the wykehamist - Winchester College
Transcription
the wykehamist - Winchester College
The Wykehamist Winter 2012 - No 1463 Editorial The Editors review the year 2 012 has been a year to remember. While the last issue of The Wykehamist celebrated the Diamond Jubilee of Her Majesty the Queen, this edition highlights the other significant events of the past few months. put and the discus, recording two of the worst throws in the history of the games, before deciding to compete in the lawn tennis, of which he was knocked out in the preliminary rounds. All hope for a Gold medal for Winchester seemed lost, until the fi- Sporting under no political influences is an Olympic dream. The passion held by Wykehamists for football became evident with the advent of the Euro 2012 competition: it dominated lunchtime conversation and was responsible for the regular crowding of house Common Rooms that began promptly at five every afternoon. Even the political columnists saw an opportunity for sporting remarks when commenting on the Germany v Greece match. nal day, in which he entered the written Greek poetry competition and, in truly wiccamical style, proceeded to beat the Greeks at their own game. insists he will not be another dictator, but with no lower house of parliament until the new constitution is formed, the President has given a decree that gives him even stronger powers than those of his overthrown predecessor. In the case of the Chinese government, everything is thoroughly predetermined. For some, Xi Jinping’s rise to the Communist throne was little more than a re-shuffle of the face of the new politburo, rather than the politburo itself. Having never had to face election, he is said to have been groomed for the top job by his predecessors. Will he inject new ideas to China’s political circuit, or is he merely the protégé of the old ones? China’s politicians have no higher priority than the economic success of their state, free from having to play political games or create vote winning policies. President Hu Jintao opened the party congress with a stark warning on corruption. Analysts have high economic expectations, and his people desire more personal and political freedom. We await the rule of China’s new leaders with much anticipation. Sporting under no political influences is an Olympic dream. Outside the Olympic Stadium in Stratford we were to witness a series of political transformations around the globe. Several countries have undergone major political reforms in the last After Spain’s long expected domi- few months. While proud Americans nation of the competition came the elected Barack Obama to a second London 2012 Olympics. The Games term in office, the French were so were a spectacular success. Sir Chris pushed for viable options that they Hoy cycled, Mo Farah ran, and Jessica (marginally) elected François HolEnnis delivered all round. Our own lande’s Socialist Party. Following the George Nash, formerly of Beloe’s, took bronze in the gentlemen’s pair, finishing well ahead of the Italian crew. Team GB enjoyed its most sucIs he merely the protégé of the old ones? cessful Olympics ever, taking Gold in twenty-nine events, and sixty-five medals in total. The success of the equestrian team knew no bounds: Arab Spring of 2011, and the subse- Wykehamists will have the abilNick Skelton, who, at fifty-four, was quent toppling of autocratic regimes, ity through their influence in many older than many competitors’ par- the Communist Party of China calmly walks of life to make a beneficial conents, took Gold in the Team Show appointed Xi Jinping, whose priority tribution to the world’s political cliJumping; and Zara Phillips was pre- has to be the addressing of corrup- mate, and while the cosy microcosm sented with Silver by her mother, the tion and inequality. of Winchester College may seem a We ask ourselves if these changes are world away from the political strugPrincess Royal, in the Team Event. Winchester has played a part in the for the better of a country. Obama gles of other peoples, our educated modern Olympics since the first has successfully established himself awareness of the world beyond our Games of 1896. George Robertson, a still to be the right man for the job. walls is crucial to our playing a conCollege man in the late 19th century, It doesn’t guarantee prosperity in structive role in its future. travelled to Greece to compete in the America’s future, but he is certainly As the year draws to close, The Wykehammer throw, only to discover that the people’s choice. hamist wishes all its readers a happy the class did not exist at Olympic lev- Mohammed Morsi was recently el. Undeterred, he entered the shot elected as Egypt’s fifth president. He Christmas and a prosperous 2013. The Wykehamist - EDITORIAL 3 The Wykehamist FEATURES 5-9 9 Binge Drinking - Freddie Parker THEATRE 10-14 13-14 A Summer Fantasy- Nicholas Wilks MUSIC 15-18 16-17 My Subject is War- Cathy Townsend SPORT 19-20 20 The Downs and Up of Winchester Soccer - Hugo Sever WICCAMICA 21-26 22-23 Ladakh 2012 - Jamie Truell, Theo Martin & Yiu Hei Shek THE REGISTER SHORT HALF 2012 27-39 The Wykehamist Editor-in-Chief Jacky Chau Editor Richard Cubitt Features Humphrey Paton Yiu Hei Shek Theatre Charlie Macnamara Music Matthew Chan Sport Charlie Macnamara Wiccamica Humphrey Paton Yiu Hei Shek 35-38 Studium 39 Salvete Photography Carwyn Dalrymple Typesetting Jacky Chau Carwyn Dalrymple Don-in-Charge RDT The Wykehamist is delighted to receive correspondence addressed to: vgr@wincoll.ac.uk 4 CONTENT - The Wykehamist Features Book Review The Head Man reviews a new book about OW War Poet Timothy Corsellis Helen Goethals, The Unassuming Sky: the Life and Poetry of Timothy Corsellis, Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2012 214pp ISBN (10): 1-4438-3975-2 ar Cloister is probably the largest and most beautiful private war memorial in England. Wykehamists are surrounded by memorials to the causalities of war, including poets, of whom the subject of this fascinating book, Timothy Corsellis, is one. Helen Goethals has constructed the story of the short life of this remarkable man, born in 1921 and killed by accident in an aeroplane in Dumfriesshire in 1941, in six periods, each situating within it a group of his poems relevant to the period, totalling one hundred poems in all. Some of these poems were published in anthologies in the years before and after the end of World War II, some in later collections, but the majority receive their first printing here. Goethals presents a single life as a thread in the fabric of the vast social problem that was the Second World War. Corsellis spent the early years of his childhood with his family in Constable country in Suffolk. His father was killed in a plane crash in 1930. Five years later Corsellis was sent to Winchester, an intelligent but free-spirited boy. The Winchester chapter of the book records the influences over him of names still alive in OW memory: Headmaster Spencer Leeson, Housemaster Murray Hicks, Div Don Harold Walker and the brilliant young medievalist Walter Oakeshott. Like all such schools at that time (and many of them still) sport was what really mattered in the general scheme of things; Corsellis took up fencing but he liked books more and was attracted to serious reading and thinking. He was fortunate to be guided by Winchester dons who offered intellectual nourishment to those who wanted it. The prevailing forces were classical studies of language and literature combined with a good grounding in science and high-church-socially-aware Christianity. Philosophy and contemporary W 6 Features - The Wykehamist poetry were read and discussed too. (This book includes an Appendix in which Corsellis’s borrowings from Moberly Library are listed, as well as a list of books in his personal collection.) Corsellis was selected to join the intellectual cream of the School in the Essay Society. In a poem he wrote while a member of it he explored the moral function of art and tried to persuade his reader to see the world from his independent ethical point of view. Even as a teenager he grappled with the sophisticated matter of the relationship between aesthetics, the reasoning mind and God (or ultimate reality). At the same time, he made himself into an accomplished magician and put on turns for House parties. and Isherwood left for New York, and Corsellis began work as an articled clerk in the Town Hall at Wandsworth. There he became involved, through fencing, in the social clubs for teenage boys and young men sponsored by Winchester, at the same time actively watching events build up to war. He read T.S. Eliot’s The Idea of a Christian Society and joined the Federal Union, a peace movement which had intellectual aspirations strikingly akin to current proponents of European political and fiscal union among the European states. Movements such as this had already had success in fostering the formation of the Commonwealth of Australia in 1901 and the Union of South Africa in 1910. ... an example of a young man whose education led him to take an independent moral view of things. By the time Corsellis left Winchester in 1938 he had written nearly eighty poems. On his own account he was treated as an oddity at school, though he mentions in a notebook that there were three other poets in his House (which out of a total of forty is quite a high proportion). Two others, in other Houses, were writing poems too (Frank Thompson, whose biography under the title A Very English Hero has just been published by Peter Conradi, and Robert Conquest). “When to this list,” writes Goethals, “are added two names of a previous generation – the great poet-critic William Empson and the soldier-statesman Lord Wavell, author of the best-selling poetry anthology Other Men’s Flowers – then one is tempted to ask whether there was not someone or something making life at Winchester in the 1930s particularly conducive to the reading and writing of poetry.” The prelude to war moved out of the realm of debate about peace aims and into a world of obedience to orders. Corsellis considered conscientious objection, but by June 1940 had made up his mind to leave London for life in the armed forces. He joined the RAF, but when during the course of his training he learned that he would fly in bombers and not fighters, he applied immediately for a transfer to a fighter squadron where he would not be involved in the bombing of civilians. “In the context of the continuous celebration of the courage of the pilots of the Battle of Britain,” observes Goethals, “and his own oftacknowledged tendency to show off, Timothy’s decision not to fly, if flying meant the bombing of civilians was courageously anti-heroic.” He received an honourable discharge and became a civilian once again, a civilian who loved flying in a way described in Corsellis did not go on from Winches- a popular book of the time by Cecil ter to university. In January 1939 Bar- Lewis entitled Sagittarius Rising, an celona fell, Auden (a strong poetic and account in poetic prose of a young philosophical influence over Corsellis) pilot’s experience in World War I. Cor- flight from Luton to Carlisle, his Miles Magister L8268 stalled in a turn near Annan in Dumfriesshire, and in the In December 1940 Corsellis bought a subsequent forced landing, hit a tree. copy of Herbert Read’s Thirty-five Po- His name is inscribed on a war memoems. Read’s idealism was based on the rial in Annan. conviction that man’s aesthetic sense While Helen Goethals gives us as is fundamentally in harmony with his much biographical information about moral sense. Read inspired war-time Timothy Corsellis as is available, careartists like John Piper, Graham Suther- fully annotated and well-indexed, land and the film-maker Michael Pow- hers is a book more about an English ell. Corsellis identified with such visual poetic sub-culture nourished by the artists through his interest in surreal Second World War than a biography art, his training as a magician and his of a conscientious dissenter or a critinavigational experience as a pilot. His cal appreciation of a minor though sensual nature also made him attract- accomplished poet. The place of ed to women and they to him. In a Corsellis among the Second World chapter entitled “La Belle Dame Sans War poets of England is established Merci” Goethals traces the influence of in the anthologies. Here additional women, and Corsellis’s experience of poems which justify attention and them, through his poems – “Timothy which have not before gone into print had decided he would try love neat present him as an example of a young with a prostitute, one of a category man whose education led him to take of women who were certainly more an independent moral view of things visible on the streets of the East End and identify with a neo-romantic apthan in the quads of New College or preciation of his world and its events, Peterhouse.” Women to whom he was sexually attracted, but with whom he could not converse, were part of his Bohemian night-life, but there were also women, like his elder sister and others, who were an essential part of his intellectual life and a strong influence over his poetic imagination. sellis’s poems about flying written at the time of his discharge echo Lewis’s classic. in Goethals’ words, “physically and bodily committed, intellectually and spiritually detached.” A fortnight before his death, Corsellis penned a poem commemorating a chance meeting he had had with the poet Stephen Spender. Fifty-four years later, in 1995, Spender published his response; “Timothy Corsellis” was his last poem to be published while Spender was still alive. Corsellis had learned at Winchester that the worth of civilisation was to be seen not in its military or material wealth but in the achievements of its poets, philosophers and artists. Timothy Corsellis’s poems remain to proclaim what war poets have always proclaimed, that something of each one of us may survive our bodily death. War Cloister at Winchester (in the south-eastern corner of which can be found the name of Timothy John Corsellis) is a reminder of that, and this book reminds us that the poet’s voice matters in our assessment of the sad reality of war. After his discharge from the RAF in February 1941 Corsellis applied to serve in the Air Transport Auxiliary (ATA). It was at about this time that he set aside the Christian faith in which he had been brought up. His experience of the Blitz changed his way of looking at things. The hard work of rescuing bodies from untimely death and their gentle handling required sensual, physical acts which brought to consciousness the power of human compassion and the responsibility of human beings one to another. Three poems in the chapter entitled “Ruins and Visions” suggest his replacement of religious doctrine with the redeeming power of poetry. The ATA was a civilian organisation set up in 1939 to relieve the RAF of certain non-combatant duties. Its chief task was to fly new aircraft from the factory to the appointed base. Corsellis began service in late September 1941. Within a fortnight, at the age of twenty, he was dead. On a ferrying The Wykehamist - Features 7 A view from The Economist Humphrey Paton (I) puts some questions to Emma Duncan, Deputy Editor of the renowned weekly news and international affairs magazine H P: What advice would you give to Wykehamists leaving school? EM: If the economy is tough it puts even more of a premium on what pupils should be doing anyway. Anybody looking ahead through their university choices to their careers would really do best to decide quite early on what they think they want to be doing in the future, and to bare that in mind when choosing extracurricular stuff they might do at university and also to start working on getting internships and building up contacts in whatever area of life they think they might want to go into. I am in this job partly because I wrote to somebody here at The Economist when I was in my first year at university and I was invited to come here and do an internship that summer. Although I worked elsewhere after university, that helped me come back later on. What you do with your life and how you think about your career from the age of eighteen onwards can make a real difference to what happens to you later. HP: What effect do you think the “attitude” of Britian’s youth will have on the country’s hopes for a return to prosperity in relation to our peers? ED: I think it will be a huge determining factor. Britain’s youth is going to have to work jolly hard. My generation has spoiled the prospects for the future by spending too much money and leaving a massive debt overhang for your generation. It also may have given your generation the false impression that we can get away in the West with working less hard than our counterparts in Asia. We in Britain, just in terms of the hours we work, work far less hard than people do in Asia. You can’t really do that and think that you are going to retain well paid jobs in this country. Your contemporaries will have to work jolly hard, probably a lot harder than you thought you were going to have to, and also a lot harder than we thought you were going to have to. That is partly because we could have got “fat and lazy” in the West, and we just can’t be like that anymore, and partly because of 8 Features - The Wykehamist this rotten debt overhang. We, my own generation, are also going to have work harder, we are going to have to work much longer than we thought we were going to have to do, and I am sure the best thing we can do to remedy some of the damage we have done is to go on working for much longer than we thought we would. Now some people in your generation might think that “us lot” should just get out of the way and make room for “your lot” to take our jobs, but I am afraid that economics doesn’t work like that. We have to go on producing in order to create a larger economy which will create the opportunities for “you lot”, and we also have to go on producing so that “you lot” don’t have to pay for “us lot” to sit around on our bottoms claiming pensions for thirty years. HP: I believe you have spent some time studying issues surrounding the effects of climate change. Do you believe that solving the issue of climate change should be handled through the private or the public sector? ED: I don’t think you can do it just through the private sector because cutting carbon emissions or reducing the amount of greenhouse gases generally by necessity increases the costs for businesses, and although there are some areas where you can cut emissions and not raise costs or even reduce them - for instance where companies are using too much energy and just not paying enough attention to their energy bills, generally speaking when businesses cut emissions - by and large, it will involve businesses using more expensive forms of energy than they would otherwise use themselves. So, you can’t really expect businesses to put on extra costs to help the planet because the difference that any one business can make is miniscule, so it has got to be done, like any other environmental improvement through regulation. There are a whole lot of regulations which might be appropriate to adopt but this is really something that has to be organised, like any other regulatory regime, at governmental level, and preferably at inter-governmental level if we can possibly manage it. HP: What avenues of particular interest to you personally have you been able to pursue in your current position as Deputy Editor of the Economist? ED: That is sometimes tricky as my main job is editing the paper when the Editor is not here and helping him to edit it when he is here, and so I have to kind of snatch areas of interest and carve out niches for myself. So, this year I spent five weeks doing a Special Report on London which came out just before the Olympic Games and that was really interesting and very good fun. Just now, I am settling down to researching a piece on the increasing wolf populations in North America and Europe which is for our Christmas Issue, which I edit, and which is very good fun because our Christmas Issue has traditionally been full of off-beat and sometimes eccentric pieces which are generally things which our correspondents really wanted to write about and don’t get to write in the normal run of things and as I edit the Christmas Issue I am able to commission myself to write whatever I feel like writing. Last year I did a piece about endangered frogs in India, and this year I am really quite interested in wolves as they represent a general increase in the population of predators in various countries in the world. The question arises as to whether one can live with large mammals that are predators. The politics of wolves in America I think are particularly interesting as in rural areas they are often seen representatives of, and as metaphors for, Federal Government because the Federal Government mandated that wolves should be reintroduced into National Parks and the ranchers out there are furious that the wolves are roaming around attacking their cattle. Since they regard the Federal Government as rather predatory it is a fine metaphor. So, I thought it would be quite fun to explore around that story. As you can see the stuff I manage to do as Deputy Editor which is real journalism as opposed to editing other people’s journalism is rather strange and various and depends on the Editor’s whims as well as mine. Binge Drinking - What's the real problem? Freddie Parker (K) reflects ‘You don’t have to know the reason for it. You just do it anyway. Everybody does it, it is the way the world is.’ Anonymous (18 years old) tal effect on an individual’s physical health; sustained over-consumption of alcohol can cause liver disease, infertility, heart problems and cancer. People can also injure themselves as a result of loss of balance and cofound the quote above in a re- ordination – indeed one only has to port by the Institute of Alcohol watch a reality show such as ‘Geordie Studies into the problem of the Shore’ or ‘The Valleys’ to see this. over- consumption of alcohol among young people. It highlights the scan- If we are aware of the consequences dal of binge drinking, a British prob- of binge drinking, it begs the queslem which is consistently a focus of tion: why do young people drink? the supposed ‘Broken Britain’ in the There are some broad motives as to media. Despite the fact that there is why people binge drink: to have fun, seemingly not a problem of binge to conform to one’s peer group and drinking among Wykehamists, I of- to manage stress. There is a broad fer a young person’s perspective on culture of equating excessive drinka problem which involves and affects ing with having a good time, that one can have a more enjoyable night so many young people. if one drinks first. Thought drinking What is binge drinking? Binge drink- to excess is often seen as a cause of ing is the consumption of a large depression, often young people will amount of alcohol over a short pe- turn to alcohol if they are frustrated, riod of time. Binge drinkers will con- already depressed or anxious. These sume alcohol with the intention of issues can concern all young people getting drunk or at least feeling the – including Wykehamists. Cheap alcoeffects of alcohol. There is no defin- hol is in abundance. ing threshold for ‘bingeing’ although the National Office of Statistics and If the government and the health the NHS use a marker of around dou- service are aware of what is causing ble the daily unit guidelines for al- binge drinking then they should be cohol in one session. A man will be working towards solutions to this binge drinking if he consumes more ‘epidemic’. It should be said, howthan eight units of alcohol (three ever, that a problem of this nature pints of strong beer) or if a woman and magnitude is not solved by an drinks more than six units of alcohol educational programme or a typical (two large glasses of wine). These ‘police blitz’ on drinking in public. In guidelines are not set in stone, but as my view, if as a country we are going a general threshold, does it not strike to deal with the UK’s binge drinking problem, far-reaching solutions are you as being rather low? needed. The first solution is to stop What are the effects of binge drink- exaggerating the problem; when ing? It is now a regular occurrence the Prime Minister talks about the to see shocking images of young ‘scandal’ of binge drinking, he crewomen or men showing the effects ates ‘social norming’: when a man of over-consumption of alcohol in thinks that everyone else is drinkpublic. Binge drinking can lead to ing to excess, he is inclined to think anti-social, aggressive and violent that it is all right for him to drink to behaviour. In fact, alcohol is a factor excess. Drinking needs to become a in one in three sexual offences, one different part of our culture; it should in three burglaries and one in two become more associated with modstreet crimes. It can also have serious eration and as it is on the continent, mental repercussions; binge drink- with food. The idea of drinking with ing has been linked to self-harm, de- a meal should build a sense of apprepression and long-term memory loss. ciation for alcohol as a taste and as Binge drinking can have a detrimen- something that should be consumed I over a longer period of time. One could also nationalise off-licences (i.e. the Systembolaget shops in Sweden). These shops have a very sterile image which has been compared to a pharmacy. This has the advantage of removing any glamour or supposed social cachet that young people can associate with buying alcohol. Maybe I am missing the point. The solutions I have put forward may solve only the symptoms of a wider problem. Possibly, the question we should ask is what does binge drinking say about our society. Are the media right about a ‘Broken Britain’? The children of single-parent and dysfunctional families are often some of the worst abusers of alcohol, as are young people who have relatives with a history of substance-abuse. Those with anxiety and depression tend to over-consume alcohol. The government could well look at binge drinking as an indication of potentially more serious issues. Finally, to take a different approach, one could convincingly argue that alcohol is not the only means of having a good time (though it certainly can help). One might argue that alcohol and the over-consumption of alcohol is part of growing up. Of course an element of moderation is needed in binge drinking, this may sound paradoxical but a ‘rare binge’ is not going to have health repercussions. There are issues if people, both young and old, build a reliance on alcohol to de-stress or to have fun. There are problems if this leads to anti-social and violent behaviour. Binge drinking in moderation might sound like a contradiction in terms but it is not the principal problem. The problem is a consistent and continued overconsumption of alcohol; nonetheless, this will not be completely solved by a radical reform of alcohol in the United Kingdom. Excessive binge drinking may be to some extent an indication of young people’s dissatisfaction with the values of the society in which they live. The Wykehamist - Features 9 T H E AT R E What's been on in QEII? J ack Keating (C) writes: The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, directed by Johnny Cardozo (F) was well-suited to the easily- amused wiccamical audience. Arthur Dent’s intergalactic adventure began when his friend Ford Prefect tells him that the Earth is about to be destroyed and that in order to save himself he needs to be carrying a towel. Whilst this is happening builders are trying to destroy Arthur’s home. This first scene was managed to introduce the two main characters and their traits efficiently. The dialogue between Arthur and the demolition man was also rather comedic and was an engaging parody of the British planning office. Rather quickly the play moved from Earth into a spaceship. The set for this production was minimalistic and the only discernible feature was a TV screen. This was utilised throughout to act as the ship’s computer (Ben Chua (E)) and, to everyone’s amusement, the Vogan captain’s (Ben Maciejewski (K)) channel. After being introduced to the Vogan captain on the screen we were soon introduced to him in the flesh, him and his dimwitted henchman, Maxim Bird (F). After listening to some Vogan poetry and having a wonderfully silly conversation with the Vogan soldier the two main characters somehow found themselves on Zaphod Beeblebrox’s ship. Beeblebrox (Ben West (G)), was a pretty ‘cool dude’ and happened to be related to Ford. It was at this point we were introduced to the funniest character in the play, Marvin, the ship’s depressed robot, played by Dominic Penton-Hauchard (Coll), who could clearly relate to the troubles associated with being too intelligent. From this point onwards most of the laughs were induced by Marvin’s sarcastic comments and constant moaning. Soon the adventurers found the lost planet of Magrathea, which used to manufacture luxurious planets be- fore the universal recession. It is here that Arthur was separated from the group and meets Slartibartfast, (Ben Chua again), who explained to Arthur that Earth was actually a super computer that had been working out the question which if answered would explain the meaning of life, the universe, and everything. Two of the people who had commissioned the Earth, Benjy and Frankie Mouse (Ed Strang (F) and Julian Kirk (Coll)) arrive on the planet and explain to Arthur that they need his brain as it contains a latent version of the question. Obviously Arthur was not too keen on their proposal and so was relieved when a series of distractions allows him and the rest of the group to escape. We then met the universe’s useless council, made up of Jamie Allner (K), Tommy Peet (F) and Kaz Costello (F), before the play finishes in the restaurant at the end of the universe. The majority of the cast were either jun play veterans or otherwise inexperienced. This inexperience was rarely noticeable but when it was it seemed to add comic value. Andy Li’s (E) cameo as a policeman was especially funny. Despite these smaller roles being a bit hit and miss the play was anchored by two extremely strong performances from Ivan Kirwan-Taylor (F) and Sam Groom (Coll), Arthur Dent and Ford Prefect respectively. As the main characters it was vital that these two held the play together, not an easy job faced by the chain of jokes. Another constant which made for a good show was George Herring’s (I) narration, which was smooth throughout. On the whole Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy was an engaging and enjoyable play which hit the mark in terms of comedy. Sam Groom writes: Hitchhiker’s Guide was always going to be a tough act to follow. Like this play, the Phil’s production of I Killed the Count did not attempt artistically to defy categorisation, to go against the conventions of genre. The G House play I Killed the Count sat comfortably in the whodunit tradition, promising no gimmicks but those that the black-gloved detectives of Scotland Yard are trusted to provide, and the directors’ understanding of the world of crime stories The Wykehamist - THEATRE 11 came through so clearly to the audi- just as satisfied as our eyes. torium that David Suchet could have I like short plays. Not only do they get been pulling the strings himself. the audience to concentrate so much We had, centre stage, the dynamic better than they might for some duo of Tyler and Spanos. Their ex- three-act monster, but the undichanges were lightning-quick and luted creative energy of the producseemed almost improvised; each was tion team is really tangible: less time well-suited to his character, and the spent learning lines, getting blocking pairing was perfect. Spanos’ frustra- sorted; more time having fun. One tion at the seemingly unusable evi- suspects, however, that Bentley and dence he was receiving and Tyler’s Colin could have coped with somenear-uncrackable professionalism thing more substantial for this their debut: we await, sirs, your return. were convincingly portrayed. To help these two pillars keep the production aloft, an array of flying buttresses danced across the stage throughout: a large number of varied and colourful characters which, I dare say, no one could have provided as well as Phil’s. The first line of the play, delivered by Sweet-Escott, garnered laughs for the simple pleasure his old-style regional accent gave: an accent which during the course of the hour rewarded the attentive by shifting subtly from one end of the Commonwealth to another. Just another red herring, it turned out, for those, like myself, who thought they had spotted the undercover agent. As is right and proper, the audience was treated to all the classic archetypes (a cynic may call it cliché, but what could be more in the spirit of the thing?), including Langley-Coleman’s white-suited gangster, Pusinelli’s cabaret girl – the only thing able to break Tyler’s focus on the job – Petersen’s terse butler (all right, maybe he wasn’t technically a butler, but such was the role he filled), Macdonald’s toff and West’s dodgy doorman. The set was immaculately assembled: compulsive attention to detail paid off and the company was lucky to have an effective pair of designers in Bentley and Colin, the V Book directors. Lighting, managed by Peat, Peat and Phillips, helped provide atmospheric flashbacks, and competently directed our attention across the space. The one real scene change was covered by a live performance of some Miles Davis by members of the cast and crew: an unusual and delightful treat. This, combined with the classy, old-style intro music, setting the tone so spot-on at the start, meant that our ears left the theatre 12 THEATRE - The Wykehamist lationship between Louis and Edith D’Ascoyne (Harriet O’Connor). There was a real passion in the encounters between Sibella and Louis. A consistently superb Ed Horrocks (A) provided a lot of laughs with his range of characters (his resplendent barrister and his lyrical hangman were my personal favourites). The supporting cast had a large responsibility in the production, and on the whole they did a commendable job. Ed Wylde (H) played the role of Lionel brilliantly with the aloofness that the role reHarry Palmer (F) writes: quired, and the bland nature of LiAn adaptation of a screenplay is very onel’s early character contrasts well difficult to get right. Often produc- with the real desperation with which tions can get stuck trying to repro- he throws himself at Louis’ feet later duce a moment that works on the on. screen, but not on stage. What struck The staging of the play was complime most about Charlie Macnamara’s cated, and the stage crew had a real (Coll) adaptation of Kind Hearts and job on their hands. In order to keep Coronets was the intelligent way in up with the flash-backs, which were which the speed of the plot man- often very short, there were constant aged to be retained on stage. scene changes. Whilst this was for The play revolves around the tenth me sometimes a bit distracting, as Duke of Chalfont, Louis Mazzini, Jack changes took place alongside the Cammack (A), who is writing his action, it was absolutely necessary memoirs in prison, condemned to in order to maintain the pace of the hang the next day. The plot is narrat- story. This seemed to me to be one ed by Louis in the form of flashbacks, of the features of the screen play that which tell the story of his attempts would have been more difficult to to take revenge upon his slighted transplant. mother’s aristocratic family, the Cammack was perfectly cast in this D’Ascoynes. Louis plans to murder role, and was in his element. Louis’ all the D’Ascoynes who are between sense of chivalry, seemingly contrahim and the Dukedom. The charm dictory, was put across well, and the with which Cammack played the role friendships he formed with his vicputs the audience firmly on his side; tims were especially comic. I found the murders seem justified when car- that the small changes in costume ried out by such a likeable assassin. whilst narrating was sometimes a Playing the role of six D’Ascoynes bit complicated, but the attention was Will Ashford (D). The variety with to detail was superb. The blocking which Ashford brought to life his was fantastic throughout, and with uncannily similar looking characters such varied characters and uses of was one of the key components to the space throughout, nothing was the success of the production. From repetitive in style. the graphic picnic scene to the hi- Macnamara deserves high praise for larious brass-rubbing enthusiast The taking on a very complicated piece Reverend Lord Henry D’Ascoyne, this in terms of tone and variety, and for play gave Ashford an opportunity to delivering a distinctive production. demonstrate a smorgasbord of creep. The script was hilarious, the bold Mazzini juggles his murderous activi- characters were convincing and brilties with a hectic social life, and Ma- liantly acted, and there seemed to tilda Bedford’s Sibella Holland was be a huge confidence in the way that the perfect counterfoil for Cammack, the cast delivered their lines. Whilst and was brilliantly acted. The playful it was sometimes clear that this was nature of Sibella’s flirtatious relation- originally not made for the stage, this ship with Louis is an ideal contrast to adaptation worked brilliantly. the more respectful and formal re- A Summer Fantasy Nicholas Wilks reviews the Winchester performances The Minack Theatre Company’s production of Shakespeare’s As You Like, directed by Simon Taylor, played in the Warden’s Garden before it went down to its home base in Cornwall. A s You Like It has perhaps the most threadbare plot in all Shakespeare, but this very feature allows the play to explore human nature in a way which is uniquely leisurely and generous. I remember seeing an unforgettable RSC production as an undergraduate with the muchmissed Susan Fleetwood as Rosalind and Sinéad Cusack as Celia and being struck by its humanity and warmth – qualities in abundance in this fine performance by the Winchester College Players. As You Like It is above all could have felt that any actor fell short of the demands of his or her role, and yet the effect of the production was a deeply moving sense of the whole – a profoundly humane vision of the Garden simply was the Forest of Arden, and the audience was at liberty to engage with the characters and their interaction with each other. Harry Sever’s ingenious music similarly did not Unexpected rhythmic quirks. young and old, foolish and wise, arriv- draw attention to itself, but served the ing at an acceptance of each other and, play perfectly, being a hybrid of styles – renaissance court in appearance, but critically, of themselves. The setting of the Warden’s Garden with decidedly rustic manners and could not have been happier, being unexpected rhythmic quirks, all exat times almost comically congruent quisitely sung by the cast. The nearest with the text of the play. The lines thing to a romantic lead in As You Like referring to “an oak whose antique It is Orlando, and Harry de Moraville root peeps out / Upon the brook that was not afraid to play him as a young man who was not the sharpest tool in the box, but whose integrity and honesty shone through – he was without A profoundly humane vision of the young and old. guile, and perfectly prepared to accept the disguised Rosalind at face value, courting her as Ganymede as though an ensemble piece, and, critical as the this were the love of his life. Oliver by role of Rosalind is, its success depends brawls along this wood” were deli- contrast undergoes a transformation upon actors working together to cre- cious. The setting was the opposite from jealous brother to warm-heartate something greater than the sum of of a distraction, since we never had to ed and generous lover. The particuits parts. No member of the audience suspend our disbelief – the Warden’s lar challenge for Tom Yarrow, as he The Wykehamist - THEATRE 13 over Orlando and fathom the depth of his love for her – it was really a means by which she could test herself, and her readiness for a life-long emotional commitment. Megan Salter’s Celia was clearly no push-over. She was warmhearted but highly principled, sane, intensely loyal, and decisive. It would be hard to imagine a better friend for Rosalind or a more understanding While suggesting an underlying sense of injustice. lover for Oliver. Simon Taylor claims to have broken two golden rules in this production – never act with animals to bereft father showed – we did not to yield her cherry until matrimony and never act in a play you are directdoubt his reformation for a moment, was well and truly sealed. Harriet Eas- ing. He appeared so natural in the role not least because of the sheer delight dale’s Phebe exhibited comparable of the shepherd Corin that at first I Oliver demonstrated in discovering self-confidence, enabling Freddie Tay- failed to recognise him (perhaps I was a new self. Oliver’s two selves are an lor’s touchingly love-lorn Silvius to elic- distracted by the ram, who probably extreme form of the divisions within it all the audience’s sympathies. An air harboured a desire to upstage eveother characters. Simon Eliot’s Duke of uncertainty hung over these lovers ryone). Like Adam Crick’s beautifully Senior took philosophical delight in the simplicity of his rustic court in exile, while suggesting an underlying sense Determined not to yield her cherry. of injustice. Anthony Dakin found a sense of guilt lurking beneath the Machiavellian usurping brother Ferdi- at the play’s close. Anna Tolputt was judged Adam, his Corin was in many nand. Peter Broad delved deeply into unforgettable in the role of Rosalind. ways the still centre of a kaleidoscopic the role of the saturnine Jaques, and Not only did she speak the verse as world, quietly steeped in the values of caught his dark brooding presence un- though it was the most natural thing his rustic life, and wisely impervious forgettably while demonstrating that in the world (much of it sounded strik- to the prejudices of Touchstone. He this elusive character is perhaps ulti- ingly modern), she also conveyed the should be enormously proud of this mately unknowable. The pretensions vulnerability behind an assertive fa- exceptional production. of John Tolputt’s Touchstone were cade. Her disguise as Ganymede was marvellous – the speech about rhetor- not so much a ruse to gain control pointed out in his programme note, is that this metamorphosis takes place off stage – the audience has to take the actor’s word for it. Tom Yarrow played a memorable King Lear here in 2005, and the experience of playing a king who changes from peevish tyrant 14 THEATRE - The Wykehamist ical devices can be interminable in the wrong hands (it was clearly put in by Shakespeare as a simple device to give the principal actors time to change offstage) but this was a model of comic clarity. He met his match in Emma Cole’s astute Audrey, determined not MUSI C My Subject is War Cathy Townsend (with help from Tim Cox) reviews the performance in the Cathedral of Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem Op.66 “My subject is War, and the pity of War. The poetry is in the pity... All a poet can do today is warn” A rum est”. We then moved seamlessly to the murmuring pleas of the openThe composer makes huge demands ing movement. This slow, tender upon his musicians. When Britten repetition by the chorus of Requiem was conducting a recording in 1963 aeterna leads to the entry of the Quihe expressed frustration at the com- risters, their strange distant sound On the night of 14 November 1940 poser’s intentions! Nicholas Wilks quietening the soul. The Quiristers Coventry’s mediaeval cathedral was controlled his forces with his usual throughout produced the sound that bombed. Britten was commissioned expertise and vigour. The Winches- Britten wanted: nothing was forced, to compose a work for the opening ter Music Club Orchestra played with as though they had been singing for of the new Cathedral in 1962. His re- virtuosity and energy. The Southern eternity. The first movement ends sponse to the commission was a large Pro Musica conducted by Carl Claus- with the unaccompanied choral singing of the Kyrie. It was beautiful. scale work combining the words of the Missa pro defunctis with the war poetry of Wilfred Owen. This gave an intimacy and immediacy to the The propensity of man for self-destruction. work and with it Britten explored the conflict between personal and public duty. s we pass through War Cloister each day the echoes of the Somme haunt us. In his War Requiem Benjamin Britten warns us of the propensity of man for self-destruction. The work is in six movements with the words of the Requiem interspersed with nine poems of Wilfred Owen. The musical forces he engages are vast. Britten calls on only three soloists: the soprano who sings the words of the Requiem with the chorus and full orchestra, the tenor and baritone, who take the roles of the British and German soldiers in Owen’s poetry and are accompanied by the chamber orchestra and finally the boys’ choir accompanied by a portable organ. It is the combinations, alterations and interplay of these three musical forces that provide the structure of the piece. The score makes great include falling and rising arpeggios followed by repeated triplets. en accompanied tenor, Justin Lavender and baritone, Stephen Gadd with poignant beauty and some very fine playing. The Chorus of the Winchester Music Club and the Glee Club found their voice even through the wild orchestral landscape and with the outstanding soprano, Clare Rutter, they revealed some of the most moving music of the evening. The Quiristers conducted by Malcolm Archer and accompanied by Jamal Sutton provided an ethereal voice which, although distant and unseen, floated into all the spaces of the Cathedral. The Dies Irae follows with its terrifying power and austerity. The Chorus sang very well against a brilliant orchestral sound. The Teste David cum Sybilla before the Lacrimosa was explosive. This movement is the longest and includes four of the Wilred Owen poems. These were sung with a drama and tenderness that transfixed, but it is the conclusion of the Dies Irae beginning with the Lacrimosa that contains the most sublime music. Clare Rutter’s voice effortlessly conveyed weeping and sadness. Justin Lavender’s “Move him gently into the sun” was full of compassion. We will not forget the translucent “Was it for this the clay grew tall”. The central drama of Abram sacrificThe composer makes huge demands upon his musicians. ing Isaac follows. Justin Lavender and Stephen Gadd sang together with exquisite delicacy. Great demands are made upon the chorus use of the “Diabolus in Musica” the tri- The evening began with a reading by here and Wilks kept the fugal entries tone C – F sharp. The unease created Harry Culverhouse of a letter Owen tight and the accents strong, espeby this dissonance sets up a conflict sent to his mother from the Front cially in the concluding inversion of that requires resolution. Other motifs and a recitation of “Dulce et deco- the original fugue. The retelling of 16 MUSIC - The Wykehamist the story is shocking as one knows that “half the seed of Europe” was slaughtered during the First World War. The music here becomes sinister and menacing after the glorious heavenly harmonies of the Angel’s provision of a ram. The percussion and soprano open the Sanctus in startling form. The chorus then intones the fugal Pleni sunt caeli. This worked very well, creating a confused yet purposeful sound. The Benedictus for soprano and chorus expressed a hushed yearning for tranquillity before the return of the vibrant Hosanna. Then the Agnus Dei with tenor and chorus gave us a reprieve from the intensity of the drama as we reflected on Christ’s sacrifice. The peace is then shattered by the Libera Me. The opening Choral section starts slowly and very quietly, gathering speed. It is difficult to control but very exciting. Owen’s “Strange Meeting” was a poignant reminder of the futility of war and both tenor and baritone, ably sup- al and moral depth. Britten, a pacifist, living through the Cold War of the late 1950s and early 1960s wanted, through work, to make us look at The peace is then shattered by the Libera Me. ported by the soloists of the chamber orchestra, expressed this lucidly. In Paradisum combines the whole musical ensemble in an otherworldly expression which resolves the dissonance of music and war into the heavenly resolution of the “Tierce de Picardie”. This is the fiftieth anniversary of the first performance of the War Requiem and we are grateful to Nick Wilks for revealing this twentieth-century masterpiece. It is a work of emotion- our situation. He has said “It is not a Requiem to console the living. It should disturb every living soul.” As the performance drew to a close and the attention of the whole Cathedral was drawn to the wish of the soldiers to “Let us sleep now”, the quality of the listening was so intense and our concentration so deep that after the last Amen the silence that was held reigned inaudibly through the Cathedral for many minutes. This was a most memorable performance. The Wykehamist - MUSIC 17 A Very Russian Evening William Ashford (D) surveys the School Concert A n extract from Prokofiev’s 1930s ballet Romeo and Juliet was first item of the evening on the musical menu. It was performed by the Winchester College Academy Orchestra and conducted by the maestro of the violin, ADA. ‘Montagues and Capulets’ is perhaps the most famous piece from the ballet, having been used as the theme tune for the BBC show ‘The Apprentice.’ Fortunately the music was so inspiring that all images of Lord Sugar, hollering swear words in a boardroom with the expression of a disgruntled gargoyle, were quickly put aside. The string arrangement by Gideon Baker was cleverly pieced together so that the cellos and double basses played the on-beat-belching brass part while the higher strings, with sparks of electricity flying from their perfectly-synchronised bows, agitatedly played the aggressively turbulent tune on top. The performance was so good, in fact, that it was performed twice and, as ADA was so confident in his players, he decided not to conduct the second time playing - showing the audience the weeks of hard work and practice that had gone into the piece. and a brawl in the brass. NPW had a greater sense of arrival was created. expertly crafted a miniature lecture Stravinsky's Firebird was the next for the audience and described how orchestrated Russian folk tale of the each section of the orchestra repre- The stage seemed to transform into the Starship Enterprise. sented a certain theme. This greatly enhanced the performance and the audience’s reception as they were able to relate the concrete ideas to a certain musical motif. The enlightened audience expected a fantastic rendering as their musical appetites had been tempted by these short orchestral snippets. They had more than a ‘fantastic’ rendering; pure passion and hard work came together in this performance. A tempest of noise was created in the first few bars as the marching lower strings swelled and then fused with the infernal brass. A tornado had been unleashed as the sheer might and strength of brass, string, percussion and woodwind united in a black cauldron of perfect, musical mayhem. Bedlam had been orchestrated It is a musical depiction of a witches' sabbath. Russian folklore is full of the weird and the wonderfully wacky, from Zmey Gorynych (the three- headed dragon) to Domovoi (the coveredin-hair-all-over house spirit.) Mussorgsky’s ‘Night on the Bare Mountain’ was one of the first tone poems in Russian repertoire. It is a musical depiction of a witches’ sabbath. Various debaucheries take place as the witches try to conjure the devil with all kinds of strange voodoo and black magic. There is demonic wailing in the violas, satanic shouting from the trumpets, hollering from the timpani 18 MUSIC - The Wykehamist to produce this wonderfully rich and decadent Russian masterpiece. Rimsky-Korsakov’s arrangement included an enchanting ending that was not originally intended by the lazy Mussorgsky; he was more interested in chugging vodka at his local Russian pub. The ethereal breath of a D harmonic in the cellos, the pure silver sonority of the shimmering harp in symbiosis with alpine horns and the distant call of a church bell, aurally depicted the break of dawn. In knowing that good has triumphed, evening, this time played by the Winchester College Symphonic Wind Band and conducted by Carl Russel. We heard three excerpts from Stravinsky’s 1910 ballet and through them, entered the realm of Kaschei the Immortal. After the melancholic ‘Round Dance of the Princesses’ the audience was suddenly attacked by the percussion section and led into the ‘Infernal Dance of all Kashei’s subjects.’ The menacing theme and the lightning like use of percussion infatuated the audience. ‘The collapse of Kashei’s Palace and the dissolution of all enchantments’ was pure genius: the fanfares from the trumpets and thunderclaps from the percussion worked like clockwork. The crescendo and chromatic climb upwards of the main theme in the last few bars ended with an atomic explosion from the cymbals. Finally, the stage seemed to transform into the Starship Enterprise as the audience was guided into the outer realms of the galaxy amid Saturn, stars and spaceships. Making a highly banterous cameo appearance RJW wearing a gaudy gold bow-tie on his neck, took on the role of Captain Kirk and recited the opening lines of the original series of Star Trek: “Space: the final frontier. These are the voyages of the Starship Enterprise. Its five-year mission: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no man has gone before.” This added the finishing touches to what proved one of the finest school concerts in recent years. SPO R T The Downs and Up of Winchester Soccer F ootball at Winchester is an enigma. It really is. Just when you think that, after three years, you understand the process of Soccer XI games and their possible results, you find yourself constantly being surprised. This season was always going to be challenging, with a very large group of players leaving at the end of last year. However, there were a few mainstays of last year’s team remaining, with the captain Sever (I) and key player Hodnett (C) entering their third and final year in Soccer XI. The season began with four days of pre-season training, but it went badly with Lyons (K), a possible striker, who injured the ligaments in his left foot. Nevertheless the rest of the group worked hard in an attempt to regain some of the fitness inevitably lost over the long summer. Our first real game of the season came on the Sunday afternoon, in the traditional curtain-raiser against Corinthian Casuals. After holding out for seventy minutes against a talented opposition, who lest we forget roundly beat us 3-0 last year, Winchester’s resistance broke in the last play of the game and the Casuals took their chance with aplomb. However, the defensive performance gave some encouragement, with Bacon (D) starting his first game and Adeeyo (C) beginning to find his feet at left back. Our next game was on the Thursday against arguably the best side in our area of England, St Bede’s. Winchester worked very hard without the ball and showed excellent defensive discipline on a hot day but, with the score at 2-1 after 65 minutes, tired and conceded four goals in the closing stages. The games followed thick and fast, with a home fixture against KES Witley two days later. Regarded as a winnable game, the complacency against which coach Chatterley warned set in and Winchester ultimately went down 3-1, our consolation scored by the excellent Hodnett. Next up was Eton, and Soccer XI continued to show the enigma that is 20 SPORT - The Wykehamist The Captain of Soccer XI reports football here. Having played appallingly against a weak KES side, Winchester were a different team against their old enemy, a much more talented side and, had it not been for the width of the post and a slice of bad luck, should have been in front at the interval. Again though, tiredness set in and concentration slipped as Eton made the most of sloppy errors at the back and in the end Winchester lost 4-1, the goal of the game coming from Herring with a pile-driver from just inside the box. Next it was the ISFA cup against a highly-regarded Alleyn’s team, and it was a performance to forget from Soccer XI, going down 3-0 in the first round of the competition. Luck was not on our side as, after a dramatic goal line clearance from Sever, their midfielder lashed the resulting corner into the top corner from thirty yards. However, after this performance it is clear a few faces were looked at in the mirror, and as a result a more invigorated side returned for our next batch of games. The Hampshire Schools game was a classic, full of attacking dynamism, defensive ineptitude and a truly atrocious performance from the referee. At one point 4-2 up, Winchester gave the game away with some comical defending, coupled with a few peculiar decisions from the referee, and lost 5-4. ticularly pleasing as not only were we more defensively astute but also clinical in attack, with the ever impressive Hodnett netting two. The first win of the season came away at Aldenham. Having lost 3-0 last season, the team sought to make amends. It did so emphatically. A brace from Hodnett, a length-of-thefield solo goal from Sever and further goals from Herring and Dowson (H) gave Winchester a dominant victory over a physical team. The last performance before leave out was away against Bedales, and Winchester registered another victory with a handsome 6-2 score line. Having rested and recuperated over Leave Out, Winchester continued their winning streak with victory over Lancing in an entirely forgettable affair, which was settled from the penalty spot by Hodnett. Next up it was a rematch with Alleyn’s, having already played them in the cup competition earlier in the term. This, though, was a different Soccer XI from that which had excited the cup nearly two months earlier. After a bitterlyfought contest that could have gone either way, Winchester lost 1-0, but it was the reaction of the Alleyn’s players at the final whistle that showed us how far we had progressed in the period between our two fixtures. With a few more games to go, we hope The next game was away to Charter- we can continue to progress both as house and Winchester performed individuals and as a group, and finish with more passion and more deter- the season on a high. mination than had previously been We thank the driving force behind seen and, with the score at 0-0 after Soccer XI football, Lew Chatterley. His sixty minutes and the game on a role is often underappreciated, but knife-edge, Winchester nearly scored whether it is in sun, wind, rain or hail, at one end then conceded with the he continues to give absolutely everesulting counter-attack. Two goals rything for Winchester College footin the final few minutes put an un- ball, and on a personal level I would appetising gloss on the score line like to thank him for everything he for the home side, but Soccer XI re- has done for me, not just in football, turned home knowing that their per- over the last three years, and what he formances were picking up. has done for every single player to The next two games both produced have played for him. As an ex-profesentertaining draws, the first 1-1 sional it must be infuriating at times against Westminster and the second to watch us play, but his commitment 2-2 against a strong Ardingly side. and loyalty is second to none. The Ardingly performance was par- W I CC A M I C A Ladakh 2012 Jamie Truell (H), Theo Martin (G) and Yiu Hei Shek (A) report on a truly challenging project in the foothills of the Himalayas T his was our second major project with the Lotus Flower Trust. The Trust’s CEO, John Hunt, has spent the last fifteen years delivering projects in India with the sole aim of ‘changing lives forever’, working with some of the world's poorest children and communities. The School's first project was to build a primary school in Tarsaal, a small rural community in the foothills of the Himalayas. Following successful completion last year, 31Wykehamists took on the challenge of raising the money to construct a new home for a community of Buddhist nuns in Ladakh. The new home will house fifty, taking in young girls who are either homeless or no longer able to stay in the family home. Many come from Zanskar, one of the poorest regions in the area. Over the last year, the team raised the funds required to allow the project to commence. Of a required total of £50,000 to be secured over a two-year period, the target for the first was £26,000: at the time of departure, there was £40,000 available to support the project. Members of the team individually or collectively completed a wide range of activities to gain sponsorship: 100 holes of golf in a day, tombola, a cake sale, a physi- cal challenge that saw the team complete the distance from Winchester to Ladakh on ergs in the gymnasium (10,500km), cycling the South Downs Way etc. It has been a remarkable effort, nearly reaching the two-year target in the first year! a few tries we managed a load one around every 25mins. The load was then unceremoniously dumped into a pile, promptly breaking a third of the bricks. For me, inside was the best job. It was For me, inside was the best job. Our first attempt at a human chain, in moving huge amounts of rock, was about as successful as my first year Mill project. But soon our Dear Leader, SEH, cracked some skulls and we managed to move another 100 yards longer. We shifted around 600 bricks from hand to hand, half way from the brickyard to the nunnery. So after shifting 3.6 tonnes of bricks, they conveniently told us that they had a truck. The pace and leadership picked up after that. Essentially there were three main jobs; bricks, inside and granite. Granite is exactly what it says on the tin. Picking up large boulders and putting them onto a truck. These were then used for the foundations of the buildings. Bricks were pretty similar; we loaded around 650 mud bricks for every truck. After the hardest and dustiest job but it had one major advantage, the nuns. They made the bricks lighter and the dust, ever so slightly, less dusty. They were the most incredible people that I have ever met. The local community has donated every possession of theirs. Yet, despite this material poverty, I never saw a single argument, no raised voices. In fact, each sentence, in surprisingly good English or quick fire Ladakhi, is punctuated with a smile. Language was not much of a barrier. They all spoke varying levels of English and we, haltingly, learnt varying levels of Ladakhi. The nuns were fascinated to learn anything, from rudimentary French to the Soulja Boy dance. Friendships struck up quickly. Several boys, and dons, were granted the title of atcho, meaning brother. One of the nuns, Moskit, was 16 and I felt slightly sorry for her. The main group of nuns were aged from six to twelve. The elder nuns are around 30. She had no friends of her own age, definitely not going to parties or updating her Facebook. She did great natural skill with my camera though. She took some of my best photos. Each day, as construction progressed, the two groups from either ends of Earth grew closer. When it was finally time to leave the whole village turned out for a goodbye ceremony. Girls from the local school did some traditional dancing. The young nuns sang two beautiful songs, one dedicated to John Hunt. After which we gave pitch perfect 22 WICCAMICA - The Wykehamist renditions of ‘Reach for the Stars’ and ‘Jerusalem’. Following some very variable comedy sketches by Wykehamists the time to say farewell arrived. Naimdal gave a moving speech thanking us for our work, saying “you will forever be in our hearts” and “we will never forget you”. As the nuns left, several members of team were, justifiably, emotional. In five days I formed closer friendships than I ever could have imagined. Lardon, Moskit, Chinle and all the others will forever be my nomos, my sisters. The next part of our journey began as we slowly edged away from Stok Village, pulling our blistered and generally pretty exhausted bodies up into the unknown. But the prospect of climbing Stok Kangri, a mountain 6153 metres high, higher than the tallest mountain in Africa, Europe, Australasia and North America was one which enticed us all, and pulled us along the dusty path which curled off away from civilisation. We reached our first camp at midday, in time for lunch and some rest. That afternoon we went for a short walk, up onto ‘Ton-Ton La’ Pass where an empty river valley laid ahead, a huge mass of gormless boulders and small streams within the gap between the mountains. That, we were told, was the way up. As we trekked up, apart from Tanta, our small, robustly built, croc-wearing guide, all of us were finding out that altitude sickness isn’t a myth, with the unlucky ones having to endure the sickness itself. We reached Base Camp next afternoon and stayed inside our tents until dinner. Lentil curry and rice was the menu on the mountain, a meal which caused repressive thoughts of Cheeseburgers, English breakfasts and most notoriously the rumoured Dominoes at Delhi Airport (which turned out to be true). However the meals cooked really were astounding culinary achievements considering we were 5000 metres from sea level. The following day we trekked up to Advance Base Camp; preparation for the summit attempt. it was seven or more hours trekking to the top and at 0200, sweating feverishly in the freezing vacancy of the night, inching our way up an endless pillar of blackness interrupted only by the splashes of light from our torches, we were certain that this would “take some time”. Hours later, after crossing over a crevassestrewn glacier and working our way through the towering mass of snow, ice and rock we finally had to use all available limbs to tackle the ridge line itself, which twisted up to the summit. At this point we peered off the edge of the mountain and were confronted with the reality that if we tripped up we would fall thousands of feet to our deaths. Needless to say, we were enormously grateful when we finally reached our goal at sunrise after walking throughout the seemingly endless night. both the mind and the body starts to relax, however we were walked and talked through this by our leaders, and we stumbled on full of stories, greatly enriched and totally drained. After our exhausting summit attempt on Stok Kangri all of us were bustling to get down from base camp to civilisation where we could relax, have a shower, watch TV and most importantly leave behind the dreaded loo tents. After another early start of 4 in the morning we headed off to Leh airport to catch a plane to Delhi. When we arrived in Delhi, all of us we looking forward to return to the Ashok Country Resort where air-coned rooms and a pool awaited us. That afternoon we got on a coach which took us sightseeing around Delhi, to places like the Indian Gate, the house of Ghandi as well as an The stark beauty is almost indescribable. The stark beauty is almost indescribable and the views gave us all an extraordinary lift. Maybe the days we spent building the nunnery had given us some spiritual preparation as well as the physical acclimatisation; there was certainly something there that was beyond the experience of most of us. The descent back down That night we made it to Advance was the beginning of the descent Base Camp and before us was a gla- back to “normal”, somewhat banal, cier and standing stalwart and high life. They say that this is often the above it was Stok Kangri. Apparently most dangerous part of a climb as authentic Hindu temple. Early next morning we took a train to Agra for more sightseeing. The Taj Mahal and Agra fort were brilliant sights but the best by far was the abandoned city of Fatehpur Sikri. After we returned to Delhi we were all treated to dinner buffet at a 5 star hotel (John Hunt knew the owner). The next morning, exhausted but full of unforgettable memories, we finally boarded the plane which took us back to the UK, home. The Wykehamist - WICCAMICA 23 Into The Land Of Vampires Sebastian Fletcher (A) reports on a Romanian trek A n expedition to Romania makes an exciting and adventurous trip, a fantastic opportunity to explore this part of Europe. This trip consisted of hiking and kayaking through the Danube Delta. When we arrived in Bucharest we drove throughout the day to reach Pennsylvania. The minibus journey lasted the whole day so we all caught up on the sleep we on the flight. When we arrived at Pennsylvania we stayed at a campsite called ‘Vampire Camping’. in a hotel because of torrential floods which would have severely affected us if we were camping. In the morning we scoffed down a delicious breakfast and drove to the water’s edge. We had a little reminder session and then set off kayaking. For lunch we stopped and made a fire on the land by the delta. The first day of The next day we got up early to atkayaking we kayaked a total of 35km tempt the tallest mountain we were to where we were camping. hiking up. When we arrived we saw boulders up in the distance, but our The next day, we kayaked to a town, guide explained to us that this was where our Romanian guides lived, only 1/3 of the height we had to which was only accessible by boat or climb. Halfway up, a thunderstorm helicopter. We stocked up on food arose so we were forced to take shel- supplies and then proceeded to our ter lower down the mountain. When campsite. On the last day of kayaking, we reached the summit, we ate din- we journeyed to a pension where ner in a chalet and camped just be- we stayed the night and had our first low the peak of the mountain which shower for a while. That night we was higher than Ben Nevis. Next were cooked a traditional fish soup. morning we ate our remaining food After having a well-earned sleep in a supplies and did a half day trek down bed, we got into a motorboat which the mountain. We walked to a new took us to the bus on which we were campsite where we stayed the night travelling on to get to the airport in before travelling to the Danube Delta. Bucharest. When we arrived in EngThe following morning we said our land everyone was relieved to be farewells to our guide and made the able to enjoy their creature comforts journey to the Delta. When we ar- again! camp everyone was exhausted and after eating went straight to sleep. The second day of trekking wasn’t as hard as the first; we managed to get back to the camp site at 3:00 pm. The thing which was worst about this day was that there was no shade where we were walking. The next day we had a cooked breakfast made by our Romanian guide called Nick. We were giving a quick briefing on what to bring in our rucksacks and set off at 09:00. To get to the mountain we were going to climb, we had to walk through a village and past Dracula’s Castle. The path outside the village we hiked up was on a very steep hill. We had a break when we were halfway up and admired the spectacular landscape of Pennsylvania. Halfway through the day we stopped by a local shop to re-supply after climbing down the mountain. When we got back to the rived, we were lucky enough to stay Journey To Iceland Ryan Chan (A) travelled north with geographers A fter a three-hour flight from Luton airport, we entered a rather new airport in Iceland. Our luggage arrived quickly and efficiently and went to the arrivals, where we had to wait half-an-hour for our tour guide and driver to find us. Meanwhile, we were busy trying to change our money to Icelandic krona. When the tour guide found us, we climbed onto a large bus with an elevated chassis and headed for the famed Blue Lagoon. This was where it is claimed that a spa provides silica mud masks that can make your skin 24 WICCAMICA - The Wykehamist cle of Iceland” by visiting the world’s first parliament, and then the Althing and the rift created by the separating Eurasian and North American plate. We also saw geysers erupting at a place called “Geysir” but unfortunately we didn’t get to see the main large one go off. Then we went to a gigantic waterfall called Gullfoss (golden waterfall) that was situated within the rift valley. Unfortunately, our sun-roof in the bus exploded on the way and had to be temporarily The next day, we did the “Golden Cir- supported by a tourist umbrella and a bag of apples until the bus driver look and feel younger by ten years. Of course, we were all quite interested and went for a dip in the warm blue water lined with dried silica mud. We all tried the mud and went into the saunas and steam rooms before going on to more sights related to the study of geography. We ate Icelandic fish and chips for lunch and headed to some bubbling smelly mud pools complete with a sulphur crust and steam. Later that night, we stayed in the capital city. was able to put a plank on it. The next day we journeyed to the tame island of Heimaey (Home Island) to walk up the Eldfell volcano that was born on the 23 January 1973 from opening lava fissures on the island. This volcano destroyed 400 homes, nearly devastated the fishing business on the island from a lava flow; the government spent a large amount of money to stop the lava flows from destroying the love- ly town. We managed to see some puffins with SKW’s help on the island of Surtsey, not far off. After this we took the ferry back and went to walk behind a waterfall called Seljandfoss before heading to Hotel Laki, where we relished good food, free Wi-Fi and a golf course. tic columns, Europe’s largest lateral moraine and we climbed a glacier. Before leaving for the capital, we also crawled into a lava tube and saw spectacular costal landforms with the familiar basalt columns. As a treat we then had an eat-all-you can pizza challenge before we left! The final two days of the trip was mostly concerned about ice. We visited a glacial lagoon, another waterfall flowing over black basal- We were quite sad to leave Iceland as we had a wonderful time there, thanks to DEP, SKW and JJC, who had shown us Iceland’s best. Operation Garelochhead James Temple (C) tells the story of a Royal Marines exercise D uring the last two weeks of Cloister Time three Wykehamists participated in the annual Royal Marines Cadets training camp in the west of Scotland. We travelled by train with mountains of kit and were met at the station by the coach driver, a gruff Scottish man. Upon arrival we were shown around the accommodation: two long thin buildings with 16 beds each; and the ‘galley’ (dining room) where we would eat our ‘scran’ (food) when not out in the field. The next morning we woke at 06:00 but were excused from early morning ‘phys’ as it was our first day. Having eaten breakfast we went to the training area where we were introduced to our weapons, complete with collapsible bipod grip and telescopic sight: a first for us as cadets. We then revised everything from camouflage and concealment to weapons handling drills. After a day of sunshine we returned to the campsite, confident that the stories of hardship from previous years were exaggerated. The following morning we were punished for such wistful thinking, having risen at 05:30, arranged in two files and with the background music of the PTI’s calls of one-two-threefour, set off on a jog. This early morning ‘phys’ session was to become part of our routine over the subsequent two weeks. Over the next few days some marines from the Fleet Protection Group taught us to fight in open ground and in close quarters, a particular highlight of the camp. With our appetites wetted for the battle exercise that weekend, we moved on to survival skills. The next day consisted of hacking down trees with axes, saws and even knives as we lit fires and constructed shelters under the constant attack of clouds of midges. truck we patrolled forwards and soon spotted the building in which they were hiding. The fire support groups were lined up in silence and smoke grenades thrown at the building, providing cover for the assaulting group to move closer. We soon heard shots from the building and returned fire, eventually reaching the door where we were engulfed in But the greatest challenge was yet smoke. Choking, we discovered the to come: the three day exercise. This door to be locked, but soon found began on Friday morning when we another. The ensuing contact with went to Fas Lane and were taught the marines inside was thrilling, as the basics of beach landings with the we moved from room to room until help of three Offshore Raiding Craft. all threats were eliminated. We then carried out a full landing, The next week focused on adventhe beginning of the exercise, and turous training and commando hishaving sorted out our kit we set off tory. We canoed, kayaked and hiked, up the difficult and muddy terrain of as well as making use of the range the hillside. Eventually we reached simulator and shooting range at Fas our harbour location (tactical camp- Lane. We also participated in a run in site) and set up our bivvies. It was memory of Captain Phil Guy, a Royal now that the rain began which didn’t Marine who had previously been the stop until the end of the exercise. commanding officer of the Royal MaThe next day we carried out numer- rines Youth Training Team but sadly ous attacks on enemy positions, en- passed away when serving in Iraq. joying the unlimited blank rounds The camp was difficult yet extremely that are usually denied cadets. Dur- rewarding. As well as gaining an exing these attacks we put into practice cellent insight into life in the Royal our close-quarters training as well as Marines we also learnt lots in the casualty evacuation. We also had the space of just two weeks. What’s chance to improve our leadership more, because it was carried out with skills, everyone rotating into com- the Royal Marines we had access to equipment and expertise that is not mand positions of the platoon. Next day we woke up at 04:00 on the normally available: an opportunity final morning of the exercise and re- not to miss and one that I would recceived orders. Having been dropped ommend to anyone who loves a chaloff near the enemy location by the lenge. The Wykehamist - WICCAMICA 25 Pringle Matthew Tyler (G) participates in the Marine competition O n the afternoon of Friday 5 October, the Pringle team assembled in the Armoury. After a three-hour journey to Lympstone Barracks, we unloaded our kit and began to set up our area in the gym hall. Later that evening, after some confusion about the time of dinner, all the teams were welcomed and briefed in the presentation hall on the proceedings for the next two days. by a frenzied rush to reach the point- ence with red smoke. As soon as we reached the casualty we came under scoring boundary. contact from an enemy directly in The next stand was where we had to front of us. Once the casualty was retrieve items from a ‘shark-infested’ treated by Shaw, we stretchered him area with a length of rope and two out of the burnt gorse. carabineers. Initially we tried using the carabineers as a hook on the midsection of the rope. However, when this failed we tied the rope between two trees and sent Alexander Davies (F) across, who subsequently Then came our winning performance. At five o’clock the next day, having had a good night’s sleep thanks to JJCW’s expertise on night duty, we made our way to the food hall for a hasty breakfast and then made final preparations before boarding our mighty transport vessel, the minibus. With CGY at the wheel we made Woodbury Common in good time and advanced to our first stand: first aid. We carried out the first aid well, primarily thanks to Oliver Blanshard (X) and Alfred Shaw (B), whose performances impressed the assessors got ‘eaten’. When we ran out of time, we proceeded to the section attack stand where Blanshard, as IC, briefed us and moved us up a gentle hill. Two men contacted us in a depression at the top. Charlie section assaulted the position by flanking left, while Delta section provided covering fire. Our final stand of the day was fire control orders. We arrived early and while bantering with the young officer, Bills was yet again given physical punishment for his foolish ways. We had spent the week prior to the event practicing giving fire control orders, so it was a breath of fresh air to simply receive an FCO and mark the position of the would-be enemy. The next day brought drill to begin with. Thanks to Frederick BenhamCroswell’s (F) and Davies’ superb efforts our dress was in good order. After a quick change we headed down to the bottom field for the assault course. It was an all-out sprint over and along walls and suspended ropes, across monkey bars and through tunnels. The whole course only took four minutes with Bills storming ahead to take first place out of our team. As soon as we finished the assault course we were brought across to the regain tank. This is a five-foot-deep pool with four taught ropes suspended across its length and three metres above it. One man slides along each rope and, once halfway, hangs below it and then must Then came our winning performance: observation. We patrolled along a lane in a wooded area, looking for any objects of interest, such as a tent peg or an RPG. We then recalled them from memory after passThis was followed by a camouflage ing through the lane. James Pinder and concealment stand, which en- (Coll) found it very difficult not to tailed the section being split into two jump for joy at the next stand - map groups. The first group had thirty reading - but unfortunately (to his seconds to hide, within certain limits, dismay) we came second to Bradfield with a view of the other group who in this event. were on high ground looking for them. The roles were then reversed after five minutes. Only one person While bantering with the young officer... was found - we later found that this was not to our advantage. Moreover, Harry Bills’ (G) mistake was his desire The weapons-handling stand was to join the army rather than the royal very much about learning the steps regain his position on it and proceed marines, which resulted in twenty and carrying them out. This encom- to the end of the rope. It really wasn’t press-ups! Then this stand was con- passed loading a magazine and as easy as it looked as only two of us veniently followed by a stalk. We standard handling procedures of an made it across. were all given one blank round. From SA80 rifle. What is valued as prob- Finally, the scores were announced: within a certain range, we had to ably the most technical and impor- we came fourth, a very respectable fire this, without being seen, at two tant stand was the battle exercise. result. It wouldn’t have been possible young officers who were trying to We were tasked with retrieving a without the input of the whole team spot us. We were all surprised when downed pilot from hostile territory. under our captain Charlie Macnawe suddenly heard, “one minute re- We proceeded in arrowhead forma- mara (Coll), as well as our two leaders maining!” This was swiftly followed tion and the pilot indicated his pres- CGY and JJCW. 26 WICCAMICA - The Wykehamist R EG IS T ER The Wykehamist - WICCAMICA 27 QEII Programme The Hitchhiker's Guide to The Galaxy Adapted and directed by Johnny Cardozo October 11-13 Phil's House Play: I Killed The Count Adaptation of a Hitchcock whodunit October 22-24 Kind Hearts and Coronets Adapted and directed by Charlie Macnamara November 8-10 Toye's House Play: The Bald Primadonna By Eugène Ionesco Directed by Patrick Herring and Nicholas Fennell November 21-23 King John By William Shakespeare Directed by Rob Wyke December 6 – 8 28 REGISTER- The Wykehamist Music Diary Chamber Music I Scholars’ Concert – 23 September 2012 Violins Violas AllegroNicholas Lau (B) James Fraser (Coll) Geng To Law (E)Ryan Chan (A) Jacob Thorn (Coll) Calvin Chan (D) Cellos Double bass Alexander Howard (I) Arnold Ching (C) Min Hyuk Choi (Coll) Samuel Grew (B) Regan Ring (Coll) Nocturno Richard Strauss (1822 - 1905) Hugh Chilcott (G) horn Nicholas Salwey piano AdagioKodaly (1882 - 1967)Christopher Cheng (Coll) cello Nicholas Salwey piano Recitativo e Allegro Defossez (1905 - 1988) Alexander Toal (B) trumpet Nicholas Salwey piano Braziliera, from Scaramouche Milhaud (1892 - 1974) Jacob Thorn (Coll) & Angus Robinson (Coll) piano duo Quartet no. 1 in G major Grechaninov (1864-1956) Nicholas Lau (B) & Tom Allinson (Coll) violins AndanteJames Fraser (Coll) viola Rowan Ferguson (Coll) cello Poulenc (1899–1963) Tommy Peet (F) oboe Nicholas Salwey piano Elégie from Sonata for oboe & piano Banjo and Fiddle Kroll (1901-1980) Kaz Costello (F) violin Adrian Adlam piano Fantaisie Demersseman (1833 - 1866) Daniel Porter (B) alto saxophone Brian Lee (B) piano Two songs from Finzi (1901 - 1956) Hugo Sever (I) voice Nicholas Salwey piano Let us garlands bring Come away, come away death O Mistress Mine Allegro con spirito Bowen (1884 – 1961) Laurie Harris (I) horn Nicholas Salwey piano 3rd movement from Horn Sonata Te quiero como loco Igudesman (b.1970-) Brian Lee (B) & Nicholas Trapp (A) violins La Cucaracha Brandenburg Concerto No.3 J.S. Bach (1685-1750) Avenue St Andrew’s, Southampton – 27 September 2012 Violins Violas AllegroNicholas Lau (B) James Fraser (Coll) Geng To Law (E)Ryan Chan (A) Jacob Thorn (Coll) Calvin Chan (D) Cellos Double bass Alexander Howard (I) Arnold Ching (C) Min Hyuk Choi (Coll) Samuel Grew (B) Regan Ring (Coll) Adrian Adlam director Brandenburg Concerto No.3 J.S. Bach (1685-1750) The Wykehamist - REGISTER 29 Recitativo e Allegro Defossez (1905 - 1988) Alexander Toal (B) trumpet Nicholas Salwey piano I am the very model Sullivan (1842-1900) Edward Horrocks voice Charles Maxtone-Smith piano Grechaninov (1864-1956) Nicholas Lau (B) & Tom Allinson (Coll) violins of a modern major-general Quartet no. 1 in G major AndanteJames Fraser (Coll) viola Rowan Ferguson (Coll) cello Poulenc (1899–1963) Elégie from Sonata for oboe & piano Banjo and Fiddle Kroll (1901-1980) Fantaisie Demersseman (1833 - 1866) Two songs from Finzi (1901 - 1956) Let us garlands bring Come away, come away death O Mistress Mine Allegro con spirito Bowen (1884 – 1961) 3rd movement from Horn Sonata Te quiero como loco Igudesman (b.1970-) La Cucaracha Tommy Peet (F) oboe Nicholas Salwey piano Kaz Costello (F) violin Adrian Adlam piano Daniel Porter (B) alto saxophone Brian Lee (B) piano Hugo Sever (I) voice Nicholas Salwey piano Laurie Harris (I) horn Nicholas Salwey piano Brian Lee (B) & Nicholas Trapp (A) violins A Classical Guitar Concert by pupils & tutors with special guests: Tim Rushworth Flamenco Guitar & The Vida Guitar Quartet – 14 October 2012 Vals no. 1 B. Calatayud Christopher Elliot (I) Tango esta noche V. Lindsey-Clark Kevin Lo (B) Theme from the Godfather N. Rota PeteneraTrad. Alexander Crew (I) Rumbaarr. R. Pearson Drewrie’s Accordes Anon 16th Century Michael Turner (Coll) & William Nestor-Sherman (B) CavatinaS. MyersJerold Chu (H) El Roble J. Montoya William Nestor-Sherman (B) Minuet in A F. Sor Prelude no. 4 H. Villa Lobos Polacca op. 5 no. 3 J. Mertz Adagio - Allegro G. P. Telemann Jerold Chu (H) Michael Turner (Coll) La fille aux cheveux de lin C. Debussy Alexander Crew (I) William Nestor Sherman (B) Hotel California D. Henley & G. Frey & William Malpass (C) bongos arr. J. Chu & A. Neville Allegro (from Sonata in D) C. Scheidler Michael Turner (Coll) Adrian Neville & Malcolm Hebron Four song arrangements: Spanish & South American Salamanca arr. L. Williams Cantar Montaňés El Paňo Moruno Cubana Santaurio (Soleares)Trad. Tim Rushworth En Las Cuevas (Farruca) arr. P. Pena Largo & Rondo op.34 F. Carulli Adrian Neville & Mark Eden Un Paraiso Moro A. Neville Adrian Neville 30 REGISTER - The Wykehamist The Miller’s Dance M. de Falla (from the Three-Cornered Hat) G. Bizet Habanera (from Carmen) Ritual Fire Dance M. de Falla Vida Guitar Quartet Mark Eden, Mark Ashford, Helen Sanderson & Christopher Stell Chamber Music II – 18 October Irish Fantasy Harty (1879-1941) Geng To Law (E) violin Adrian Adlam piano Piano Sonata in A Minor Mozart (1756-1791) James Fraser (Coll) piano KV 310 (300d) I. Allegro maestoso II. Andante cantabile con espressione III. Presto Adagio & Allegro op. 70 Schumann (1810-56) Sonatine Ravel (1875-1937) I. Modéré II. Mouvement de Menuet III. Animé Scherzo Brahms (1833-97) Edward Beese (G) cello Nicholas Salwey piano Harry Metrebian (Coll) piano Nicholas Trapp (A) violin Adrian Adlam piano Concert (Woolrich, Ireland, Bach) – Sunday 21 October Watermark John Woolrich (born 1954) Peter Cornish bass clarinet/clarinet Partita No. 3 in E Major J.S. Bach (1685-1750) Adrian Adlam violin/viola Preludio Stephen Robbings piano Loure Gavotte en Rondeau Menuett I Menuett II Bourée Gigue Fantasy Sonata John Ireland (1879-1962) Farewell John Woolrich (born 1954) Chamber Music III – Thursday 8 November String Quartet opus 17 no. 2 Haydn (1733-1809) Nicholas Lau (B) & Jacob Thorn (Coll) violins i. ModeratoCalvin Chan (D) viola Samuel Grew (B) cello ii. Menuetto: Allegretto iii. Adagio iv Allegro di molto Sonata for Piano & Violin in Beethoven (1770-1827) Kazuma Costello (F) violin Nicholas Salwey piano F Major op. 24, ‘Spring’ i. Allegro ii. Adagio molto espressivo iii. Scherzo: Allegro molto iv. Rondo: Allegro ma non troppo The Wykehamist - REGISTER 31 Nocturne in B major Chopin (1810-1849) Jacob Thorn (Coll) piano Brahms (1833-97) Brian Lee (B) violin Nicholas Salwey piano op. 62 no. 1 Nocturne in E major op. 62 no. 2 Violin Sonata in D minor op. 108 i. Allegro ii. Adagio iii. Un poco presto e con sentiment iv. Presto agitato School Concert – Sunday 11 November Montagues & Capulets Prokofiev (1891-1953) Winchester College Academy Orchestra Adrian Adlam conductor Night on the Bare Mountain Mussorgsky (1839-1881) Winchester College Symphony Orchestra arr. Rimsky-Korsakov Nicholas Wilks conductor Excerpts from The Firebird Stravinsky (1882-1971) Winchester College Symphonic Wind Band arr. Bocook (b.1953) Carl Russell conductor Symphonic Suite from Gianchino (b.1967) Winchester College Symphonic Wind Band Star Trek Courage (1919-2008) Carl Russell conductor Roddenberry (1921-1991) Rob Wyke narrator Arr. Bocook (b.1953) Britten – War Requiem – Thursday 15 November Claire Rutter soprano Winchester Cathedral Justin Lavender tenor Stephen Gadd baritone Winchester Music Club Winchester College Glee Club & Quiristers Nicholas Wilks conductor Delius Centenary Concert – Sunday 18 November Sonatina Bax (1883-1953) Lionel Handy cello i. Allegro risoluto Nigel Clayton piano ii. Andante iii. Moderato Sonata 1916 Delius (1862-1934) SonataDebussy (1862-1918) i. Prologue ii. Serenade et Finale 32 REGISTER - The Wykehamist Chamber Music IV – Thursday 22 November Piano sonata in E major Beethoven (1770-1827) Angus Robinson piano op. 14 no. 1 i. Allegro ii. Allegretto and Maggiore iii. Rondo, Allegro comodo Violin Sonata no. 2 in Brahms (1833-1897) A major op. 98 i. Allegro amabile ii. Andante tranquillo-Vivace-Andante-Vivace iii. Allegretto grazioso (quasi andante) Ballade No. 4 in F minor op. 52 Chopin (1810-40) Violin Sonata in E minor op 82 Elgar (1857-1934) i. Allegro ii. Romance iii. Allegro non Troppo Nicholas Lau (B) violin Adrian Adlam piano Timothy Wong (F) piano Byung-Hyun Gong (H) violin Nicholas Salwey piano Cantores Episcopi - Mince Pie Concert Thursday 6 & Friday 7 December Jamal Sutton, Jack Cammack (A), Hugo Sever (I), Laurie Harris (I), George Herring (I) Andrew Terrafranca (E), William Ashford (D), Wind, Brass & Percussion Concert - Tuesday 11 December The Wykehamist - REGISTER 33 Sports Results SOCCER TeamPlayed Won Drawn LostTeamPlayed Won Drawn Lost Soccer XI 14329 Jun Colts A 14527 2nd XI 10 3 4 3 Jun Colts B 11 5 0 6 3rd XI 9405 Jun Colts C 10307 4th XI 7214 Jun Colts D 6123 5th XI 6303 Yearlings A 13319 6th XI 3201 Yearlings B 10118 Sen Colts A 11524 Yearlings C 9018 Sen Colts B 5104 Yearlings D 6105 Sen Colts C 5203 Sen Colts D 2011 GOLF TeamPlayedWonDrawnLost Seniors6402 Juniors2002 RACKETS TeamPlayedWonDrawnLost Princes5302 Overall187110 SAILING TeamPlayedWonDrawnLost Overall9900 FENCING TeamPlayedWonDrawnLost Foil A6402 Epee A7601 Epee B6501 WATER POLO TeamPlayedWonDrawnLost U187115 U161001 34 REGISTER - The Wykehamist Studium STEPHEN CARTER The value of trying to think differently First developed in 1999, Hawk-Eye Innovations has used the expertise gleaned from years of broadcasting to remain at the cutting edge of sports technology and broadcasting. Honours include two BAFTAS and one Emmy. Since these initial accolades, Hawk-Eye has become one of the leading vision processing companies within the sports sector. First used as a broadcast tool for the leg before wicket decision in cricket, the company has since revolutionised sports broadcasting, officiating and coaching across a number of sports. The company is proud to be an integral part of many of the world's premier sporting events. These include The Wimbledon Championships, the Cricket World Cup, Davis and Federation Cups, World Championships snooker, the Indian Premier League cricket, and the Olympic Games. DOUGAL GRAY (D), FREDDIE PARKER (K), HUGO SEVER (I), JAMIE TRUELL (H) The Ladakh Expedition Dougal, Freddie, Hugo and Jamie will give an account of the expedition with some stunning photography. PETER KRAKENBERGER The 15th Century Apocalypse of the Dukes of Savoy Peter Krakenberger is in his 40th and final year as a maths don at Winchester College, where he is also lay chaplain and organiser of the Illuminated Manuscript Society. The Apocalypse of the Dukes of Savoy is generally considered by experts to be the most beautiful of all the medieval apocalypse books. It has 97 larger paintings, 91 smaller ones and profuse marginal decoration. The first half took seven years to decorate, from 1428 to 1435; the artists involved being Jean Bapteur and Peronet Lamy. The second half was completed in the years 1484-1490 by the outstanding French book artist Jean Colombe. The paintings are spectacular and of great beauty, and because they refer to cataclysmic events due to happen as the end of the world draws near, they are sometimes awe-inspiring. NICK MACKINNON Poetry reading Nick MacKinnon was runner up in the 2009 Bridport Prize and a major prizewinner in the 2007 and 2008 McLellan Festivals and the 2009 Plough, Hippocrates, and tall-lighthouse competitions. He has just won the 2012 Keats-Shelley prize. CHARLIE MAULEVERER AND COLIN UPTON From Canon St to Abbey Rd – a musical journey Back in 2001 Charles Mauleverer (E, 1997-2002) and former maths don Colin Upton got together to record their compositions in Colin’s home studio in Canon Street. Pop, rock and classical were all explored, and many of the school’s best musicians – boys, old boys, and dons – found themselves being roped in: Robert Bottone, Phil Nash, Malcolm Hebron, Adrian Adlam, Leo Cairns, Will Keen, Tom Jesty and Harry Sever amongst others. Buoyed by some radio play on Classic FM, the pair decided to make an album using a top class professional orchestra to back the school’s musicians. Two memorable trips to Abbey Rd Studio 2 followed, and after years of overdubbing, editing and mixing, the album is finally ready for release. Meanwhile Charles has graduated from Oxford with a degree in music, and from the Royal College of Music as a Master of Composition. The Studium talk will include recordings of some their early efforts through to excerpts from the album. DR ANTONIA WHITLEY The Art of War Teaching Fellow in the War Studies Department of Kings College London. Art historian and lecturer with a particular interest in the art and architecture of the Italian Renaissance- her PhD from the Warburg Institute was an interdisciplinary study of Sienese society in the 15th century. The Wykehamist - REGISTER 35 The war in question is WW1, of which Ernest Hemingway wrote that it had been: “...the most colossal, murderous, mismanaged butchery that has ever taken place on earth. Any writer who said otherwise had lied. So the writers either wrote propaganda, shut up or fought.” Was the same true for painters? We consider some notable examples and also how the Great War called for a new kind of art, while maintaining a tradition stretching back to the Renaissance. ANTONY BEEVOR OW The Second World War Antony Beevor is the author of The Second World War which has already been a No 1 Bestseller in five countries. He will speak on the nature of the conflict, and why historians have disagreed even over its duration. Was it the main part of the 'Long War of the Twentieth Century'? Was it a clash between the great powers, or a conglomeration of conflicts including an international civil war? DR ELIZA FILBY AND STEVEN CLARKE Speakeasy: Learn to be Heard Acting techniques as a way of improving confidence, conquering nerves and projecting your voice. Public speaking is one of those key life-skills but we rarely receive training in it. The world is full of bad communicators but what makes a good one? Are great orators born or are they made? Drawing on acting techniques and academic know-how, Speakeasy is an interactive workshop which will provide you with a tool kit of skills necessary to be an effective communicator. This is not a lecture on the art of rhetoric, but an interactive workshop; you will practise the exercises and will receive personal feedback. The course includes how to conquer nerves, think on your feet, voice projection and the art of speech writing. JULIAN FRANCIS OW Ethiopia – land of contrasts Julian Francis is a highly successful city lawyer who is also an avid collector of private press books and a serious ornithologist. His talk will be not just about the birds but also the mammals, landscapes, music and people of Ethiopia. RICHARD FULLER Fuller’s Fuller's has been around for over 165 years. Whilst we may be best known for brewing London Pride, there is a lot more to Fuller's than first meets the eye. We are proud of our heritage and manage to successfully combine it with a thriving, modern retail business. With our iconic brewery and head office in West London and our portfolio of 364 pubs, inns and hotels, it is a multi-faceted operation. TOM PAKENHAM OW & HUGH KNOWLES OW Six ways to die A trained solicitor, Tom launched greentomatocars in 2006 as the first in the greentomato group of companies of which he is CEO. In the last five years he has grown greentomatocars to a fleet of 120 vehicles and launched greentomatoenergy and the greentomatokit. Hugh is Principal Sustainability Advisor at Forum for the Future. ‘Working with pioneering partners, we transform the essential systems of food, energy and finance to secure a more fulfilling life for us and future generations. A slightly irreverent tour of 'The six ways you can die' and why the world is a becoming a more complex and dangerous place. We will have a conversation about the many ways you can help society through some tricky times. DIMA YEREMENKO Dima is often called a Dog Whisperer because of his extraordinary rapport with dogs and gentle approach in training. This can be seen in the award winning film by Michael Slowe ‘The Leader of the Pack’ (accessed on the homepage of his website). A large number of dogs, all with different owners, harmoniously follow Dima around Hampstead Heath. In this first session, Dima will do a demonstration with his own two dogs, one of whom, George, has appeared in the Harry Potter films. He will explain his philosophy and take questions. 36 REGISTER - The Wykehamist SAMVIT KANORIA OW (on Skype from Dubai) Global Forces This is a seminal work done by our strategy practice that lays out some of the biggest macro-economic trends (e.g. rise of the middle class) that are affecting our world. DR IAIN MCGILCHRIST OW Two brains, two minds, one person Dr Iain McGilchrist is a former Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, a Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, and former Consultant Psychiatrist and Clinical Director at the Bethlem Royal & Maudsley Hospital, London. His latest book, published by Yale in November 2009, is The Master and his Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World. Why is the brain divided? Why does it matter? What can it tell us about our experience as human beings, what we are like, what sort of thing the world is, and how we relate to it? How might understanding this even help us stop destroying it? ED PARKER Walking with the Wounded – from battlefields to the North Pole, Everest and beyond …. In 2011 our team set a World Record by taking four wounded servicemen to the Geographic North Pole, our first expedition. In 2012, the charity set its sights even higher and on the new challenge, and aimed to put five wounded servicemen on the summit of Mount Everest, the worlds’ highest peak standing at 8,848m. Charity Co- Founder Ed Parker will tell of the epic experiences from both The North Pole and from Everest. Whilst the Everest summit attempt was sadly cancelled in May due to unprecedented conditions, Ed will speak of their journey from the battle field to the final selection process for joining the summit and base camp teams, including their summits of Manaslu, the world’s 8th highest peak, Lobuche, 6145m, and finally their attempt on the world’s highest mountain. Ed will also speak of the next expedition, our largest yet, which is currently in the planning stages for 2013. This has been named as the largest modern day expedition. BEN HEASON First Free Climbed Ascent of Angel Falls Ben Heason is one of the UK’s leading climbers, having been climbing full time for over 15 years. He is world-renowned for his bold climbing on routes at the cutting edge of the sport including his impressive exploits on big wall expeditions around the globe. In his presentation Ben describes the first free climbed ascent of the 1000m Angel Falls wall, the world's highest waterfall, in 2005. The team's successful expedition, with climbing at the highest level, in an incredibly remote region of the planet, has been praised as 'one of the finest achievements by British rock climbers on foreign soil'. Situated in the heart of the Venezuelan jungle, this is not merely a story about an audacious rock climb on one of the Natural Wonders of the World, but the emotions and experiences encountered along the way. RALEGH LONG In concert Ralegh Long (I, 1999-2004) is an English Singer-Songwriter, guitarist and pianist. He mixes a love of classic song writing with improvisational tactics. Ralegh has recently supported Darren Hayman (ex-Hefner) and Thomas White (Electric Soft Parade) on tour. 'Placing the enigmatic within the classically melodic'.(Sweeping The Nation) WILL SHARPE OW & TOM KINGSLEY Black Pond screening Will Sharpe, aged 25, wrote, co-directed and acted in Black Pond which was BAFTA nominated Outstanding Debut film, Winner of the Evening Standard Best Newcomer award and nominated for a Raindance award. He and his codirector, Tom Kingsley, will take questions following the screening of the film. The Wykehamist - REGISTER 37 GEOFFREY TIBBS OW Why look at social movements?: The case of Southern Mexico Geoff Tibbs (B, 2003-8) took three sciences early, leaving plenty of time for Art and Art History in his final year. He studied Fine Art at Oxford and has just completed a Masters at the School of Oriental and African Studies, London. He was recently accepted as a member of the Magic Circle. His talk will be split between his academic work in Mexico and some ‘How did he do that?!’ magic. It is amazing. PROFESSOR CHRISTOPHER SACHRAJDA FRS Prof Sachrajda’s research continues to be focussed on the development and exploita¬tion of Quantum Chromodynamics, the quantum field theory of the strong nuclear force. He obtained his Ph.D. from Imperial College (London) in 1974. After periods of research as a Harkness Fellow at Stanford University in California (1974-76) and in the Theory Division at CERN in Geneva (1976-79) he was appointed to a faculty position in the Physics Department of the University of Southampton. There he has held most senior roles including Head of Department. In recognition of his research, Prof Sachrajda was elected to the Royal Society in 1996. The Higgs Boson – Prediction, Discovery and Significance On July 4th 2012, experimenters at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) announced the discovery of an elementary particle which is likely to be the anticipated Higgs Boson, the last missing ingredient in the Standard Model of particle physics. In this lecture Prof Sachrajda will explain the reasons behind its prediction in 1964 and discuss its discovery at the LHC and the implications for the future of particle physics. DR THOMAS DE WESSELOW OW Making Sense of the Turin Shroud Dr Thomas de Wesselow is an independent art historian and the author of The Sign: the Shroud of Turin and the Secret of the Resurrection. He gained his PhD from the Courtauld Institute of Art in 2000, worked for a year in the curatorial department at the National Gallery and was then a post-doctoral fellow at King’s College, Cambridge. Eight years ago he took on the challenge of researching the most controversial, enigmatic object in the world: the Shroud of Turin. A long linen sheet, bearing an extremely faint image of a crucified man, the Shroud is traditionally supposed to be the burial-cloth of Jesus but is now generally dismissed as a medieval fake. In this talk Thomas tells the story of his investigation of the Shroud and explains why it has led him to a radical conclusion regarding the birth of Christianity. PETER TATCHELL Economic democracy - Power to the people Peter Tatchell is an Australian-born British political campaigner best known for his work with LGBT social movements. He was selected as Labour Party Parliamentary candidate for Bermondsey in 1981, and was then denounced by party leader Michael Foot for supporting extra-parliamentary action against the Thatcher government. The Labour Party subsequently allowed his selection when he ran in the Bermondsey by-election in February 1983. In the 1990s, he became a prominent LGBT campaigner through the direct action group OutRage!, which he co-founded. He has worked on a wide variety of issues, such as Stop Murder Music, which campaigns against music lyrics that incite violence against LGBT people, and is a frequent contributor on human rights and social justice issues in print and through broadcast media, authoring many articles and six books. In 2006, New Statesman readers voted him sixth on their list of "Heroes of our time". He attracted international attention when he attempted a citizen's arrest of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe in 1999 and again in 2001. In his email to LCW he wrote: ‘I have several very simple, achievable ideas on how to make the economy more participatory and accountable. I think the pupils will find them interesting, challenging and may well wonder why no government has bothered to put them into effect.’ 38 REGISTER - The Wykehamist Societies Diary CathedralChronicles of Light Classical Robert Leach (Coll) Plato & Socrates Rebecca LeighCatullus EmpsonHilary MenosPoetry Reading Friends Lt Gen Sir Hew Pike The Falkland Peter OborneThe Future of the Coalition GermanFilm: Der Utergang HistoryProf Angus HawkinsOur Democracy Prof Miles TaylorThe Triumph of Democracy? MusicDavid CairnsBerlioz Oriental Iain Buchanan OW From Winchester to North Korea Guy Clutterbuck Emeralds, Taliban & the Asian Gem Trade RamseyAdrian HornsbyMoney, Value & Something Other Michelle BaddeleyGames & Economic Behaviour Science Prof Steven Simon Knots, World-lines etc Christopher Spencer MDObstetrics & Gynaecology Mike KlugstonGreat Ideas in Chemistry Prof Adrian SuttonThe Metallic State Spirit Lamp Hanna Jameson Something You Are Calum KerrFlash Fiction Theol & Phil Prof Keith Fox Has Biology Buried God? Salvete Alfred Edgar William Artley - Classics Cecilia Diana Davis-Hayes - Physical Education Richard Edward Joseph Foster - History Andrew Craig Shedden - Registrar Richard Stephen Stillman - English Rebecca Jane Topley - Biology Maria Zampeta - Mathematics The Wykehamist - REGISTER 39