St Hugh's College, Oxford - Chronicle 1976-1977

Page 1

ST. HUGH'S COLLEGE

CHRONICLE 1976-77

Association of Senior Members



ST. HUGH'S COLLEGE

CHRONICLE 1 97 6-1 977 Number 49


FOUNDRESS ELIZABETH WORDSWORTH BENEFACTORS CLARA EVELYN MORDAN EDWARD GAY ELIZA MARY THOMAS CHARLES SELWYN AWDRY PHILIP MAURICE DENEKE MARY GRAY ALLEN JOHN GAMBLE MARY MONICA CUNLIFFE WILLS EVELYN MARTINENGO CESARESCO CATHERINE YATES ELSIE THEODORA BAZELEY ERNEST CASSEL HILDA MARY VIRTUE-TEBBS ISOBEL STEWART TOD ASP1N LOTTIE RHONA ARBUTHNOT-LANE CECILIA MARY ADY CATHERINE FULFORD WILLIAM, VISCOUNT NUFFIELD DOROTHY MAY LYDDON RIPPON MARJORIE FOWLE THEODORA MARION ELIZABETH EVANS EDITH MARION WATSON KATHLEEN EMILY BABBS MARY ETHEL SEATON


Visitor THE RIGHT REVD. LORD RAMSEY OF CANTERBURY, HON. D.C.L.

Principal MABEL RACHEL TRICKETT, M.A.

Fellows MADGE GERTRUDE ADAM, M.A., D.PHIL., F.R.A.S.,

Senior Research Fellow,

University Lecturer in Astronomy Nuffield Fellow, Tutor in Modern History, Special University Lecturer in Modern History

BETTY KEMP, M.A. B.A. MANC.), F.S.A., F.R.HIST.S.,

THE HON. HONOR MILDRED VIVIAN SMITH, O.B.E., M.A. (B.SC., M.D. LOND.), F.R. C.P., Additional Fellow PAMELA OLIVE ELIZABETH GRADON, M.A. (PH.D. LOND.), Official Fellow, Lec-

turer in English Language, University Lecturer in Medieval English AGNES PRISCILLA WELLS B.A. LOND.), Official Fellow, Treasurer SUSAN MERIEL WOOD (MRS.), B.LITT., M.A., F.R.HIST.S., Official Fellow,

Tutor in

Modern History, University Lecturer Fellow, Tutor in Geography, Special University Lecturer in Geography MARGARET JACOBS, B.LITT., M.A., Official Fellow, Tutor and Cassel Lecturer in German, University Lecturer, Vice-Principal VERA JOYCE DANIEL, M.A. (B.A., PH.D. LOND.), Official Fellow, Tutor in French, University Lecturer JOYCELYNE GLEDHILL RUSSELL (MRS.), M.A., D.PHIL., F.R.HIST.S., Official Fellow, Librarian, Tutor in Modern History, University Lecturer MARY RANDLE LUNT, M.A., D.PHIL., Official Fellow, Tutor in Biochemistry, University Lecturer THEODORA CONSTANCE COOPER, M.A. M.A. CANTAB.), Official Fellow, Tutor in Economics, University Lecturer RACHEL FRANCES WALL, M.A. B.A. MANC., M.A. CANTAB.), Additional Fellow, University Lecturer AVRIL GILCHRIST BRUTEN, M.A. B.A. BIRM., PH.D. CANTAB.), Official Fellow, Tutor in English Language and Medieval Literature, University Lecturer AUDREY JOAN COLSON (MRS.), B.LITT., M.A., D.PHIL., Additional Fellow, University Lecturer in Ethnology GILLIAN ANNE GEHRING (MRS.), M.A., D.PHIL. (B.SC. MANC.), Official Fellow, Tutor in Physics, University Lecturer MARY LUNN (MRS.), M.A., D.PHIL., Official Fellow, Tutor in Mathematics, University Lecturer JENNIFER CLARE GREEN (MRS.), M.A., D.PHIL., Official Fellow, Tutor in Chemistry GILLIAN ROMNEY, B.PHIL., M.A., Official Fellow, Tutor in Philosophy, University Lecturer MARGARET ROSARY HASWELL, B.LITT., M.A., Additional Fellow, University Lecturer in Agricultural Economics GLENYS LILIAN LUKE, M.A., D.PHIL. B.A. WESTERN AUSTRALIA), Official Fellow, Tutor in Mathematics, University Lecturer

MARJORIE MARY SWEETING, M.A. (M.A., PH.D. CANTAB.), Official


LAETITIA PARVIN ERNA EDWARDS (MRS.), M.A. M.A. CANTAB., PH.D. LOND.),

Official Fellow, Tutor in Classics, University Lecturer Official Fellow, Tutor in Philosophy, University Lecturer, Dean MARILYN SPEERS BUTLER (MRS.), M.A., D.PHIL., Probationary Fellow and Tutor in English Literature, University Lecturer JOAN MARY NICHOLSON MILNE, O.B.E., M.A., M.A. CANTAB.), Senior Bursar HELEN MARY WARNOCK (MRS.), B.PHIL., M.A., Senior Research Fellow JULIA ELIZABETH ANNAS, M.A. (PH.D. HARVARD),

Honorary Fellows DAME JOAN EVANS, D.B.E., D.LITT. (D.LIT. LOND.; HON. LL.D. EDIN.; HON. LITT.D CANTAB.), HON. A.R.I.B.A., F.S.A., F.R.HIST.S., CHEVALIER DE LA LIIGION D'HONNEUR IDA CAROLINE MANN, C.B.E., M.A. (D.SC. LOND.), F.R.C.S. DAME MARY LUCY CARTWRIGHT, D.B.E., M.A., D.PHIL., HON. D.SC. (M.A., D.SC. CANTAB.; HON. LL.D. EDIN.; HON. D.S.C. LEEDS, HULL, AND WALES), F.R.S., COMMANDER OF THE ORDER OF THE DANNEBROG DAME MARGERY FREDA PERHAM, D.C.M.G., C.B.E., M.A., D.LITT. (HON. LL.D. ST. ANDREWS; HON. LITT.D. CANTAB.; HON. D.LITT. SOUTHAMPTON, LONDON, AND BIRMINGHAM), F.B.A. EVELYN EMMA STEFANOS PROCTER, M.A., CHEVALIER DE LA IAGION D'HONNEUR DAME PEGGY ASHCROFT, D.B.E., HON. D.LITT. DOROTHY STUART RUSSELL (Professor Emeritus), M.A. M.D. LOND. ; D.SC. CANTAB.; HON. LL.D. GLASGOW; HON. D.SC. MCGILL), F.R.C.P. THE RIGHT HON. MRS. BARBARA CASTLE, P.C., M.P., B.A. LADY WOLFSON THE HON. MRS. MIRIAM LANE, HON. D.SC. PROFESSOR JOAN MERVYN HUSSEY, B.LITT., M.A. (PH.D. LOND.), F.S.A. PROFESSOR KATHLEEN HAZEL COBURN, B.LITT. M.A. TORONTO; LL.D. QUEEN'S UNIV. KINGSTON; D.LITT. TRENT; D.H.L. HAVERFORD), F.R.S. CANADA PROFESSOR AGNES HEADLAM-MORLEY, B.LITT., M.A. CHRISTINE MARY SNOW (MRS.), B.SC., M.A. PROFESSOR ALISON ANNA BOWIE FAIRLIE, M.A., D.PHIL. PROFESSOR GERTRUDE ELIZABETH MARGARET ANSCOMBE, M.A., D.PHIL. HELEN SUZMAN (MRS.), HON. D.C.L. (B.COM. WITWATERSRAND), Member of

House of Assembly of Republic of South Africa DAME KATHLEEN MARY KENYON, D.B.E., M.A., D.LITT. (D.LIT. LOND.; HON. D.LITT. EXON.), F.B.A., F.S.A.

Emeritus Fellows ELIZABETH ANNIE FRANCIS, M.A. M.A. LOND.) OLGA DELFINA BICKLEY, M.A. (DOTTORE IN LETTERE, GENOA) GERTRUDE THORNEYCROFT, M.A. B.A. BIRM.) IDA WINIFRED BUSBRIDGE, M.A., D.PHIL., D.SC. (M.SC. LOND.) DOROTHEA HELEN FORBES GRAY, O.B.E., M.A., F.S.A., Soc. ab.

ep. Inst. Arch.

Germ. Rhodes Visiting Fellow JEYARANEY KATHIRITHAMBY, M.A. (B.SC. MADRAS; PH.D., D.I.C. LOND.)

4

Imperial College,


Elizabeth Wordsworth Junior Research Fellow MARGARET ELIZABETH TUCKER (MRS.), M.A.

I.B.M. Junior Research Fellow PENELOPE ANN CHALONER, B.A. (PH.D. CANTAB.)

Martinego Cesaresco Research Scholar RITA HANNAH PITT B.A. LONDON)

Lecturers BARBARA MARY LEVICK, M.A., D.PHIL., Lecturer in Ancient History JOHN CRAVEN WILKINSON, M.A., D.PHIL., Lecturer in Geography of the

Middle

East

GILLIAN MARY COHEN (MRS.), M.A., D.PHIL. M.A. EDIN.), Lecturer in Psychology ROBERT ANDREW INGRAM, B.LITT. B.A. BIRM.), Lecturer in French ANN SMART (MRS.), B.C.L., M.A., Lecturer in Jurisprudence BRIAN CRAYFORD LOUGHMAN, M.A. (PH.D. CANTAB.; B.SC. WALES), Lecturer in

Plant Sciences KEITH GORDON COX, M.A. (PH.D. LEEDS), Lecturer in Geology EDITH MICHELE MCMORRAN (MRS.), B.LITT. (LICENCE Es LETTRES, DIPLOME D'ATUDES SUPERIEURES, UNIVERSITE DE PARIS, SORBONNE), Lecturer in French PHILIP ANTHONY LLOYD-BOSTOCK, M.A., Lecturer in Spanish THE REVD. ARTHUR WHITE ADAMS, M.A., D.D. M.A. SHEFFIELD), Lecturer in

Theology DOROTHY ANN WORDSWORTH (MRS.), B.PHIL., M.A., Lecturer

in English Litera-

ture

THE REVD. ANTHONY ERNEST HARVEY, B.A., Lecturer in Theology JANET PATRICIA MORGAN, M.A., D.PHIL. M.A. SUSSEX), Lecturer in Politics HENRY CHALMERS BENNET-CLARK (PH.D. CANTAB), Lecturer in Zoology JOHN CHARLES CLARKE, M.A. D.PHIL., Lecturer in History FRANCES ALLEYNE STREET B.A. CANTAB., M.A. COLORADO), Lecturer in Geography JANE ALISON GLOVER, M.A. D.PHIL., Lecturer in Music

College Secretary MISS G. A. EASTERBROOK

Domestic Bursar

College Matron

MISS E. ROTHWELL

MISS E. FOX

Chaplain

Principal's Secretary

THE REVD. R. LLOYD

MRS. M. NAHMAD M.A. LOND.)

Treasurer's Clerk MRS. C. GARNER

5


PRINCIPAL'S REPORT summer of 1976 the Bursar, Eva Major, retired to live in DunfermHer bursarship here has been a memorable one in every respect. She Ithrewline.theherself with her extraordinary energy into so many branches of college life that there is hardly any aspect of it where her influence has not been felt. It was characteristic of her that her parting gift to the College was a new flag. In the course of the year Mrs. Beaumont, Mrs. Brown, Miss Christine Kenyon, Mrs. Sourvinou-Inwood, and Mrs. Wollenberg resigned their posts. We wish Miss Kenyon well in her Lecturership at Lincoln College and Mrs. Sourvinou-Inwood in her Lectureship at Liverpool University. We congratulate Mrs. Beaumont on the birth of a son, and wish Mrs. Brown every success in her work for the Medical Research Council. Miss Joan Milne, F.R.I.B.A., was appointed Senior Bursar—a senior administrative office which combines supervision of fabric with full financial responsibility for the College. Miss Milne had been acting as Secretary to the R.I.B.A. before her appointment and is now an honorary fellow of that body. Miss Rothwell, formerly Deputy Bursar, was appointed Domestic Bursar at the same time. Other appointments made during this year were, Lecturer in Politics: Miss J. Morgan; Retaining Fee Lecturers: Mr. Bennet-Clark, Zoology; Mr. J. Clarke, History; Mrs. Cosgrove, Geography; Miss J. Glover, Music; Mr. Harvey, Theology; Miss Street, Geography. Mrs. Warnock was elected to a Senior Research Fellowship. Miss P. A. Chaloner was appointed to an I.B.M. Research Fellowship, and Miss R. H. Pitt to a MartinengoCesaresco Research Scholarship. Dr. E. M. Soulsby, head of the Geography Department at Madras College, St. Andrews, Fife, was Schoolmistress Student in Hilary Term 1976. The engraved panel by Laurence Whistler in memory of Miss Gwyer was shown in the exhibition of his work at the Ashmolean Museum during the summer and was installed in the Chapel in October 1976. A Dedication Service will be held in May 1977. R. T.

DEGREES, 1976 D.Phil. A. M. Crabbe, Mrs. Dehnel (J. M. Muller), J. A. Glover, Mrs.

Hardy (A. Gokhale) B.Phil. R. F. Chadwick, L. Roberts, Mrs. Rosewell (B. C. Mills) B.Litt. L. A. Cort B.C.L. R. P. Stanley M.Sc. F. Grandclement, P. Homayounfar, F. E. Miller, Mrs. Moorhouse

(R. Martin) M.A. R. M. G. Andrews, V. A. Bagley, Mrs. Bailey (G. L. Bullock), J. M.

Beardwood, (M. N. Bennett) Mrs. Hameed, Mrs. Blakesley (C. M. Barras), Mrs. Branch (S. M. Hope), V. M. Brennan, Mrs. Broadbent (R. J. Billsdon), M. L. Browne. B. M. Cave, M. Chatterjee, Mrs. Cole (S. T. Percy), J. R. Cooper, Mrs. Costello (E. J. Jacka), A. M. Crabbe, Mrs. Day (L. E. Stockley), A. C. Dolphin, Mrs. Douglas (S. C. Shrigley), L. M. Dovey, Mrs. Duggan (J. K. Russell), C. G. Frost, Mrs. Gair (M. E. 6


Farson), Mrs. Ghia (M. Krishna), J. A. Glover, H. S. Goldie, Mrs. Haworth (S. E. Payne), N. M. Hayes-Allen, Mrs. Hickman (S. M. Tucker), J. Hollman, A. Holman, K. S. Islip, Mrs. Jeans (M. R. C. Keay), P. E. Johnson, C. M. Jones, Mrs. Kearey (J. M. Scott), L. Lightfoot, Mrs. Little (N. E. Smith), Mrs. Lutyens (M. A. J. P. Drabble), Mrs. Lyle (H. M. Watt), Mrs. McDonald (C. E. Grayson), C. L. Macdonald, Mrs. McGowan (J. R. A. Kay), Mrs. Martin (A. Gardner), Mrs. Matthews (M. M. M. Henderson), H. S. R. Maxwell-Hyslop, A. C. P. Milburn, J. M. N. Milne (Incorporated), E. Y. Moore, A. R. R. Nesham, Mrs. Nicholas (A. W. Przywala), Mrs. Nicholson (A. M. Thompson), R. M. Parsons, Mrs. Plowman (M. W. Wait) G. B. Robinson, J. Rossant, Mrs. Rosser (N. G. Purser), J. A. Staton, Mrs. Tate (J. Forsyth), G. R. Ter Haar, P. E. Thomas, S. M. Vanstone, Mrs. Wheeler (S. P. Woodcock), Mrs. Wilkinson (H. C. Hallett) B.A. J. J. Armitt, B. Au, F. Baron, S. F. Bennett, M. Bittner, Mrs. Braybrook (J. Clarke), C. L. Brothwell, D. L. E. Bullock, H. C. Burgess, P. A. Chalenor (Incorporated), N. E. Clifton, E. A. Czajkowski, B. L. Davison, Mrs. Day (L. E. Stockley), C. Dooley, H. J. Downes, M. C. Doyle, M. E. Emerson, J. Evans, A. D. Farrar, N. J. Ford, Mrs. Ghia (M. Krishna), K. A. Goad, S. E. Goodacre, L. A-M. Hagopian, Mrs. Hall (F. J. Cutts), Mrs. Hallam (E. R. Laidlaw), R. Hawes, C. E. Headlam-Morley, J. H. Heap, A. F. L. Heron, C. M. Hesketh, J. Hodgkins, H. V. Hood, K. M. R. Howard, C. M. F. Hunt, Mrs. Jones (J. M. Ramsden), P. C. M. Jones, C. E. Johnston, Mrs. Juniper (B. E. Taylor), R. Kampeas, K. Kapadia. S. J. Kellett, M. E. Kendall, Mrs. Kenrick (S. E. Murray), S. A. Laing, J. M. Lawson, A. B. Lehmann, A. Leighton, Mrs. Lunn (J. S. Bowling), M. K. McEvoy, P. M. McNeile, N. K. Mackie, C. N. Mason, B. G. Mather, Mrs. Mitchell (S. Cawthera) C. E. Moss, K. Miyazaki, C. A. Murdock, C. Newton, A. P. O'Donnell, Mrs. Page (D. S. Davis), S. M. Palmer, L. F. Pitts, J. M. Phillips, Mrs. Plews (C. C. Halter), M. Prew, C. I. Reynolds, A. L. Richards, A. M. Roberts, D. A. Rothnie, M. A. Russell, M. E. Sanders, M. J. Schove, E. G. Sharp, S. C. Smyth, S. N. Stalbow, R. P. Stanley, J. M. Stedham, G. M. Suttle, A. M. Telesz, C. A. L. Thomas, L. J. Thomas, J. R. Thompson, E. J. Tombs, M. V. Trelfa, D. M. Underhill, Mrs. Verrall (M. Winn), B. V. Wadley, C. P. Wickham, G. Williams, J. M. W. Winterbotham, J. L. Wright, C. A. Wrighting, G. V. Yeats

AWARDS AND PRIZES University Graduate Awards and Prizes Senior Scholarship at Hertford College: E. A. Moignard Studentship at Nuffield College and Herbertson Memorial Prize: M. J. Schove Gustav Mann Clinical Scholarship: Mrs. S. A. Iles Proxime accessit for Henry Oliver Beckit Memorial Prize: S. M. Christensen University Undergraduate Awards and Prizes Junior Heath Harrison Travelling Scholarship in Russian: F. Cooley Junior Heath Harrison Travelling Scholarship in French: K. B. M. Griffith Junior Heath Harrison Travelling Scholarship in German: S. G. Panter

7


Postgraduate Awards Frank Knox Fellowships for graduate study at Harvard University:

R. Hedley-Miller, Mrs. C. Plews Kennedy Scholarship: N. K. Mackie British Council Studentship for travel in the U.S.S.R.: F. Cooley Pelham Studentship awarded by Craven Committee: L. F. Pitts Harmsworth (Major) Exhibition to the Middle Temple: R. B. Trinder Entrance Award to Gray's Inn: A. M. R. Ross Robert Garraway Rice Pupillage Award at the Middle Temple: F. J. Baron Winston Churchill Pupillage Award at the Middle Temple: Mrs. J. R. PittLewis (nee Tucker) Major State Studentships: Mrs. J. Braybrook, L. V. King, H. F. Kirkby,

T. E. Maclver, Mrs. M. E. Morris (for graduate study in Philosophy at King's College, London), L. F. Pitts, H. L. Ratcliffe. One Year State Studentship: J. A. Hazelden S.R.C. Grant: M. J. Lee Undergraduate Awards Caroline Haslett Memorial Trust Scholarship: S. A. Cooper (2nd year Mathe-

matics) Sunday Telegraph Travel Essay Prize: S. M. Jones (3rd year English) College Awards and Prizes To the Dame Catherine Fulford Senior Scholarship: T. E. Maclver Hurry Prize: M. J. Schove Elizabeth Wordsworth Essay Prize: (Divided) N. A. Jackson, R. A. Omar Hilary Haworth Essay Prize: (Divided) M. Murazumi, H. M. Cruickshank Special College Prizes: Mrs. J. Braybrook, S. M. Christensen, H. F. Kirkby,

A. Leighton, N. K. Mackie, J. Pappworth, J. M. Phillips, H. E. Pocock, E. G. Sharp Julia Wood Book Prize: H. J. Smith Lorna Limpus Book Prize: M. T. Doherty

HONOUR EXAMINATIONS, 1976 Literae Humaniores

Class I: N. K. Mackie Class II: A. D. Farrar, L. F. Pitts Classics and Modern Languages

Class II: A. V. Bott Mathematics

Class II: B. Au, M. L. Chettle, G. M. Suttle Class III: S. C. R. Barnes, A. M. Goldsack, S. Pritchard-Jones, A. L. Richards 8


Mathematics and Philosophy Class II: J. H. Heap, M. A. Pain

Natural Sciences Physics: Class II: M. Bittner, L. A. Ellery, D. M. Underhill Class III: M. Miyazaki Chemistry: Part I: C. N. Mason, J. M. Stedham Part II: Class II: M. E. Emerson, M. A. Russell, C. A. Wrighting Biochemistry: Part I: K. Garrick, P. A. Kingsland, J. H. Wilson Part II: Class II: D. L. E. Bullock, R. E. Giblin, L. A-M. Hagopian, S. M. Palmer

Zoology Class II: S. M. Lauckner

Physiological Sciences Class I: H. E. Pocock Class II: E. A. Czajkowski, R. A. Davies, Y. Y. Ng, J. Z. Wimperis

Geology Class II: M. C. Doyle, S. M. Mooney, J. P. Owen

Engineering Science Class II: L. J. Huntington

Engineering Science and Economics Class II: J. 0. Youde

Human Sciences Class II: H. Jackson, M. Winn

Experimental Psychology Class II: V. A. O'Mahoney

Geography Class I: S. M. Christensen, E. G. Sharp, M. J. Schove Class II: B. G. Mather, C. A. Murdoch, M. Murtagh, H. M. Ouseby, G. V. Yeats

Agricultural and Forest Sciences Class II: J. E. Maggs, C. Newton

Jurisprudence Class II: A. N. Beckett, M. W. Ennis, J. A. Hazelden, S. C. Smyth, C. A. L. Thomas Class III: C. E. Sopp 9


Modern History Class I: H. F. Kirkby Class II: C. D. Colquhoun, H. Crabb, M. A. Kernan, T. E. Maclver, H. L. Ratcliffe, C. Strachan Class III: C. D. Awdry, C. L. Brothwell, V. M. Palmer Modern History and Modern Languages Class II: J. M. Taylor Theology Class II: N. J. Ford, Mrs. J. S. Lunn English Class I: A. Leighton, J. Pappworth, J. M. Phillips Class II: B. L. Davison, B. J. Harley, R. Hawes, R. Kampeas, K. Kapadia, A. Leslie, A. I. Mitchell, J. Nicolson, R. E. Swan, J. R. Thompson Class III: H. J. Downes, C. L. Holt Modern Languages Class I: tJ. Clark (Fr./Ger.) Class H: M. A. Burwell (Ger.), F. J. Hall (Fr.), 1.13. C. M. Jones (Sp./Fr.), J. M. Ramsden (Ger./Fr.) 1-M. E. Sanders (Fr./Sp.), M. Saunders (Fr.), *D. Sawkins (Ger.), B. V. Wadley (Fr.) T. M. Woodbridge (It.) P.P.E. Class II: Mrs. E. R. Hallam, R. Hedley-Miller, M-J. King, M. K. McEvoy, Mrs. M. E. Morris, Mrs. C. C. H. Plews, D. A. Rothnie Class III: P. M. McNeile Philosophy and Modern Languages Class II: N. E. Clifton, R. Dumble P.P.P. Class II: S. E. Hough Oriental Studies Class II: M. E. Kendall, A. M. Roberts Class III: K. M. R. Howard, T. A. Leandro Music Class II: C. M. Ennis, K. A. Goad ADDENDUM Geography Honour Examinations 1974: Class II: J. Bartlett, J. L. Hannam, V. A. Medlin, A. M. Palmer, G. M. Wood, R. E. A. Wood Class III: L. C. Winter -1- Distinction in spoken French I0

* Distinction in spoken German


Honour Moderations Literae Humaniores

Class I: J. A. Cocks, C. B. Dermot Small, J. A. Rushton Class II: S. E. Coventry, L. M. T. Williams, J. C. Macaskie Jurisprudence

Passed: M. A. Gillard, J. L. Hornor, S. J. Norton, L. H. Whittaker English Language and Literature

Class I: C. M. Birkett, Mrs. J. M. Healey, K. H. Rose Class II: T. B. Armstrong, H. T. Brewer, J. A. D. V. Davey, M. A. Howarth, R. Jeffrey, C. M. F. Nowland Class III: S. M. Cleave, P. P. Duerdan, J. M. Egan, F. C. Stott, L. K. Todd Mathematics

Class I: S. A. Cooper Class II: R. N. Barlow, J. S. Belcher, J. C. Connell, D. M. Hindle Class III: F. C. Lea-Wilson, M. A. Maffey, J. G. Tarr Mathematics and Philosophy

Class III: R. Gil Physics, Mathematics, Engineering Science

Class I: H. M. Steele Class II: M. S. L. Jacques, M. Murazumi, C. M. Patey, H. A. Schove Class III: J. M. Green Geography

Class II: C. M. Blackden, H. B. Hamilton, T. J. Hirst, C. L. Laight, L. M. MacAlpine, S. W. McIntyre, J. F. Paxman, F. M. J. Sampson Passed: A. M. Besse Music

Class II: M. T. Doherty, S. E. Evans Diplomas Diploma in Ethnology

Mrs. M. E. McDonald (Distinction) Diploma in Social Anthropology

G. Williams Scholarships and Exhibitions awarded since October 1975 Scholars: COCKS, JANE ALIDA, Classics, Old Student's Scholar DERMOT-SMALL, CAROLINE BARBARA, Classics and Mod.

Langs, Old Students'

Scholar HALFPENNY, JULIE CHRISTINE, Mathematics, Old Students' Scholar JURY, KATHERINE TANYA, History, Ethel Seaton Scholar (formerly

an

Exhibitioner) II


RUSHTON, JULIE ANN, Classics, Old Students' Scholar STEELE, HELEN MARGARET, Physics, Old Student's Scholar

Exhibitioner)

THOMPSON, VALERIE,

(formerly an

Mathematics, Old Student's Scholar

Exhibitioners: HOLDSWORTH, ALISON DE BOUYS, English, Hodgson Exhibitioner JACKSON, NICOLA ANNE, English, Hodgson Exhibitioner

MATRICULATIONS, 1976 Scholars: SPAIN, LEIGH (Jubilee Scholar, History), Dover Grammar School for Girls JONES, BEVERLY ANN (Nuffield Scholar, Medicine), The Brooksbank School,

Elland (Ethel Seaton Scholar, Mathematics), Twickenham County Grammar School and Thames Valley College, Twickenham

PRINCE, SUSAN LINDA

Exhibitioners: BOSELEY, SARAH ROWENA

(Hodgson Exhibitioner, English), County School for

Girls, Guildford SUDDEN, ROSEMARY ANNE

(Clara Evelyn Mordan Exhibitioner, History),

Devonport High School for Girls (Clara Evelyn Mordan Exhibitioner, Geography), Altrincham Grammar School for Girls GARLICK, SUSAN JENNIFER (Irene Shrigley Exhibitioner, History), South

CLARKE, ROSALIND JULIA GEORGINA

Hampstead High School, G.P.D.S.T. GIBB, ROSALIND EMILY

(Nuffield Exhibitioner, Physics), Withington Girls'

School MARSH, JOCELYN

(Hodgson Exhibitioner, English), Wycombe High School

for Girls MERRITT, JANET ELIZABETH

(Nuffield Exhibitioner, Biochemistry), Banbury

Upper School Commoners: ALLISON, SUSAN (Classics), The High School, Boston, Lincs. ANTEN, CLAIRE ELIZABETH (P.P.E.), Ashton-in-Makerfield

Grammar

School ATKINSON, JOYCE MARY (Theology), Maidstone Grammar School BERG, MARGARET ALISON (P.P.P.), Cotham Grammar School, Bristol BEWLEY, ALEXANDRA MARY (P.P.E.), Godolphin and Latymer School BLACKWELL, JANET ELIZABETH (Mathematics), Wyggeston Girls' School,

Leicester BONES, LINDSAY ANN (Zoology), Edgehill College, Bideford BROOM, SHEENA MARY (Geology), Stamford High School BROWN, KATHLEEN (Chemistry), Lark Hill House School, Preston BUDD, JULIA KATHARINE (P.P.P.), Benenden School CAMPBELL-COOKE, JENNIFER (Mathematics), Croydon High School

for Girls,

G.P.D . S. T . CAPALDI, JULIANA ELENA (Jurisprudence), Clapham County CAUDREY, ADRIANA AILEVE (English), Putney High School, I2

School G.P.D.S.T.


CHANDRIS, EUGENIA DEMETRIUS (English), Queen's College, London CHURCH, ANTHEA MARY CHARLOTTE (English), Sherborne School for Girls COOMBES, BARBARA ANN (Modern Languages), Tonbridge Girls' Grammar

School COPISAROW, ROSALIND SARAH (Human Sciences), Benenden School CORLETT, JUDY ANNE (Theology), Pate's Grammar School, Cheltenham CORRY, FIONNUALA MAIRE (History), St. Anne's Comprehensive, South-

ampton DAVIES, RUTH MARGARET

(Medicine), Whyteleafe County Grammar School

for Girls DAY, JANET ELIZABETH

(Chemistry), Collingwood County Secondary School,

Camberley DRYDEN, JENNIFER LYNN

(Biochemistry), Woking County Grammar School

for Girls EDWARDS, KSHANIKA MARINI JOSEPHINE

College

(Human Sciences), Malvern Girls'

EGERTON, CAROLINE MARY (History), Wakefield Girls' High School ELLINS, FRANCES ROSEMARY (P.P.E.), Sheffield High School for

Girls,

G.P.D.S.T. ELTON, CAROLINE SARAH (Human Sciences), Camden School for Girls EMERTON, CAROLINE MARY (Mathematics), Perse School for Girls FLETCHER, KATHARINE LAWRENCE (Classics), St. Mary's Hall, Brighton FURZE, LINDSEY MARIA (History), Folkestone Girls' Grammar School GILBERT, SHARON (Mathematics), Roundhay School, Leeds GOUGH, ALISON BARBARA (Biochemistry), St. Alban's Girls' Grammar School GREENWOOD, CATHERINE ANN (P.P.E.), St. Joseph's College, Bradford HAUSER, CHANTAL SUSANMADELEINE (English), Putney High School,

G.P.D.S.T.

HAYWOOD, STEPHANIE KAREN

(Chemistry), King Edward VI High School

for Girls, Birmingham HAZELTON, AMANDA MARY

School HEAL, SUSANNAH

smith

(Geography), Godolphin and Latymer School, Hammer-

HIRSCH, JULIA ANN

School

(English), Haberdashers' Aske's Hatcham Girls'

(Experimental Psychology), Tonbridge Girls' Grammar

HOCKENHULL, CAROLINE ANN LISTER (Zoology), Badminton School HOLLAND, JANE SARAH (Geography), The Kingsley School, Leamington Spa HOUGHTON, JANE BEVERLEY (Agriculture & Forest Sciences), St. Bartholo-

mew's School, Newbury

HOWARTH, JANE ELIZABETH (Botany), Lancaster Girls' Grammar School HOWE, SUZANNE VIRGINIA (Geology), Charterhouse ICETON, CAROLINE WENDY (P.P.E.), Jersey College for Girls ISACKE, CLARE MARGARET (Biochemistry), Talbot Heath School, Bournemouth JONES, KATHRYN (English), _Fleetwood Grammar School KELLETT, FELICITY ANNE (Geography), Roedean School KING, HILARY ELEANOR (English), Gloucester High School for Girls LEE, FUWEN (Oriental Studies (Chinese)), Wellesley College, Mass., U.S.A. LEES, AMANDA MARY (Chemistry), Dr. Challoner's High School, Chalfont St.

Giles.

LEVETT, ELIZABETH MARY

(Biochemistry), Cranbrook

r3


(Mathematics & Philosophy), Rosebery County Grammar School, Epsom LOCK, HEATHER JOY (Mathematics), Sutton Coldfield Girls' School LUCAS, PENELOPE MARY (Jurisprudence), King Edward VI High School for Girls, Birmingham MCAULAY, CATHERINE (Physics), La Sagesse High School, Newcastle-uponTyne MCLEAN, KATRINA MARY (Oriental Studies), Madras College, St. Andrews MaCLEOD, RUTH MARGERET (Geography), Eastbourne High School MCMILLAN, SARAH MADELEINE (P.P.E.), The Lady Eleanor Holies School, Hampton, Middlesex. MCPHERSON, MOIRA ELIZABETH (Classics), St. Albans High School for Girls MATTHEWS, CHRISTINE ANN (Geography), Bolton School, Girls' Division MEHTA, ZUBEEN MINOO (Modern Languages), Headington School MILLER, KATHARINE ROSAMUND (Classics), Benenden School MOLYNEUX, ANNE (English), Northwich County Grammar School MOON, JAKYUNG (Medicine), Cheltenham Ladies' College NICHOLSON, FLORA RACHEL (Geography), Eton OBLITAS, GILLIAN DEBORAH (Geography), Cheltenham Ladies' College O'CONNOR, BRIDGET ANNE (Classics), St. Helena School, Chesterfield OHANJANIAN, ISABEL ARPENIK (Classics), B.A. British Columbia PAVIS, HILARY MARGARET (Medicine), Mill Mount Grammar School, York PHILLIPS, SUSAN PATRICIA STEWART (History), Sherbourne School for Girls POLLOCK, JANE (Philosophy & Theology), Wycombe High School for Girls PROCTER, BARBARA CLARE (Geography), Norwich High School, G.P.D.S.T. REYNOLDS, MARGARET LOUISE (English), Woodford County High School RIDLEY, JESSICA CLAYRE (History), Queen's College, London ROBB, JACQUELINE GAYLOR (Mathematics), High School of Dundee ROGERS, TERESA CATHERINE (Engineering Science), Wulfric School, Burtonon-Trent ROSS, ALISON MARGARET REID (Jurisprudence), The Queen's School, Chester RUNDLE-SMITH, SARA EVELYN (Mathematics & Philosophy), Bedford High School RUSSELL, EMILY ANN (Physics), Victoria College, Belfast RUSSELL, SHEELAGH ELIZABETH (History), City and East London College RUTTER, JANET LYNNE (Modern Languages), Northallerton Grammar School SALISBURY, DAVINA ALEXANDRA CLAIRE (Jurisprudence), Cheltenham Ladies' College SCRATON, PAULINE AMANDA (Physics), Ripon Grammar School SHAFTO, ELIZABETH ANNE (Geography), King Edward VI High School for Girls, Birmingham SHAW, VALERIE ANN (Geography), Layton Hill Convent, Blackpool SHILLING, JANE ELIZABETH (English), Highsted School for Girls, Sittingbourne SMITH, MOIRA ANN (Modern Languages), Brentwood County High School SMITH, NICOLA LESLEY (History), Lichfield Friary-Grange SMITH, VERONICA MARY DOLORES (History), Ursuline Convent, Westgate-onSea SPARROW, CAROLINE FRANCES (Modern Languages), Stroud High School SUMMERS, WENDY ANN (P.P.P.), Hastings High School LIVESEY, ANNETE JOYCE


TANNER, LUCINDA JOSEPHINE CLARE

(Physics), Oxford High School,

G.P.D.S.T. THOMAS, CAROL SANDRA (Mathematics), Rosebery County School, Epsom TOPPING, SUSAN ANGELA (Jurisprudence), Henrietta Barnett School TYSON, ERICA SYDNEY (Engineering Science), Lancaster Girls' Grammar

School VAN DER GAAG, NICOLA ELIZABETH (English), St. Catherine's School, Bramley WALKER, DEBORAH CLARE (P.P.E.), Oxford College of Further Education WALL, JOANNE CLARE (Biochemistry), Sydenham High School, G.P.D.S.T. WALSH, BARBARA ANNE (Modern Languages & Philosophy), St. Maurs

Convent, Weybridge WHITE, CLAIRE JOSEPHINE

(Modern Languages), Devonport High School for

Girls, Plymouth WHITE, KATHERINE (History), Highworth School, Ashford, Kent WHITTERS, FRANCINE ELIZABETH (P.P.E.), St. Joseph's College, Bradford WHYMAN, JANETTE ROSE (Classics e..1 Modern Languages), Sheffield High

School. G.P.D.S.T. WOOD, CAROL-ANN MARGARET

(Jurisprudence), St. Leonard's School, St.

Andrews YALE, JANET ELIZABETH

(English), Whitcliffe Mount School, West York-

shire.

FIRST-YEAR GRADUATES FROM OTHER UNIVERSITIES READING FOR OTHER DEGREES, DIPLOMAS, ETC DANZIGER, G. H. (B.A. London), B.Phil., Politics FARR, H. M. (B.A. Hull), Certificate in Education GILMORE, M. C. (B.A. Cambridge), B.Litt., Music HIGGINS, S. A. (B.A. London), M.Sc., Applied Social Studies JUDGES, S. A. (B.A. Manchester), Certificate in Education KENDALL, MRS. M. L. (B.A. London), Certificate in Education KING, L. V. (B.A. Essex), B.Litt., Social Anthropology KOLLER, P. s. (B.A. London), Certificate in Education LAHHAM, MRS. s. (M.A. Am. Univ. Beirut), B.Litt., English RICHARDS, MRS. P. M. (B.A. Salford), Certificate in Education

ST. HUGH'S GRADUATES READING FOR CERTIFICATES IN EDUCATION DAVISON, B. L. FORD, N. J. HEAP, J. H.

JONES, MRS. J. M. LUNN, MRS. J. S. RICHARDS, A. L.

15


RESEARCH STUDENTS (Term of admission in brackets) Board of the Faculty of Anthropology and Geography B.Litt. DE ROCHE, MRS. C. D. (M 73), FENTRESS, MRS. E. W. B. (M 74) JONES, 75), KING, L. V. (M 73), RIDD, R. E. (M 73) BLAIR, J. F. (M 70), CHAPMAN, M. D. (M 71), LETTS, S. E. (M 69) MILLS, MRS. N. K. (M 71), THOMAS-HOPE, MRS. E. M. (M 70), WALTER, MRS. B. M. (M 70) A. M.

(M

D.Phil.

Board of the Faculty of English Language and Literature B.Litt. ARMSTRONG, A. (M 74), HANSCOMBE, G. E. (M

74), JOHNSON, M. F. 75), LAHHAM, MRS. S. (M 76), LEIGHTON, A. (M 73) D.Phil. BIRCH, MRS. D. L. (M 71), CLEGG, J. F. (M 72), KEYTE, P. E. J. (M 73), MILLETT, E. N. (M 70)

(M

Board of the Faculty of Literae Humaniores B.Litt. CASTELNUOVO, MRS. L. M. (M 73) D.Phil. BILLERBECK, M. J. (M 75), MOIGNARD, E. A. (M 74),

PALAGIA, 0.

(M 73)

Board of the Faculty of Mathematics D.Phil. LEE, M. J. Board of the Faculty of Clinical Medicine B.M. BENNETT, S. F. (M 71), CAUDWELL, H. F. (M

74), CZAJKOWSKI, E. A. 73), ILES, MRS. S. A. (M 66), JORDISON, M. H. (M 74), KEIDAN, A. J. (M 72), MOUNSEY, B. E. A. (M 72), NG, Y. C. (M 72)

(M

Board of the Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages B.Litt. BRAYBROOK, MRS. J. (M 72), MAXWELL, MRS. E. J. J. (M 70) D.Phil. BALLARD, E. A. (M 74), DUDEK, J. (M 72), DUNCKER, P. M. (M 73), HENDERSON, MRS. I. (M 74), KONNOVA, MRS. V. F. 71), STEVENS, MRS. L. (M 73)

(M

75), O'BRIEN, J.

(M

Board of the Faculty of Modern History B.Litt. IERODIACONOU, A. L. (M 74), KIRKBY, H. F. (M (M 73),

D.Phil.

73), MaCIVER, T. E. RATCLIFFE, H. L. (M 73) TAVERA DE ESTEBAN, MRS. S. (M 73) ALLAN, J. E. (M 72), BURK, K. M. (M 72), CHANCELLOR, V. E. (M 73)

Board of the Faculty of Law B.C.L. HAZELDEN, J. A. (M 73) Board of the Faculty of Music B.Litt. GILMORE, M. C. (M 76) D.Phil. BARTOS, B. M-A. (M 72) Oriental Studies D.Phil. GORTON, MRS. A. G. (M 73) Board of the Faculty of Physical Sciences D.Phil. MAHTAB, MRS. R. (M 74), PICKETT, MRS. A. W. (M S. C.

M.Sc.

i6

(M 75) HUNTINGTON, L. J.

(M 73), NIXON, L. M. (M 71)

71), SHARPLES,


Board of the Faculty of Social Studies Diploma Economic Development QUINTERO TORRES, MRS. Z. (M 75) B.Litt. EL-HELOU, A. (M 72), PALACIOS, MRS. A. (M 72) B.Phil. DANZIGER, G. H. (M 76) M.Sc. HIGGINS, S. A. (M 76), SHEARER, E. L. (M 69) Board of the Faculty of Theology D.Phil.

WILSON, F. J. (M 71)

Committee for Archaeology B.Litt. TINKOFF-UTECHIN, T. A. (M 74) B.Phil. JONES, M. L. (M 71), PITTS, L. F. (M 72)

THE JUNIOR COMMON ROOM, 1976 AST year, like the previous one, was distinguished by the small part

politics played in the life of the J.C.R., and J.C.R. meetings have usually concentrated on domestic matters. Special interest has been shown in the problem of space for the J.C.R. and plans are now going ahead for the conversion of the Mary Gray Allen basement into a J.C.R. bar and television room, leaving the present J.C.R. free for quieter and more serious pursuits! The conversion of the Mary Gray Allen basement is not the only structural alteration in the College that has caused excitement; much enthusiasm has been shown for plans to extend the College Library in the coming summer St. Hugh's J.C.R. continues to be very socially inclined and this year Freshers' Parties were held with the J.C.R.s of both University College and of Christ Church, and were followed by a very successful Christmas Party, held in the Mordan Hall, which was much enjoyed by everyone who attended. As usual the Scouts' Christmas Party went very well. St. Hugh's continues to be well represented in University societies, especially in the fields of music and drama, and the St. Hugh's Choir performed particularly beautifully at the annual carol service in the College Chapel. Last year St. Hugh's held three open days in which the J.C.R. participated: one for headmasters and headmistresses, one in conjunction with the other women's colleges, for women who are considering application to Oxford, and one for those women who were considering applying to St. Hugh's, and this last we organized on our own. Open days seem to have become part of Oxford college programmes now and those held at St. Hugh's were especially successful, for both the head teachers and the girls were struck by the helpful and very happy atmosphere which has continued to pervade the College this last year, as always. RUTH HALSEY (President) 17


Games Report. The majority of members of St. Hugh's College seem to enjoy sport, whatever their sporting ability. There has been, as usual, the `hard core', who have gained their Blues and excelled at their sport, but there have been others who played for second University teams, who with their great enthusiasm and their loyalty were invaluable to the Blues themselves. Others played for the College, and not just in conventional women's sports. We are able to boast an excellent darts team, which can beat most men's teams—by fair means, I might add. We have also a thriving Rugby team, soon to be televised, whose great love of the game could not be dampened by bad weather, nor by the Headmaster of Eton! Finally, there are girls who profess no prowess at any sport whatsoever, but are still happy to knock a ping-pong ball around the J.C.R. or hit a croquet ball to victory on the lawns. This is the essence of sport at St. Hugh's: it is enjoyed and gives nearly every member something in common, apart from their academic abilities. The following gained Blues in the 1975-6 season: Helen Bayley (athletics), Veronica Davidson (athletics), Anne Gillard (swimming), Julie Halfpenny (athletics and cross-country), Ann Harris (netball), Mary Hindle (cricket), Erica Ison (netball) Sally Jones (modern pentathlon, tennis and squash), Jane Maggs (rowing), Margaret Maffey (hockey), Beverley Mather (rowing), Beverley Plastow (netball), Elizabeth Robertson (cricket), Hilary Schove (netball), and Mary Schove (netball). The following have been elected University team captains for the 1976-7 season: Jill Griffin (fencing), Julie Halfpenny (cross-country), Hilary Schove (netball) and Jane Sinclair (lacrosse). ERICA ISON

MIDDLE COMMON ROOM HE St. Hugh's M.C.R. continues to enjoy the interest and participation of its members, which, both its redecoration, last year, and its greater number of activities this year have fostered. The number of M.C.R. members, both in and out of residence, totals approximately ninety; seventy-five members are currently in residence and of these about thirty per cent are graduates of St. Hugh's. In addition to graduates from other British Universities the M.C.R. boasts students from universities in Czechoslovakia, Canada, Lebanon, U.S.A., U.S.S.R., Greece, and Venezuela. Among these are Rawnsley Students Blanca A. Bartos of Charles University, Prague, and Vera F. Konnova of Moscow State University. Maud Gleason, of Harvard University, U.S.A., has been the recipient of a Danforth Fellowship award. Academically we are, I think, an impressive group. Thamar E. Maclver is Dame Catherine Fulford Senior Scholar, and an associate member of the M.C.R.; Elizabeth A. Moignard is Senior Scholar at Hertford College (1976-7); Ruth Chadwick, another affiliate member of the Common Room, has a lecturership in Philosophy at Trinity College (1976-7), and Karin Kapadia, a former Vice-President of the Common Room, was a recipient,

T

18


last year, of the Violet Vaughan Morgan Prize. Olga Palagia, who is completing a D.Phil. in Classical Archaeology this year, has published articles and reviews in the Journal of Hellenic Studies, Athens Annals of Archaeology, and Mnemon. She has also given a lecture, with another scholar, on Greek and Roman sculpture at the 77th General Meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America. Socially, our joint activities with the Brasenose Hulme Common Room are now an enjoyable part of every term. We have had a champagne and strawberries feast at the Frewin Court Annexe to Brasenose, two 'disco' parties, one of which was preceded by wine and cheese in our Common Room at 12 Canterbury Road, and the Hulme Common Room at Brasenose has become a gathering place for some St. Hugh's members at lunchtime after purchase of a meal in hall there. This arrangement is most convenient for those St. Hugh's graduates who work in libraries or laboratories in the city centre, and our members can also dine in H.C.R. on guest nights. Last Hilary Term an unofficial liaison developed with the Queen's College and resulted in a successful tea party and a Carnival Disco, held near the time of Shrove Tuesday. Queen's, along with Brasenose, was invited to our summer garden party, complete with croquet and bowls. A dance with St. Anthony's in Trinity Term provided another new and promising contact. In College three guest nights have taken place over the past three terms, when M.C.R. members bring guests into one of Chef's finest 'special menu' dinners, followed by port and coffee served in New Building Common Room. With the help of Miss Haswell of the Senior Common Room our link with Queen Elizabeth House remains strong and we shall again have the pleasure of a buffet supper there. And finally, to demonstrate our deep appreciation to the College for help in redecorating the M.C.R., we invited members of the Senior Common Room to share our Christmas tree and holly and some of 'Dr. Johnson's hot mulled wine', along with cheese, biscuits, and mince pies. (Entertainment on a more sophisticated scale has been made possible by the purchase of sets of wine and sherry glasses, sufficient for large numbers!) In University matters contact has been maintained through the President (M. F. Johnson) who attended the M.C.R. Presidents' Conferences with the Proctors. At one meeting the question of women's colleges becoming mixed was raised, and St. Hugh's voiced the opinion that there still exists a role for women's colleges, both in providing places for women scholars and in fostering, not only scholarship, but perhaps a special independence and self-awareness as well. The M.C.R. this year voted temporarily to disaffiliate from the National Union of Students, to ease our budget, and now that all austerity measures can be eased without undue strain on the treasury the incoming committee can feel free to plan enjoyable events for all M.C.R. members. The outgoing officers of the M.C.R. Committee (to be replaced in the second week of Hilary Term) are as follows: Mary Franklin Johnson, President; Gloria Danziger, Vice-President; Miriam Greenbaum, Secretary; Margaret Lee, Treasurer, and Julia Jones, Social Secretary. During Hilary and Trinity Ter ms Rosemary Ridd served as Vice-President, and Mary Rees as Treasurer. Miss Rees is now pursuing a degree at another university and Miss Ridd is engaged in research in South Africa for her Oxford degree in Social Anthropology. MARY FRANKLIN JOHNSON 19


GIFTS AND BENEFACTIONS Gift of silver menu holders for High Table from Miss Hobbs (1924-7). Gift from 1926 group of Old Students of a first edition of Clarendon's History of the Rebellion, and a gift of money for a showcase for rare books in the Library. Gift from Miss M. M. Dalston (1918-21) of Ackermann's History of the University of Oxford.

Gift of £600 from Mrs. B. G. Lyons (nee Gellert, 1954-6): allocated to the Library. Gift of k30o from Miss R. Syfret (Lecturer of the College, 1968-72): allocated to the Library. Anonymous gift of £2,000: allocated towards the cost of the Library expansion.

20


ST. HUGH'S COLLEGE ASSOCIATION OF SENIOR MEMBERS

President, 1976-8 MISS M. L. MARR Hon. Secretary, 1976 8 MRS. J. V. COCKSHOOT (J. JOHNSON) Gateways, Harcourt Hill, North Hinksey, Oxford -

Editor of the Chronicle, 1976 8 DR. N. M. FLEET (N. M. THORP) io Polstead Road, Oxford -

Committee 1976-8

MRS. J. POTTER (M. NEWMAN, 1944) DR. H. S. M. BRADBURY (H. S. M. MACPHERSON, 1951) MISS V. CHANCELLOR (1955) MRS. CAMPBELL THOMPSON (M. A. W. TOOVEY, 1943) MRS. CURTIS (S. MYERS, 5954) DR. JONES (E. P. JACOB, 5963) DR. M. G. ADAM (Governing Body Representative)

21



ANNUAL MEETING OF THE ASSOCIATION OF SENIOR MEMBERS rri HE fifty-first Annual Meeting of the Association of Senior Members was 1 held in the Mordan Hall on Saturday 3 July 1976, at 3 p.m., the President, Miss Marr, in the chair. One hundred and forty-five members were present. The President called on the meeting to stand in memory of those members who had died during the year. The Minutes of z8 June 1975 were accepted and signed and there was no business arising from the Minutes.

The President's Report. 'Madam Principal, fellow members of the Association, I have much pleasure in presenting my report for the past year of the activities of the Association. The Committee has met three times since the last A.G.M., in November, March, and today. At the November meeting we welcomed Dr. Adam as Governing Body Representative in place of Miss Jacobs, who had felt she must resign, owing to pressure of work, on her appointment as Vice-Principal. Miss Jacobs had served on the Committee for a number of years and had given us a great deal of valuable advice and help for which we are most grateful and we owe her a great debt for her lively and informative annual accounts of the achievements of members of the Association. `At our meetings we have been particularly interested to learn about the Memorial to Miss Gwyer, designed and executed by Mr. Laurence Whistler. Some of us saw it at an exhibition of his work at the Fine Arts Society in London and it is now being shown at the Ashmolean. [Cf. the following statement by the Principal. ED.] We were also delighted to see, at the St. Hugh's Night Sherry Party, the beautiful head and shoulders bust of Miss Gwyer, the work of Maureen Coatman and given to the College by the late Miss Towerton. It now stands outside the Chapel. `We gave some of our time to working out the scheme for priority of places at the Gaudy, ready to meet the contingency that more members might apply to attend the Gaudy Dinner than could possibly be packed—I use the word deliberately—into the Dining Hall. I hope you feel that the final plan is a fair and just one. In accordance with our custom in non-Gaudy years, a Sherry Party was held in London on 31 October 1976. It was a very happy occasion to which members came from a very varied number of years, and drawn from all over London and the Home Counties. The Committee feels that it is a very valuable opportunity for members to meet, but we wish to point out very clearly that it is no longer possible to hold such a party at any hotel or club and make it financially viable, with tickets at a reasonable price. Last year's party was held at the home of one of our members, Lady Johnston, and we are all most grateful to her and to her whole family, for all they did to make the party possible. Only if we can have similar offers to hold the Sherry Parties in members' homes can this custom continue. If any member can help us in this matter will she, please, let us know? While talking about the Sherry Party, I am sure we should like to congratulate Lady Johnston on becoming Chairman of the Girls' Public Day School Trust, with which so many of us have links. I should also like to convey our warm thanks to Mrs. Cynthia Rayment who carried out all the clerical and financial work in connection with the party.


`At our March meeting we were delighted to hear that Dr. Joan Evans had been created a Dame in the New Year's Honours. There may be some here, like myself, who knew Dame Joan in College in her capacity as Librarian, and are grateful for all the work she did for us and the help she gave us then, before College Librarianship became a professional matter and its scope immensely widened, and before she herself became deeply involved in the researches which brought her so many honours and much distinction in many fields. `Those of you who were present at the A.G.M. last year will remember that the Editor of the Chronicle gave us some rather moving and, in some cases, sad information which she had gleaned from following up certain replies to the 'coloured forms'. These were from our oldest members, of whom there are now more than thirty between the ages of 8z and 92. Some of them had had no personal word from College or contacts with other members for a long time. Several of the fourteen to whom she had written replied very gratefully and with much delight at being remembered. Some of them are ill or disabled or rather lonely, and most of them, through age, infirmity, or distance, cannot come to College reunions. From the A.G.M. last year we sent picture postcards of College, prepared by the Editor, bearing our greetings and signed by a number of us. I saw some of the letters of thanks for these cards, and they were most appreciative. We have been wondering, therefore, whether it would be possible to compile a list of members of the College, in different parts of the country, who would volunteer to have their names and addresses and telephone numbers printed in the Chronicle, in order that elderly members, if they so wished, could contact them. In this way friendly relations could be established and perhaps help given in an emergency. This does seem something which we ought to do as an Association, particularly in an age when the old and elderly are so apt to be overlooked. Many of us, at some time or other, have found ourselves in illness or trouble or loneliness—perhaps even in a new post in an area we do not know. In such circumstances the opportunity to make a friendly contact with someone who has a common interest in St. Hugh's would have been very welcome. The initiative would be with the person desiring the contact and not with the volunteer. If you think this is a good idea, perhaps you would let us know? If you are willing to be a volunteer, the Editor would be delighted to hear from you. [Cf. notice on p. 5o.] `Finally, I must thank all the Committee for their help and encouragement, which have made carrying out the office of President a far less overpowering and frightening experience than I expected it to be. Most especially would I thank Mrs. Jeanette Cockshoot, our Secretary, for all the time, thought, and hard work which she devotes to the affairs of the Association. Only the Committee, and perhaps only the President, can fully appreciate her wealth of experience, her foresight, dedication, and sound judgement which enable the affairs of the Association to run so smoothly. We all owe her a great debt of gratitude. `That, Ladies, completes my annual report. I hope you will feel that your Committee has lived up to St. Hugh's motto—Fidelitas—at least, we have tried to.' The President then invited the Principal to speak. She said: 'There are only two things I want to say. First of all, how very sorry we are that it has not 24


proved possible to have the memorial glass to Miss Gwyer in College in time for the Gaudy. We hope it will be inserted in the Chapel on r September, and I will let Senior Members know when a date has been fixed for a Dedication Service. I hope to be able to get Lord Ramsey of Canterbury, the Visitor, to take the service. The other thing concerns the Library. This is very much a 'library' Gaudy: I have just come back from a presentation of rare books to the Library by the 1926 Jubilee Year. They have collected over z6o and with this the Library has already bought a handsome early edition of Clarendon's History of the Rebellion, the first book to be printed at the Clarendon Press when it moved to the Clarendon Building in Broad Street. The money will also pay for a show case and for more books. `But more books mean more space for books, and one of our problems has been deciding what to do about extending the Library. It is such a peculiarly handsome building that the notion of changing it in any way we simply could not, in the end, accept. What we do propose is to improve and increase shelving in the Main Library, relighting it, recovering the floor, and heightening the book-stacks by an extra shelf. We are also going to turn one large stack-room into an open-access part of the Library and probably make it into a science reading-room. We shall then take in three undergraduate rooms adjacent and use them as stack-rooms, and add two book-stacks to the Fulford Room, and this will give us a total space for 63,990 vols. By present-day standards that is still not a large library, but it is a good working library, and we are rightly proud of our collection of rare books and unusual items. In the course of next year we shall be launching an appeal for help with this library project. The Building Fund is on the point of being closed and we hope that those of you who have so generously covenanted with us in the past may consider doing the same towards the expansion and maintenance of the Library. It is the heart of the College, and I know how much it has meant to everyone who was an undergraduate here.' The College Report. Dr. Adam, the Governing Body Representative on the A.S.M. Committee congratulated Dr. Joan Evans on being made a D.B.E. and Professor Joan Hussey on the award of a Leverhulme Emeritus Fellowship, 1975-7. On S.C.R. matters she said the Principal had been much in demand for lecturing and speaking: she had been invited to give a paper at the David Nichol Smith centenary in Edinburgh and had been offered a grant from the Theodore Stewart Fund to work in the National Library of Scotland. She had taken advantage of this in the first two weeks of May. She had been guest speaker at Oxford Society functions as far apart as Jersey and Westmorland and had also presented the prizes at Bradford Girls' Grammar School. She was at the moment an Examiner in the Final Honour School of English, and four other Fellows of the College were also Finals Examiners. Miss Sweeting had been elected to a five-year University Special Lecturership in Geography. An Open Day for Headmistresses had been arranged for 20—I April and fifty-seven schools had been represented. As there was, at least in some of the smaller schools (i.e. subjects), a problem of finding enough suitable candidates, it had been decided to make early offers of places, though awards would still be made only on the usual Entrance Examination. Mrs. Soulsby, from St. Andrews, was Schoolmistress Student (Geography) in M.T. 1975, 2

5


and the Fanny Seaton Schoolmistress Studentship (endowed under Dr. Seaton's will) had been awarded to Miss Jillian Ramshaw, Head of House at Bedlington High School, Northumbria. The Governing Body had arranged for the erection of a headstone to Dr. Seaton's grave in Wolvercote cemetery. It lies immediately east of the cemetery chapel. Consequent upon the retirement of the Bursar and the future retirement of the Treasurer, the administrative offices of the College were in future to be that of Senior Bursar and Domestic Bursar, with suitable arrangement of the duties of each. The post of Senior Bursar had been advertised as open to both men and women and Miss Joan M. N. Milne, O.B.E., M.A. (Cantab.), was elected from a strong field of candidates. She would take up her college duties on i September 1976. Miss Eunice Rothwell, the present Deputy Bursar, had been appointed Domestic Bursar. Mrs. Mary Warnock, an exFellow and Tutor, had been appointed Senior Research Fellow; the Martinengo Cesaresco Research Scholarship in Italian Studies, 1976-7, had been awarded to Miss R. H. Pitt (B.A. Lond.), now a Lecturer at Bristol University. She would continue her research on the Sicilian writer Giovanni Verga. Dr. Adam was sorry to say goodbye to Mrs. Hilary Brown who had been, for twelve years, of outstanding help to the medical students as Lecturer in Physiology, to Mrs. Sourvinou-Inwood, on her appointment as Lecturer in Archaeology at Liverpool University, to Mrs. Susan Wollenberg, who was resigning her Lecturership in Music, and to Mrs. Beaumont, who had resigned her Lecturership in Zoology. Dr. Jane Glover (a former Junior Research Fellow), who had recently been making a considerable impact on the musical world by her editing and conducting, had been appointed to a Lecturership in Music; Mr. A. E. Harvey, University Lecturer in Theology had been appointed to a College Lecturership; Mr. Bennet-Clark to a Lecturership in Zoology, and Miss Alayne Street, Demonstrator at the School of Geography, to a Lecturership in Geography. On J.C.R. matters Dr. Adam reported that the Joint Committee between Junior Members and the Governing Body was now well established and seemed to work very well; and in the academic field the J.C.R. continued to bring us great credit Dr. Adam ended her report with a personal tribute to the retiring Bursar. Elections. The Hon. Secretary and the Editor of the Chronicle were re-elected. There were two nominations for the office of President: Miss M. L. Marr, who was eligible to serve for another two years, and Miss K. M. Hobbs. A ballot was held and the votes counted after the meeting. Miss Marr was re-elected. For the three vacancies on the Committee for the period 1976-80, the following had been nominated and were declared returned unopposed: Mrs. Ann Campbell-Thompson (née Toovey) 1943; Mrs. Sarah Curtis (née Myers) 1954, and Dr. Elizabeth Patricia Jones (née Jacob) 1963. A vote of thanks to the retiring members of the Committee was proposed by Mrs. Audrey Carlisle. She thanked Miss Jacobs, who had handed over to Dr. Adam in October 1975, as Governing Body Representative, Lady Johnston, Mrs. Rayment, and Dr. Levick who had each served the Association in their various ways.

z6


The President then asked the Secretary to make a presentation to Miss Major on her retirement on behalf of the A.S.M. The Secretary highlighted the work Miss Major had done over the past twenty years particularly for the Association, and said that Senior Members were under a special obligation to her for stage-managing the Gaudy weekends with tremendous thoroughness and enthusiasm. Nothing seemed to be too much trouble to ensure that these reunions were enjoyed to the full. The Secretary added a personal thank-you to Miss Major for her kindness and co-operation which had been so encouraging throughout her secretaryship, and welcomed the opportunity to make the presentation of a cheque with which to purchase some photographic equipment. With it went the very sincere thanks of the Association and very best wishes for the future. In thanking the members for their magnificent gift, Miss Major said that the period she had spent at St. Hugh's had brought many challenges and she had found the work an adventure. Preparations for the Gaudy and other College functions had given her great satisfaction. It had also been a delight and privilege to feel that she could share in the life and service of the College. Miss Major concluded: 'This College has its own special atmosphere, possibly stemming from its noble patron, St. Hugh, whose keynote was in some of his own words: "Love in the heart / Truth on the lips." Long may this atmosphere of devotion and integrity continue.' The following letter was received by the Hon. Sec., Mrs. Cockshoot, from Miss Major: 27 Victoria Terrace, Dunfermline z8 August 1976 Dear Mrs. Cockshoot, I am still feeling overwhelmed by the tremendous generosity of the Senior Members of St. Hugh's in their gift to me on that most memorable occasion of the 1976 Gaudy. It will give me the greatest pleasure to seek out the camera of my choice and to use it to the full in the leisure that lies ahead. It has always been one of my ambitions to have the time to capture the beauty of the world around us and if possible to make a record of it. You have all now set me on the way to making this a reality and I am deeply grateful to you. Would you very kindly convey my warmest appreciation and wishes to the Committee and to all the Members ? Yours very sincerely, EVA MAJOR

Proposed change in the Constitution. This item (remitted from the Annual

General Meeting 1974) was declared lapsed when, in the absence of the original proposer, it was found that nobody present desired to speak. As there was no other business the meeting was closed.

GAUDY 1976 L the well-loved traditions were maintained but there were also elements `special' to 1976. The weather was hot, so hot that agenda papers and AL menus became fans. The garden had protested a little against the sun, yet the splendid trees had borne up well; there was colour from roses and lavender and, at night, the well-remembered sent of tobacco plants. 27


Annual Meeting proceedings are recorded elsewhere but Miss Major's reply to her presentation captured what she aptly termed St. Hugh's atmosphere of devotion and integrity and her quotation therefore belongs here: `Love in the heart / Truth on the lips.' By Saturday tea-time we were agog for exchange of news at the garden party: bright frocks and the occasional delicious hat, sunshine and deep shade, inexhaustible teapots and tongues—Gaudy 1976 was in full swing. Outside Chapel there is a finely sculptured bust of Miss Gwyer and within there will soon be the memorial glass panel engraved by Laurence Whistler. At Evensong the Principal read—and how appropriately—Ecclesiasticus 44. ; we rejoiced in the playing of today's organ scholar and delighted in the golden green alter cloth with its white swan of St. Hugh. Prayer, thanksgiving, rededication. The set piece of Gaudy Dinner did not disappoint, gastronomically or otherwise—and what heroines to cook for some 23o on such a night! The menu was adorned by original verses in French, the result of collaboration between two members of the S.C.R., Miss Daniel and Mrs. McMorran. After an excellent meal, we were in the mood for splendid speeches and both savoured and applauded these. Mrs. Mary Warnock, proposing the toast of the Association, debated for us the merits and demerits of 'going mixed', setting this in perspective by remarking that the matter was trivial beside two great questions of the day: the need to work with the greatest vigilance to protect academic standards and the alarming tendency for secondary education to detach itself from the universities; she gave thanks for our membership of a living humane organization of reasonable size. In her presidential reply Miss Marr referred to her membership in 1920 of the first group of women undergraduates to be full members of the University, aware of their privilege and of its other side: commitment to make adequate return in service. The role of university education anywhere was to enable those who desire to become aware of lasting values; these would survive and bind us all together. The Countess of Huntingdon proposed the health of the Principal and College, appreciating the Principal's insight and gift for communication, and expressing her own pleasure in being in College again fifty years after her first arrival at St. Hugh's; her feeling of delight then was unchanged in 1976. The Principal thanked senior members for their loyalty and generosity to the College and for their enthusiasm for the things of the mind. [Cf. below. ED.] On Sunday morning there was Communion Service and, before lunch, various hospitable gatherings hosted by generous Fellows and by the Principal herself. So Gaudy 1976 came to its close with its echoes of the past and—on notice boards—hints of wise attitudes towards present-day undergraduates, the young women who are increasingly gaining high honours in Schools and in their subsequent careers; we salute both them and those who educate them. OLIVE CHANDLER

28


THE PRINCIPAL'S SPEECH [ the benefit of members who were unable to attend the Gaudy the Principal's Gaudy Dinner Speech is here given ini extract. ED.] `. . . On the [FOR walls of Bath Place, outside the Turf Tavern, a faded graffito is rapidly, perhaps appropriately, disappearing. What it said was: "Nostalgia is not what it was"—a piece of Oxford undergraduate wit which reaffirms your faith in the style and spirit of the place. But at gaudies nostalgia is still what it was and gaudies are very much the time for it. I always seem to be addressing Oxford people after dinner. What I mean is, that I enjoy especially going round to various Oxford Societies in the country and feeling this same warmth and sense of association which we feel as a College, which spreads from individual colleges to all members of the University. This last week I was in Kendal, speaking to the Oxford Society of Westmorland—a splendid body, which has boldly decided to ignore the rash meddling of the retiring Master of University College and his Commission who, at one disgraceful stroke, altered the local history and the geographical boundaries of centuries. I am glad to tell you that, in his despite, Westmorland still exists and three senior members of St. Hugh's came especially to that meeting because they would not be able to be here with us tonight, and sent their love and greetings to us. `In this exceptional searing summer I am sure we ought to be thinking about our exceptional good fortune, not about our problems, our uncertainties, our future, but about our delight in the present, in the College as it is. No one who has lived through this term in Oxford can have failed to enjoy that fragile, yet paradoxically permanent beauty, which the place itself, in all its new brilliance of golden stone against its frieze of trees and gardens presents, a beauty which rises uniquely out of the sense of continuity which must characterize the life of a learned community. It is especially important to us tonight to think of that sense of continuity, because we have to say good-bye to two Fellows of the College who are retiring, and I have begun my talk by reminding you of permanence in order to preface my remarks on them with a reassurance that retirement is not separation. How could anyone think other at a Gaudy ? Here we have sitting around us, as though they had never left, Dame Kathleen, Professor Headlam-Morley, Miss Bickley, Miss Thorneycroft, and Mrs. Warnock, whom we have just elected to a Senior Research Fellowship and who is, to our delight, coming back to us. And here are all of you, from Miss Glenday, our oldest member present, who came up in 1918, the last year of the First World War, when Main Building was already standing and the physical character of the College already established. It seems hard to believe that Miss Major and Miss Wells will not be busy about their College functions next time we meet, but we are happy to feel that they will still be with us in a less exacting capacity. When I first set foot in this College (literally, because, as you will remember, during my undergraduate years from 1942 to 1945, St. Hugh's was generally known as 'that hospital down the road'), it was for an interview for the post of Tutor in English, in 1954, and the first person I met was Priscilla Wells. I hope she won't mind my saying that she does not look a year older now than she did then. Her kindness and her calm assurance did a great deal to quieten the agitation of a candidate. Indeed, my recollection of that crucial moment is of the reassurance she and many other Fellows gave me. Miss 29


Jacobs, for instance, whom I had known briefly as an undergraduate, Miss Gradon, who offered to lend me a pair of walking shoes (I hadn't brought any) for the expedition I was deliciously whisked into that night—to hear the nightingales on Otmoor. My predecessor, Molly Mahood, had just bought a car but not passed her test, Peggy Jacobs, a Jehu to this day among drivers, was to accompany us, along with two undergraduates. So I took Miss Wells's reassurance, Miss Gradon's shoes, Molly Mahood's car, and Peggy Jacob's direction and, that summer night before my interview, off we went to Otmoor, through hedgerows of cowparsley and shadows. The only trouble with this story is that the nightingales didn't perform. It seemed a bad omen, but turned out not to be, and now I have learned that whenever I am brought out by some kind member of St. Hugh's to listen to nightingales they remain obstinately silent. Professor Headlam-Morley may remember refusing to believe this, and once, on our way back from Stratford, stopping her car and saying firmly: "Now, Rachel, if you'll only listen and stop talking, you'll hear them". But though we sat silent for a good quarter of an hour no nightingale opened a bill. `I have strayed from what I wanted to say, except that that little expedition, the night before my interview, seemed characteristic to me of the humane and easy life of St. Hugh's, its spontaneity and gratuitousness, and Priscilla Wells and Eva Major have both contributed to that spirit and that life. Priscilla, who on that tense occasion reassured me, has reassured hundreds of Old Members who come back for their degrees. I shall always think of her on a Saturday morning in the S.C.R., immaculate, concerned, affable, articulate, welcoming Old Members, remembering each of them, concerning herself with their present lives as much as with their past. There are many other things she has done for us, but I should like especially to mention her concern for those who have worked for the College in humble and essential capacities and whom she has never overlooked. We thank her for all this and hope to see her again often, in the future. It is good to know that she will be in Wolvercote among that formidable society of retired Principals and academic women, able to return often to us and able, too, to spend much more time walking in Wytham woods, which she loves so much. `And we say a bewildered good-bye too to Eva Major tonight, whose passionate energy and dedication to the College has left its mark on every physical aspect of the place and of our life in it. It is impossible to think of the College without Eva, simply because she has made the College her life. She would not want any other tribute than that, but we are all happy to feel that she will be taking to Scotland with her and using for whatever work she involves herself in (for Eva's retirement won't be idle, we know) the skill and universal efficiency she has developed and demonstrated here at St. Hugh's, that she will be taking some of St. Hugh's to Dunfermline, where she is going to live. It is entirely characteristic of Eva Major's imaginative devotion to the College, that she revealed to me the other day her parting gift to us—a new College Flag. Long may it fly to remind us of her, her spirit and her resourcefulness. We shall miss both these Fellows as people who have been deeply involved in our daily life as a college, whose own interests have been knitted into ours for so long. But we wish them great happiness and, at future Gaudies, many happy returns to us. `Tomorrow, as you all know, is the Bi-centenary of the United States of America, and we should be thinking especially tonight of our American 30


Senior Members. There are many of them scattered throughout the Continent, and I hope that some of them may be asked to serve on the Rhodes Scholarship selection committees, which are being set up, now that the Rhodes Trust has decided to open its scholarships to women as well as to men. This is wonderful news, I am sure you will agree with me. It means that we may increase our American membership in future, and those of us who have experienced the affection and the generosity of the great universities of the United States, are happy to think that we may be able to repay some of that debt by welcoming Rhodes Scholars to St. Hugh's. Thoughts of the Bi-centenary made me recall a distinction I have always noticed between America and England, which in its turn throws up some speculation upon the nature of our own College. I've always noticed that ordinary Americans continually ask if you are going to stay, even seem quite offended when you have to admit that you're not, that is, if you are working in the country. I remarked on this to an American friend who confirmed it and answered: "whereas I'd hardly been in Cambridge, England, where I was spending a year researching, a fortnight, when the little tobacconist down the street was asking me when I was going home!" It is a fair contrast. Americans welcome you in, to join them, the insular British feel that everyone really in their heart of hearts, longs to go home. In each case it arises from a love and pride in one's country, one's own vast or small piece of land. Now, no one can ask a member of a college: "Are you going to stay?", because in the nature of things, a college population is shifting and continually changing, but, for all that bewildering sequence of years and faces which kaleidoscope before us—we few, almost permanent people—the College is still a place to return to and Gaudies, in a sense, are home-comings. May I speak for the College as a whole when I thank you all for your loyalty, your affection, your unfailing generosity, your enterprise, and ardour for those things of the mind that you learned to love here? You were the College when you spent your undergraduate years here, and you are the College at large, now scattered over the country, but come together on this occasion to celebrate its existence. Members of St. Hugh's College, let us drink a final toast which unites the Association and the College. I give you simply: "St. Hugh's".'

THE LONDON SHERRY PARTY, 1977 HIS will be held, by kind permission of Mrs. A. Curtis, at 9 Essex Villas, London, W8 7BP, on Friday, 3o September, 6 to 8 p.m. Members T wishing to attend should apply for tickets to Dr. H. S. M. Bradbury, 61 Hill Top Road, Oxford, enclosing a cheque or postal order for £1•z5p. and a stamped addressed envelope.

MARRIAGES RACHEL MARY GARNETT ANDREWS to IAN S. FLYNN (Christ Church), CLARE ASHER tO JOHN GILLIES, 5 April 1975 ROSEMARY MARGARET BAINES to R. POLLARD, 28 December 1970 HEATHER BATTY to ROGER DAVID KERSWELL, II October 1974

24 July 1976

31


VALERIE MARY BRENNAN to DR. D. I. DE POMERAI, 24 July 1976 FRANCES ELIZABETH CHISWELL to P. MAIN, 16 February 1974 SUSAN EDGAR to PAUL D. ADAMS, 18 December 1976 ELAINE FAIRLESS to MICHAEL BURROW (Wadham College), 4 June 1976 VICTORIA MARY LOUISE FRASER to DR. C. E. FISHER (Christ Church and Hertford

College), 27 October 1973

SYLVIA ROSEMARY HANSON tO HERR KURT REITINGER, 15 August 1972 CLAUDIA CERIDWEN HODGSON to T. LI. DORNAN, 12 April 1975 JACQUELINE HOLLMAN tO ERIC J. BROWN, 7 August 1976 CHRISTINE MARY HOPKINS to DR. D. R. COUSINS, 17 July 1976 ANDREA ROSALIND ILLINGWORTH tO ROGER ERNEST FRANKS, 19 October 1974 HILARY JOYCE PIPER to WILLIAM MICHAEL HEAFORD, 6 September 1975 SUSAN MARGARET PRECIOUS to A. G. W. GIBSON, 24 January 1976 JUDITH PRYCE to PETER DAVID WITHNELL, 29 May 1976 ADELE WANDA PRZYWALA to DR. D. NICHOLAS, 13 September 1975 ALISON CLARE RASHLEIGH tO F. HOUGHTON, 17 January 1976 HAZEL ELIZABETH SALTER to DAVID ROWLAND LANGFORD (Brasenose College), 12 June 1976 JUDITH ANN SHARMAN tO D. KILLION, 2 September 1972 EILEEN SWEENEY to MILLIUS PALAYIWA, II September 1976 JUDITH TURNER tO BERNARD JOHNSTON, I I August 1976 RUTH MARY VIGOR tO ANDREW JOHN HAROLD LOCKLEY (Oriel College), 14

September 1974

BIRTHS MRS. ALEXANDER (F. Ross)—a son (Mark), 26 February 1976 MRS. ASHWIN (A. D. S. Bennett)—a daughter (Clare Elizabeth),

18 October

1976 MRS. BAILEY

(G. L. Bullock)—a son (David James Lloyd), 18 September

1976 MRS. BLAKESLEY (C. M. Barras)—twin daughters (Marion and Rosanna), 17 March 1976 MRS. BRADNUM (E. M. Cresswell)—a son (Stephen James), 31 October 1976 MRS. BRIDSON (M. A. Dickie)—a son (Robert Edward), 24 September 1976 MRS. BURT (H. A. Smith)—a son (Thomas James), 19 November 1975 MRS. CLEAR (S. Russell Vick)—a son (Philip Earland), 9 May 1976 DR. DENNIS (J. Pearson)—a daughter (Louise), 197o; a daughter (Sophie),

973

1

MRS. DENNIS (M. J. MRS. FRIEND-SMITH

Morley)—a son (Mark Richard), to June 1976 (S. E. Kelly)—a daughter (Emma Mary Alice), first child of second marriage, October 1975 MRS. GILCHRIST (D. J. Hudson)—a son (Ian), 1952; a son (Michael), 1954; a daughter (Alison), 1957; a son (Martin), 1959; a son (Neil), 1961 DR. GILLAM (M. L. Woodrow)—a son (James Richard), 13 October 1975 MRS. HARDINGHAM (S. J. Townend)—a son (David Robert), 14 November 1974 MRS. HIBBERT—(G. M. Bennett)—a second son (Malcolm George), to October 1974 MRS. JOHNSON (G. S. Keith)—a daughter (Rachel Edith), 14 October 1973; a son (Mark Ralph Edward), I I April, 1975 32


MRS. KEEP (M. J. Snow)—a daughter (Catherine Margaret), 24 July 1976 MRS. KENRICK (S. E. Murray)—a daughter (Joanna Rachel), 15 January 1976 MRS. KERSHAW (M. T. McD. Ellis)—a second daughter (Elizabeth Anne

McDonogh), z6 July 1976 MRS. KERSWELL (H. Batty)—a son (George Kenelm), 23 September 1975 MRS. KNIGHT (C. E. Cretney)—a son (Edmund William), 14 June 1974; a daughter (Frances Rosemary), 12 August 1976 MRS. LOMAS (C. M. Littlewood)—a daughter (Nicola Mary), 1 i November

1975 MRS. LOVELESS

(P. M. Tunnard)—a second daughter (Lucy Ann), ar October

1976 MRS. MARTIN

(H. M. Aird)—a son (Ian William Richard),

12

November

1976 MRS. MERRIMAN (C. M. Beech)—a son (Peter Richard), 7 April 1976 FRAU NEUHANN (J. A. Parker)—a second daughter (Vanessa), to December

1975 MRS. PEARCE (C. G. Jex)—a daughter (Helen Caroline), 8 March 1976 DR. POLLARD (R. M. Baines)—a son (Timothy Michael), ro May 1975 MRS. QUINCEY (J. Kemp)—a daughter (Elisabeth Hope), 29 August 1976 MRS. REISS (E. D. Mossel)—a son (Elisheva Michel), i5 June 1969; a daughter (Abigail Yael), 4 December 1971; a daughter (Odelia Hannah), 20 April

1976 (S. R. Hanson)—a son (Steffen Marcus), 15 February 1974; a daughter (Ingrid Ellen), 13 January 1976 MRS. ROGERS (S. J. Galley)—a son (Hugo), 29 April 1976 MRS. SQUIRE (K. St. C. Hook)—a daughter (Isabelle Clair), 18 April 1976 MRS. WHEELER (S. P. Woodcock)—a daughter (Rachel Elizabeth), 23 May 1975 MRS. WOOD (M. A. Carter)—a daughter (Eleanor Louise), 22 December 1975 MRS. WYCHERLEY (L. M. Knipe)—a daughter (Amanda Rachel), 4 April 1975 FRAU REITINGER

ADOPTION MRS. COYLE

(M. S. McDonald)—a son (David Mark), in 1973

OBITUARY On I December 1976, MARGARET GRANT DENBIGH (née Beamish), Commoner of the College 1939-42. Aged 56 On 21 January 1976, LAURA HARRIET MAUDE DUGGAN (née Hill), Commoner of the College 1923-6. Aged 71 On ro January 1976, MARGARET ELIZABETH LOIS GRIFFITHS, Commoner of the College 1936-9. Aged 58 On 18 December 1976, MARGARET AUGUSTA LEISHMAN, Lecturer in Chemistry 193o-1, Assistant Tutor 1931-7, Official Fellow of the College 1932-7. Aged 73 On 15 March 1976, NANCY LEWIS (née Baker), Commoner of the College 1919-22. Aged 75 On 9 April 1976, HELEN ECKFORD PEARSON LINDSAY (née Douglas), Commoner of the College 1921-4. Aged 74 33


On 19 October 1976, GWYNETH MORLEY, Commoner of the College 1926-9. Aged 69. On z8 January 1976, DOROTHY NEVILLE ROLFE, Commoner of the College 1923-6. Aged 72 On 9 October 1976, RUTH LESLIE PHILLIPS, Commoner of the College 1909-13. Aged 88 On 6 February 1976, ETHEL FAVELL PRIEST SHAW, Commoner of the College 1917-20. Aged 79 On 17 January 1977, FLORENCE GERTRUDE SUTTON, Commoner of the College 1910-13, Aged 86 On 7 January 1977, VIOLET HELEN TRUMAN, Commoner of the College 1913-15. Aged 90.

RUTH LESLIE PHILLIPS

MISS

R. L. PHILLIPS, who was at St. Hugh's from 1909 to 1913, died on 9 October 1976, in her home at Lexden (Colchester). Miss Phillips was 'a daughter of the Church' and her home had been the Vicarage at Stonehouse, Gloucestershire. After she went down she taught first in private schools, but in 1918 she joined the W.R.N.S. In 1919 she taught briefly at the Central High School, Newcastle, and then, in the same year, she went to Colchester County High School where, from 1936 until she retired, she was Senior English Mistress. The following tribute has been sent by Miss 0. M. Potts. ED. `Leslie Phillips was in her third year when I came up to St. Hugh's. She was reading English and, for some reason which I cannot remember, she had a fourth year, so we 'freshers' got to know her fairly well. St. Hugh's was then very small. Someone wrote to me to say that her chief memory of Leslie was that 'with all her 5ft. nothing in height, she was a most graceful canoe punter'! Leslie was very vivacious and talkative and she had a keen sense of humour. Some forty years after we had all gone down she used to come and stay with Lorna Southwell (who had been an exact contemporary at St. Hugh's) and me in our Shropshire home, and our friends called her `Puck', because she was still so quick in her movements and so 'puckish' in her behaviour. She devoted her whole life to teaching, and when she retired she remained in Colchester near her last school and her many friends there, living in the same house to which she had come in 1924 with two of her friends. After their deaths she went on living there. In her last letter to me she wrote: "People are ceaselessly kind in coming to see me, and I I have help in the garden and in the house from people who are among my oldest friends". `I spoke to someone the other day who saw her about a fortnight before her death, when she was still, apparently, well and fairly active. She must have had only a very short illness.'

NANCY LEWIS

(nĂŠe

BAKER)

ANCY BAKER was at St. Hugh's from 1919 to 1922; she came up from Oxford High School after a spell in the Land Army. With her contemporaries she was matriculated at the beginning of the second year,

N 34


the statute admitting women to membership of the University having been passed in Trinity Term 192o. In her second year, too, The Lawn was opened; Nancy and her friends, including (Dame) Mary Cartwright, were some of the first undergraduates to live there. She read German, in a small but enthusiastic group who began to build the school up again after it had languished in the war years. Her interests included the Bach Choir, hockey, and everything connected with the river—diving was her forte. Oxford was Nancy's home; her father was J. B. Baker, Censor of the NonCollegiate Students and a staunch supporter of degrees for women. After graduating she taught for a few years and then married another member of the German school, Cecil Lewis of Lincoln College. He lectured at Providence University, Rhode Island, and then for many years was Professor of German at Trinity College, University of Toronto. So Nancy's married life was spent overseas, but they kept in touch by frequent visits to England and to Germany in summer vacations, both before and after the second war. Nancy was full of energy and fun, perseverance and enjoyment of life, although in later years she had to undergo several operations on her hip. Cecil predeceased her by less than a year; their two married sons are settled in Canada. M. I. B.

HELEN ECKFORD PEARSON LINDSAY (née DOUGLAS)

H

ELEN DOUGLAS, Mona as she was always called, came up in 1921 to read Mathematics and went down in 1923 to be married without taking a degree. She will be remembered for her outstanding vitality, good looks, and charm. She was also a very kind person with a strong sense of justice and great courage. This last showed especially in later life when she was struck by arthritis, which she fought for many years with determination and no self-pity. She spent much of her married life in Kenya, where her husband, Kenneth, was a District Officer, and afterwards in Palestine under the Mandate. Her husband predeceased her and she leaves one son. R. P.

DOROTHY NEVILLE ROLFE OROTHY NEVILLE ROLFE, Commoner of the College 1923-6, of a distinguished naval family, came up from Clifton High School D with a tradition of zeal and duty, and she not so much read as devoured French and Italian, and lacrosse. As soon as she went down a back injury asserted itself and she lay flat for a year. Punctual to her foreseeable recovery she taught mainly citizenship for a few terms at Westonbirt, then started, with Margaret Godley, also of St. Hugh's, at the Hon. Mrs. Charles Ponsonby's private finishing school in Oxfordshire Dorothy had found her niche—to guide a young person from school into life ahead, professionally as the stalwart secretary capable of almost anything, and later perhaps to marriage in difficult times. Girls came 35


from all parts of the world, sobered and grateful to the 'House of Citizenship'. From houses in Braham Gardens, London, it moved to Ashridge and then, after fearful administrative difficulties, to Hartwell House, Aylesbury, the Stuart seat of the Fairfax family and despite a serious fire it ran splendidly on, to a royal garden party with the Guards' Band on the lawns. Dorothy retired as Principal in 197o, whilst young enough to be missed. From her fine flat in Hans Place, which the Governors gave her, she embarked on a new career as Secretary to the Friends of the British Museum, whose membership quadrupled in two years, and the Journal became one of the learned valued kind. But in the Isle of Man she had a fall and despite a characteristic flare-up, the flame was finally extinguished at 72, in 1976. Ex-pupils were always honoured to have her stay on her long travels and fed her material for the valuable lectures. Of her own evolution, to appear gracious, to wear beautiful clothes, and present an impeccable appearance (for these did not come naturally) she wrote two books: Nothing Venture and The Power without the Glory. She made clever use of her descent from Princess Pocohontas in the U.S.A., and her elegant portrait by John Teesdale hangs on the famous staircase at Hartwell. D. N. L'E. M.

VIOLET HELEN TRUMAN

MISS

TRUMAN came up to St. Hugh's in 1913 from the Ladies' College, Cheltenham, to read for the Certificate in General and Regional Geography, which she obtained in 1914, and for the Diploma in Geography, which she obtained in 1915. She taught briefly at Sheffield High School and then, until she retired in 1954, at Wimbledon High School G.P.D.S.T., where she had become Senior Mistress in 1946. She was appointed Manager to the Old Central School, Wimbledon, in 1957 and made Foundation Governor of St. Mary Merton Secondary Church Schools. She was an F.R.G.S. and M.A.G.S. In her last letter of nearly two years ago she wrote: 'I have only just come home again after being in hospital on and off for three months. I have always suffered from very soft bones . . and am unstable on my legs and so fall very easily and that generally causes a fracture somewhere . . . . I live alone but my friends are very good to me and on the whole I manage quite well with a very good "daily" three mornings a week'. A contemporary, Miss G. Vaughan, wrote: 'although she was older than most of us, when she came up, Violet fitted in well and was much liked. And she was a very good hockey and tennis player.' ED.

WINIFRED ELEANOR JOCELYN (nĂŠe SHEPHERD) INIFRED, known to her contemporaries as 'Freddie', died suddenly in July 1974. It was discovered that she was suffering from an inW operable tumour in the brain. She was still teaching and was very active until her last short illness. She was the widow of the Revd. Kenneth Jocelyn, Vicar of Erith, and she had taken an active part for years in the life of a very busy parish. She read English at St. Hugh's. H. R. 36


FLORENCE GERTRUDE SUTTON

MISS

FLORENCE SUTTON, whose home was in Truro, where her father was a medical practitioner, came up to St. Hugh's from Truro High School in 1910. In 1916 she became a Secretary to the Y.W.C.A. and, in 1918, went to China as Secretary for its School and College work. From 1925-9 she was Editorial Secretary for the World Office of the Y.W.C.A. and left for Australia in 1929 to continue her work there. From 1937-9 she was Y.W.C.A. Secretary in Durban, combining that with the post of Warden of their Hostel there. She left S. Africa on the outbreak of war, to return to this country where she became Organizer of the Y.W.C.A. Camp Hostel to the Women's Land Army. From 1942 to her retirement in 195o she remained Secretary to the International Service Committee of the Y.W.C.A. in Great Britain. Later she lived with a widowed sister in Australia, returning to this country in 1958. In reply to a letter of some two years ago she wrote, characteristically: `. . . I did not imagine that we very old members were ever in the minds of the younger generations, unless we had brought some distinction to St. Hugh's. All my working life I was only a plodding "Professional Christian" '. She died early in the new year in consequence of a fall after a happy Christmas spent with her niece. En.

PUBLICATIONS E. Chawner, B.A. Wanderings of a pilgrim in Search of the Picturesque, by Fanny Parks, (Introduction and Notes). Oxford in Asia Historical Reprints, 2 VO1S., O.U.P., 1975. P. M. Cooper, M.A. The Story of Claremont, 6th ed., West Bros., London, 1975, Sop. Mrs. A-M. Cox, B.A. (née Wilson). Danger at Hand (an adult literacy novel), Cedric Chivers Aerial Books, 1976, k2.3o cloth, 75p paper. Mrs. P. E. C. Crampton, M.A., F.I.L. (née Wood). Development and Structure of the Theatre in the Federal Republic of Germany, from the German by Werner Schulze-Reimpell, Deutscher Bahnenverein, 1975. Rainer Maria Rilke: Life and Work, from the German by Ingeborg Schnack, Insel Verlag, Frankfurt, 1975. Konrad Adenauer, from the German by Horst Osterhald and the French by Francois Seydoux, Verlag Bonn Aktuell GmbH, Stuttgart, 1975. Ferdinand Freiligrath, from the German by Josef Ruland and Gerhard Werner, Inter Nationes, 1976. Dr. J. A. Glover, M.A., D.Phil. Cavalli: Eritrea, ed. J. A. Glover, O.U.P., 1976. M. Greaves, B.Litt., M.A. The Night of the Goat, children's novel, AbelardSchuman, 1976, £1.55 hard-back, 45p paper. —Nothing ever happens on Sundays, B.B.C. Publications, October 1976. With Kathleen Hughes, Dr. A. E. Hamlin, M.A., Ph.D. The Modern Traveller to the Early Irish Church, S.P.C.K., January 1977, £2.95 paper only. Mrs. L. d'O. Iremonger, M.A. (née Parks). How do I Love Thee: the story of Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Morrows U.S.A., April 1976; Michael Joseph, London, September 1976, $10 in U.S.A., £4.5o in U.K. 37


M. Jacobs, B.Litt., M.A. Tankred Dorst: Toiler, edited with introduction and notes, Manchester University Press, 1975. Mrs. Keep, M.A. (née Herbert). The Family Garden, Bartholomew, March 1976, £3.50• Mrs. M. G. Mann, M.A. (née Hartshorne). The Role of Books in Higher Education; a select annotated bibliography, University of Sheffield, 1974. The Reading Habits of Adults: a select annotated bibliography, University of Sheffield, 1976 Mrs. J. Mellows, M.A. (née Melloy). Friends at Knoll House (Novel), Hurst & Blackett, 1974, £2.40• A Family affair (Novel), Fawcett Publications Inc., U.S.A. 1976, $1 25. Mrs. I. I. H. Oram, B.A. (née Jones). The Church of St. Bartholomew on Chosen Hill, Churchdown, Churchdown News and Community Services Ltd., 1975, 25p. Dame Margery Perham, D.C.M.G., C.B.E., M.A., D.Litt., F.B.A. African Journey, Faber & Faber, 1976. Mrs. M. Potter, M.A. (née Newman). The Motorway Mob (for children), Methuen, 1976. The Temp. by Anne Betteridge, Hurst & Blackett, 1976. Dr. H. M. Wallis, M.A., D.Phil. (with others). The American War of Independence, 1775-83. A Commemorative Exhibition organized by the Map Library and the Department of Manuscripts of the British Library Reference Division, 4 July to II November 1975, London. Published for the British Library by British Museum Publications Ltd., 1975, £2•5o, hard covers £5.25. Maps and Views of Colonial America. Booklet to accompany Facsimile Maps and Views. British Museum Publications Ltd. for the British Library, London, 1975, Portfolio £20. Ratzer's Plan of New York, 1770. Leaflet to accompany facsimile map. British Museum Publications Ltd., for the British Library, London, 1975, £16.20. Map-making to 1900. An historical glossary of cartographic innovations and their diffusion. Preliminary study, presented on the occasion of the Eighth International Conference on Cartography, Moscow, U.S.S.R., 3-10 August 1976. London, The Royal Society, 1976, pp. xviii, 52, kI*95•

Mrs. Mary Warnock, M.A. Imagination, Faber, £6.50. Mrs. A. Watson, M.A. (née Young). Saxons and Saints, W. & R. Chambers Ltd., 1976, 95p. A Marcher Lord, W . & R. Chambers Ltd., 1976, 95p. School history text books in The Way it Was series.

ARTICLES Mrs. Bax, B.Litt., M.A. (née Priestley). 'Aspects of the Problem of Expenditure Control in Ghana between 1951 and 1963'. Greenhill Journal of Administration, 1975, vol. r, no. 4. `Nana Ofori Atta I and Public Financial Affairs in Ghana'. Legon Journal of Humanities, 1976, vol. 2. 38


`Ghana's financial Bureaucracy: an Historical Approach'. (Open Lecture, 4 December 1975), Ghana Universities Press, Accra, 1976. Dr. B. R. Bradbrook, Ph.D., D.Phil. (nee Ne6asovi!). 'Czech Writers in the Past and Present'. Osvobozeni, London, March 1976, pp. 4-6. `Three Great Otakars' (Obituary notice of Professors B. 0. Unbegaun, Otakar Vaadlo, Otakar Odloklik). Promeny, New York, October 1975, PP. 37-41. Mrs. A. E. Burton, M.A. (née Wyatt). Troude, Lecky and "the Humblest Irishman" '. Irish Historical Studies, March 1975, vol. xix, no. 75. (under Wyatt). Mrs. P. E. C. Crampton, M.A. (née Wood). 'Ardent Pacificism: Children's Literature in Holland since the War'. Times Lit. Suppl., April 1976. Mrs. N. R. Evans, M.A. (née Moylan). 'Housekeeping in 1605'. The Suffolk Review, 197516, vol. 4, no. 4. Dr. J. A. Glover, M.A., D.Phil. 'Aria and Closed Form in the Operas of Francesco Cavalli'. The Consort, 5976. H. S. Goldie, B.A. The Limestone Pavements of Craven'. Transactions of the Cave Research Group of Gt. Britain, September 1973, vol. 15, no. 3, PP. 175-90. Mrs. Gregory, B.A. (née Kohsen). Introduction to L. L. Vasiliev, Experiments in distant Influence, 1976, London, Wildwood House, New York, Dutton 2nd ed. Mrs. Johnson, M.A. (née G. S. Keith), with R. H. Johnson, 'Differences in in opportunities for the Disabled in England and Scotland: a survey of paraplegics in Scotland'. British Medical Journal, 1972, pp. 779-82 `Paraplegics in Scotland: a survey of employment and facilities'. British Journal of Social Work, 1973, 31, pp. 19-38 `Social Services Support for Multiple Sclerosis Patients, in the West of Scotland'. Lancet, 1977, pp. 31-4. Mrs. Lobel, B.A., F.S.A., F.R.Hist.S. (née Rogers). 'Some Reflections on the Topographical Development of the Pre-Industrial Town in England'. Tribute to an Antiquary. Essays presented to Marc Fitch, Leonard's Head Press, $ so. Mrs. A. W. Nicholas, B.A., M.Sc. (née Przywala). 'Optical Reconstruction of Radioisotope Distributions Obtained using a Zone Plate Coded Aperture'. Proceedings of the Electro-Optics/Laser International 1976 Conference in Brighton, March 1976, I.P.C., £13. Lady Nicholson, M.A., B.M., B.Ch. (née Macneice). 'Trees were Green'. Time was Away: the world of Louis Macneice, ed. T. Brown, Dolman Press, December 1974, k4.25. Dr. A. C. Percival, M.A., Ph.D. 'A Survey of the Diocese of Gloucester, 1603'. An Ecclesiastical Miscellany, Bristol & Gloucester Archaeological Society, Records Section, vol. xl. `Some Victorian Headmasters'. (Chap. 5) The Victorian Public School, ed. Simon and Bradley, Gill & Macmillan. `Miss B. M. Blackwood'. Obit., Folklore, vol. 87, no. r, 1976. Dr. R. M. Pollard, B.A., Ph.D. (née Baines) `Ultrastructure of the Uterine Epithelium during Hormonal Induction of Sensitivity to a Decidual Stimulus in the Mouse.' (With C. A. Finn), Journal of Endocrinology, 55, 1972, pp. 293-8. —The Influence of the Trophoblast upon Differentiation of the Uterine 39


-

Epithelium during Implantation in the Mouse'. (With C. A. Finn), Journal of Endocrinology, 6z, 1974, pp. 669-74.

Dr. R. M. Pollard, B.A., Ph.D. 'The Effect of Ovariectomy at Puberty on Cell Proliferation and Differentiation in the Endometrium of the Aged Mouse'. (With C. A. Finn), Biology of Reproduction, io, 1974, pp. 74-7. Dr. S. J. Rogers, M.A., Ph.D. (née Galley). 'On the Steady State Gametic Frequency Distribution for Two Linked Loci in a Finite Population with Recurrent Reversible Mutation'. Mathematical Biosciences, 24, 5 975, PP- 257-72. N. K. Sandars, B.A., B.Litt. 'Orient and Orientalizing: recent thought reviewed'. Celtic Art in Ancient Europe, ed. P-M. Duval and Christopher Hawkes, Seminar Press, 1976, £12-80. `Are Myths Luggage ?' To Illustrate the Monuments, Essays on Archaeology Presented to Stuart Piggott, ed. J. V. S. Megaw, Thames & Hudson, 1976, £15. — Thracians, Phrygians and Iron'. Thracia, II I, Primus Congressus Studiorum Thraciorum, Sofia, 1974 (1975). The Present Past in the Anathemata and Roman Poems', in David Jones, Eight Essays on his Work as Writer and Artist, ed. R. Mathias, Gomer Press, 1976, £3-25. Dr. H. M. Wallis, M.A., D.Phil. 'Missionary Cartographers to China'. Geographical Magazine, 1975, vol. XLVII, pp. 751-9. `The World Turned Upside Down'. Geographical Magazine, 1975, vol. XLVII, p. 651. With Terry Coppock and David Thomas, 'Ordnance Survey Policy Review', in Area. Institute of British Geographers, 1975, vol. 7, no. 1, pp. 21-3. `The Exploration of the North American Interior' (review article). Geographical Journal, 1976, vol, 142, pp. 303-5. With P. K. Clark, 'Education and Training of Map Librarians: Special needs of Developing Countries'. INSPEL, 1976, vol. II, pp. Ioo-2. Professor M. E. White, M.A., D.C.L., D.Litt., Hon. F.R.S.C. 'Festivals and Politics in Peisistratid Athens', paper at the Joint Meeting of the Classical Association and the Hellenic and Roman Societies, Oxford, August 1975.

NEWS AND APPOINTMENTS OF SENIOR MEMBERS (The date of appointment is 1976 unless otherwise stated. The date after each name is that of entry to the College) DR. R. A. BAILEY (1965).

Course Assistant in the Mathematics Faculty, Open University since 1972. Research Fellow in the Dept. of Statistics, Edinburgh University since January 1976. DR. BALDRY (P. A. Wilkinson, 5969). Postdoctoral Research Associate, Dept. of Organic Chemistry, University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne since October 1975. 40


MRS. BAND (E.

M. Mitchell, 1932). Part-time lecturer in Botany, Bournemouth College of Technology since 1968. MRS. BARBOUR (J. L. West, 1951). Senior Lecturer for the Council of Legal Education (lecturing and tutoring for the Bar Final Examination) since October 1975. MRS. BARGERY (C. Banks, 1972) spent September 1975 to July 1976 on an M.Sc. (Economics) course at the London School of Economics, and passed the examinations at the end of June. Since September she has been in the Civil Service as an Administration Trainee in the Dept. of Prices and Consumer Protection. DR. BATTEN (A. M. M. Oriel, 1943). Medical Assistant, Charing Cross Group of Hospitals, London, since 1971. Her son is at New College reading Physiology, and her daug hter went to St. Hilda's in 1976 with a Nuffield Scholarship in Medicine. MRS. BAX (M. A. Priestley, 1945) has had her appointment as Visiting Professor of History to the University of Ghana extended for a further year. MRS. BENNETT-REES (M. J. Fanning, 1966). Head of Mathematics Dept., The Licensed Victuallers' School, Slough, since 1974 DR. BRADBROOK (B. R. Ne6asova, 1954). Permanent Lecturer in Education, University College of North Wales, Bangor, from September 1977. MRS. BRIMS (J. A. Butcher, 1968). Part-time teaching post at Wallington High School since September. E. BROWN (1927) writes that the friend with whom she had lived since retiring in 1965 has recently died, so that she 'now has to like living alone'. MRS. BURT (H. A. Smith, 1968) writes: 'I left my post at North London Collegiate School in October 1975, before my son's birth. My husband became a Senior Planner with Newark District Council in March 1976, and I will be Temporary Bibliographical Research Asst. (October to December 1976) and Part-time Tutor-Counsellor (from February 1977) with the Open University, East Midlands Region.' MRS. BUTLER (G. L. Galley, 1958). Part-time teaching post at Alleyn's School, London, S.E. 22. DAME MARY CARTWRIGHT (1919) writes: 'I attended the International Convention of Women at the 182o Settlers National Monument Foundation at Grahamstown, Cape Province, Republic of South Africa, 1-5 December 1975. The theme was "Focus on Women", "Appraisal of Achievement—the Role of Women in Shaping the Future". I spoke on Assessment against varying backgrounds of tradition and environment. Margaret Mead was in the Chair for my lecture and I spoke mainly about English history . . . Dame Kathleen Kenyon and Mrs. Helen Suzman were also there and there were many questions. I also lectured on mathematical topics at the University of the Witwatersrand, at Cape Town University, and at Rhodes University, Grahamstown.' c. J. CHARDIN (1967) passed in June the Certificate in Communications Studies (in six subjects, one with distinction) of the Communication Advertising and Marketing Education Foundation, and intends to continue with professional education to final diploma stage. MRS. COLE (S. T. Percy, 1966) writes: 'I returned from Australia in May 1975 and after a temporary appointment for one year at Queen's Park High School, Chester, I am taking up a permanent appointment, teaching history at Helsby Girls' Grammar School, in September.' 41


(E. M. C. Wilkes, 1929) has 'retired but is still able to carry on voluntary work as a J.P. and as Manager of a Community Home'. REVD. B. K. COTTRELL (1968) became Divisional Youth and Community Officer to Norfolk County Council in May. G. CORLEY (1958) has been Educational Psychologist with the I.L.E.A. since 1975. A. E. COWPERTHWAITE (1970). Assistant Classics Mistress, Sutton High School, G.P.D.S.T., since 1975. DR. A. M. CRABBE (1968) has been appointed Lecturer in Classics at St. John's College. MRS. CRAMPTON (P. E. C. Wood, 1943). Dep. Chairman, Society of Authors, writes: 'In June 1976 the Society of Authors and the Translators' Guild sent me as British translators' representative to the UNESCO Conference in Paris, on their forthcoming Recommendations for the Protection of Translators. The Conference was an eye-opener, politically and culturally, but the results should be a help to our small and insufficiently organized profession!' MRS. CRELLIN (D. M. Harvey, 1943) is teaching in the Joint Embassy School, Jakarta. Her elder son has been awarded his D.Phil. degree and is now married, and her younger son goes to Cambridge to read for his Ph.D this autumn. MRS. CURTIS (S. Myers, 1954). Editor of Adoption and Fostering, the quarterly journal for professional workers in the child care field, published by the Assoc. of British Adoption and Fostering Agencies. In April she became Vice-Chairman of the education committee of the U.K. Committee for UNICEF. PROFESSOR R. J. DEAN (1922) was made Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy in July. DR. DENNIS (J. Pearson, 1955). Part-time medical officer in developmental medicine, The Park Hospital, Oxford, since 1968. MRS. DENNY (V. A. Wylie, I950). Assistant Mathematics Mistress, North Foreland Lodge School, Sherfield, since September 1972. MRS. DE POMERAI (V. M. Brennan, 1969) was French teacher at St. James's School, West Malvern, from 1975 to 1976. Since 1976 she has been researching into sixteenth-century French literature at Edinburgh University, for the degree of M.Litt. MRS. DICEY, M.B.E. (D. M. Doveton, 1931). Security Officer, Secretary for Civil Defence, District Commissioner's Office, Gwanda, Rhodesia. DR. DORNAN (C. C. Hodgson, 1968). Paediatric Senior House Officer, Nottingham Children's Hospital, for one year from February. MRS. MORDA EVANS (C. M. Gernos Davies, 1938). Member of the Wakefield Area Health Authority since November. DR. FINCHAM (J. Cousins, 1944) who has been since September 1975 Research Associate, Academic Unit of Human Psychopharmacology of St. Bartholomew's and the London Medical Colleges (full-time), was awarded her Ph.D. from the Dept. of Social Science and Humanities, The City University in 1976, for her thesis on 'The Development of sociology first degree courses at English Universities, 1907-1972.' D. I. FLETCHER (1938) became Senior French Mistress at St. Louis College, Jos, Plateau State, Nigeria, in March. She writes: 'I have left the Federal Education Service to take up a post at St. Louis College, Jos, a voluntary

MRS. CORNWELL

42


agency school, grant-aided by the Plateau State. After ten years in the humid heat and ever-increasing congestion and chaos of Lagos, the change to the non-tropical climate of the Plateau (5,000 ft.) is delightful. Jos is a very pleasant town and the great rocks, hills and vast savannahs are really wonderful.' MRS. FLYNN (R. M. G. Andrews, 1969). Mathematics Mistress, Hurst Lodge School, Sunningdale, since September. MRS. FOOT (M. E. Beckinsale, 1958). Senior Programme Researcher, HTV (West) since 1974. MRS. FRIEND-SMITH (S. E. Kelly, 1955). Part-time history teacher, King's School, Ely. E. M. GIBSON (1946). Principal Lecturer, in charge of English Subject Group, in the new East Sussex College of Higher Education since September. DR. GILLAM (M. L. Woodrow, 1964). Medical Officer in Haematology, Northampton General Hospital, since 1975. MRS. GILLIES (C. Asher, 1967). Head of Geography Dept., Frances Holland School, Clarence Gate, London, since September 1975. DR. J. A. GLOVER (1968) who is now Lecturer in Music at St. Hugh's has recently conducted for the B.B.C., at the Wexford Festival and the English Bach Festival, and in Italy. She is writing a book on Cavalli for Batsford and she is also a member of the Common Room at Wolfson College. She was awarded a special prize by the National Opera Company and a Stephen Arlen Bursary for travel in Italy. R. W. GODDARD (1902) writes from Cullompton, Devon: 'Thank you very much for the picture of St. Hugh's from the Gaudy, 1976, with its kind message and signatures. I greatly appreciate it . . . I have been to several entertaining cricket matches and now that it is cooler, I should much enjoy the fine weather, if it were not for the damage it is doing.' MRS. GODLEY (H. Couper, 1946). Head of Humanities, Orleans Park Comprehensive School, Twickenham, since September 1975. H. S. GOLDIE (1968). Vice-Warden of Hughes Parry Hall, University of London, since December 1974. MRS. GOODWIN (J. A. G. Jones, 1962). Lecturer in medical statistics, Dept. of Community Medicine, Westminster Medical School. MRS. GOSLING (D. de Rin, 1949). Supervisor of Day Centre run by the National Assoc. for Mental Health (MIND) for psychiatric patients between or after visits to hospital, and for people under stress. M. GREAVES (1933) wrote that her 'Nothing Ever Happens on Sundays' was to be shown on the B.B.C. Jackanory programme in October, and that the American edition of Gallimaufry (Bowmar, California, 1975) has been awarded a Certificate of Merit by the Bookbuilders West Bookshow, U.S.A. MRS. GREENALL (S. M. Draycott, 1944). From November 1975 Special Advisor to the Secretary of State for Education and Science. MRS. GREGORY (A. Kohsen, 1945) writes: 'I am still at the Department of Teaching Studies, Polytechnic of North London, where I am now Course Tutor of the Certificate B.Ed./B.Ed.Hons. courses, which were validated by the Council for National Academic Awards after prolonged planning. I was Chairman of the Course Planning Committee—a sobering and somewhat exhausting experience. At present I am trying to plan for a Psychology Degree at the Polytechnic.' 43


(J. Howard, 197o) who has been Computer Tape Librarian at the South Western Regional Health Authority Computer Service, Bristol since July has had letters published in the Radio Times and the Bristol Evening Post, and a poem, Wrington', about her grandfather's birthplace, published in Horizon, the House Magazine of the Bristol Health District. MRS. HAINES (C. P. M. Dight, 1953) writes: 'In January of this year I was invited to teach part-time in my daughter's school, here in Halifax, Nova Scotia, where I have acted as a supply teacher from time to time. On this occasion I taught English and, perhaps to the surprise of my contemporaries, Mathematics, in the Junior School. This year I am back on a similar basis, but in English only (a reflection on my expertise ?) With respect, one finds the Humanities much less well taught than the Sciences in North America generally.' M. V. HALMSHAW (1929) writes: 'I am enjoying some teaching of Pakistanis and of illiterates within the schemes for immigrant teaching and for the teaching of adult illiterates. I am also helping to start a local branch of the National Council for the Single Woman and her Dependants, founded by the late Revd. Mary Webster of St. Hugh's.' A. E. HAMLIN (1959) was awarded the degree of Ph.D. at the Queen's University, Belfast for a thesis on 'The Archaeology of Early Christianity in the North of Ireland', in December. MRS. HARDIE (P. M. Croissant Uhde, 1946) writes that her visiting lecturership at St. Paul's College, Cheltenham (where she has been elected first woman Chapel Warden), has been extended for a further year; her elder daughter has gained her M.Sc. at Sheffield and, in Hilary Term, 1977, her husband will become the first Schoolmaster Student at St. Hugh's. DR. HARRIS (V. V. R. Cohen, 1964) who has been since January Principal in the Dept. of Prices and Consumer Protection, heading the section responsible for research, briefing, and monitoring of food prices, joined the Civil Service recently as a direct entrant principal. E. M. HAYES (1968) has been English Mistress at Ockbrook Moravian School, near Derby, since 1975. MRS. HEAFORD (H. J. Piper, 1971). Executive Officer in D.H.S.S. (W. Midlands Region) since December. A. M. HEDLEY (1934) writes: 'Now retired, and a Senior Citizen; hoorah!' M. N. HEWINS (1921) writes: 'After nearly forty years of touring with the Company I founded—The Osiris Repertory Co. Ltd.—with Shakespeare and standard plays in the schools and modern plays in villages, festivals of plays in Jersey, Chipping Campden, and many other places, we gave up the touring company in 1965. We had given 25o plays a year and travelled over a million miles. Now we run a historical costume hire service with our usual policy of keeping the fees low, so that schools and others can afford them.' MRS. HEWSON (A. F. Fisher, 1942) has been a District Councillor since 1973. MRS. HIBBERT (G. M. Bennett, 1963). Temporary teacher (Mathematics) Victoria College, Belfast, January 1977–May 1977. E. M. HIRST (1917) records 'Nowt', in the 'any other news' section of her coloured form. K. M. HOBBS (1924) has been re-elected Chairman of the Tutors' Association Incorporated.

MRS. GRIFFITHS

44


(S. V. Gilbert, 1964) has been appointed Asst. Librarian, Spence School, New York, 1975-7, and her husband, in the Diplomatic Service, has been attached to the U.K. Mission to the U.N. in New York since 1972. DR. P. F. HULL (1953) writes: 'I have not worked since my severe road traffic accident on 6 October 1969, but I am still striving to have some medical job.' A. P. HUMM (1969) from 1973 onwards was working in the Ministry of Overseas Development. From March to August 1976 she had a posting in Bogota, Colombia, as ,First Secretary, Aid (Temporarily seconded to the Foreign Office). MRS. HUNTRODS (G. P. Sibley, 1947) has been Leader of the South Northants. District Council since the elections of May 1976. Her son (Patrick) is now a Postmaster of Merton College, reading Lit. Hum. M. IGGLESDEN (1942) writes from her home in S. Africa: 'The above address is that of a restored 182o settler home—a cottage which I rent from Historic Grahamstown (Pty.) Ltd.' M. J. IRISH (1968) Assistant Research Officer, Institute of Economics and Statistics, Oxford, since October. D. M. K. IRVINE (1941) writes: 'I have been Headmistress of North Foreland Lodge since 1967, and since then the school has grown from about loo . pupils to about 16o and we have done a great deal of new building.' MRS. JAMAL (J. Spicer, 1968). Asst. Mistress in French, Nottingham High School for Girls, G.P.D.S.T. since September 1975. MRS. JOACHIM (M. J. Carpenter, 1967). Research Fellowship for three years in the Dept. of Geological Sciences, Birmingham University (1976-9), studying Pleistocene Entomology (fossil beetles!). Prospective Liberal Parliamentary Candidate for West Gloucestershire. Member of National Liberal Party Council. Also: continuing with local and national politics, University extra-mural lecturing, mediaeval music; organizing nonacademic programme for 1976 INQUA (Quarternary Research) Congress at Birmingham in August 1977; completing Ph.D. thesis; also National Committee Member of the National Traction Engine Club. MRS. JOHNSON (G. S. Keith, 1966) who was Research Asst., Dept. of Social Administration, University of Glasgow, 1971-7, is emigrating with her family to New Zealand, on her husband's appointment as Dean of the Medical School and Professor of Medicine at the University of Otago. MRS. JOHNSTON (J. Turner, 1967). Music Teacher, Huyton College, near Liverpool, since September. C. L. JONES (1953) is pianist in the Andresier Ensemble which is to have a concert at the Wigmore Hall, London, on 11 February 1977. She also directs the New Hampstead Group and has just returned from performing in Paris and is soon leaving to tour the U.S.A. and Canada. MRS. JONES (J. Lane, 1934) writes: 'I have many, many happy memories of St. Hugh's and of past Gaudies and Sherry Parties, and I am so very sorry not to be free to come to the Gaudy this year again, but it has been a delight to have Miss Thorneycroft here, staying with us last week, and I feel wonderfully in touch with College and wish all happiness and success to St. Hugh's.' w. M. KEENS (1926) writes: 'The Newbury Literary Society is thriving and an assistant Secretary-Treasurer has mercifully turned up to help. The MRS. HOHLER

45


Hampshire Flora is still far from publication: its new editorial committee has sent me to delve into old records at the B.M. Herbarium.' MRS. KEEP (C. J. Herbert, 1959). Second Chemistry teacher, Exmouth School. MRS. KERSHAW (M. T. McD. Ellis, 1957) wrote, two years ago: 'I retired from practising as a solicitor when my daughter was born last year (1973), but I hope to return to it eventually. Currently I sit, as one of the members of this parish (Lodsworth), on the Midhurst Deanery Synod.' MRS. KERSWELL (H. Batty, 1962). Conservation Officer, Waverley District Council, since August 1974. MRS. KILLION (J. A. Sharman, 1969). Administrative Assistant, Further Education, County Council Education Dept., Oxford. DR. A. H. KING (1957) was awarded the C. H. Currey Memorial Fellowship for 1976, by the Library Council of New South Wales. The purpose of the Fellowship is to assist research and writing in Australian history. MRS. KIRBY (J. F. Dickins, 195o). Part-time teacher at Rickmansworth School since 1973; part-time Tutor with extra-mural adult classes, University of London. A. E. LAMBERT (1970). Since October 1974 she has been O.R. Analyst with British Leyland, in London until 1975, but currently at Cowley. She obtained her M.Sc. in Operational Research and Management Studies at Imperial College, London, in September 1974. MRS. LANGFORD (H. E. Salter, 1971). Clerical Officer at Reading Computer Centre (D.H.S.S.), since September 1975. S. A. LITTLEJOHNS (1967) H.M. Inspector of Taxes (Higher Grade) since February 1975. A. LLOYD (1972) writes: 'From September 7th I will be taking up my first teaching post at the Foxhills Comprehensive School, Scunthorpe, after having completed a Certificate of Education course at the University of Leeds.' R. S. A. LLOYD-BOSTOCK (1968) was pictured in the national press as 'First Officer Ann Bostock, the first woman pilot to join British Caledonian, at the controls of a BAC r jet at Gatwick.' MRS. LOBEL (M. D. Rogers, 1919) who became Hon. General Editor of the Historic Towns Series, wrote the following note in 1974: 'An Historic Towns Trust has been formed by myself and Colonel Johns, the topographical Editor of the Historic Towns Atlas (Lovell-Johns Ltd., 1969) to carry on this very important series. The Lord Franks is Chairman of the Trust, Dame Lucy Sutherland, formerly Principal of L.M.H., and Walter Oakeshott, formerly Rector of Lincoln are trustees.' This year she writes that she has been re-elected for five years to the Bureau of the International Commission for the Study of the History of Towns. C. L. MACDONALD (1968) writes that: 'having entered the T.E.F.L. fold late in 1975, I am now directing a language school here in Helsinki, an appointment I took up in August this year.' s. J. D. MACKENZIE (1967). Planning Officer with the Countryside Commission for Scotland, dealing with North Scotland including Shetland, Orkney, and the Hebrides (many visits!) since February. E. B. MACKINLAY (1934) writes: 'For the last two years I have been doing part-time work at Newton Park College, and shall be retiring in July.' MRS. MANLEY (G. K. West, 1946) writes: 'My husband, John, died suddenly on April 11th, 1976. I am continuing my job as Personnel Director of our 46


honey-packing company, Manley—Ratcliffe Ltd. With that and a house and garden to run I am kept very busy.' MRS. MANN (M. G. Hartshorne, 1943). Research Officer (part-time), Centre for Research on User Studies, University of Sheffield, since January. MRS. MARTIN (H. M. Aird, 1967) writes: 'My husband and I left Shemlan, Lebanon in January 1976 because of the civil war there. The Arabic language school, which my husband had been attending full-time and I part-time, was directed by John Moberly, son of the late Lady Gwendoline Moberly of St. Hugh's, until he went as British Ambassador to Jordan. We are moving to Dubai in early 1977 and expect to be in the Middle East for a few years.' MRS. MELLOWS (J. Melloy, 1943) writes that she has had a second tour, of one year, with her husband, in Zaire. Her daughter took her degree, married and is now living in N. Africa. Her son spent six months in Germany and Canada and is now at Sandhurst. She has a third 'pot-boiler' near completion. MRS. MERRON (S. M. P. Gero, 1962) writes from Canada: 'I am taking advantage of the present government's bi-lingual policy, to introduce small groups of children to French. My aim is to make the learning of French an enjoyable experience, and this is proving most successful. I also tutor older children who are having difficulties at school.' MRS. MISCHLER (H. M. Newell, 1929) writes: 'We had a wonderful visit to the Pacific in 1975, visiting our daughter Caroline in New Caledonia and our daughter Susan (also of St. Hugh's) in the New Hebrides.' MRS. MOLE (S. R. Wildbore, 1961). Part-time teacher of German, George Dixon School since September. MRS. MORGAN (M. Evans, 1947) who is Head of Department (teaching Classics) at Claremont School, Esher, where she has been for the last ten years, writes: 'My daughter, Catherine, has just been accepted at St. Hugh's to read Classics, so we are very pleased that she is following in our footsteps . . . My husband is now head of British-American cosmetics and has a world-wide business. His firms include Yardley, Lentheric, Morny, Cyclax . . mils. MORTON (J. Farley, 197o) has been working since May as an actuarial student for Bacon and Woodrow (Consulting Actuaries) in London. A. R. R. NESHAM (1968) qualified as an actuary (F.I.A.) in July 1975, and is now working for Bacon, Woodrow, and De Souza (Consulting Actuaries) in Trinidad. FRAU NEUHANN (J. A. Parker, 1965) was going in August as an interpreter to the N.H.F. International Conference in San Francisco. MRS. NICHOLAS (A. W. Przywala, 1969). M.R.C. Studentship for Ph.D. at the Institute for Cancer Research, Surrey, 1973-6. Temp. Basic Grade Physicist, Royal Marsden Hospital, Surrey, from October to December. MRS. NORMAN (E. Elliott, 1937) still teaches history for the Westminster Tutors Ltd. MRS. O'DELL (A. A. M. Wilson, 1933) has been Vice-Chairman of the Samaritans Inc. since 197o. mRs. oRAm (I. I. H. Jones, 1928) retired from full-time teaching in July. MRS. PALAYIWA (E. Sweeney, 1971). May 1976, Scientific Officer, Dept. of Medical Physics, Hammersmith Hospital, London. I. P. PALMER (1933) retired in 1975 from her post of Senior Classics Mistress 47


at Barr's Hill Grammar School, Coventry (Comprehensive since 1975), where she had been on the staff since 1954. N. PAPWORTH (1934) writes: `I retire in July from the post of Senior Mistress in what was once a good girls' grammar and is now a large, sub-standard, mixed comprehensive school.' MRS. PETERS (M. Davis, 1938) is Associate Editor of Over 21, a magazine started in 1972. MRS. POPE (S. E. Fryer, 1936). Part-time French Mistress at Lewes High School from September. L. POWYS-ROBERTS (1934) writes that she retired in September after nearly thirty years as Warden of Alexandra Hall of Residence for Women Students, University College of Wales, Aberystwyth. MRS. PRICE (J. Bates, 1952). Head of Mathematics, Liverpool Girls' College since September 1974. A. J. READ (1957). Social Work Education Adviser (East Anglia) with the Central Council for Education and Training in Social Work, since May. DR. RODNER (F. A. Maxwell-Bresler, 1963) obtained her Ph.D. in German Literature from Harvard University in June. MRS. SAMUEL (R. Cowen, 1947) Home Tutor (part-time teaching) for Barnet since January 1975. E. M. R. SAYERS (1971). Thouron Scholar at the University of Pennsylvania 1974-7• MRS. SCOTT (R. M. Cook, 1959). Full-time Lecturer in English at Abingdon College for Further Education, since September. MRS. SHERLOCK (A. M. Downie, 1937) has retired from teaching. SISTER ANNA (N. Hoare, 1940) writes. 'I have been doing work of a reconciling nature in Belfast for over four years, living in Ardoyne. Originally Mother Teresa of Calcutta sent eight of us out, four Indian R.C.s and four Anglicans. Now I am the only one left. It is a privilege to work here as there are so many opportunities and so much that is creative and constructive, of which the news gives no idea.' SISTER PALMO (F. M. Houlston, 1929) writes: `. . . on the occasion of International Women's Year, the National Committee of Indian Women, whose President is Mrs. Indira Gandhi, has given me an award "for outstanding service to India". I received it in October through the Ministry of Education and Social Welfare.' C. L. SMITH (1965) Information Officer Runnymede Trust, 1972-4; Information Officer Arts Council of Gt. Britain, Regional Dept. 1974-5; Information Officer Personal Social Services Council 1975. MRS. SMITH (E. A. Senior, 196o) writes: 'Since October 1974 I have had a post with the Ministry of Defence at C.O.D. Bicester.' B. A. TAYLOR (197o) obtained her D.Phil. in Mathematics at Wolfson College in October and is now Research Mathematician with British Gas, London Research Station, Fulham, S.W. 6. A. M. TELESZ (1971) has been a medical student at University College, London, since October 1975. MRS. TEMPLEMAN (A. J. Williams, 1968) has been teaching Latin and History at St. Mary's Convent School, Worcester, since September. G. R. TER HAAR (1969). Research Assistant, Guy's Hospital Medical School, Anatomy Dept., 1975-6. MRS. THOMAS (G. M. Willing, 1929) writes: 'I was joint leader, with my 48


husband, for a very successful 5-day Field Meeting for 52 members of the Bournemouth Natural Science Society, based on St. Hugh's College in the spring.' MRS. THORNTON (R. G. Cole, 1956) has been Mathematics teacher at Market Weighton Comprehensive School since 1975. F. M. TOMLINSON (1972) was from September 1975 to July 1976 teacher of German and French at Lowther College, Rhyl, Clwyd, N. Wales; since September she has been teacher of German at Warminster School. MRS. TUCKER (J. Mitchell, 1966). Part-time teacher of Religious Studies, Boundstone Comprehensive School, Lancing; part-time Lecturer in General Studies, Worthing College of Further Education since September 1975. H. L. TURNER (1961) was appointed Secretary of the British School of Archaeology in Athens in June. MRS. TWYMAN (M. P. Farrar, 1953) writes: 'I spent two years (1972-4) as part-time lecturer and tutor in the Applied Social Studies Dept. of the Polytechnic of North London. I am currently consultant psychotherapist to an I.L.E.A. college of further education (City and East London College) since September 1975. I have two children, a son of Io and a daughter of 5, and I combine their care with my consultant position, a growing private practice, and my training at the Institute of Psycho-Analysis, which I hope to complete during the course of this year.' • A. M. VINTON (1971) was from 1974 until this spring a trainee ship-broker with a French shipping company in Paris. She has been since this summer a member of the National Union of Journalists for I.P.C. magazines (The Motor Ship). E. M. WALLACE (1908) writes that she 'is still going strong and able to carry out my quota of the Parish Visiting'. She also wrote a brief introduction to Teilhard de Chardin's Milieu Divin, but found it impossible to publish owing to copyright difficulties. E. K. WALLEN (1933) retired from the headship of Bedford High School in August. A. E. WAYMENT (1921) has been Member of the General Synod of the Church of England since 1975; member of the Diocesan Synod of Winchester Diocese since 1976; member of the Bishop's Council of Winchester Diocese since 1976, and Chairman of the Church of England Schools Buildings and Administration Committee for Winchester Diocese. A. P. WELLS (1951). Official Fellow and Treasurer of the College until 1977, writes that 'I shall still keep quite busy in retirement'. She has been since 1965 a member of the Governing Body of Westfield College, London (six years as representative of the Old Students and now as a co-opted member), since 197o she has been one of the representatives of S.S. Philip and James Church on the Deanery Synod, and since 1972 she has been a manager (now a Governor) of Bishop Kirk C. of E. Middle School. MRS. WESTON (J. M. Gamon, 1941). Tutor-Counsellor, Arts Foundation Course, Open University (S.E. Region) for 1976 and 1977. MRS. WHEELER (S. P. Woodcock, 1969) gave up teaching in April 1975 before the birth of her daughter in May. PROFESSOR M. E. WHITE (1930). Chairman, Publications Committee of the American School of Classical Studies in Athens 1973-8; Hon. President 49


of the Canadian Classical Association since 1974; Member of the Editorial Board of the American Journal of Ancient History, since 1975; recipient of a volume of Studies Presented to Mary E. White. Phoenix, vol. 28, 1974. C. P. WICKHAM (1972) is teaching Physical Education at the East Anglian School for Deaf and Partially-sighted Children at Gorleston-on-Sea, Norfolk. MRS. WILBY (W. A. Nightingale, 1968) writes that she has been awarded a grant from the Arts Council of Gt. Britain for the study of the chamber music of Schoenberg. MRS. WILDE (F. E. C. Bayliss, 1947). Temporary Asst. Librarian, St. David's University College, Lampeter, Dyfed, April—October. MRS. WILSON (S. L. Elbourne, 1967). Mathematics Mistress at Nonsuch High School for Girls since September. MRS. WILSON (S. M. Backhouse, 1944). 1976 Welfare Tutor, Walworth Comprehensive School, London, S.E. 17 writes : 'I should be extremely glad to hear from any Members with knowledge or experience of studies in truancy in comprehensive schools.' G. M. WOOD (1971). Research student for a Ph.D. degree in Geography at Leicester University since October 1974. J. M. WOOD (1948) has established a business administration company in Monaco (October 1975). R. E. A. WOOD (1971). Assistant to the Departmental Secretary, Legal Department of the National Coal Board, Hobart House, London, since September. L. J. WOODBURN (1965). Asst. Public Trustee of the Republic of Kenya since May 1974. Vice-Chairman of the Nairobi Legal Advice Centre since 1975. H. M. WRIGHT (1966). English and Classics Mistress, Newton Manor School, Swanage, Dorset, since September 1975. MRS. YOUNG (E. I. Marshall, 1936) writes that she has no paid employment but much work. Her four children are now all married and she has three grandsons. MRS. YOUNG (J. Vajda, 1963) who entered the Multicultural Directorate, Secretary of State Dept. (Canada), to liaise with the West and NorthWest European ethnic groups in the field of culture, still continues also to teach part-time at the University of Ottowa.

ARRANGEMENTS FOR CONTACTING MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATION The Editor reported to the Committee that the following members have most kindly offered their help : Miss A. C. Percival, 21 Maunsel St., London, S.W. 1 P2QN. Tel. ot 839 3273 Miss H. M. Taylor, 6z Bellingham Rd., Catford, London, S.E. 6 2PT Miss E. C. M. Rountree, Little Glebe, r Churchill Rd., Chipping Norton, OX7 5HR. Tel. Chipping Norton 2794 Mrs. Tozer (J. C. Morland), 17 Hyland Grove, Henbury Hill, Bristol, BS9 3NR. Tel. Bristol 503665 Miss E. K. Wait, Beechcroft, Urchfont, Devizes, Wiltshire. Tel. Chirton 248 Miss J. Lake, Ham Cottage, Coaley, Dursley, Glos., GLII 5AS 50


Miss M. Wilkins, Byways, Benenden, Cranbrook, Kent. Tel. Benenden 53o Miss C. M. Lilleyman, Convent of the Holy Family, Aucklands, Littlehampton, Sussex. Tel. Littlehampton 323o Mrs. M. S. Gray (M. S. Viner), Old Glebe, Waldron, Heathfield, Sussex. Tel. Heathfield 3865 Mrs. V. Nurse (V. Hughes), Willow Garth, Notton, Wakefield, W. Yorks., WF4 2ND. Tel. Royston, Yorks. 252o Miss J. Newman, Keil House, Ardgour, by Fort William, Scotland, PH33 7AH, Tel. Ardgour 231 Mrs. M. H. Marsden (M. H. Gillett), Jardin du Milieu, Le Fort, Sark, C.I. Tel. Sark 117 Miss C. L. MacDonald, Pietarinkatu iia 12, 00140 Helsinki 14, Finland. Tel. 657835 Members who may find themselves in any way isolated through old age, illness, bereavement, or in any other emergency, are invited to contact the person at the nearest address on the list above. The Editor would welcome offers of help from any member who would be willing, in this connection, to have her name and address and, if possible, her telephone number printed in the Chronicle.

ADDRESS LIST, 1976 OPIES of the new Address List, 1976, are now obtainable from the College Secretary, at Only zoo copies have been printed, and C it is hoped that as many members as possible will avail themselves of this ÂŁ1.80.

opportunity to buy one, to help defray the considerable cost of preparation and printing. ED.

THE COLOURED FORM

M

EMBERS are reminded that it is essential to complete details of new appointments, courses taken, publications, etc. sothat, should references be required from the Principal or from Fellows and Tutors, this information is readily available to them in College.

SCHOLARSHIPS FOR POSTGRADUATE WORK HE B.F.U.W. and the I.F.U.W. offer each year for competition amongst members certain Scholarships and Fellowships that enable the holders to T undertake research work abroad, mostly for an academic year, or occasionally for a shorter period to complete a piece of work; there is also available each year a Scholarship at Crosby Hall, the B.F.U.W.'s Club House in London. Particulars may be obtained from: The Secretary, British Federation of University Women, Crosby Hall, Cheyne Walk, London S.W. 3. 51


FORM OF BEQUEST HE College is sometimes asked by Senior Members or their solicitors to 1 suggest the wording to be used when making a bequest to the College: for guidance we suggest the following: I give and bequeath (specify the property) to the Principal and Fellows of St. Hugh's College, Oxford, to be dealt with or disposed of for the purposes of the College as the said Principal and Fellows may think fit. The receipt of the Treasurer or proper Officer of the said College shall be a sufficient discharge to my Executors.

ADDRESSES REQUIRED HE College has no known address for the following Members and former undergraduates, and the College Secretary would be grateful for any news. (Please note that the list consists of people with whom the College has lost touch during the past year, and that names will be kept on the list for one year only.)

T

Mrs. Bacon (M. H. Sims) (1954) Mrs. Beardon (L. A. Hayes) (1959) Mrs. Beedham (V. Veall) (1966) Mrs. Burke (J. E. Phillips) (1955) M. G. Callow (1970) M. L. Charles (1968) Mrs. Cooke (L. M. Donnithorne) (1967) J. A. Cunningham (1970 M. R. Cunningham (1919) Mrs. Eaglestone (H. J. M. Greening) (1952) A. M. Edwards (1970) Mrs. Freedman (J. C. M. Grose) (1955) Mrs. Goldstein (B. A. Prevatt) (1968) A. N. Goodwin-Bailey (1971) Mrs. Grant (M. Keene) (1948) J. M. Griffin (1958) M. C. Hargreaves (1965) Mrs. Harley (A. M. Lever) (1957) C. Harries (1964)

52

Mrs. Iny (P. Smouha) (1965) Mrs. Jacob (J. M. Furlow) (1959) R. S. A. Lloyd-Bostock (1968) M. V. McEntegart (1971) A. R. P. Malcolm (1966) A. M. Mercer (1965) Mrs. Munch (F. P. Kuttner) (1965) Mrs. North (C. M. Renshaw) (1958) Mrs. Painter (K. L. A. Oliver) (1966) G. M. Philpot (197o) Mrs. Plummer (D. E. Elliott) (1968) J. C. Potter (1950) Mrs. Riordan (C. L. Smith) (1968) J. Shields (1970) Mrs. Steele (C. N. Biernoff) (1968) P. F. Tate (1966) Mrs. Taylor (A. T. Gary) (1931) Mrs. Thomas (M. R. Bird) (1949) C. E. Watson (1921) Mrs. Wyatt (H. M. Watts) (1939)


CONTENTS VISITOR, PRINCIPAL, FELLOWS, HON. FELLOWS, ETC.

.

THE PRINCIPAL'S REPORT

3 6

DEGREES

()

.

AWARDS AND PRIZES

7 8

HONOUR EXAMINATIONS MATRICULATIONS

12

GRADUATES FROM OTHER UNIVERSITIES

.

15

GRADUATES READING FOR CERTIFICATES IN EDUCATION

15

RESEARCH STUDENTS

i6

.

THE JUNIOR COMMON ROOM .

17

THE MIDDLE COMMON ROOM GIFTS AND BENEFACTIONS

I8 .

20

OFFICERS AND COMMITTEE OF THE ASSOCIATION ANNUAL MEETING OF THE ASSOCIATION GAUDY, 1976

.

23 27

.

29

THE PRINCIPAL'S SPEECH THE LONDON SHERRY PARTY,

1977

MARRIAGES BIRTHS

21

.

OBITUARY . PUBLICATIONS

31 31 32 33 37

NEWS AND APPOINTMENTS ARRANGEMENTS FOR CONTACTING MEMBERS

50

ADDRESSES REQUIRED

52

.

The attention of Members is drawn to: z. The coloured folder enclosed with this number. 2. The list of Members of the College for whom the College has no address at present. 3. The arrangement that all Members should notify the College Secretary of

any change of address.

53


University Press Oxford, England






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