S T U D E N T P E R S P E C T I V ES The Year St Catherine’s College Oxford 2017–18 2016 S T C AT H E R I N E ’ S C O L L E G E / Master and Fellows 2018 MASTER Professor Roger W Ainsworth, MA, DPhil, FRAeS, FLSW FELLOWS Fram E Dinshaw, MA, DPhil Oxf Official Fellow Finance Bursar Peter D Battle, MA, DPhil Oxf Tutor in Inorganic Chemistry Professor of Chemistry (Leave M18-T19) A Gervase Rosser, MA Courtauld, MA Oxf, PhD Lond Tutor in History of Art Professor of the History of Art Librarian John S Foord, MA, PhD Camb, MA Oxf Tutor in Physical Chemistry Professor of Chemistry Robert A Leese, MA Oxf, PhD Durh Fellow by Special Election in Mathematics Director of the Smith Institute Louise L Fawcett, BA UCL, MA, MPhil, DPhil Oxf Tutor in Politics Wilfrid Knapp Fellow Professor of International Relations (Leave M18-T19) Penny A Handford, BSc, PhD S’ton, MA Oxf Tutor in Biochemistry Wolfson Fellow Professor of Biochemistry Vice-Master Timothy Cook, MA, DPhil Oxf Fellow by Special Election Richard I Todd, MA Camb, MA, DPhil Oxf Tutor in Materials Sciences Goldsmiths’ Fellow Professor of Materials Marc Lackenby, MA Oxf, PhD Camb Tutor in Pure Mathematics Leathersellers’ Fellow Professor of Mathematics Marc E Mulholland, BA, MA, PhD Belf, MA Oxf Tutor in History Wolfson Fellow Professor of Modern History Senior Tutor Cressida E Chappell, BA, MA Hull, MA Oxf Fellow by Special Election Academic Registrar Secretary to the Governing Body David R H Gillespie, MA, DPhil Oxf Tutor in Engineering Science Rolls-Royce Fellow Associate Professor in Engineering Science Peter P Edwards, BSc, PhD Salf, MA Oxf, FRS Professor of Inorganic Chemistry W I F (Bill) David, MA, DPhil Oxf, FRS Fellow by Special Election in Physics Richard M Bailey, BSc Leics, MA Oxf, MSc, PhD RHUL Tutor in Geography Associate Professor in Geochronology Dean Gaia Scerif, BSc St And, PhD UCL Tutor in Psychology Professor of Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience Adrian L Smith, BSc Keele, MSc Wales, MA Oxf, PhD Nott Tutor in Zoology Associate Professor in Infectious Diseases Andreas Muench, MA Oxf, Dr phil, Dipl TU Munich Tutor in Mathematics Associate Professor in Applied Mathematics Udo C T Oppermann, BSc, MSc, PhD Philipps Marburg Professor of Musculoskeletal Sciences Karl Sternberg, MA Oxf Fellow by Special Election Alain Goriely, Lic, PhD Brussels, MA Oxf Professor of Mathematical Modelling Naomi Freud, MA, MSc Oxf Fellow by Special Election Director of Studies for Visiting Students Gavin Lowe, MA, MSc, DPhil Oxf Tutor in Computer Science Professor of Computer Science President of the Senior Common Room (Leave T19) Patrick S Grant, BEng Nott, MA, DPhil Oxf, FREng Vesuvius Professor of Materials Justine N Pila, BA, LLB, PhD Melb, MA Oxf Tutor in Law Christoph Reisinger, MA Oxf, Dr phil Heidelberg, Dipl Linz Tutor in Mathematics Professor of Applied Mathematics Richard M Berry, MA, DPhil Oxf Tutor in Physics Professor of Biological Physics Bart B van Es, BA, MPhil, PhD Camb Tutor in English Sullivan Fellow Sullivan Clarendon Professor of English Literature Kirsten E Shepherd-Barr, Grunnfag Oslo, BA Yale, MA, DPhil Oxf Tutor in English Professor of English and Theatre Studies Tommaso Pizzari, BSc Aberd, MA Oxf, PhD Shef Tutor in Zoology Professor of Evolutionary Biology Angela B Brueggemann, BSc St Olaf, MSc Iowa, DPhil Oxf Fellow by Special Election in Biological Sciences Associate Professor Pekka Hämäläinen, MA, PhD Helsinki, MA Oxf Rhodes Professor of American History Byron W Byrne, BCom, BEng Western Australia, MA, DPhil Oxf Fellow by Special Election in Engineering Science Ørsted/Royal Academy of Engineering Research Professor in Advanced Geotechnical Design Professor of Engineering Science James E Thomson, MChem, DPhil Oxf Fellow by Special Election in Chemistry Tutor for Admissions Benjamin A F Bollig, BA Nott, MA, PhD KCL, MA Oxf Tutor in Spanish Professor of Spanish American Literature Andrew J Bunker, MA, DPhil Oxf Tutor in Physics Professor of Astrophysics Eleanor P J Stride, BEng, PhD UCL, MA Oxf, FREng Fellow by Special Election in Engineering Science Professor of Biomaterials (Leave M18-T19) Ashok I Handa, MB BS Imp, MA Oxf, FRCS Fellow by Special Election in Medicine Associate Professor in Surgery Tutor for Graduates James L Bennett, BA R’dg, MA Oxf Fellow by Special Election Home Bursar David J Womersley, MA, PhD Camb, MA, DPhil, DLitt Oxf, FBA Warton Professor of English Literature Duncan A Robertson, BSc Imp, MA, DPhil Oxf Fellow by Special Election in Management Peter T Ireland, MA, DPhil Oxf Donald Schultz Professor of Turbomachinery Saira Uppal, BA Durh Fellow by Special Election Director of Development K W M (Bill) Fulford, MB BChir Camb, MA, DPhil Oxf, PhD Lond, FRCP, FRCPsych Fellow by Special Election Heidi de Wet, BSc NorthWest, DPhil Cape Town Tutor in Pre-clinical Medicine Associate Professor in Physiology Philipp E Koralus, BA Pomona, MA Oxf, PhD Princeton Tutor in Philosophy Fulford Fellow in Philosophy of Mind & Cognitive Science Fulford Clarendon Associate Professor in Philosophy of Mind (Leave M18-T19) Andrew J Dickinson, BCL, MA Oxf Tutor in Law Professor of Law Ian P J Shipsey, BSc QMUL, MA Oxf, PhD Edin Henry Moseley Centenary Professor of Experimental Physics Philip H S Torr, BSc S’ton, DPhil Oxf Fellow by Special Election in Engineering Science Professor of Engineering Science Fiona R McConnell, BA Camb, MA, PhD QMUL Tutor in Geography Associate Professor in Human Geography Laura Tunbridge, BA Oxf, MA Nott, PhD Princeton Tutor in Music Henfrey Fellow Professor of Music C O N T E N T S Contents Master’s Report The Cameron Mackintosh Visiting Professorship Senior Tutor’s Report Tutor for Admissions’ Report Tutor for Graduates’ Report Visiting Students Report From the Library From the Archive The Development Office Review Postcards to the Master JCR Report MCR Report Sports and Societies Review Finals Results & Prizes 2018 10 12 14 15 16 17 18 20 22 24 26 28 Student Perspectives CatzExchange 2018 Matteo Broketa (2016, Biomedical Sciences) Gwendolen von Einsiedel (2017, Music) Michaela Brady (2017, Social Science of the Internet) 34 36 40 42 Alumni News Beren Money (1995, English) Guy Bell (1997, Geography) Asheem Singh (2000, Law) Kashish Saluja (2015, Philosophy) Alumni News in Brief College Events 2019 The College Time Capsule Prize Crossword 44 46 50 52 54 54 55 56 Catz Fellows Laura Tunbridge Bart Van Es Heidi de Wet The Coincidence of Novembers 58 60 62 64 Gazette Obituaries 2018 Admissions 2017 66 80 © Guy Bell College Life S T C AT H E R I N E ’ S C O L L E G E / CM OE LS LSEAGGE E SL I F E Master’s Report A former Senior Tutor likened my SGM reports to the Pathé News Reels of the 1950s, in terms of the trumpeting of positive news This year I have good cause to get the trumpet out of its case and blow it harder than ever It has been an outstanding year in every respect Our students and their Tutors have excelled themselves with their performance in Finals this year Our students and their Tutors have excelled themselves with their performance in Finals this year – 64 Firsts The Master, Professor Roger Ainsworth out of the cohort of 130 sitting Finals, including the top First across the University in Law (Alex Benn, North kept his teaching, research and revolutionary interests Halifax Grammar School), in Biology (Oliver Mattinson, alive His new book in respect of the latter is called Marlborough College) and in History of Art (Nathan The Murderer of Warren Street and is sure to be a Geyer, Haberdashers’ Aske’s, Hatcham College) The bestseller I have already sent him a Gift Aid form Lawyers managed the top First too in Law Moderations (Joshua Wang, Raffles Institution, Singapore) whilst The Development Office team led by Saira Uppal has the Biologists took the top Distinction in Prelims had an outstanding year, having raised just over £3M, (Mavis Teo, NUS High School of Maths and Science, with a participation rate of 18%, the fifth highest in Singapore) Oxford In particular, we are extremely grateful for the very significant individual gift this year from Simon The Academic Office and our Tutors have much to Clark (1966, Mod Langs and now Honorary Fellow) be proud of in helping our students to realise their potential, but Marc Mulholland deserves very special It’s been a great year too in terms of recognition of the mention in terms of College citizenship He has served achievements of our Fellows: as Dean, now as Senior Tutor, and throughout has / A M AMS ET SE SR A’ SG E R EF PR OO RM T T H E M A S T E R S T U D E N T Lord Bragg of Wigton (Domus Fellow) was made receives for establishing a record of exemplary service Companion of Honour in the 2018 Queen’s Birthday whilst acting in a civilian capacity in a senior federal Honours, recognising his long-standing services to government position I believe also that Marshall is the Broadcasting and the Arts Melvyn has been a loyal only Fellow here to have had an asteroid named after supporter of the College in spite of his very busy life him, 15499 CLOYD, discovered in 1999 You may like to Laura Tunbridge (Tutorial Fellow in Music) was an know that it orbits the Sun with a period of 1,902 days invited guest on Melvyn’s Radio programme In Our Time to talk about the works of Beethoven, and Professor Eleanor Stride (Fellow in Engineering separately Kirsten Shepherd-Barr (Tutorial Fellow in Science) has been elected to a Fellowship of the Royal English) joined a panel of three to talk about Ibsen Just Academy of Engineering, winning recognition for before the programme went live on air, Melvyn said to outstanding engineering accomplishment Her research Kirsten, “You know I’m a Fellow of St Catherine’s too, using nanobubbles to deliver drugs to cancer tumours don’t you?”, at which point the third member of the continues with great intensity One of her current panel, Norwegian Tore Rem chimed in that he too was a strands of work is at the new national Rosalind Franklin former Fellow of Catz! Institute based at Harwell, dedicated to bringing about transformative changes in Life Science through The internationally acclaimed pioneering work of our interdisciplinary R&D She is part of the team working Honorary Fellow, Nick Stern, Lord Stern of Brentford, on what will be the first camera in the world able to President of the British Academy from 2013 until July capture up to 100 million individual frames per second 2017, was recognised by the award of an Honorary at 1-megapixel resolution operating across a wide Degree, the DLitt, at the University’s Encaenia this year, optical spectrum from ultraviolet to infrared The camera always a most glittering occasion will help her to understand the biophysical mechanisms behind drug delivery – critical to perfecting ultrasound Professor Masaki Orita (Honorary Fellow and Alumnus) targeted drug delivery has been awarded the Order of the Sacred Treasure, Gold and Silver Star by HM the Emperor of Japan, an Dr Jessica Goodman (Fellow and Tutor in French) was honour awarded to those who have made distinguished recently awarded a Rising Star Engagement research achievements in civil or military service award by the British Academy for the project ‘Modern Languages in Crisis: Creating a Support Network for Marshall Cloyd (Domus Fellow) has been honoured, Languages Outreach in the UK’ The idea behind her receiving the Admiral of the Navy George Dewey Award project is to train Early Career Researchers to think from the Naval Order of the United States This he of using their research to engage school students S T C AT H E R I N E ’ S PC EO RL SL PE EG CE T IL VI FE SE Just before the programme went live on air, Melvyn said to Kirsten, “You know I’m a Fellow of St Catherine’s too, don’t you?”, at which point the third member of the panel, Norwegian Tore Rem chimed in that he too was a former Fellow of Catz! C O L L E G E / C O L L E G E L I F E Before I speak more generally about our other Outreach work, I must first of all thank Byron Byrne, our demitting Tutor for Admissions for his exemplary and skilful efforts over 10 years in our Admissions Office / M A S T E R ’ S Subsequently hundreds of pupils across the country will Jim Thomson (Fellow by Special Election in Chemistry) be exposed to events that should inspire them to see becomes our new Tutor for Admissions, and has Modern Languages study in a new light, and hopefully assumed the mantle with great gusto You will know encourage them to study it at both school level that Outreach is a set agenda item for Oxford and and – hopefully – beyond therefore for St Catherine’s We have of course been working in this area since the foundation of Before I speak more generally about our other Outreach the Delegacy for Unattached Students, 150 years work, I must first of all thank Byron Byrne, our demitting ago The team led by Jim together with Charlotte Tutor for Admissions for his exemplary and skilful efforts Sansome, and supported by our new Outreach over 10 years in our Admissions Office He has resigned Officer Anna McMurtie, has welcomed over 1,200 from his Tutorial Fellowship, to become the Ørsted / Royal prospective applicants to the College, from more than Academy of Engineering Research Chair in Advanced 85 different school groups For well over a century, Geotechnical Design He has secured £5M of funding the Leathersellers’ Livery Company has been a great from the Danish firm Ørsted, to work on new design supporter of St Catherine’s They have good links with methods for offshore wind turbine foundations We are schools in South London and because of this we now very pleased to retain him as a Fellow by Special Election have a Leathersellers’ Day here, the aim of which is R E P O R T C O L L E G E to inspire pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds who Catz student Sam Edgerley (2017, Modern have outstanding academic potential to apply to highly Languages) represented the University in the Rugby selective universities like Oxford 50 came this year, Varsity Match against Cambridge in December, while from four schools Morgan McGovern (2017, Management Studies) rowed in the Oxford vs Cambridge Boat Race this year, Our students are very active too in this area, as one might described as the power in the centre of the boat – hope and expect, and a good number act as volunteer where Catz likes to be tutors to local schools through Schools Plus at the Oxford Hub, through Students4Students going to local primary Oxford beat Cambridge in both the Men’s and Women’s schools to tutor English and Maths, and through Jacari, Varsity Triathlon this year, with Sophia Saller (2011, providing one hour a week of free home tutoring to Mathematics) taking 1st place in the women’s children who speak English as an additional language competition In terms of news of some specific students: Our students won a Platinum award for the Student Switch Off campaign Let’s hope it’s to with Chloe Rooke (2015, Music) was ‘highly commended’ electricity in the ‘Young Star’ category of the Women of the Future Awards in November last year, and went on to Our alumni are not to be outdone by the rest of the take part in a prestigious conducting course with the College in registering noteworthy achievements Two BBC National Orchestra of Wales She was the only were honoured in the 2018 New Year’s Honours list: woman on the course and the only undergraduate – the others were postgrads She is certainly one to watch Joanna Coleman (1986, Engineering), was awarded an OBE for services to the Energy Sector Currently Alissa Hummer (2015, Biochemistry) and Zoe the Director of Strategy Development for the Energy Catchpole (2015, Biochemistry) won gold medals at Technologies Institute, her work there is focused on the International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) creating strong partnerships and modelling systems competition The iGEM competition attracts 5,600 which should have a significant impact on the participants across 42 countries advancement of low carbon technology for the energy L I F E Chloe Rooke (2015, Music) was ‘highly commended’ in the ‘Young Star’ category of the Women of the Future Awards in November last year, and went on to take part in a prestigious conducting course sector In March, Sophie Taylor (2013, Medical Sciences) was elected President of Vincent’s Club – the first female Professor Mark Miodownik (1988, Metallurgy) was president since the club was established in 1863 awarded an MBE for his services to Science, Engineering S T C AT H E R I N E ’ S C O L L E G E / C O L L E G E L I F E and Broadcasting Recently, in a series of programmes which aims to establish the UK as a leader in applying on BBC Radio 4, he explored our love-hate relationship advanced robotics to nuclear problems with plastic, why we have ended up with oceans of waste blighting the environment and what science and Diplomacy and politics seems to be a career theme for society can about it our alumni this year: The Queen’s Birthday Honours brought further esteem Andrew Pearce OBE (1979, Chemistry) was recently to the College: appointed Governor of Montserrat, his latest posting in his 30 years of service for the UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office Professor Sarah Harper (1979, Anthropology & Geography) was made a CBE for services to the science of Demography She is this University’s first Professor Trevor Traina (1990, Visiting Student) has followed in of Gerontology, and has served on the Prime Minister’s his grandfather’s footsteps by becoming US Ambassador Council for Science and Technology since 2014, a body which advises the PM on the scientific evidence for strategic policies and frameworks Jeanette Winterson (1978, English) was made a CBE for services to Literature In terms of other notable achievements amongst our alumni, David Waksman QC (1979, Law) has been appointed a Justice of the High Court, with effect from October 2018 He has played a leading role in the training of judges at all levels David has been involved in the recent development of the Business and Property Court Rustam Stolkin (1993, Engineering), Chair in Robotics at the University of Birmingham, is the Director of the new National Centre for Nuclear Robotics He recently won £42 million funding to found the centre, / M A S T E R ’ S R E P O R T I want to pay a special tribute to Thelma Holt CBE (Emeritus Fellow), our Cameron Mackintosh Professor of 1998, who has never stopped helping Oxford students since to Austria And Simon Bridges (2004, Law) has been elected Leader of New Zealand’s opposition party, the National Party I want to pay a special tribute to Thelma Holt CBE (Emeritus Fellow), our Cameron Mackintosh Professor of 1998, who has never stopped helping Oxford students since In the forthcoming year she will be winding down the formal bit of her role here, but she will continue giving students the benefit of her expertise on an ad-hoc basis At the National Theatre with Peter Hall in 1987, she won the Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Theatre for her international work She hasn’t paused for breath since Her theatrical successes as producer after leaving the National Theatre include many outstanding Shakespeare productions: The Merchant of Venice with Dustin Hoffman, Hamlet with Alan Rickman in the leading role, C O L L E G E and Much Ado about Nothing with Janet McTeer and Mark Rylance Of all her awards, Thelma is most proud of the Order of the Rising Sun from the Emperor of Japan ‘for her services to cultural exchange between the UK and Japan, particularly the work of the director Yukio Ninagawa’ We are so fortunate that she has never left us! L I F E So many well-motivated young people want to come here that we have had to expand the numbers in College The 19 students in 1868 had grown to 600 in 2001, and to over 1,000 today – now the largest college by over 200 The new building work in College is well underway So many well-motivated young people want to come here College still held covenants over the land we purchased that we have had to expand the numbers in College from them many years ago We are very grateful to The 19 students in 1868 had grown to 600 in 2001, James Bennett, our Home Bursar, in the very detailed and to over 1,000 today – now the largest college by and extensive work he has to carry out in interfacing over 200 Ashok Handa, our Tutor for Graduates, and with the building project He carries a very heavy his supporting team have played a large part in the load, much of it unseen by colleagues In terms of the growth over the last decade or so These numbers have building project, financing too of course could not be provided us with the incentive to build what will possibly taken for granted, but the skills of Fram Dinshaw, be the last range of buildings on our site here – a our Finance Bursar, careful custodian of our financial further 78 graduate en-suite rooms in three staircases strength, enable us to take on this project unaffected and a new Graduate Centre incorporating a new MCR by sleepless nights We are deeply grateful for those and further seminar rooms The latter building will be on skills For the record, our initial endowment in 1962 was three floors and circular in form In the last decade and equivalent to £10.8M in today’s money The 2018 value a half, we will have more than doubled the number of of endowment is £85M student bedrooms from the original 305 to 649 Well, there you have it A frenetic year marked by great We are very pleased with the design work carried out, achievements I am so privileged to have had the role of and so far so good with the contractors executing the Master and I thank you for your help and support I will plans The journey to this stage has been a complicated demit from office in December 2019 one – for instance, archaeologists got excited about the possible presence of a Saxon ditch potentially under the I hope you will agree that events of this last year have Graduate Centre, the Environment Agency had to be been appropriate cause for wielding the Pathé News satisfied over the effect on the flood plain, and Merton Trumpet Q S T C AT H E R I N E ’ S C O L L E G E / C O L L E G E L I F E The Cameron Mackintosh Visiting Professorship We are delighted announce Deborah Warner CBE as the next Cameron Mackintosh Visiting Professor of Contemporary Theatre for 2019 In 1990, Honorary Fellow Sir Cameron Theatre Company, which took a play to the Mackintosh established a Visiting Edinburgh Fringe Festival each year Since Professorship at the University, funded then, the majority of Deborah’s work has through a grant from the Cameron Mackintosh focused on major classics of spoken drama Foundation The Visiting Professorship, based and opera at St Catherine’s College, aims to promote interest in, and the study and practice of, In 1987 Deborah joined the Royal contemporary theatre at Oxford Shakespeare Company as Resident Director, and from 1989-1997, Deborah was an Deborah Warner © RUPCHRI, Wikimedia Commons The Visiting Professorship has previously Associate Director at the National Theatre been held by actors, writers, directors, and Over her career, Deborah has collaborated Deborah has also worked extensively in the producers including Arthur Miller, Stephen with actor Fiona Shaw on plays including field of opera and classical music Examples of Fry, Thelma Holt, Stephen Sondheim, Phyllida Electra (1989); King Lear (1990); Hedda her work as a Director include Britten’s The Turn Lloyd, Sir Tim Rice, Sir Ian McKellen, and Gabler (1991); Richard II (1995); and Medea of the Screw for the Royal Opera, which won Claude-Michel Schönberg We are thrilled to (2000-2001) Many of Deborah’s productions the Evening Standard and South Bank Awards, be welcoming Deborah Warner as the 27 have been widely toured, for example her Dido and Aeneas and La Traviata for the Cameron Mackintosh Visiting Professor, due to production of T.S Eliot’s poem The Waste Vienna Festival She has also directed Wozzeck succeed Sir Tom Stoppard in January 2019 Land with Fiona Shaw which visited Brussels, and La Voix humaine for Opera North and both Dublin, Paris, Montreal, Toronto, Brighton, Don Giovanni and Fidelio for Glyndebourne Deborah Warner is a world renowned British Adelaide, Bergen, Perth London, and New Examples of her work for the English National director of theatre and opera Her career York (where it won two New York Drama Opera include Britten’s Death in Venice and started in 1980, when she founded the Kick Desk Awards) Handel’s Messiah th / T H E C A M E R O N M A C K I N TO S H V I S T I N G P R O F ES S O R S H I P G A Z ETT E Colin Gordon – Barry’s path to Australia was Power: from Hobbes to Foucault in 1996 and Barry leaves behind many acquaintances, facilitated by the ‘Forms of Communication’ the edited collection (with Mitchell Dean) on colleagues, and loving friends who will miss group at Griffith University in Brisbane And Governing Australia: Studies in Contemporary his rationality, integrity, support and, above all, this in turn led to his appointment to the Rationalities of Government in 1998 By friendship Barry supervised around 60 doctoral Research School of Social Sciences at the 2011, R.B.J Walker, introducing a special students, and it is noteworthy that many of Australian National University issue of Alternatives on Barry’s work, would them attended his funeral, testifying to a describe him as ‘one of the most significant lasting legacy that was both highly intellectual Many doubted that this move would be a but underappreciated voices shaping social and and very personal He will be remembered as good fit How wrong could they have been? political theory for more than three decades.’ one of the most important intellectuals of his era, widely and highly regarded in the western The research professorship at the Australian National University allowed Barry much more In later years, Barry suffered from a number of academic world as a leading social and political time to pursue his main interests Not that health problems, which became increasingly theorist But perhaps the defining paradox of he ceased to encourage and mentor others, debilitating Firstly, a congenital heart problem Barry was his combination of acute intelligence in which role he gained much respect and was discovered The surgery for this ultimately and gentle nature many lifelong friendships He also met the became the inadvertent cause of a stroke and anthropologist Christine Helliwell and they then a particularly vicious skin cancer launched Kindly provided by family and friends of were to enjoy 29 years together Their house an attack on an already weakened victim Barry Barry Hindess in Reid, with Christine’s extensive garden (and accepted all this with amazing stoicism and, a series of adored cats), became a place of typically, played down his problems to those JONATHAN HORNBUCKLE happiness and hospitality It was also where more distant friends, who couldn’t witness Jonathan Hornbuckle (1962, Metallurgy) he and Christine were to write extensively the reality for themselves Throughout all this, was born in Bedford on 23 April 1943 his together, including on race and time, on his intellectual prowess was undiminished, parents both being schoolteachers Moving imperialism and on ‘the theory of society’ and though his written output gradually to Nottingham (his father’s home town) he diminished, he joined public dialogue with won a city scholarship to Nottingham High In these years, Barry’s output was prolific, with blogs on Australia’s detention of refugees School where he concentrated on science, books and research papers often written in and treatment of Aboriginal and Torres Strait rugby, rowing, art, and train spotting (the collaboration with former students His work Islanders, about political corruption and in school railway society being run by Ken Clarke shifted away from that earlier engagement defence of politics ‘when there is so much the Conservative politician) He came to St with Marxism to a sympathetic and very political work to be done’ In this respect, and Catherine’s to read Metallurgy Jonathan productive dialogue with Foucault This with academic exchanges, he was active right (usually called Jon) became President of the addressed liberal forms of power and the up to his final days The end when it came Oxford University Film Society and was an avid market, resulting in a series of important was sudden and peaceful, with his beloved attender at local Oxford cinemas, his record publications that included Discourses on Christine at his bedside, holding his hand being nine consecutive nights In 1965, while at S T C AT H E R I N E ’ S C O L L E G E / G A Z ETT E Oxford, he married Evelyn Brewster They had Jon’s spare time was spent bird watching world has to offer, and right until the end of his four children, Joanne (born 1966) a cancer Typically in his lunchtime, when working life continued to seek out new birds in far-flung consultant, Martin (1967, who read physics near Rotherham he was the first in the UK to corners of the globe; But also as a man who at St Catz, matriculating in 1987), a merchant record an overwintering Dark-eyed Junco on was still content putting in many less glamorous banker; Sue (1970), a teacher and Daniel Thrybergh Banks Many remember him for his hours in contributing to the ornithological (1972) a cabinet maker Evelyn went on to passionate dedication to habitat conservation, knowledge of his local area A true enthusiast’s become a well-respected family dentist and his insistence that observations should be enthusiast orthodontist promptly and accurately recorded and his Jon’s first job was with Samuel Fox in huge generosity in sharing his knowledge and FRANCIS HUXLEY giving advice to other birders In the early 1950s the anthropologist Stocksbridge, a Sheffield suburb He quickly became an expert on the manufacture of In 1993, at the age of 50, Jon took early Francis Huxley, special steel and specifically razor steel This retirement, and then concentrated on world- who has died aged entailed many visits to one of their main wide travel, bird spotting and expanding his 93, undertook customers Gillette, in Boston, USA There were World List of observed birds He ended with pioneering fieldwork usually two problems Either the steel was of 9600, being for a time the top World Lister among the Urubu such fine quality that the razor blades would More than 270 foreign trips (all taken on a people of the not blunt and lasted too long; or there was shoestring budget) put too great a strain on Amazon basin something wrong with the steel and the blade his marriage and Jon and Evelyn separated The resulting book, Affable Savages (1956), blunted too quickly In 1971 he won a United in 2005 Six years later, in 2011 he married adopted a new, ‘reflexive’ approach to Steel Company travel award to study the Syndy, forty years his junior, who was born in the study of culture in which the author’s special steel industry in Japan and India This Manila, Philippines encounters with the ‘other’ are reflected as much in personal reactions as in objective opportunity encouraged his love of travel, and also provided opportunities for his enthusiasm In July 2017 Jon and Syndy were involved in for ornithology a serious car crash whilst travelling from Nice descriptions airport Jon sustained severe brain injuries Francis was a pioneer of this form of In Jon’s own words he became a victim of which led to a steady deterioration in his anthropological writing – a style that much an obsession for ‘birding’ This included health He died on 19th February, 2018 in suited his lifelong interest in shamanism and being a founder member of the Sheffield Sheffield’s Northern General Hospital, leaving the altered states of consciousness often Bird Study Group, and the author with behind his first and second wife, four children experienced by religious healers While David Herringshaw of the authoritative and eight grandchildren He will be remembered this novelesque way of writing was largely Birds of the Sheffield Area: including the as a man who had seen a staggeringly high shunned by his contemporaries, eventually it north-east Peak District (1985) Most of percentage of the ornithological wonders the became commonplace / O B I T U A R I ES G A Z ETT E In the meantime, apart from a period as a In 1972 Francis was a member of a four- In 1958, while undertaking an anthropological lecturer and research fellow at St Catherine’s person mission, sponsored by the Aborigines’ study of Weyburn hospital, Saskatchewan, College, Oxford (1962-68), Francis followed Protection Society and aided by the Brazilian Francis participated in Humphrey Osmond’s his own path outside the academic government, to investigate the plight of research on the therapeutic value of LSD for mainstream In The Invisibles: Voodoo Gods native South American tribes Their report, alcohol addiction Indeed, Francis was the in Haiti (1969), he described vividly his Tribes of the Amazon Basin in Brazil (1973), family’s true pioneer of the psyche, counting encounter with possession, magic and psychic identified groups threatened by Brazilian the radical psychoanalyst RD Laing amongst healing; and in The Way of the Sacred economic expansion and described the his closest friends As director of studies at (1974) he expanded this personal perspective sad impact on their religious, spiritual and Laing’s London-based Philadelphia Association on healing to include the study of myths, psychological health and wellbeing (1972-82), Francis acted as teacher, supervisor, therapist, and writer In 1984 he returned religious rites and sacred symbolism While Francis’s interests were diverse – The Raven Born in Oxford, Francis was the son of Julian to Oxford to give a well-received lecture on and the Writing Desk (1976) was a study of Huxley, the noted biologist and first director Psychoanalysis and Anthropology the riddles of Lewis Carroll – his fascination general of Unesco, and his Swiss wife, with sacred healing remained constant With Juliette (née Baillot), a writer and sculptor He retired to New Mexico in 1990, and to his fellow anthropologist, Jeremy Narby, he He joined a remarkable dynasty that included California in 2006 The Mutual Self, his last co-edited Shamans Through Time (2001), a Julian’s brother, the author Aldous Huxley, unfinished book, is a musing on the fact that: collection of five centuries of writing on the and half-brother, the physiologist and Nobel ‘We swim in a sea of mutualities whether we subject laureate Andrew Huxley Francis was also the like it or not, and mutuality changes us as we great-grandson of Charles Darwin’s friend change each other.’ Francis was also an activist for the indigenous Thomas Henry Huxley, and as a child knew peoples he studied and loved A Sunday such luminaries as Bertrand Russell and TE Though his third marriage, to Adele Getty, Times article by Norman Lewis in 1969 had Lawrence ended in divorce – as did his first two – she looked after him throughout his final decade pointed to the killing of the native peoples of the Amazon basin and the taking of their Educated at Gordonstoun, the school in Above all, Francis will be remembered for his land, prompting Francis, along with several Moray, Scotland founded in 1934 by the insatiable desire to know things and for his other anthropologists and the explorer educationist Kurt Hahn after he left Germany, wholesome and robust laugh Robin Hanbury-Tenison, to found Survival Francis joined the Royal Navy in 1943 as International, an NGO devoted to protecting assistant navigating officer on HMS Ramilles Francis Huxley, anthropologist and author, the rights of indigenous peoples worldwide In 1946 he went to Balliol College, Oxford, born 28 August 1923; died 29 October 2016 Over the years Survival International has where he gained a degree in zoology, working provided a platform for exposing genocide, under Peter Medawar, who regretted that First appeared in The Guardian, December violence, slavery and exploitation Francis did not continue in that field 20, 2017 Reproduced with kind permission S T C AT H E R I N E ’ S C O L L E G E / G A Z ETT E CEDRIC GRAHAM KAYE later Graham moved back to the Midlands to time, passed away on 23 June 2017 aged Cedric Graham Kaye died in Bristol on 21 become Deputy Head at Polesworth School only 58 He passed away due to a sudden March 2018 aged 90 He leaves a wife of 65 In 1971 Graham finally achieved his ambition heart attack in Bangkok, Thailand, where he years, Jean, and two children, John and Fiona to become a Headmaster taking charge at was attending an international conference Rodway School, Mangotsfield, Bristol This at the United Nations Economic and Social Born in Elland, West Yorkshire on May later amalgamated with Chase Boys’ School in Commission for Asia and the Pacific His 1927, son of Wilfred and Elizabeth, he was 1982 to become Mangotsfield School passing came as a shock to everyone who knew him, most of all his family educated at Heath Grammar school Elland Aged 18 he joined the RAF for his National Graham, like his father, had a strong interest Service and was stationed in Italy and Egypt in Scouting While at Tudor Grange he started Born in Kandy, Sri Lanka, Saman grew up in After completing three years National Service a Scout Group which quickly grew to over 100 Colombo under the influence of his father, Graham went to St Catherine’s College to scouts Following his move to Yorkshire he late Dr Jayantha Kelegama (St Catz, 1957, read History in 1948 While at St Catherine’s, became County Secretary for West Yorkshire DPhil Economics), who was an eminent Sri Graham (nicknamed Danny during his time at in 1963 Lankan academic and civil servant Saman received his Master’s in Mathematics with college) joined the rowing club As a cox he had a number of successes for the college When his children started horse-riding in First Class Honours from the Indian Institute These include being cox of the winning 1968 Graham decided to take up the sport of Technology (IIT) Kanpur, India in 1983 boat at the junior Eights event at Marlow and found it was a good way to relax Thereafter, Saman entered St Catherine’s Regatta in 1949 and cox of the College eight After he retired he took people out for College, Oxford where he received a Master’s entered for the Thames Cup at Henley in rides in Dyrham Park and was still riding in Development Economics (1986) and a 1952 The Boat Club remained a link to the into his eighties Graham also worked as D.Phil in Economics (1990) He did his College throughout Graham’s life He regularly an information volunteer at the National doctoral thesis on trade liberalisation reforms attended dinners at the College, the last in Arboretum, Westonbirt in Sri Lanka, under the supervision of two eminent Oxford economists, Sudhir Anand 2017 It was during his time as a student in DR SAMAN and David Bevan He also held the post of KELEGAMA President at the Oxford Majlis Society in After leaving Oxford in 1952 Graham began April 1959 – 23 1985/86 a career in teaching at Chard School in June 2017 Oxford that Graham met his future wife Jean Saman returned to Sri Lanka from Oxford Somerset, moving on to Tudor Grange, Solihull in 1956 Graham was ambitious and Saman Kelegama, in 1990 and joined the Institute of Policy in 1962 he moved his family back to his regarded as one of Studies (IPS), a semi-government socio- native Yorkshire when he became Head of Sri Lanka’s foremost economic think tank, as a Research Fellow History at West Leeds School Four years economists of his In 1995, Saman became the organisation’s / O B I T U A R I ES G A Z ETT E Executive Director, a post he held till his Lanka’s chief trade negotiator and played a scholarship grant in his honour, and launched untimely demise He spearheaded IPS’s lead role in negotiating bilateral free trade an annual memorial lecture in his name, expansion, and under his leadership, IPS agreements with China, Singapore, and while the PIM has launched an award in transformed from a little known economic India He was also a prominent private sector his name and published a commemorative think tank to Sri Lanka’s leading institution personality and served on the boards of many book in his honour The government of India for economic policy research He built a blue chip companies, including as Chairman has recognised him as one its distinguished sizeable endowment fund to create financial of Singer PLC Saman was a public intellectual foreign alumni autonomy, brought together an able team of who gave his enormous talents and energy to researchers, and relocated the IPS to a newly serve with devotion the economic profession Beyond all of this, Saman was a family man constructed building with modern research in Sri Lanka and in the South Asian region He He was a keen traveller and loved travelling and conference facilities IPS stands today as was the President of the Sri Lanka Economics to places around the world with his family a centre of research excellence in Sri Lanka, Association from 1999-2003 and founded Saman is survived by his wife Eranthika, their filling the needs of various government the South Asia Economic Summit in 2008, daughter Jayathri and son Chandana He is bodies, international developmental which carries on to date He served as the missed deeply by all those who knew him and organizations, and the general public editor of numerous journals and co-founded loved him Importantly, Saman protected and preserved the South Asia Economic Journal He was a the independence and integrity of IPS as a member of many academic bodies, including Kindly provided by the family of Dr Saman non-partisan research organisation, free of the Postgraduate Institute of Management Kelegama political bias, despite its semi-governmental (PIM) of Sri Lanka, and the South Asia Centre status, which is no mean feat in Sri Lanka for Policy Studies BRUCE MITCHELL continue to be the lodestar for evidence- Saman liked people and ideas, and he did so 1954), 82, died based economic policy in Sri Lanka, and his without thoughts of private aggrandisement November 2017 after contribution to fostering Sri Lanka’s next or personal vanity Colleagues who knew a long illness His generation of economists Unsurprisingly, Sri Saman for over 20 years remembered him as funeral was held at Lanka’s research and private sector landscape ‘the most modest of men’ whose ‘humility Gloucester Cathedral is dotted with a new generation of economists was only surpassed by his humanity’ He on 21 November who have been nurtured by him was loved and admired by his friends and 2017 Bruce Mitchell (m His legacy is a solid institution that will colleagues, and the numerous articles of Saman served successive Sri Lankan appreciation and expressions of sympathy Bruce was born on 28 January 1935 in governments on a number of high-profile following his demise are a testament to this Cowley, Oxford, but moved to Gloucestershire government boards and committees From Since his passing, the IPS has named its in 1939 He was a Chorister at Gloucester 2015 till his untimely demise, Saman was Sri auditorium after him, established a research Cathedral for seven years and then, after S T C AT H E R I N E ’ S C O L L E G E /7 G A Z ETT E three years at the Crypt Grammar School, up the St Catherine’s Rowing Society: raising JOANNA OXENBOULD Gloucester, became an undergraduate at St money for the new boathouse, organising Jo Oxenbould died on 15 May 2018, aged 59, Catherine’s Society, Oxford to read Modern sponsorship and serving as Chairman and later in London History He threw himself into University President, whilst, in the pre-internet days, also life relishing the egalitarian mix of newly dealing with essential practical matters such as Jo was well known to many in the British and demobbed Service men, ex-National Service the printing, folding and mailing of hundreds European Labour movement Her old friend men, grammar and public school boys and of copies of newsletters to members, twice a and colleague, the late great Barbara Castle sadly, very few women He was enthusiastic term (with no little help from his wife, Julia!) acknowledged Jo’s contribution to her 1993 about student life, making the most of every His two sons, Andrew (m 1985) and John autobiography, “Fighting All The Way”, in opportunity He played hockey but his main (m 1989) inherited his interest, both rowing the preface She describes Jo as a ‘source of recreation was rowing, an interest he retained for St Catherine’s strength’, praising Jo’s ‘[exceptional] political knowledge and flair’ for research for the rest of his life He stroked the 1st VIII and also founded the Beer and Blade Club Throughout his life Bruce took an interest in fundraising for various charities He was Jo talked often of her years in the late After Oxford, Bruce first went into school President of CLIC, raising money to buy and 1970s at St Catherine’s, and what a great teaching, then youth training where he ran refurbish houses near to hospitals where time she had there She was educated at Endeavour courses for the National Association families could stay close to their sick children, a state comprehensive and was proud of of Youth Clubs Following this he moved into he raised money to re-roof Tewkesbury getting to Oxford, from where she graduated further education, eventually running a very Abbey and also to put defibrillators in with First Class Honours Her friends and large department at Gloucestershire College Gloucestershire ambulances, he founded a contemporaries at St Catz included the of Arts and Technology, where he inspired Twinning Association between Tewkesbury and novelist, Jeanette Winterson, who Jo said once generations of students to achieve their Miesbach in Bavaria and he initiated the annual directed her in what sounded like a joyous potential at A Level Tewkesbury Half Marathon production of the musical, ‘Cabaret’ Bruce became interested in local government Bruce led a very full life, giving his time Jo was originally from Cambridgeshire Her and served on Parish, Borough and County unstintingly to his many and varied interests dad was a national official of the Transport Councils in Gloucestershire for nearly thirty but even so he remained a devoted husband and General Workers’ Union and Jo was years, becoming Mayor of Tewkesbury in 1982 and family man His wife of 54 years, his herself also later to work for the TGWU At home he project managed the building children, grandchildren, colleagues and many and then its successor, Unite She had two of two family homes He became a licensed friends will miss him siblings, Sean, and a sister, Karen, who has disabilities Jo spent much time with Karen Reader in the Gloucester Diocese He kept up his interest in rowing by coaching for various Kindly provided by Julia Mitchell, Bruce’s over the years when she could and the Gloucestershire schools In 1984 he helped set wife experiences with social services and the NHS / O B I T U A R I ES G A Z ETT E served only to increase Jo’s sensitivity, sense DR JAMES RUSSELL CONWAY “JIM” PERKIN (1994-99) Chairman of the Western Regional of justice and personal politics 1928-2017 Health Board; he was a member of the James Russell Conway “Jim” Perkin, BA, MA, Valley Hospice Foundation from its inception One of Jo’s early jobs in the 1980s was DPhil, DLitt, DD, of Wolfville, NS, Canada, in 2000 For more than thirty years, Jim a political aide to Tom Pendry MP in died peacefully at Valley Regional Hospital, planned and led services at the Covenanter Westminster She went on to work for several Kentville, on 13 December 2017 Jim was born Church in Grand Pré An established author, years as the lead political adviser and head of in Northamptonshire, England, on 19 August Jim wrote sixteen books and edited four the secretariat to the European Parliamentary 19 1928, son of the late William and Lily others, along with approximately five hundred Labour Party in London, Brussels and Maud (Drage) Perkin At age 17 he joined the chapters, articles, reviews and reports Strasbourg This group of MEPs grew in Royal Air Force and served for three years He chiefly in the fields of theology, history, size and prominence during Jo’s time there studied at Oxford University and Strasbourg language, biography and health In 1992 he Her former colleagues remember her quick University, France, obtaining the BA, MA, and was awarded the Commemorative Medal for wit, fierce intelligence and sharp political DPhil degrees From 1956 to 1962 he was Canada’s 125th anniversary, and in 2013 the judgement, as well as her great glamour, Minister of the Altrincham Baptist Church in Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal Other awards style and charm Jo also worked later in her Cheshire and active in local educational and include an honorary DD from McMaster career both with Barbara Castle and for the athletic circles In 1963 he was appointed University and an honorary DLitt from Acadia European Parliament, taking a leading role on Lecturer at New College, Edinburgh University, He was a lover of music and literature and projects such as women’s equality where he was primarily responsible for a keen vegetable gardener He is survived teaching New Testament Greek In 1965 he by his wife of sixty-four years, Dorothy Jo sought selection unsuccessfully herself as a immigrated with his family to Canada and he Joan Louise (Bentley); sons, Dr Russell (Dr Member of the European and UK Parliaments assumed the position of Associate Professor Deborah Kennedy) Halifax; the Reverend John There is no doubt she would have been a of New Testament Interpretation in McMaster (Dorothy), Sackville, NB; and daughter, Anne talented and passionate MP Labour’s loss Divinity College In 1969 he was appointed Louise (the Reverend Timothy McFarland), She suffered from some ill-health and dark to Acadia University, Wolfville, where he Wolfville, and grandchildren, Wray and Joanna days in her last years, but was always good was successively Head of the Department company when we met up, ready with of Religious Studies, Dean of Arts, Vice- perceptive analysis and insights about the President (Academic) and President and Vice latest political developments She is much Chancellor, retiring in 1993 He was Chairman DAVID GUY STEVENS missed and mourned of the Council of Nova Scotia University David was born at Chelmsford Hall School in Presidents and active in the Association of 1928 and died aged 88 at Chelmsford Lodge, Kindly provided by Ann Oldroyd, Kevin Flack, Commonwealth Universities His community part of the same school, in May 2017 The third, Richard Frost service was mainly in the field of health and youngest, son of Colonel Leonard Stevens administration, including being for five years JP DL and Mrs Nancy Stevens, David was at Kindly provided by the family of James Perkin S T C AT H E R I N E ’ S C O L L E G E / 7 G A Z ETT E Eagle House Prep School during the war when At a moment of financial crisis at the Saffrons, Born in Primley Park, Leeds, he was the Chelmsford Hall was evacuated to Wellington, David stepped in and ensured the survival of youngest of four sons to Joe and Eileen Somerset He later went to Wellington College, the Club Warham Joe was coach of the rugby league team now known as Leeds Rhinos, which Berkshire, before serving in the Royal Sussex Regiment, Cinque Ports Battalion, from 1946 For many, being a Headmaster would be won the Championship in 1961 and 1969, to 1948 He then went to Reading and later sufficient work, but David combined this with and later the general manager of the Leeds Oxford University, where he studied Geography making a great contribution to Eastbourne as Cricket, Football and Athletic Company and gained a Teaching Diploma a public servant He was a Borough Councillor for Meads for 24 years, serving on various His son attended St Paul’s Primary and later St In 1955, David joined the teaching staff at committees and chairing some In spite of his Thomas Aquinas Grammar – and it was there, Chelmsford Hall and became Headmaster in political allegiance, David was very independent at 12, that he was involved in an accident 1965 until his retirement in 1992 The school and liked to make his own decisions He was with a school bus which almost led to the he inherited had very high standards and Deputy Mayor twice and Mayor in 2001–2 He loss of a leg The limb was badly scarred and achieved excellent results Towards the end of was honoured by the Town by being appointed misshapen, and he was told he might not the 1970s, David was one of the early pioneers an Honorary Alderman in 2012 walk again Language Development Centre, specialising in David was a very private person, but most But the scare served only as an incentive to dyslexia important to him of all were Jane, who he drive him on of Special Needs in Education and opened a married in 1972, and their son Guy, born David was a brilliant amateur sportsman in his in 1975 He loved his dogs, walking on the He went up to Oxford, reading philosophy, younger days: an outstanding boxer at school, Downs, his large garden, classical music and his politics and economics at St Catherine’s he later represented St Catherine’s College holidays in Scotland College, before embarking on a 35-year career in merchant banking with Schroder’s, at hockey, soccer, cricket, squash, rugby and tennis He played cricket and hockey for MARK WARHAM Barclays and Rothschild’s, including a spell Eastbourne from 1948 until the 1960s Mark Warham, who as head of the Takeover Panel in the City of died at 56 following a London Like his father he was a lifelong supporter of cancer diagnosis, was the Saffrons Sports Club and became a life a City high-flyer and In 2000, he joined Morgan Stanley, rising member in 1942 He went on to serve on also a mountaineer to become head of its UK mergers and the committee, twice as Chairman, and was who conquered acquisitions practice and, later, chairman President from 19888 until he died He did the highest peaks of UK Investment Banking At Barclays he not just attend meetings, he took an active in Europe and, headed the Europe, Middle-East and Africa interest and it became a huge part of his life eventually, Everest mergers business and at Rothschilds from / O B I T U A R I ES G A Z ETT E 2014 he was an Executive Vice-Chairman and He had also become an enthusiastic mountain his way back down On the second go, he Global Partner climber, under the tutelage of his elder made it to the top brothers, Peter and Paul, initially on the During his time at Morgan Stanley he was relatively gentle slopes of Almscliffe Crag, The metaphor of his life as a climber and a seconded for two years to be director general near Harrogate banker was, said Mr Swannell, obvious ‘He was the only banker I know to have reached of the Takeover Panel, regulating all public merger activity in the UK It was during his It wasn’t long before he was traversing the summit of Everest It is no surprise he time there that the panel was given statutory Europe, North and South America, conquering reached the pinnacle in banking, too The powers Mount McKinley (Denali) and Aconcagua, same values applied in both aspects of his and Robert Swannell, his former boss at life,’ he said But his love of sport was never far from the Schroders, recalled him requesting three Additionally, a keen ornithologist and wildlife surface At St Catherine’s he had played in months’ leave for an attempt on Everest photographer, he is survived by his wife Olivia and daughters Francesca, Eleanor and Anna the first Oxford vs Cambridge rugby league fixture at Craven Cottage, London, for which He tried it twice On the first attempt, he was he was awarded a half-blue within reach of the summit when he was hit First appeared in the Yorkshire Post, 19 May, by pulmonary edema, a condition caused by 2018 Reproduced with kind permission excess fluid in the lings, and he had to make NOTIFICATIONS Martin W L Hughes (1973, Modern History) Dr Gene E Sharp (1961, Social Studies) Peter George Hutchings (1951, PPE) The Revd Derek George Taylor (1945, Modern History) Professor Terence V R Beard (1954, PPE) Devapraya Lahiri (1975, Modern History) John H Bowles (1958, Modern History) The Revd Robert W Lee (1956, Theology) Dr John Wharton (1946, Medicine) Roger J Brunton (1952, Chemistry) William H Mervyn Matthews (1955, Economics Mark J Wharton (1970, Physics) Paul Stuart Chambers (1963, Modern Languages) Professor Lawrence Weiskrantz (1949, & Politics) Psychology) Justine D L McKay (1982, Modern History) Sean V Elliott (1984, English) Nicanor Parra (1949, Cosmology) Michael W D White (1960, PPE) The Revd Desmond Evans (1948, Theology) John Pelham (1965, Modern Languages) Dr Ivor Anthony Williams (1956, Chemistry) Michael Cristopher Gard (1946, Law) James Poxon (2010, Management Studies) Geoffrey Richard Hague (1948, Law) Professor Kenneth Seddon Sincere apologies to Martin R Hughes, whose Walter R Harrabin (1952, Mathematics) Owen A C Shallcross (1963, Metallurgy) name was incorrectly listed in the deceased Professor Peter Harris (1960, Theology) Andrew E A Simpson (1963, Modern History) notifications in the 2017 edition of The Year S T C AT H E R I N E ’ S C O L L E G E / G A Z ETT E Admissions 2017 UNDERGRADUATES Biological Sciences Charlotte Atkins – St Laurence School, Wiltshire Laurel Constanti Crosby – Tiffin Girls’ School, Kingston upon Thames Ella Glover – Ilkley Grammar School, West Yorkshire Martha Haslam – Ousedale School, Newport Pagnell Piotr Parzymies – 33 Liceum Im M Kopernika, Poland Emma Raven – International School of Geneva, Switzerland Mavis Teo – NUS High School of Math & Science, Singapore Jemima Walker – New Hall School, Chelmsford Biomedical Sciences Martha James – Guildford High School, Surrey Nan Song – Lancing College, West Sussex James Wantling – Pate’s Grammar School, Cheltenham Chemistry Rebecca Clarke – Stockton Sixth Form College, Cleveland Alexander Hajialexandrou – King’s College School, Wimbledon Paramveer Kumar – Wyggeston & Queen Elizabeth I College, Leicester Lara Martin – Charterhouse, Godalming Teodor–Razvan Mirescu – Theoretical High School I C Vissarion, Romania Jevhan Pandya – Brighton, Hove & Sussex Sixth Form College Roshni Patel – Bexley Grammar School, London Chloe Ridsdill Smith Lycộe Franỗais Charles de Gaulle, London Ming Kit Sze – Kingham Hill School, Oxfordshire Daniel Thomas Du Toit – Westminster School, London Computer Science Andrei Draghici – Colegiul National de Informatica Tudor Vianu, Romania Milos Golub – Gimnazija Svetozar Markovic Novi Sad, Serbia Ilia Manolov – Plovdiv Mathematics High School, Bulgaria Benjamin Slater – Bishop Luffa School, Chichester Serban Slincu – Petru Rares National College Suceava, Romania Joshua Smailes – Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar School, Horncastle Bozhidar Vasilev – Sofia Mathematics High School, Bulgaria Economics & Management Usman Arshad – Altrincham Grammar School for Boys, Cheshire Morgan Chang – Sydney Church of England Grammar School, Australia Suleika Fiumi – International School of Milan, Italy / A D M I S S I O N S Engineering Science El–Amin Ahmed – King Edward VI Camp Hill School for Boys, Birmingham Sara Beitlafteh – Loreto College, Manchester Wesley Condren – Tong High School, Bradford Gakuto Fuse – Dwight School, London Zachary Nairac – Magdalen College School, Oxford Michael Watford – Kings of Wessex Academy, Cheddar Thomas Wight – George Heriot’s School, Edinburgh Huaiji Zhou – Abbey College, Cambridge English Language & Literature Ruilin Cheng – St Paul’s Girls’ School, London Finlay Field – Pate’s Grammar School, Cheltenham Rosa Haworth – Loreto College, Manchester Gabrielle Kaza – Godolphin & Latymer School, London Callum Meaney – King’s College School, Wimbledon Hannah Morrisey – St Mary’s School Ascot, Berkshire Jack Parkin – Langley Park School for Boys, Kent Megan Smith – Fallibroome Academy, Macclesfield Experimental Psychology Sian Mathur – North London Collegiate School, Middlesex Georgia Sandars – St Paul’s Girls’ School, London Fine Art Mihaela Man – Stephan Ludwig Roth Theoretical High School, Romania Emily Stevenhagen – Fortismere School, London Geography Madeleine Diment – Canford School, Wimborne Benedict Farmer – Cardinal Vaughan Memorial School, London Lucy Jackson – St Peter’s Catholic School, Solihull Kexin Qiu – Raffles Institution, Singapore Nevena Slavova – Westminster Academy, London Zachary Spavins–Hicks – Rushden Academy, Northamptonshire Yingxi Zhao – Woodhouse Grove School, Bradford History Chloe Bregazzi – Wolsingham School and Community College, County Durham Oliver Lloyd Williams – Westminster School, London Sabrina Pinto – St Albans School, Hertfordshire Daniel Wolstenholme–Powell – Mill Hill School, London History & Economics Ryan Barnes – Sir Joseph Williamson’s Mathematical School, Rochester History & English Charlotte Sefton – Emmanuel College, Gateshead History & Politics James Cleaver – Brookfield Community School, Chesterfield Will Lloyd – Littlehampton Academy, West Sussex History of Art Agnes Chandler – Westminster School, London Jiaqi Kang – International School of Geneva, Switzerland Anna White – Landau Forte College, Derby Human Sciences Lucy Adams – Sponne School, Towcester Tosca Tindall – St Paul’s Girls’ School, London Phoebe Whitehead – Wallington High School for Girls, Surrey Steffan Williams – Shrewsbury School Law Vivian Bennett – Henrietta Barnett School, London Frances Chui – Yew Chung Education Foundation, Hong Kong Lucy Jones – Putney High School, London Nahida Khanom – Central Foundation Girls’ School, London Joshua Wang – Raffles Institution, Singapore Andreas Wolf – Emsland Gymnasium Rheine, Germany Law with Law Studies in Europe Thomas Roy – Royal Grammar School, High Wycombe Eve Thomson – Hutchesons’ Grammar School, Glasgow Materials Science Anthony Akinwale – Chislehurst & Sidcup Grammar School, Kent Yingsi Lin – U–Link College of Guangzhou, China William Staunton – St Ambrose College, Altrincham Xumo Yang – Shenzhen College of International Education, China Mathematics Aikaterini Adamopoulou – Athens College – Psychico College, Greece Julien Bruyninckx – British School of Brussels, Belgium Nicholas Curtis – King’s School, Canterbury Julian Hitchcock – Hampton School, Middlesex Semen Korneev – Moscow Lyceum 1533, Russia Thomas Wilkinson – King’s College London Mathematics School Yansong Zhao – Shandong Taian No Senior High School, China Mathematics & Computer Science Dominic Benjamin – Hereford Cathedral School Paul Stoienescu – International Computer High School of Bucharest, Romania Alexander Teague – Bishop Stopford School, Kettering G A Z ETT E Mathematics & Statistics Amie Campbell – Ashlawn School, Rugby Medical Sciences Kwame Baffour–Awuah – Wilson’s School, Surrey Magdalena Chmura – American School of Warsaw, Poland Meirian Evans – Dauntsey’s School, Devizes Hannah Fuchs – Staedtisches Cecilien–Gymnasium Duesseldorf, Germany Elizabeth Hatton – Alcester Grammar School, Warwickshire Heather Tong – Hills Road Sixth Form College, Cambridge Modern Languages Katie Brookes – Haberdashers’ Aske’s Girls’ School, Elstree Charlotte Hughes – Tapton School, Sheffield Elizabeth Maggs – Ralph Allen School, Bath Amy Ryder – Thomas Mills High School, Framlingham Elise Shepley – Highgate School, London Jonathan West – Alleyn’s School, London Modern Languages & Linguistics Amelia Brunton – Richard Huish College, Taunton Sadiyah Diallo–Geny – St Michael’s Catholic Grammar School, London Rory Fisk – Charterhouse, Godalming Samantha Morito – Bexley Grammar School, London Molecular & Cellular Biochemistry James Bennett – Reigate Grammar School, Surrey Joseph Hamley – Frankfurt International School, Germany Noah Harrison – Peter Symonds College, Winchester Leonard Lee – Westminster School, London Jordan McCabe – Cardinal Vaughan Memorial School, London James O’Brien – Haberdashers’ Aske’s Boys’ School, Elstree Music Joseph Beesley – Eltham College, London Lola Grieve – Latymer School, London Elizabeth Hollins – Waldegrave School, Twickenham Philosophy & Modern Languages Toger Christiansen – Ermysted’s Grammar, Skipton Philosophy, Politics & Economics Aaron Kiernan – St Olave’s and St Saviour’s Grammar School, Orpington Iksoon Kim – Hankuk Academy of Foreign Studies, South Korea Ottavia Laidler – University College School, London Clare Leckie – Canadian International School, Hong Kong Callum Loader – King Edward VI School, Southampton Declan Marshall – Kristin School, New Zealand Gillian Xie – Auckland International College, New Zealand Physics Ivan Dimitrov – Plovdiv Mathematics High School, Bulgaria Jamie Fisher – University of Birmingham School Christopher George – Dulwich College, London Jude Hunt – Crypt School, Gloucester Ross Jenkinson – Wilmslow High School, Cheshire Michael Jones – Hartlepool Sixth Form College, County Durham Emil Ostergaard – British School in the Netherlands Yimin Zong – Queen Mary’s College, Basingstoke Psychology & Linguistics Alexander Greenwood – Pate’s Grammar School, Cheltenham Psychology & Philosophy Edward Benfold – Saffron Walden County High School, Essex Thomas Graham – Peter Symonds College, Winchester Alexandra Lascy – Rochester Independent College, Kent Calum White – Steyning Grammar School, Kent GRADUATES K M Achyut Ram (BA University of Madras, India), MBA Kaitlyn Abrams (BA Western Washington University, USA; MA University of Maine, USA), MSc (C) Nature, Society & Environmental Governance Thomas Achtelstetter (BSc University College London), MSc (C) Contemporary Chinese Studies Amal Ahmed (BSc University of Khartoum, Sudan; MSc Istanbul Teknik Universitesi, Turkey), MSc (C) Nanotechnology for Medicine & Health Care (part–time) Ikuya Aizawa (BA International Christian University, Japan; MSc St Catherine’s; MSc Kellogg College, Oxford), DPhil Education * Deena Alasfoor (BSc University of Jordan, Jordan; MSc Cornell University, USA; MSc Kellogg College, Oxford), DPhil Population Health (part–time) Carolina Albassini (BA Ludwig Maximilians Universitat, Germany), MSc (C) Social Science of the Internet (part–time) Naser Albreeky (BA Rutgers University, USA), MSt Modern Languages Maryam Alkadhimi (MSc University of Gothenberg, Swden), DPhil Oncology Alaa Alzhrani (BSc King Saud University, Saudi Arabia; MSc University of Nottingham), DPhil Surgical Sciences Amanda Araujo Moreira Queiroz (BA Richmond, The American International University in London), MSc (C) Sustainable Urban Development (part–time) Joshua Asquith (MusB University of Manchester; PGCE University of Leeds), MSc (C) Learning & Teaching (part–time) Maelle Barbancon (BSc Cornell University, USA), MBA Agnese Barbensi (BSc, MSc University of Pisa, Italy), DPhil Mathematics Michael Barton (BSc University of Edinburgh; PGCE St Catherine’s), DPhil Molecular Cell Biology in Health & Disease * S T Yuval Ben–David (BA Yale University, USA), MPhil Oriental Studies (Modern Middle Eastern Studies) Eduardo Benitez–Inglott Y Ballest (BA King’s College London), MSt Medieval Studies Sarah Bernhardt (BA University of the Arts London), MSt Historical Studies (part–time) Khadija Berrada (BEcon School of Governance & Economics of Rabat, Morocco; MA King’s College London), MSc (C) Evidence– Based Social Intervention & Policy Evaluation Devin Bittner (BA Union College, USA), MSc (C) Cognitive Evolutionary Anthropology Simon Bone (MA Corpus Cristi College, Cambridge; UGDip University of Oxford; MPP Harvard University, USA), MSc (C) Social Science of the Internet (part–time) Sophie Boote (BA University of Edinburgh), MSc (C) Economics for Development Thomas Booth (BA School of Oriental & African Studies), MPhil Oriental Studies (Traditional East Asia) Emmanouil Bougiakiotis (LLB Democritus University of Thrace, Greece), MJuris Alexander Bowring (BSc University of Warwick), DPhil Population Health Michaela Brady (BA Sarah Lawrence College, USA), MSc (C) Social Science of the Internet James Breckwoldt (BA University of Warwick), MPhil Politics (Comparative Government) Kathleen Brennan (BA University of Sydney, Australia), MSt British & European History, from 1500 to the present Alex Burston–Chorowicz (BA, MA University of Melbourne, Australia), DPhil History Michael Butler (BA University of Durham; PGCE, PGDip, MSc University of Southampton; PGDip Magdalen College, Oxford), MSt Diplomatic Studies (part–time) Ciarán Byrne (BA Trinity College Dublin, Ireland), MSt English (1900–present day) David Cain (BVMedSci, BVM BVS University of Nottingham), DPhil Medical Sciences Katherine Cairnes (BA University of York), MSt Literature & Arts (part–time) Aoife Cantrill (BA Worcester College, Oxford), MPhil Oriental Studies (Modern Chinese Studies) Giedre Cepukaityte (BSc University of St Andrews), DPhil Experimental Psychology Calum Chalmers (BSc University of Glasgow; MSc, MSc University of Warwick), MSc (C) Mathematical Finance (part– time) Howook Chang (BSc, MSc Seoul National University, Korea), MBA Eduardo Chazan (BA University of Sao Paulo, Brazil), MBA Margaret Cheesman (BA, MSc King’s College London), DPhil Information, Communication & the Social Sciences Alexander Chen (BSc University College London; PGDip University of Oxford), Executive MBA (part–time) Peiyu Chen (BA, MSci University of Cambridge; Hertford College, Oxford), DPhil Materials C AT H E R I N E ’ S C O L L E G E / G A Z ETT E Xu Chen (BSc University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong), MSc (C) Mathematical & Computational Finance Kajal Chhapia (BA King’s College London), MSc (C) Modern South Asian Studies Nicholas Chiasson (BA University of British Columbia, Canada; MSc University of Edinburgh), DPhil History Zihao Ching (BSc University of Warwick), Master of Public Policy Serena Yuk Ching Chow (BA University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong), MSc (C) Sociology Amalia Christofidou (LLB University of Manchester; LLM University College London), MSc (C) Law & Finance João Pedro Coelho (BSc, MSc University of Coimbra, Portugal), DPhil Anthropology Theodor Cojoianu (MEng, MSc University of Edinburgh; St Edmund Hall, Oxford; St Hilda’s College, Oxford), DPhil Geography & the Environment Theodora Constantin (BSc Imperial College London), MSc (C) Pharmacology Laura Coryton (BA Goldsmiths, University of London), MSt Women’s Studies Luke Cotter (BA St Catherine’s), 2nd BM * William Crona (BA University of Sussex), MSt Global & Imperial History Brandon Crotty (BSc University of Colorado, USA), MBA Ada Martina Cucciniello (LLM University of Perugia, Italy), MJuris Yanqiu Dai (BA University of Southern California, USA), MSc (C) Visual, Material & Museum Anthropology Jeeban Das (BEng National Institute of Technology, India; MBA ICFAI Business School, India), MBA Danielle Del Vicario (BA University of Durham), MSc (C) African Studies Beth Delaplain (BA Stockton University, USA), MSc (C) Visual, Material & Museum Anthropology Leonardo Dias (BA Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brazil), MSc (C) Sustainable Urban Development (part–time) Blake Dicosola (BSc North Carolina State University at Raleigh, USA; MSc University of Washington, USA; MSc Northwestern University, USA), MSc (C) Social Science of the Internet (part– time) Sarah Dietzfelbinger (BA, MEd Universität der Künste, Germany), MSc (C) Applied Linguistics & Second Language Acquisition Daniele Dona (MB BS Universita degli studi di Padua, Italy), MSc (C) Paediatric Infectious Diseases (part–time) Martin Donlon (BA University of St Andrews; PGCE St Catherine’s), MSc (C) Learning & Teaching (part–time) * Babatunde Dosunmu Odunsi (BA University of York), MSc (C) Sociology Alexis Doyle (BSc University of Notre Dame, USA), MSc (C) Medical Anthropology Sam Duffy (BA University College Dublin, Ireland), MBA Samuel Dunkley (BSc University of Bristol), MSc (R) Oncology / A D M I S S I O N S Emily Durfee (BSc Georgetown University, USA), MBA Georgette Eaton (BSc Coventry University; MSc Cardiff University; PGCE Oxford Brookes University), MSc (C) Education (Research Design & Methodology) Christina Economy (BA University of Pennsylvania, USA; MPP Trinity College, Cambridge), DPhil Public Policy Sam Edge (BA University of Exeter), MBA Samuel Edgerley (BA Birkbeck, University of London), MSt Modern Languages Telmen Erdenebileg (BBA Mongolian University of Science & Technology, Mongolia; MBA National University of Mongolia, Mongolia), Master of Public Policy Sjöfn Evertsdottir (BA University of Akureyri, Iceland; CandPsych University of Iceland, Iceland; PGCert, PGDip University of Oxford), MSc (C) Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (part–time) Natalie Fairhurst (BA St Catherine’s), 2nd BM * Nicholas Fordham (MB BS, BSc Queen Mary University of London), DPhil Medical Sciences John Forristal (BA Marquette University, USA), MBA Tomi Francis (BSc University of Warwick; Somerville College, Oxford), BPhil Philosophy Marie Froehlicher (BA University of York), MSc (C) Migration Studies Andrew Gambardella (BSc University of California Berkeley, USA), DPhil Engineering Science Teshil Gangaram (BEng National University of Singapore, Singapore), MBA Leylya Gaysina (MD Kazan State University of Medicine, Russia; PhD Kirov Military Medical Academy, Russia), MSc (C) Experimental Therapeutics (part–time) Pooja Mary George (BA University of Delhi, India), MSc (C) Social Anthropology Gina Gilson (BSc Creighton University, USA), MSc (C) Biodiversity, Conservation & Management Jasper Gold (BA St Catherine’s), BCL * Maria Jose Gomez Vazquez (BSc Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon, Mexico; MPhil Wolfson College, Cambridge), DPhil Molecular & Cellular Medicine Johannes Goslar (BSc Darmstadt University of Applied Sciences, Germany), MSc (C) Computer Science Terrina Govender (BCom University of Cape Town, South Africa), Master of Public Policy Ayda Gragossian (BA California State University, USA), MFA Emily–Keziah Green (BA Brunel University), MSt Music (Musicology) Nishant Grover (LLB Symbiosis Law College, University of Pune, India; Dip Asian School of Cyber Laws, India; PGDip ICFAI University, India), Executive MBA (part–time) Fubiao Gu (BEng Tsinghua University, China; MSc Imperial College London), DPhil Materials Muting Hao (BEng, MEng Dalian University of Technology, China), DPhil Engineering Science Alison Hardingham (BA Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford; PGCert, PGDip University of Oxford), MSt Psychodynamic Practice (part–time) Oscar Hartman Davies (BA St Catherine’s), MSc (C) Nature, Society & Environmental Governance * Catherine Hau (BA Cornell University, USA; JD, PCLL Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong), BCL Conor Healy (BA University of Chicago, USA), MBA Patricia Hein (BA Seattle University, USA), MPhil General Linguistics & Comparative Philology Alexander Herkert (BA Yale University, USA), MSc (C) Contemporary Chinese Studies Emma Hibbett (BSc University of Durham), MSc (C) Water Science, Policy & Management Samuel Hilditch (BA, LLB University of Adelaide, Australia; PGDip Australian National University, Australia), MBA Brittany Hilyer (BA University of Washington, USA), MSc (C) Refugee & Forced Migration Studies Courtney Hinz (BEd McGill University, Canada), MSt General Linguistics & Comparative Philology Lai Hong Ho (BA University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong), MSc (C) Applied Linguistics & Second Language Acquisition Kai Sheng Hoo (BSc Multimedia University, Malaysia), MBA Solveig Hoppe (BSc University of Newcastle), 1st BM (Graduate Entry) Kimberly Horner (BA Luther College, USA), MSc (C) Migration Studies Harriet Horsfall (BJ Queensland University of Technology, Australia; MSc St Catherine’s), Master of Public Policy * Lidingrong Huang (BSc University of York), MPhil Economics Niclas Huck (BSc Frankfurt School of Finance & Management, Germany), MBA Philipp Huelse (LLB Humboldt–Universitat zu Berlin, Germany; LLM Université Paris II (Panthéon–Assas), France), MJuris Moritz Hundertmark (MB BS Bayerische Julius Maximilians Universitat Wurzburg, Germany), DPhil Medical Sciences Ahmed Ibrahim (BSc Ain Shams University, Egypt), MBA Osaruyi Igiehon (BSc Howard University, USA; MSc Harvard University, USA), MBA William Iliffe (MEng University of Bristol; MSc Technische Universiteit Eindhoven, Netherlands), DPhil Materials Caitlin Jensen (BA Monash University, Australia), MPhil Oriental Studies (Egyptology) Matea Jeric (BSc, MSc University of Split, Croatia), Executive MBA (part–time) Xiheng Jiang (BA, MA Lanzhou University, China; MPA Chinese Academy of Social Science, China), Master of Public Policy Adam Johnston (BSc University of Warwick, MSc University of Ulster), 1st BM (Graduate Entry) Anthony Jones (BSc University of Durham), MPhil Water Science, Policy & Management G A Z ETT E Jatin Joshi (BDS King’s College London; PGDip Royal College of Surgeons of England; MB BS University College London; PGDip Royal College of Surgeons of England), MSc (C) Evidence– Based Health Care (part–time) Alexander Karapetian (BEng Imperial College London; PGCert University of Oxford), MSc (C) Nanotechnology for Medicine & Health Care (part–time) Artem Katilov (BSc University of Warwick), MSc (C) Financial Economics Matthew Kelson (BA McGill University, Canada), MSc (C) Comparative Social Policy Norliana Khairuddin (BSc Universiti Malaya, Malaysia; PhD University of Queensland, Australia), Master of Public Policy Brendan Kilpatrick (BCom, MSc University College Dublin, Ireland), Master of Public Policy Joseph Kirk (MMath University of Durham), MSc (C) Mathematical & Computational Finance Vitor Kneipp (BCL Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), MBA Adam Knight (BA Hertford College, Oxford; Kellogg College, Oxford), MSc (C) Social Science of the Internet (part-time) Jiaying Kong (BA Beijing Foreign Studies University, China; MA University College London), MSc (C) Japanese Studies Fanni Kovesdi (BSc University of Bristol), MSc (C) Sociology Titus Krahn (BSc University of Mannheim, Germany), MSc (C) Financial Economics Viveka Kulharia (BTech Indian Institute of Technology, India), DPhil Engineering Science Karime Kuri Tiscareno (BA Universidad Anáhuac, Mexico), Master of Public Policy Beth Larsen (BA Lawrence University, USA; MSc St Catherine’s), MBA * Katharine Lawden (BA University of the Arts London), MSt History of Design (part–time) Elodie Lawley (BSc University of Exeter), 1st BM (Graduate Entry) Kam Pui Lee (MB BS University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong; PGDip Cardiff University; MSc Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong), MSc (C) Evidence–Based Health Care (part–time) Chaminie Legrand (BA Queensland University of Technology, Australia), MBA Justyna Legutko (BA Royal Holloway & Bedford New College), MSc (C) Applied Linguistics & Second Language Acquisition Rachel Lewzey (BA St Hugh’s College, Oxford; MMus University of Edinburgh), DPhil Music Chong Li (BA Peking University, China), Master of Public Policy Isabella Lin (BA University of Tsukuba, Japan), MSc (C) Criminology & Criminal Justice Sean Linsdall (MSc Imperial College London; New College, Oxford), DPhil Organic Chemistry Alison Logier (BA University College London), MSc (C) Evidence–Based Social Intervention & Policy Evaluation Dimitri Lozeve (MSc Ecole Polytechnique, France), MSc (C) Statistical Science Mengyao Lu (BA Minzu University of China, China; MSW University of Pennsylvania, USA), DPhil Social Intervention Marcin Maczkiewicz (MD Medical University of Łódź, Poland; MBA University of Minnesota, USA), MSc (C) Experimental Therapeutics (part–time) Reevu Maity (MSc Indian Institute of Technology, India; St Edmund Hall, Oxford), DPhil Atomic & Laser Physics Kaya Masler (BA University of Southern California, USA), MPhil Politics (Comparative Government) Hibba Mazhary (BA St Catherine’s; MSc St Cross College, Oxford), DPhil Geography & the Environment (part–time) * Alexander McCarron (BA University of Sydney, Australia; MPhil St Stephen’s House, Oxford), DPhil Oriental Studies Seth McCurry (BSc Georgetown University, USA; MA King’s College London), MBA Morgan McGovern (BSc Georgetown University, USA), MBA James McVeigh (BA St Catherine’s), 2nd BM * Emily Meller (LLB, BCom University of Technology Sydney, Australia), MSt Creative Writing (part–time) Molly Moore (BA Christ Church, Oxford), MPhil Oriental Studies (Classical Indian Religion) Benjamin Moseley (MPhys University of Durham), DPhil Autonomous Intelligent Machines & Systems Joseph Mukasa (BA Makerere University, Uganda), MPhil Development Studies Megan Musilli (BSc United States Naval Academy, USA; MSc St Catherine’s), Master of Public Policy * Kamal Nahas (BSc Imperial College London), MSc (C) Integrated Immunology Kalina Naidoo (BMedSci, MMedSci University of KwaZulu– Natal, South Africa; St Edmund Hall, Oxford), DPhil Psychiatry Giuliano Natali (BA University of Warwick), MPhil Politics (European Politics & Society) Sawsene Nejjar (BA Ecole de Gouvernance et d’Economie, Morocco; MA Al Akhawayn University, Morocco), DPhil Oriental Studies Louis–Marie Neviaski (Université Paris II (Panthéon–Assas), France), Diploma in Legal Studies Eric Ng (BSc Babson College, USA; MSc University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong; JD, PGCert City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong), BCL Valentine Njoroge (BSc Drexel University, USA), MBA Maxwell Novak (BA University of Southern California, USA), MPhil Classical Archaeology Saskia Nowicki (BSc McGill University, Canada; MSc Linacre College, Oxford), DPhil Geography & the Environment Larissa Nzikeu (BA University of Warwick), MSc (C) Sociology Mark O’Connor (BMus King’s College London), MSt Music (Musicology) Fergus O’Leary (BA University of Otago, New Zealand), MSc (C) Mathematical & Computational Finance Thomas O’Riordan (LLB University of East Anglia; BSc University of Brighton), MSc (C) Evidence–Based Health Care (part–time) S T Margaret Ounsley (BEd University of Reading, UGDip University of Oxford), MSc (C) English Local History (part–time) Manabu Ozawa (BEcon Osaka Gakuin University, Japan), MSt History of Design (part–time) Thomas Paine (MMath Oriel College, Oxford), DPhil Computer Science Annabel Parkin (BEng University of Exeter), PGCE Physics Jane Parkin (LLB, BA, LLM University of Melbourne, Australia; St Catherine’s), DPhil Law * Helena Parsons (BSc Royal Holloway & Bedford New College), MSc (C) Biodiversity, Conservation & Management Samantha Pay (BSc University of East London), MSc (C) Social Science of the Internet (part–time) Josiah Peeler (BA Florida College, USA; MA Abilene Christian University, USA), MSt Classical Hebrew Studies Daniel Pesch (BSc WHU–Otto Beisheim School of Management, Germany), MSc (C) Financial Economics Nicola Pinzani (MMath University of St Andrews), MSc (C) Mathematics & Foundations of Computer Science Joshua Potter (BA University of the Arts London), MSc (C) Social Anthropology Jasmine Proteau (BA University of Guelph, Canada; MA University of Ottawa, Canada; MMSt University of Toronto, Canada), DPhil History Alvin Puspowidjono (BSc University of New South Wales, Australia), MBA Jin Qin (BA Fudan University, China), MSc (C) Financial Economics Phuong Quan (BSc University of Warwick; MSc Green Templeton College, Oxford), DPhil Population Health (part– time) Marcus Quek (BSc University of Manchester), MSc (C) Psychological Research Laura Quiroz Lopez (BSc Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Colombia; PGCert Universidad de los Andes Colombia, Colombia), Master of Public Policy Maryam Rahbar (BSc York University, Canada), MSc (C) Clinical Embryology Wasif Rehman (BA University of Peshawar, Pakistan; MBA Institute of Management Sciences, Pakistan), Master of Public Policy Tiago Rocha (BA Universidade Mackenzie, Brazil; MSc Fundacao Getulio Vargas, Brazil; PGCert Universidade de Sao Paolo, Brazil), Executive MBA (part–time) Reza Rezaei Javan (BSc University of Surrey; MSc Imperial College London; St Cross College, Oxford), DPhil Clinical Medicine Isadora Ruiz Dias (BSc Universidade Estadual de Maringá, Brazil), MBA Liam Saddington (BA St Catherine’s; MSc St Cross College, Oxford), DPhil Geography & the Environment * Remi Saidi (BA, ID Ecole Polytechnique, France), MSc (C) Mathematical & Computational Finance C AT H E R I N E ’ S C O L L E G E / G A Z ETT E Madeleine Salinger (BCom RMIT University, Australia; BA, LLB Monash University, Australia), BCL Gavin Schaefer (BA Simon Fraser University, Canada; BEDS, MArch Dalhousie University, Canada), MSc (C) Sustainable Urban Development (part–time) Tim Scherer (BA Munich Business School, Germany), MSc (C) Financial Economics Vanessa Schreiber (BA University of St Gallen, Switzerland; MPhil Jesus College, Oxford), DPhil Economics Christian Schroeder (MPhys Exeter College, Oxford; MCompSci Kellogg College, Oxford;), DPhil Engineering Science Jaslyn Seah (LLB Peking University, China), Master of Public Policy Nikita Sehgal (BEng Birla Institute of Technology & Science, India; MBA S P Jain Institute of Management & Research, India), Master of Public Policy Jasminder Sekhon (BA University of Toronto, Canada), MSc (C) Criminology & Criminal Justice Suzannah Sherman (BA London School of Economics & Political Science), MSc (C) Environmental Change & Management Kay Siahaan (LLB Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia), MJuris Miaw Ler Sim (BTradChinMed INTI International University, Malaysia), MSc (C) Medical Anthropology Gizem Simer Ilseven (BA TOBB University of Economics & Technology, Turkey), PGCert Diplomatic Studies Helen Singh (BSc King’s College London, MSc University College London), 1st BM (Graduate Entry) Kathryn Slenker (BA George Mason University, USA; MA Columbia University, USA), MBA Imogen Smalley (BMus King’s College London), MSt Music (Musicology) Edmund Smith (BSc University of Exeter), MSc (C) Computer Science Akash Sonecha (BA St Catherine’s), BCL * Enti Spata (BSc Athens University of Economics & Business, Greece; MSc University of Leicester), DPhil Population Health (part–time) Elaine Stabler (BA University of Surrey), MSt Creative Writing (part–time) Andrew Strait (BA Pomona College, USA; MPhil Downing College, Cambridge), MSc (C) Social Science of the Internet Jae Won Suh (BA, MSc St Catherine’s), DPhil Population Health * Mateusz Szczesny (BEng University College London), MSc (C) Financial Economics Shu Xiang Tan (MSc Ecole Nationale Superieur de l’Electronique et de ses Applications, France; MSc Columbia University, USA), Master of Public Policy Ling Tang (BSc, MPhil Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong; St Peter’s College, Oxford), DPhil Oriental Studies / A D M I S S I O N S Scherezade Tarar (MSc Kinnaird College for Women, Pakistan; MSc Syracuse University, USA), MSc (C) Comparative Social Policy Jasmin Tarique (BA Birkbeck, University of London), MPhil Oriental Studies (Modern Middle Eastern Studies) Matthew Tarnowski (MChem University of Sheffield), DPhil Synthetic Biology Chynara Temirova (BA Moscow State Linguistic University, Russia), Master of Public Policy Palmo Tenzin (BASIAPS, BEc, PGDip Australian National University, Australia), MSc (C) Contemporary Chinese Studies Jordan Terry (BA Dartmouth College, USA), MSt British & European History, from 1500 to the present Oliver Thicknesse (BA Magdalene College, Cambridge; PGCE University of Buckingham), MSt Greek &/or Latin Languages & Literature Florentine Timmer (BSc University of Groningen, Netherlands), MSc (R) Musculoskeletal Sciences Emilia Truluck (BA Emory University, USA), MSc (C) Refugee & Forced Migration Studies Ming–Yee Tsang (BA, MSc Princeton University, USA), DPhil Materials Sila Ulucay (LLB University College London; MA School of Oriental & African Studies; MPhil St Antony’s College, Oxford), DPhil Socio–Legal Studies Rohit Vardhan (BSc Georgia Institute of Technology, USA), MBA Edwina Vernon (BMus Trinity College of Music), MSt Psychodynamic Practice (part–time) Joao Antonio Vieira (BEng University of Manchester; MSc University of Cambridge), DPhil Gas Turbine Aerodynamics Shruthi Vijayakumar (BA University of Auckland, New Zealand), MBA Karen Vilas (BSc University of South Carolina, USA), MBA Gwendolen von Einsiedel (MA University of Edinburgh; MA Royal Scottish Academy of Music & Drama), DPhil Music Ana Wallis (BSc University of Nottingham; Corpus Christi College, Oxford), DPhil Interdisciplinary Bioscience Liam Walmsley–Eyre (BCM BE University of Western Australia, Australia), MSc (C) Computer Science Kagure Wamunyu (BA Meredith College, USA; BSc North Carolina State University at Raleigh, USA; MCP University of California, USA), DPhil Sustainable Urban Development (part– time) Hongshan Wang (LLB Shenyang Normal University, China; MSc University of Edinburgh), MPhil Social Anthropology Wenhuan Wang (BSc University of Warwick), MSc (C) Statistical Science Cody Watling (BSc University of Winnipeg, Canada), MSc (C) Global Health Science Samuel Weeks (BEng King’s College London), MBA Albrecht Werner (Diplom, PhD Friedrich Schiller Universitat Jena, Germany), MSc (C) Mathematical Finance (part–time) Leonie Westhoff (BA University College London), MSc (C) Comparative Social Policy Niels Wicke (BSc University of Edinburgh), DPhil Interdisciplinary Bioscience Matthew Williams (BA St Catherine’s), 2nd BM * Philip Wimmer (University of Bonn, Germany), Diploma in Legal Studies Julia Windsor (BA, LLB Murdoch University, Australia), MBA Andrew Wiseman (BA University of Toronto, Canada), MPhil International Relations Elke Wynberg (BSc, MB BS Imperial College London), MSc (C) Global Health Science Sarah Young (BA Florida International University, USA), MBA Mila Zemyarska (BSc University of Edinburgh), MSc (C) Clinical Embryology Haoyu Zhai (BSc University of Bristol), MPhil Politics (Comparative Government) Guorong Zhang (BA Shanghai International Studies University, China), MSt General Linguistics & Comparative Philology Zifu Zhu (BSc Dalian University of Technology, China; PhD Tulane University, USA), MBA Federico Zilic De Arcos (BEng Universidad Austral de Chile, Chile), DPhil Engineering Science Jessica Zionts (BSc Johns Hopkins University, USA), MSc (C) Environmental Change & Management Filip Zivanovic (BSc, MSc University of Belgrade, Serbia; Linacre College, Oxford), DPhil Mathematics Fangmiao Zou (BA Waseda University, Japan; MA University of Washington, USA), DPhil Area Studies (Japan) * indicates graduate of the College ADMITTED TO THE FELLOWSHIP Dr Alessandro Iandolo was admitted as a Fellow by Special Election in Politics Dr Alexander Teytelboym was admitted as a Tutorial Fellow in Economics Dr Samuel Wolfe was admitted as a Tutorial Fellow in French Linguistics Dr Thomas Adams was admitted as a Tutorial Fellow in Law Dr Sumathi Sekaran was admitted as a Fellow by Special Election in Biomedical Sciences Master and Fellows 2018 Anna Christina de Ozório (Kia) Nobre, MA Oxf, BA Williams College, MS, MPhil, PhD Yale, FBA, Professor of Translational Cognitive Neuroscience Shimon A Whiteson, BA Rice, MA Oxf, PhD UT Austin Tutor in Computer Science Professor of Computer Science Amanda Power, BA Sydney, MA Oxf, PhD Camb Tutor in History Sullivan Fellow Sullivan Clarendon Associate Professor in History Jessica M Goodman, MA, MSt, DPhil Oxf Tutor in French Associate Professor in French (Leave M18-T19) Susannah C Speller, MEng, DPhil Oxf Fellow by Special Election in Materials Associate Professor in Materials Royal Academy of Engineering/EPSRC Research Fellow Alessandro Iandolo, BA Roma Tre, MPhil Camb, DPhil Oxf Fellow by Special Election in Politics Alexander Teytelboym, BSc LSE, MPhil, DPhil Oxf Tutor in Economics Associate Professor in Economics Samuel J P Wolfe, MA, MPhil, PhD Camb Tutor in French Linguistics Associate Professor in French Linguistics Thomas C Adams, BA, BCL, DPhil Oxf Tutor in Law Associate Professor in Law Sumathi Sekaran, BSc, PhD Imperial Fellow by Special Election in Biomedical Sciences Eve Morrison, BA, PhD Dubl Junior Research Fellow in History Canon Murray Fellow in Irish History HONORARY FELLOWS Professor Sir Brian E F Fender, Kt, CMG, MA (BSc, PhD Imp) Ruth Wolfson, Lady Wolfson Professor Sir James L Gowans, Kt, CBE, MA, DPhil, FRCP, FRS Sir Cameron A Mackintosh, Kt Sir Michael F Atiyah, OM, Kt, MA (PhD Camb), FRS, FRSE John Birt, The Rt Hon Lord Birt of Liverpool, MA, FRTS Tom Phillips, CBE, MA, RA, RE Professor Sir Geoffrey Allen, Kt (BSc, PhD Leeds), FRS, FREng, FRSC, FInstP, FIMMM Professor Sir (Eric) Brian Smith, Kt, MA, DSc (BSc, PhD Liv), FRSC, CChem Tan Sri Dato’ Seri A P Arumugam, AP, CEng, FIEE, FRAeS, FIMarEST, FinstD, PSM, SSAP, SIMP, DSAP, DIMP Peter Mandelson, The Rt Hon Lord Mandelson of Foy & Hartlepool, MA Sir John E Walker, Kt, MA, DPhil, FRS Professor Noam Chomsky (PhD Penn) , FBA Nicholas H Stern, The Rt Hon Lord Stern of Brentford, DPhil (BA Camb), FBA Raymond Plant, The Rt Hon Lord Plant of Highfield, MA (BA KCL, PhD Hull) Professor David J Daniell, MA (BA, MA Tübingen, PhD Lond) Masaki Orita (LLB Tokyo) Professor Joseph E Stiglitz (PhD MIT), FBA Sir Peter M Williams, Kt, CBE, MA (PhD Camb), FREng, FRS Sir (Maurice) Victor Blank, Kt, MA Professor (Anthony) David Yates, MA Michael Billington, OBE, BA Professor C N Ramachandra Rao, MSc Banaras, PhD Purdue, DSc Mysore, FRS Professor Richard J Carwardine, MA, DPhil, FBA Mark H Getty, BA Simon B A Winchester, OBE, MA, FRGS, FGS Professor Christopher P H Brown, MA, Dipl (PhD Lond) Professor John B Goodenough, MA (PhD Chicago) Giles B Keating, MA Peter W Galbraith, MA (AB Harvard, JD Georgetown) Professor Nigel J Hitchin, MA, DPhil, FRS Professor Graeme B Segal, MA, DPhil (BSc Sydney), FRS Vee Meng Shaw, BA (DLitt Singapore) Anthony W Henfrey, MA DPhil Sir Ian W Dove, Kt, MA Simon F A Clark, MA EMERITUS FELLOWS Ernest L French, FHCIMA Professor Donald H Perkins, CBE, MA (PhD Lond), FRS John W Martin, MA, DPhil (MA, PhD, ScD Camb) Professor Peter G M Dickson, MA, DPhil, DLitt, FBA Bruce R Tolley, MA, DPhil (MA Victoria Wellington) Barrie E Juniper, MA, DPhil, Secretary for Alumni Henry C Bennet-Clark, MA (BA Lond, PhD Camb) Professor Daniel W Howe, MA (PhD California) Stephen J Sondheim (BA Williams) Sir Ian McKellen, Kt, CH (BA Camb) Sir Alan Ayckbourn, Kt, CBE Sir Michael V Codron, Kt, CBE, MA Sir Richard C H Eyre, Kt, CH, CBE (BA Camb) Thelma M B Holt, CBE Dame Diana Rigg, DBE Sir Nicholas R Hytner, Kt (MA Camb) Stephen D Daldry (BA Sheff) Professor Malcolm L H Green, MA (PhD Imp), FRS Sir Timothy M B Rice, Kt Professor Gilliane C Sills, MA (PhD KCL) Patrick Marber, BA Phyllida Lloyd, BA Birm G Bruce Henning, MA (BA Toronto, PhD Penn) Professor Jose F Harris, MA (PhD Camb), FBA Sir Patrick H Stewart, Kt, OBE Michael Frayn, CLit, BA Camb Professor John R Ockendon, MA, DPhil, FRS Revd Colin P Thompson, MA, DPhil Sir Trevor R Nunn, Kt, CBE (BA Camb) Meera Syal, CBE (BA Manc) Professor Sudhir Anand, BPhil, MA, DPhil Sir J Michael Boyd, Kt, MA Edin Professor Peter R Franklin, MA (BA, DPhil York) Gordon Gancz, BM BCh, MA Professor Richard J Parish, MA, DPhil (BA Newc), Dean of Degrees Professor Susan C Cooper, MA (BA Collby Maine, PhD California) Simon Russell Beale, CBE (BA Camb) John Charles Smith, MA Claude-Michel Schönberg Sir Tom Stoppard, Kt, OM, CBE, FRSL DOMUS FELLOWS Sir Patrick J S Sergeant Melvyn Bragg, The Rt Hon Bragg of Wigton, MA Bruce G Smith, CBE, MA, DPhil, FREng, FIET Keith Clark, BCL, MA Roushan Arumugam, MA Usha Q Arumugam, MA Nadia Q Arumugam, MA Marshall P Cloyd, BSc Southern Methodist University, MSc Stanford, MBA Harvard Søren H S Dyssegaard (MSc Columbia) Surojit Ghosh, DPhil (BA Antioch Ohio, MA Toronto) Susan M Ghosh, MA (MBA City, MA, PhD Lond) Mary J Henfrey Y W Wilfred Wong (BSocSci Hong Kong, MPA Harvard) VISITING FELLOWS *Professor Graham Bell, McGill University, T19 Carolyn Emery, University of Calgary, M18 *Professor Vaughan Griffiths, Colorado School of Mines, T19 Katherine Mitchell, University of Strathclyde, H19 Behrang Noohi, Queen Mary University of London, H19 *Professor Jonathan Schneer, Georgia Institute of Technology, M18 Wendy Williams, Berea College, M18 *Professor Jun Ye (Hinshelwood Lecturer), University of Colorado, T19 *Christensen Fellow RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Roger Gundle, BM BCh, DPhil (MA Camb), FRCS (Eng), FRCS (Orth) Frank Haselbach (PhD, Dipl TU Berlin) Bruce K Levell, BA, DPhil Kerry M M Walker, DPhil (BSc Memorial, MSc Dalhousie) Professor Alison H Banham, MA, DPhil, FRCPath Regent Lee, DPhil (MB BS Western Australia, MSurg Sydney) Gurman Kaur (BTech Indraprastha, MSc Imperial, PhD Camb) Jens K Madsen (BA, MA Copenhagen, MRes, PhD UCL) Elizabeth A Nye, MSc, DPhil (BA Notre Dame, MA Cardinal Stritch) Konrad Duden, Max Planck Visiting Fellow, M18 Professor Xavier Garnier, Joint Maison franỗaise dOxford & Sub-Faculty of French Visiting Fellow, M18 Professor Tumba Shango Lokoho, Joint Maison franỗaise dOxford & SubFaculty of French Visiting Fellow, M18