians, performers, revelled on the stage. They sang, danced, and improvised as though they were in an Andrew Lloyd Weber audition. Yet the cameras soon became part of the furniture and conversation became free and easy. As evictions commenced, and tears trailed down cheekbones and fists found their way to walls, I was determined not to descend into depression. They could take away my hot water, put us on rations, and wind us up to their hearts’ content, but I had sworn to myself that I would not give them the satisfaction of seeing me cry. Perhaps it was my lack of visible emotion, which prompted them to choose me for the SAS task. We were each given a secret four-digit code and were told that two housemates would be interrogated by Andy McNabb, a former SAS regiment member. The winning housemate would be immune from the week’s eviction and would go home £5,000 richer. One night I went to sleep at 5 a.m. not suspecting that two hours later two masked black balaclava-clad men would burst in and kidnap housemate Anthony and me. With my hands above my head for a forty-minute journey the cramp in my arms was enough to make we wish I was back in the House. Alone in the interrogation room I stood for an hour listening to white noise pounding in my ears. The sounds of dogs barking, footsteps clambering and a baby crying were enough to send anyone insane and after a couple of weeks in the Big Brother House, my senses were already weird and warped. One of the most fearful aspects of taking part in Big Brother is the inevitability of eviction and the dread of walking out those doors plays upon each contestant’s mind. My interrogator knew this and used my fear to his advantage. ‘There’s been a change. You and Anthony both have a number. At the moment your fellow housemates are trying to crack a code in the house. They need both yours and Anthony’s digits to finish the task. This is the real task… If they do not complete the code, everyone will be up for eviction except you. Anthony is a team player and so has selflessly given up his numbers. This task was not to find the strongest housemate, it was to see who the most selfish housemate was. At the moment that is you.’ My interrogator enforced on me how selfish and arrogant everyone watching would find me. However, just for that shadow of doubt and possibility that the task could still be real I kept my numbers secret. Hours of shouting about my selfish behaviour, arrogant attitude, and impending private and public hatred did not break me. The cramp in my arms and legs worsened, but so did my determination. Eventually we were led to the Diary Room and told the task was real. I had lasted the longest and won the prize. Anthony and I were greeted with hugs and smiles from the House, yet I could not shake my interrogator’s shouts about selfishness from my head. I became convinced the public would take offence to my determination to win over my consideration for the rest of the housemates. Of course this was not the case but SAS interrogation is enough to brainwash the The Aularian - Spring 2008 19 Paying with Plastic Recounting the Days of College Money Jonathan Warner (PPE, 1976) T strongest of wills. In the Big Brother House, eviction doesn’t feel like a game, it feels like a death. When someone walks out of that door there’s an emptiness in the House. The contestants console each other with ridiculous phrases such as, ‘they’ve gone to a better place’ and ‘I bet he’s watching us now’. Housemates cry and stare longingly at empty beds, feeling regret for all those arguments, all those bitter words. When that house is your entire universe it feels as though someone has been wiped from the world. With no mode of guidance, idea of the outside world, or adult responsibility in the Big Brother House we became childlike. Big Brother became a parent. The housemates became brothers and sisters and sibling rivalry was strife. Our only voice of authority or guidance was Big Brother and seeking that approval becomes paramount. Kids run out of the diary room with excitement, ready to show off about their latest loving conversation with the Brother. It hurts when Big Brother favours another or makes his disapproval clear. So you try your best to behave, you seek guidance from Big Brother, existing in a constant dichotomy between love and hate. Somehow I survived eviction until the final night. Leaving the House and walking through a sea of strangers and familiar faces (which somehow looked foreign), I realised it was over and was filled with relief. Adapting back was going to be difficult. On the tube a couple of days later I couldn’t help but notice how happy the voice on the tannoy made me. “The circle line is subject to delays due to signal failures” was enough to make me feel back at home. Although I still sometimes have a sense of suspicion at an innocent mirror on the wall, gradually the feeling that I am being watched is fading away but with CCTV cameras on street corners perhaps it is still always there, just slightly. here are many reasons why people might choose to use a special form of token money, and examples have been known in Britain from at least the reign of Charles II, when a shortage of coin encouraged merchants to issue their own metal tokens. In the United States numerous mining and lumber companies issued tokens and paper money to meet the needs of their employees for cash, and during the periodic crises of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and again in the Great Depression, certificates were issued by associations of banks backed by blocked deposits. Later, back in Britain, special tokens were issued for use in onearmed bandits – Bell fruit tokens became especially common – thereby adding to the rich variety of money substitutes. It is perhaps not surprising that impecunious gentlemen found St Edmund Hall’s token money a useful way of obtaining credit for buying lunch and other services. Anyone who was at the Hall during the 1970s no doubt remembers College Money. Small round plastic tokens that you could use around college, and booklets of paper notes that, rather like travellers’ cheques, you had to sign when you received, and then again when you used them, and which after one use were destroyed. The paper money was a way of postponing the day when you had to pay for what you’d bought (rather like a Blackwell’s account), as the amount you signed for was added to your next term’s battels bill. For the impoverished, this was a great attraction – and, as the last term’s College Money was paid for out of the £5 a term prepayment for final expenses, you could cheerfully use it and thereby merely reduce the amount of your donation to the Hall, when the begging letter asking whether you really wanted a refund of your prepayment overpayment arrived a few months after going down. The picture above shows the Hall’s 10p and 1p tokens (both sides were identical). There was also a 5p token, which was red. The yellow token on the bottom left, also for 10p, is an imposter from Keble College – but was nevertheless accepted in good faith, and at full value, by the staff in Wolfson Hall (from whom I obtained it in change). Like the better-known College stamps (which flourished briefly in the 1880s, as a way of paying for the inter-Collegiate Messenger Service), College Money has disappeared – probably being rendered technologically redundant in the 1980s. Today’s students know only the joys of swiping cards through readers, not of the frantic search for change in one’s pocket, and the subsequent triumphal proffering of a small piece of plastic that once passed for money. Author’s Note: Both the origins and end of College Money seem to be lost in the mists of time. If anyone has any memories of when the use of College Money started, or when it finished, or any stories of being able to use it in the world beyond the Porters’ Lodge, I’d love to know. Email: jonathan.warner@seh.oxon.org 20 The Aularian - Spring 2008 aularian contribution Midsummer Photography Suzy Styles (Experimental Psychology, 2004) I n July of last year, I received funding from the SEH Master-Class and Training Fund, established to provide Teddy Hall students with otherwise impossible opportunities to pursue extra-curricular activities at a high level. In my case, I was able to take part in a three-day photography course with top international photographers instrumental in the annual Travel Photographer of the Year Award. The course was called Shoot-Edit-Print, and was aimed at photographers at the amateur-to-professional level. The course was conducted at Iridius, a digital design and printing studio in Banbury. We began the course with the threat of public ridicule: a show-and-tell criticism session to which each participant was instructed to bring their five best photographs. I chose two shots from a winter trip to Paris, one from Barcelona, and two from Japan. My photos lay on the table surrounded by Swiss mountain goats, lions on the savannah, coastal panoramas and abstract macros of the hearts of flowers. I didn’t realise until Unimpressed, Inari Jinja, Tsuwano afterwards, but three of my five subjects were entirely architectural (The Louvre, La Sagrada Familia and Tsuwano Castle ruins). Perhaps this is the domain I am most comfortable shooting in, as the two instructors insisted that my final shot (a candid shot of a very grumpy teenage schoolgirl on her visit to a mountain shrine) was by a completely different photographer! As for the critique, across all our photographs, cropping was in, composition was critical and underexposed shadows were simply unacceptable. We needed more experience with filters, better preparation, and to shoot only in film or high resolution RAW. We should not waste photos on bad subjects or unsuitable light or be tempted by the prospect of digital studio salvation. We travelled to Broughton Castle for a shooting session with practical exercises manipulating dynamic range, and a halfhour three-shot photo-essay. We had detailed sessions about photographic theory, examining the techniques of famous photographic artists, and the tricks of world-weary professionals. We shot on the Banbury Canal, with speed and movement as our themes, and in a local park, where the goal was manipulating f-stops. In one amazing theoretical session, a guru from the world of digital printing explained the ins-and-outs of professional colour-management, colour space, and device calibration. Both my camera and my laptop pale in comparison to the machines I was able to use for the three-day course… but I am better able to use them now! And I know what I want to achieve next. Suzy Styles is in the 4th year of her D.Phil in Experimental Psychology. Since starting at SEH, Suzy’s photography has been published in the annual black-and-white photographic calendar Intra Muros: Oxford from the Inside, The Chough: St Edmund Hall MCR Magazine and in Our Oxford, a book of student photography raising money for local children’s charities. In 2007, she was involved in officially documenting the Charter Ball. 21 The Aularian - Spring 2008 aularian contribution Prisoners Abroad John Walters (History & Theology, 1959) ‘W hat are you doing now that you’re retired’ is a question I am often asked when I meet friends I first knew at Teddy Hall. What has replaced the pressures but also the satisfactions of a busy working life? One answer is that, like many other retired people, I have found that the skills, knowledge, and contacts I needed for work are tremendously useful to a number of voluntary organisations. I worked for 35 years in the probation service, the last sixteen of these as a chief probation officer. My choice of career had its seeds in my time as college rep for Crime a Challenge, a University society which others may remember offered us a chance to look at some of the progressive criminology of the time and which probably accounted for a number of careers in the prison and probation services. As a chief probation officer I had taken the lead for my colleague on international issues and so I was not surprised when, after I retired, I was asked to join the board of Prisoners Abroad, a charity I had known and admired while I was still working. I am now the chair of the board of trustees and I imagine that it may be a charity about which most readers of The Aularian will know little. Each year Prisoners Abroad works with about 1700 British men and women who are in prison in some 80 countries around the world. Some have been longterm resident in the countries where they have been arrested. Others were travellers. About half have been arrested for drugs offences. I knew a lot about prisons in the UK and internationally but, until I became involved with Prisoners Abroad, I had not really appreciated all that is involved in being in prison away from home. Some things are obvious: distance from friends and family with little or no prospect of visits; unfamiliar languages; exclusion from a wide range of programmes which are not geared to foreign prisoners; uncertainties about release dates. But in some countries the situation is much worse. In many prisoners barely survive if there is no-one John Walters with President of Ireland Mary McAleese and her husband Dr Martin McAleese at the Longford Prize event at Church House, Westminster in November 2007 on the outside who can bring in decent food, basic toiletries, and urgent medical supplies. In the worst prisons there is no hope of getting a decent space to sleep unless you can pay the criminal gangs who run the prison. We work with the consular service to provide a range of services to help British prisoners survive. We take no moral view about what they have done but we believe that everyone who is in prison has the right to help to get through their sentence and to prepare for a decent life after release. Without our support some prisoners would be all but forgotten. We provide information about being in prison abroad but we do not provide legal advice. We pay monthly grants to those in the most extreme situations to buy food, toiletries, and medical supplies. We pay for medical care. We send out books, newspapers and magazines. We organise pen pals. We never forget a birthday. We provide support for families coping with all the anxieties of a loved one in prison far away. We help them keep in touch and assist with the practicalities of visiting. We get just under 40 percent of the £1 million we need to do this work from Government. If going to prison is one sort of crisis, being released is another. The much longed-for freedom brings its own challenges and anxieties. For about 250 men and women each year release from a foreign prison means being put on a plane to Heathrow or Gatwick with nothing. Some of these people have been deported though they have been long-term resident in the country in which they have been imprisoned. Others have simply lost everything while they have been away and have no family or friends here to pick them up. There is, amazingly, no statutory provision for these people and it is to Prisoners Abroad that they turn for help in getting somewhere to stay and for accessing a whole range of essential services. Without us they would be on the street and with no legitimate source of income. We were recently delighted to be awarded the Longford Prize which recognises a contribution in the area of penal or social reform which has shown ‘outstanding qualities of humanity, courage, persistence and originality’. Editor’s Note: If you would like to learn more about Prisoners Abroad and the ways that you can help, visit www.prisonersabroad.org.uk or contact John Walters at chair@prisonersabroad.org.uk 22 The Aularian - Spring 2008 from the alumni relations & development office The 2008 Annual Fund T he St Edmund Hall Annual Fund was established in 2006 to provide direct funding for specific projects. A total of 850 alumni, parents, and friends have become Annual Fund Donors since its inception. Over £531k has been secured to date in actual and pledged donations from old members, parents of students, and friends of the College. St Edmund Hall remains one of the ‘poorer’ Oxford Colleges with an endowment of under £30 million. The challenges facing higher education in the UK will increase over the coming years and by supporting the College’s Annual Fund you help to maintain and strengthen its financial security and to ensure that the Hall can continue to deliver on its commitment to provide a first-class education and to develop individuals who go on to forge successful and distinguished lives and careers. The money generously donated to date has supported a wide range of important and vital projects and funds, including the equipping of the new multi-purpose lecture theatre, the Jarvis Doctorow Hall. Work is planned for the Wolfson Hall, including improvements to the lighting A total of 850 alumni, parents, and friends have become Annual Fund Donors since its 2006 inception. Betony Griffiths, Deputy Director of Development and the acoustics and redecoration of the walls and ceiling. Funds raised have also supported awards of the Oxford Opportunity Bursary scheme, which supports students from low-income families, and the Clarendon Scholarships, postgraduate awards which attract the most academically-able international students to study at Oxford. Many gifted students have also benefited from Masterclass awards in areas as diverse as triathlon, dance, rowing, photography, and creative writing. The awards have enabled current students to pursue their extra-curricular talents to a high standard as a complement to their academic studies. This year we are seeking to raise funds to support the construction of the new tutorial suite above the Senior Common Room. The eight new tutorial rooms will not only provide excellent facilities for tutorials (the cornerstone of our teaching) but will also make available study bedrooms in the Besse building for students. We are also seeking to fund the refurbishment of the College Chapel and Archive. Last year, water leaks damaged interior paint and plaster within the Chapel. The subsequent roof repairs were successful and the masonry has dried. However, further repair and refurbishment are required to return the Chapel to its former glory. The Archive adjacent to the Chapel is also water damaged and needs refurbishment to provide better storage and improved access to research materials. New filing cabinets, lighting, and workspace are also needed. From 31 March to 13 April, fifteen enthusiastic current students (pictured with the Principal and St Edmund above) will be contacting as many Aularians as possible to update them on life at the College and the exciting developments outlined above, to inform them of the many alumni events taking place this year and to seek support for the Annual Fund. We hope that the conversations will prove to be an enjoyable experience for both the students and alumni alike – if you receive a phone call please take the opportunity to share your experiences and feedback about how you feel we can develop our relationship with Old Members of the College. We thank all those who have supported the St Edmund Hall Annual Fund to date and also those who supported and continue to support the College as a result of the Campaign for the Hall which ran from January 2000 to January 2004. We plan to publish a full list of recent donors to the College in the 2008 Hall Magazine. If you would like to donate to the Annual Fund, please contact the Alumni Relations & Development Office or visit the Alumni section of the Hall website (www.seh.ox.ac.uk) where you can donate online via a secure payment facility operated by the Charities Aid Foundation. The Aularian - Spring 2008 23 Fundraising Update I n my six months since starting at the Hall, I have had the pleasure of meeting many Aularians. The much mentioned ‘Hall Spirit’ is still going strong. Although we are not conducting a major capital campaign at the moment, fundraising is vital to the Hall’s continuing success. Since August 2007, the Hall has raised almost £1 million through donations from alumni and friends. This is a fantastic achievement and a testament to the deep affection and loyalty felt by Aularians towards the Hall. I was lucky to join at a very exciting time – the construction of the Jarvis Doctorow Hall is well underway, with the new SCR tutorial suite not far behind. We have raised over half the necessary funds for the new Hall and hope to raise the remainder by the end of the academic year. Our US based Aularians are continuing to support the Charter Scholarship. We are halfway towards reaching the $1 million target. The interest from this endowment will be used to provide a full undergraduate scholarship (£25,000 per year) to the Hall for a US student who Yvonne Rainey, Director of Development would not normally have the financial means or opportunity to go to Oxford University. We are working in partnership with QuestBridge, a US non-profit organisation, which specialises in connecting high-achieving low-income students with admission and full scholarships to 20 partner colleges in the USA, including Stanford, Yale, Princeton, and Columbia. This is a potentially life changing opportunity for someone and we are very grateful to all the US donors who are making this possible. Especial thanks to Gareth Roberts (1971), James Lyle (1980), and David Scharer (1961), and to Nick Howard (1976) for co-ordinating the project and making lead donations. We continue to raise money for smaller projects such as the refurbishment of the Wolfson Hall, the Chapel and the archives alongside scholarships, bursaries, and fellowships. The Hall is committed to being one of the best Colleges in the fields of Geology and Materials Science. We are therefore extremely grateful to Gareth Roberts (1971) for his pledge of $666,000 to support our second Geology fellowship and to Sir David Cooksey (1959), who has generously donated £100,000 towards endowing the fellowship in Materials Science. We must also thank Paul Stanton (1982) and Stephen Rosefield (1971) for their continuing support of the Law fellowship. Legacy News: Making a Difference T he Hall has been very fortunate over the last couple of years to receive several substantial legacies. They are an effective way for individuals to make a more sizeable contribution to the future of the Hall than they could manage in their lifetime, and therefore they have become an increasingly popular and tax efficient way of giving. Kenneth Barton (1929), who died last year at the spectacular age of 97, made a very generous donation to the Hall in his Will. Mr Barton read English, and in true Hall fashion, immersed himself in extra-curricular activities as diverse as chess, cross country running, amateur dramatics, and politics. Mr Barton was a school teacher until his retirement in 1971, and he and his wife (who passed away several years ago) lived very modestly. Unable to help the Hall as much as he wanted to during his lifetime, Mr Barton pledged to leave a third of the residue of his estate to us. His legacy was £235,000, a very substantial sum, which will go towards the construction of the new lecture hall. We really depend on legacies such as these in order to improve the facilities of the Hall and endow student support which will enrich the experience of a future generation of Aularians. Fortunately, we were able to recognise Mr Barton’s generosity through membership of the Floreat Aula Society. A more unusual example was a legacy we received last year from John Chamberlain, who actually died in 1954! He left five-sixths of the residue of his estate in trust to the Hall. The trust was administered by his bank so that his widow and step-daughter might draw an annual income from it. On his step-daughter’s death, the remainder came to the Hall. Another valuable legacy which came to the Hall last year was from Hubert Beales (1936), also a member of the Floreat Aula Society. Mr Beales read Physics and after the War he became the Bursar of St Edward’s School, Oxford, a position he held for thirty happy years. We are very grateful to Mr Beales and his family (his son, Tony, is also an Aularian) for the gift of £5,000 which he wished us to use for the upkeep of the Hall gardens. All gifts made through Wills, no matter what their size, make a significant difference to the Hall. If you would like to discuss leaving a legacy to the Hall, please contact the Director of Development, Yvonne Rainey, on 01865 279096 or email: yvonne.rainey@seh.ox.ac.uk. SPRING 2008 • ISSUE 15 ST EDMUND HALL OXFORD new events programme: Subject Reunions The Alumni Relations & Development Office plans to incorporate subjectbased reunions into its existing programme of alumni events. We hope that doing so will provide alumni increased opportunities to reunite with their contemporaries, meet fellow Aularians in related fields, and also re-visit the College. This programme of subject-based reunions will start in March 2008 with the Joe Todd Memorial Engineering Dinner on Friday 14 March 2008. A medics reunion is planned for 13 September 2008. College Events 2008 2 April October date tbc West Coast Dinner Cicada Restaurant, LA Floreat Aula Society Dinner St Edmund Hall New York Aularians Drinks Drinks Reception OU NYC Reunion Waldorf=Astoria London Summer Drinks Event location tbc Parents’ Garden Party St Edmund Hall Donors’ Event St Edmund Hall Summer Reunion St Edmund Hall Old Members Cricket Match New College Sports Grounds Aularian Golfing Society Mtg St Edmund Hall Medics Dinner St Edmund Hall Oxford Reunion Weekend St Edmund Hall Dinner John Knight Retirement Lunch Invitations to be posted 1977-1982 Gaudy St Edmund Hall 1958 50th Anniversary Lunch St Edmund Hall December date tbc London Winter Drinks Event location tbc 4 April 4 April 5 April Subject Reunion Schedule YEAR 2008 2009 2010 MARCH/APRIL Engineering Law Philosophy/Politics/Economics SEPTEMBER Medics Geography/Geology English/Psychology 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 Mathematics/Education Modern Languages Music/Fine Art/Theology Medics Geography/Geology English/Psychology Physics/Chemistry/Materials History/Classics Physics/Chemistry/Materials History/Classics Engineering Law Philosophy/Politics/Economics Mathematics/Education Modern Languages Music/Fine Art/Theology 2008 Oxford Alumni Weekend Friday 19 September - Sunday 21 September Programme details and useful information regarding the 2008 Oxford Alumni Weekend may now be found online at www.alumniweekend.ox.ac.uk. The programme now has more than 120 confirmed sessions, from a panel looking at the role of China in the 21st century, to David Dimbleby hosting a University Question Time. Alumni will also have a number of opportunities to have their say at the Open Forum (What should Oxford be doing for its alumni?) and at the Vice-Chancellor’s Question & Answer session, both on Saturday. Friday 19 September & Saturday 20 September: St Edmund Hall will have 50 rooms available to Old Members and their guests only. No parking available. Saturday 20 September 6.30 pm Drinks reception for Old Members and their guests 7.15 pm Dinner for Old Members and their guests For more information on College events during the Oxford Alumni Weekend, or to RSVP, please contact the Alumni & Development Office at the address below. The Aularian Editor: Professor David Phillips Production Editor: Kate Roessler Photos by Laurence Whyatt (2005), Kate Roessler, and submited by article authors The Aularian is produced by the Alumni Relations & Development Office St Edmund Hall, Oxford, OX1 4AR Tel: +44 (0)1865 279055 Fax: +44(0)1865 279030 email: development.office@seh.ox.ac.uk website: www.seh.ox.ac.uk or www.aularianconnect.com The views expressed in The Aularian may be those of the author alone and not necessarily held by the SEH Governing Body May date tbc 24 May June date tbc 21 June 22 June 29 August 13 September 19-21 September 20 September 27 September Details of all events can be obtained by visiting the Events page of the College website or by contacting the Alumni Relations & Development Office at the address below.