Somerville College Donor Report 2016-17

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CELEBRATING THE PAST INVESTING IN THE FUTURE

REPORT FOR DONORS FOR THE FINANCIAL PERIOD 1ST AUGUST 2016 – 31ST JULY 2017

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CONTENTS From the Principal Baroness Royall of Blaisdon

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Development Director’s Report Sara Kalim

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Treasurer’s Report Andrew Parker Transforming Lives Isabel Ireland Aaron Simpson

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Building the Pipeline David Bowe 12 The Annual Fund Heather Weightman 14 Investing in Excellence 16 The Somerville Law Circle The Thatcher Scholarship Programme The Dorothy Hodgkin Project ‘This should matter to all of us’ Omar Davis

The Principal and Fellows of Somerville extend their most sincere thanks to the donors listed in this report for their generous support in 2016-17. Every gift received makes a difference – 1,584 of you supported Somerville with restricted and unrestricted gifts from 1st August 2016 – 31st July 2017. Front cover: Ruth Thompson (4 July 1953 – 9 July 2016), Honorary Fellow, who left the College the generous gift of a legacy. She is shown here at the Symposium for Honorary Fellows, February 2013. Back cover: Lady Fox, QC, CMG (Hazel Stuart, 1946), Honorary Fellow. She is shown here at the Somerville Inner Temple Dinner, May 2017.

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Somerville Will Power 20 List of Donors

During the financial period 1st August 2016 – 31st July 2017 22

Somerville College Woodstock Road, Oxford OX2 6HD E: development.office@some.ox.ac.uk T: +44 (0) 1865 270600 (General) T: +44 (0) 1865 280626 (Development Office)

www.some.ox.ac.uk/alumni Somerville is a registered charity. Charity registration number: 1139440

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FROM THE PRINCIPAL BARONESS ROYALL OF BLAISDON

It is a great pleasure to be writing as Somerville’s new Principal and to be given this opportunity to thank all of you who support the College.

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o look at the eleven Principals of Somerville who have gone before me is to be inspired by a history of pioneering women. Not the least of whom, of course, was my predecessor, the wonderful Alice Prochaska. I know that you will all want to join me as I begin by recording our thanks to Alice, who brought so much to Somerville including as a brilliant ambassador and advocate. She is a very hard act to follow. New buildings, new donors, new projects and a new Principal: the year 2016-17 has seen Somerville looking to the future, and I am excited to take up the baton. It wouldn’t be possible for me to do this without our extraordinary and dedicated staff, and I thank them for their support. Somerville has such presence and such a strong sense of purpose that it’s easy to slip into feeling it must have been here forever, secure and immoveable. One of things that surprised me was to learn about just how precarious the College’s early history was at times, and how much it has relied on the support of its members at every stage to grow and flourish. From the money left by Winifred Holtby towards scholarships, to the legacies left to the College by former Principal Catherine Hughes and Honorary Fellow Ruth Thompson, the love of Somerville and loyalty to it have inspired generations of Somervillians to contribute.

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I am pleased to report that we continue to be in a position that is far from precarious but every contribution still matters and makes a difference. As you will read in our Treasurer’s Report, careful stewardship of our assets and a growing stream of support from Somervillians is allowing us to make great strides towards ensuring that Somerville can in the future do even more to open up opportunity for all who would thrive here, to include the excluded.

“As all of you know, Somerville has the power to change lives” As all of you know, Somerville has the power to change lives. It’s a big idea, and one that matters more and more in our current climate, where universities face such an uncertain funding landscape. Though some might think this is a problem from which Oxford is insulated, we know we cannot be complacent. While cutting our coat to fit our cloth, we must be sure that we safeguard what makes Somerville such a transformative institution. Alumni have told me how much their tutorials did for them, giving them confidence, independence, intellectual fluency and resilience. Our teaching is one of the cornerstones of College life and always will be, but it is a resource-

intensive system, and it needs our support. We will therefore continue to seek funding to endow teaching Fellowships in perpetuity. Thank you to those of you who have given to help secure our superb tutorial system. It isn’t only universities who live with financial uncertainty, of course. Our potential applicants all now have to face the prospect of student debt, and the commitment can seem overwhelming. One of the major costs for all students is accommodation, and in Oxford especially the cost of renting on the private market is high. Soon, Somerville will become one of the few colleges to be able to offer all of its undergraduates on-site accommodation for the whole of their course. This will draw our community even more closely together. It will also provide additional encouragement to applicants to make Somerville their first choice. I’m proud, too, that we can help students in so many other ways, offering grants for projects as well as providing a safety net when problems arise. We would not be able to do this without your ongoing support. It would take a good deal more space than I have here to share the stories of all those whose stories have inspired me since I arrived at Somerville, so let me pick out just a few. We have all heard of Dorothy Hodgkin, whose ground-breaking research into protein crystallography won her the Nobel Prize in 1964.


What I had not realised was that Somerville gave Hodgkin a Fellowship at a time when she was, like many of her female contemporaries in Oxford, not able to secure a tenured post in the University. Moreover, the College granted her paid maternity leave before this was widely available and long before it was a legal requirement. Now, we are raising funds to establish a Career Development Fellowship in Hodgkin’s name that will specifically target researchers in science returning to the career ladder. And what of our most recent graduates? Just a few days after I arrived in Somerville, I met Isabel, whose teachers had told her it was a waste of time applying to Oxford: she wouldn’t get in, they said, and even if she did, she wouldn’t like it. She used her talents and her hard work to prove them wrong, and after graduating successfully she is now working for our Development Office. Read Isabel’s story later in these pages. I have heard from so many of you, and from our current students, how Somerville became part of your story and how it continues to be part of your lives. As I meet more and more Somervillians and find out about their lives

and about the history of the College, I can see just how closely my own beliefs align with those of the women and men who make up our community. For Somervillians, excellence matters, and it must reach out to include all those who have the talents to benefit from it. Believing in the importance of access and diversity isn’t enough. We have to act. Or, to quote the Somerville t-shirt I saw one of our student helpers wearing at our most recent Open Day, ‘Be the change’. The early Principals of Somerville might not have been slogan-savvy, but I have no doubt they would have wholeheartedly endorsed the sentiment. Alumni like Omar Davis (profiled in this report) endorse it too. They know that Somerville is all about opportunity. That’s why they give to support access work, and we thank them for the opportunities they are creating. Thank you to all of you for continuing to make Somerville such a dynamic and brilliant place. I hope that you enjoy reading about our projects and about our inspiring alumni, students and Fellows. And to those of you I have yet to meet: I look forward to welcoming you back and to hearing your Somerville story.

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DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR’S REPORT SARA KALIM

We thank all of our supporters, volunteers and friends for the contributions they have made in what has been an outstanding year for Somerville.

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t is one of the great pleasures and privileges of my role to be able to meet so many of you in the Somerville community. Hearing about your experiences, about what you are doing now and what you feel Somerville did for you always leads me to reflect on my own experience here and how important it has been to me. I am therefore delighted to be able to write and thank you for your contributions to what has been a hugely successful and exciting year for Somerville. The College’s ongoing ambition to attract and support the very best students, no matter what their background, can be seen in so many ways. The work our Fellows,

students and staff do to encourage applicants and engage with the wider community is inspiring, and there is also concrete (literally!) evidence of our ambitions in our ambitious programme of building work (as described in the Treasurer’s Report). We have also made enormous progress this year in furthering a number of key projects for the College, and this is largely owing to your generosity. Our plans to establish the inaugural Dorothy Hodgkin Career Development Fellowship are well underway. I am also delighted that our Somerville Law Circle has now formed and is fast establishing a fund for a much-

BARONESS WILLIAMS OF CROSBY (SHIRLEY CATLIN, 1948) IN CONVERSATION WITH ALICE PROCHASKA AT THE 2017 WINTER MEETING

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needed Stipendiary Lectureship in Law which will be of great benefit especially to our first year students. We are determined to ensure that every gift you give goes as far as possible to make a real difference. To this end, we have a growing group of extraordinary Matched Funding supporters, whose leadership underpins so many of our initiatives, as well as bolstering the efforts of our students in the vital annual Telethon. We also work hard to maximise your contributions through other matched schemes from individual employers as well as the University. If you would like to talk about how to make your gift go further, please do contact us. Seeing so many of you at our events in Oxford, in London and overseas is always hugely rewarding. This year our substantial programme of public


THE STONE BENCH NAMED FOR DONORS, OUTSIDE ROQ WEST

events hosted more than 1,000 alumni and guests in venues around the world. Notable ones included the Cornelia Sorabji event held at India House, London, the law fundraiser at the Inner Temple, the Oxford Asia reunion in Singapore and the Winter Meeting featuring Shirley Williams in conversation with the Principal. These events give us a chance to share what is happening in Somerville, catch up with you on your news and enjoy good conversation and good company.

We still have opportunities for you to name rooms, or to fund one of the spaces in College that mean so much to all of us. Whether it is in your own name, to honour a fellow Somervillian or commemorate a loved one, please do get in touch and talk about what you can do to make your mark.

One conversation I find we are always eager to have is about where we lived when we were here. The rooms we had in College stay with us as such an important part of our experience here: coffee with friends, the occasional essay crisis… It’s one of the reasons that Somervillians often ask about giving a gift that will enable us to name their room in their honour. Not long ago, I accompanied a guest to view the ROQ plaques. As we stood in quiet contemplation, a current student occupant of a room tumbled out a little dishevelled, and clearly running late for a lecture. He looked understandably startled to find two women staring at his bedroom door, but took it in good spirit. When we explained why we were there, his face lit up. ‘My mates and I look at those plaques every day,’ he said, ‘and we talk about what we will write on our own plaques in the future.’ This perfectly captured the power of connecting Somervillians across the generations, recognising the generosity of those that came before us and continuing the tradition of helping those that follow us. It was a gratifying moment.

Somerville’s talented and dedicated development and alumni relations team continues to meet the highest standards of recognition for donors, accountability in fundraising and innovation in new programmes. I would like to take this opportunity to thank them for their hard work over what has been an immensely busy and productive year.

Thank you all for your help and support.

Special thanks:

Support from donors to Somerville who help us to shape our strategy is such an important part of our fundraising. Our thanks go to the Development Board for the time, energy and expertise they give to the College. Thank you to all of you for helping us to build on an extraordinary history and develop the College still further for tomorrow’s Somervillians. SARA KALIM (1990, Classics) Fellow & Director of Development Regular Giver sara.kalim@some.ox.ac.uk

Donate your shares to Somerville! We welcome gifts of shares at Somerville. In addition to offering valuable support to the College, this is also a highly tax-effective way to give. You pay no capital gains tax on shares you donate and you can also claim income tax relief. If you would like to find out more, please get in touch.

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TREASURER’S REPORT:

ANDREW PARKER I am pleased to report that this has been another significant and successful year for the College financially, with legacies and growth in our endowment in particular playing a significant role in allowing us to plan for the future.

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uring the year we invested £5m of last year’s £20m private bond proceeds in buying the long term (142 year) lease on New Barnet House, situated towards the Walton Street end of Little Clarendon Street. The building comprises three shops on the ground floor which we have retained, with the upper floors, previously home to the archaeology department, being converted into 30 graduate bedrooms. The refurbished building, renamed Barbara Craig House, was opened in September 2016. In February 2017, after an extensive and open consultation period, the College applied for and received planning permission to build 68 en suite undergraduate rooms on Somerville land to the south of Penrose (to be called the Catherine Hughes Building) and to convert and extend 25-28 Little Clarendon Street into 42 graduate bedrooms (to be called the Shaw Lefevre Building). 8

Work has already started on the Catherine Hughes Building, which it is planned will be ready for occupation by October 2019. The £11.5m investment will allow us to accommodate all our undergraduates, and to do so on our site – a significant distinguishing feature which we will be exploiting for all it is worth. The Shaw Lefevre Building will be delivered in 2021/22 once existing residential tenant leases have expired. Later in the year we were unexpectedly presented with the opportunity to buy out the long term leases (again 142 years) on the two retail outlets on Walton Street and the corner of Little Clarendon Street currently occupied by the Co-op and the Oxford Wine Café, after an existing sale agreement fell through. We were able to agree a supplementary bond issue with M&G Investments in quick order (£5m, unsecured, 2.82%, repayable after 32 years) and the majority of this was used to acquire the lease.


TOTAL GIVING FOR 2016-2017 WAS £4.9 MILLION

Income in 2016-17

Expenditure in 2016-17

Somervillians continue to offer generous support towards scholarships and student costs. Our challenge now is to increase funding to secure Tutorial Fellowships in perpetuity.

Tuition fees £2,400,000 College fees £3,300,000

Fundraising, Communications and Alumni relations £700,000

Legacies and donations £2,300,000

Teaching & research costs £3,900,000

Trading income £600,000

College operating costs £6,800,000

Investment income £3,200,000

Capital gains on investments £900,000

Total income £12,700,000

During the year we spent £0.56m on fundraising costs and raised £4.9m as a result. Of this £2.7m went into the endowment to provide ongoing income for future years and £2.2m was taken directly to revenue income in the year.

Total expenditure £11,400,000

To complete the picture, and to secure our boundary, a few months later we were able to come to an agreement with University College to buy from them the freehold on the Walton Street/Little Clarendon Street corner of the site.

has been sustained and remarkable – five years ago, in July 2012, the value of our endowment was £40m – though we are still some £15m short of our overall goal of being able to fund all our Tutorial Fellowships in perpetuity.

Aside from these strategic investments in land and buildings the year also saw further significant financial growth.

The total net inflow of funds into the College in the year was £8.3m, which followed on £7.9m in the previous year. The underlying operating result on our unrestricted funds was break-even as planned. The generous gift of an unrestricted legacy from Lady Abdy of £1.3m supplemented our unrestricted funds by that amount. This has allowed us to meet our longstanding objective of doubling our free reserves to £2m, and we have also been able to set aside funds to help cover our five year capital expenditure plan and strategic priorities. Thank you to all of you whose support has made our successes possible.

Our endowment funds increased by £7m (11%) to £73.4m in the year. A significant part of this increase came from generous donations, including a gift from Robert Ng of £1.5m to support the Margaret Thatcher Scholarship Trust and a legacy of £0.8m from Robert Lloyd to support graduate scholarships in the sciences. There was also strong capital growth, particularly on funds invested with Oxford University Endowment Management (OUEM). The growth in our endowment

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TRANSFORMING LIVES ISABEL IRELAND Isabel Ireland came up to Somerville in 2014 to read English Language and Literature. But until she visited the College for an access event, she wasn’t even sure she wanted to go to university.

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knew nothing of Oxford, let alone had thought about applying,’ Isabel says. ‘I was put off university by the cost…. My teachers recommended the study day at Somerville to try and inspire me to apply to universities, not really for Oxbridge.’ Somerville’s annual study day gives Year 12 students from a variety of state schools the opportunity to delve into different subjects, and a taste of life in the College. ‘I felt at home the moment I walked in,’ she says. ‘I remember the Senior Tutor, Steve Rayner, doing a brilliant question and answer session, dispelling myths I strongly believed. I decided there and then to apply!’ She took the process one step at a time: ‘I was always thinking “well, I’ll just try to get the next stage”.’ ‘I very much got the message from school that Oxford wasn’t for me, that this wasn’t a world I would be happy in. There were teachers who told me that choosing Oxford was a wasted option. I think they thought they were being realistic when they tried to lower my expectations with a rhetoric of “It’ll be okay when you don’t get in, because you wouldn’t like it anyway”. Luckily, I was stubborn enough to ignore them!’ Isabel remembers her interviews very well. ‘The student helpers at Somerville did a wonderful job of making us feel at home. The fact that Oxford tutors wanted to hear what I had to say was a revelation.’ She was also surprised by how creative the thinking was. ‘The English tutors were interested in how my reading of The Great Gatsby inspired me to design a 1920s dress as part of my Textiles coursework,’ she says. When Isabel got her offer, some of her teachers were so sure she was going to be rejected that they didn’t even ask her about it. ‘I loved my degree,’ she says, ‘but I have to say that it was enormously hard work. I really suffered from imposter syndrome, and my tutors were unbelievably supportive: I am so thankful to them for building my confidence.’ Isabel always worked alongside her studies in school, holding tutoring and retail jobs even throughout exams, and continued this outside of term during her degree. 10

‘For me, free time was for study or work, but I always found time for access work: taking part in the very same outreach that once inspired me.’ Isabel was determined to give something back to the College and encourage others to consider Oxford. She helped out at Somerville’s study days and school visits, and represented the College and the University at access roadshows, as well as working as a student helper during the admissions period. ‘I hope I managed to beat some of the stereotypes,’ she says. ‘It is so important to me that students from all backgrounds know what Oxford is really like and how supportive it can be.’ Working in Somerville’s Development Office after graduating gives Isabel the chance to see a new side of College life. ‘It is inspiring to see how passionate alumni are, especially about College welfare and access, and how important fundraising is to making sure that students can get the support they need.’ ‘I know I’m only at the start of a journey,’ Isabel says, ‘but my time at Somerville means that I am a part of something incredible.’


AARON SIMPSON Aaron Simpson is now in his second year reading for a Graduate-entry degree in Medicine and holds a Scourse Scholarship. Here, he tells us about how he came to Somerville.

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hen the Oxford Mail reported that no one from the Blackbird Leys estate in the city had studied as an undergraduate at Oxford University for over a decade, Aaron’s Simpson’s Dad was furious. He rang up the paper and demanded they interview his son. To their credit, they were happy to do so, highlighting Aaron’s achievement in getting a place on the four-year, fast-track undergraduate Medicine degree. Was it something that Aaron could have imagined when he was at school? ‘I can see now that my schooling was underprivileged,’ he says. ‘But at the time I knew no different. I had some amazing teachers, and I remember overhearing my English teacher telling someone that one day I was going to go to Oxford or Cambridge. But I didn’t know what that meant, or what to do about it.’ His school had no sixth form (in fact, after being put in special measures, it was closed and eventually bulldozed), so Aaron went on to do his A Levels at Oxford and Cherwell Valley College of Further Education. For good measure, he cycled to St Gregory the Great School to do Philosophy A Level classes alongside his sciences. Why? ‘I like a good argument!’ he says. Aaron took his first undergraduate degree in Biomedical Sciences at Reading University, gaining a First as well as winning a Chancellor’s Award in both his first and second years. The hard science appealed to him, but he also knew he wanted to work with people. ‘At Reading, I worked in a care home for people with dementia. It was scary at first, knowing that I was responsible for looking after people who needed so much support, but I soon began to feel that I could help properly.’

The move to Oxford came when Aaron wrote on the off-chance to Professor Valentine Macaulay in the Department of Oncology, asking about work experience. She couldn’t offer him any, but a year later she wrote offering a fully-funded place to read for an MSc by research. Aaron’s research, on why brain cancer is resistant to radiotherapy and chemotherapy, is already in train for publication. ‘That opportunity changed my life,’ he says. ‘I’m so grateful to Professor Macaulay.’ Research remains important to him, but he also wanted a full Medical training, so he took the plunge and successfully applied for the fast-track course. ‘Oxford can be intimidating at first, but we’re all here to gain an education, and that’s a good basis for friendships.’

“Somerville is a great place to be and offers so much help, financially and in other ways too” Coming back was also a draw because of family and so that Aaron could live at home while studying: ‘Without that, I wouldn’t have been able to manage financially,’ he says (he has always fitted paid work around his studies). For most students, just getting through the course would be enough to handle. But during his first year, Aaron faced another challenge when he and his girlfriend took on the care of her grandfather, who was suffering from bowel cancer. ‘He used to joke with me that it was all good training,’ Aaron says, ‘and he was right. He died in May this year, and

my girlfriend and I had been there for him, helping with everything, so that he could die at home.’ Just a few weeks afterwards, Aaron took his first-year exams. He and his girlfriend married in August this year. It was an event her grandfather had hoped he would live to see: ‘But he knew it was coming, and he was thrilled.’ Though he acknowledges how difficult it was to care for someone he loved, Aaron is also quick to see how his experience could benefit others. ‘I certainly believe that seeing cancer in the context of someone’s real life, seeing that people are always more than just patients, will make me a better doctor,’ he says. Aaron has always been enormously determined, but he acknowledges that it’s the support of others, both people and institutions, which has meant he can achieve his ambitions. ‘I receive a bursary,’ he says, ‘and I also hold a scholarship. It’s such a help to be able to meet my costs without having to struggle so hard. It still isn’t easy, of course, but Somerville is a great place to be and offers so much help, financially and in other ways too. I love it here.’ 11


BUILDING THE PIPELINE We meet David Bowe, the Victoria Maltby Research Fellow in Italian, and find out what the life of an early career academic looks like now.

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here was a time when Junior Research Fellows, like Victorian children, were rarely seen or heard. Doctorates in hand, their role was to disappear into the library or the lab for the duration of their appointment, emerging with the groundbreaking work that would secure them a tenured academic post. These days, that brilliant work is still produced, but Junior Research Fellows are also fully immersed in teaching, access work and public engagement. David Bowe came to the College to take up his post in 2015. ‘I’m just starting the last of my three years here,’ he says, ‘and I’m already beginning to feel nostalgic about having to leave Somerville.’ An undergraduate at St Hugh’s and a graduate student at Somerville and St Hilda’s, David works on representations of the female and feminine voices in medieval Italian literature from its beginnings to Dante. His latest article focuses on Compiuta Donzella di Firenze, the first Italian woman poet. ‘She was renowned among other poets for her skill,’ David says, ‘and her sonnets are full of irony, rhetorical flourishes, and surprising juxtapositions.’ Working as a Junior Research Fellow gives David the chance to engage with many aspects of University life. ‘I really value the opportunities to collaborate with colleagues in Somerville and across and beyond Oxford. I’m a member of the University’s sub-faculty of Italian. I act as a mentor to students on the interdisciplinary Medieval Studies Masters Programme, and I also enjoy teaching. For me, it’s all about 12

communicating my love of what I do, whether that’s in writing, in tutorials and seminars or in conversation. And the issues that come up in my research don’t just stay in my research. Working on gender, for example, has made me question all sorts of assumptions about the way we look at and present works of art.’ David was the co-founder and, for two years, a convener of a network of scholars who examine issues of gender and authority around ‘the canon’. ‘The network is part of TORCH (The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities), and we make sure that we broadcast our ideas as widely as possible, through blogs, podcasts, and public events as well as more traditional seminars.’ More recently he’s been involved in organising a multi-university

“Working in such an extraordinary place opens up unrivalled chances for collaboration” research project, called ‘Re-reading Dante’s Vita nova’, which involves events around the country (all of which are open to the public, so consider this an invitation). David has held visiting fellowships and associate lectureship posts at the universities of Leeds and York, as well as working as a lecturer for four other colleges during his time at Oxford. ‘Teaching and research go hand-in-hand for me,’ he says. ‘The great thing about the tutorial system is that it’s always essentially collaborative. I felt this keenly as

an undergraduate, and I aim to bring the same sense of shared engagement with a question or theme into my own teaching. The ideal tutorial for me is one where I’m left saying “hmmm, yes, I’d never thought of it like that”. Tutorials are never just about information, they’re spaces where you learn to argue, rethink, discuss and engage with ideas and your peers and tutors. I’ve seen students take these experiences into academia, certainly, but also the civil service, teaching, law, and the charity sector.’ It sounds like a busy life. Does he ever long for the old-fashioned model of the Junior Research Fellowship where he could be closeted in the library every day? ‘I love my research,’ he says, ‘but I also see teaching and public engagement as very much part of the same process. The questions and ideas that come up in tutorials and at public events prompt me to rethink my work, as well as how I communicate it. It’s also crucial to keep arguing for the importance of research in the humanities, which means entering more public spheres,’ says David. ‘Often, when I


say that I work on medieval Italian literature, people give me funny looks, but as soon as I mention Dante, they get a sense of what I’m on about. There are very few people who haven’t heard of the circles of hell – it’s a commonplace that pops up everywhere, from BBC News to New Yorker cartoons, not to mention video games and TV shows. Dante is one of those authors whose ideas have wholly permeated our culture, and to understand his works better we also need to understand the context in which they were written, which means thinking about other authors in medieval Italy.’ Inspiration can come via unusual routes, as it did in the case of David’s recent Taylor Library Lecture on the audio-visual afterlife of Dante. ‘The Taylorian’s Italian Librarian left a box of LPs on my desk with a note saying “I thought these might be of interest”,’ he says. ‘She was right. The LPs featured a complete recording of Dante’s Divine Comedy, and set me off on the trail of responses to Dante’s writing over the centuries, from films, through opera, to symphonic poems.’ In May, David spoke about his discoveries at the Somerville Will Power lunch, with support from Somerville’s talented choir, who sang a selection of Dante’s poetry set to music by composers from the Renaissance to the twenty-first century. ‘It was stimulating to talk to Somerville alumni who’d read a range of subjects and followed so many different career paths all of whom had maintained the intellectual

curiosity that has defined Somerville for me since my first encounter with the College as an MSt student in 2009,’ he recalls. ‘Though I’ll admit I’m glad I didn’t realise the retired head of a university Italian department was among the attendees until after I’d given the talk!’ Supporting Junior Research Fellowships at Somerville builds a pipeline of talented researchers and tutors. The aim? To keep Oxford and the wider university community in sound intellectual health for generations to come. ‘This role has taught me how to communicate my work at the highest levels,’ says David. ‘Without it, I wouldn’t have had the necessary experience or research profile to apply for academic posts. It’s confirmed my passion for teaching and researching my subject. I know this remarkable opportunity would not have been possible without the support of the gifts given by alumni and friends of Somerville. Working in such an extraordinary place opens up unrivalled chances for collaboration (especially through the Somerville Medievalist Research Group) and offers so many chances to expand and explain my work. It’s a privilege and a joy.’ Find out more about David’s work: https://rereadingdantesvitanova.wordpress.com http://blogs.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/taylorian/2016/10/18/ listening-to-dante-an-audio-visual-afterlife/

DAVID SPEAKING IN THE ASHMOLEAN MUSEUM

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THE ANNUAL FUND Gifts to the Annual Fund play a crucial role in allowing the College to offer the very best in educational and extra-curricular opportunities to bright students with immense potential, no matter what their backgrounds.

SOMERVILLE CALLING…

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upport from our community of alumni, friends and parents has always been at the core of life in Somerville, helping us to reach the highest standards in teaching and research. The annual Telethon is vital in supporting our Annual Fund. It is always inspiring to hear how much these telephone calls mean to both our alumni and current students and to see alumni giving back to help current students. In the 2016 Phone Campaign, over £300,000 was raised for the Annual Fund, with our students speaking with around 700 alumni from around the world. An impressive 64% of those spoken with decided to make a gift in support of the College, with many choosing to make unrestricted donations.

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These allow us to respond directly to unanticipated needs and can make the difference between a student being able to complete a degree or not. We would like to thank our 2016 Matched Fund donors who last year raised nearly £80,000 of unrestricted donations to assist the callers’ efforts by matching new regular gifts and upgraded donations over the phone. We would also like to thank our 2017 Matched Fund Champions and we look forward to reporting on our most recent Telethon next year. How do we use our funds? Last year, donations enabled us to redecorate many of the student bedrooms within Park and the ROQ. Then, there are the bursaries that we are able to offer which are the actualisation

of Somerville’s ethos of inclusion and diversity. In the academic year 2016/17 around 1/5 of our students received financial support from the College. This would simply not have been possible without the generosity of the many donors who contribute to the Annual Fund. I am also pleased to report that our innovative fundraising models continue to go from strength to strength. The Somerville crowdfunding platform helps students pursue creative projects, with a particular focus on those that will benefit other students. Last year, five projects led by Somerville students were hosted on our Hubbub site (https://somerville.hubbub.net/), including a campaign to support the


What the Telethon means to me

THE 2016 TELETHON TEAM

JCR Arts Week, which hosted a hugely successful events programme, supporting and developing the Arts within College. Over £90,000 has been raised on the platform to date towards student-led projects and initiatives. It’s a wonderful achievement. Thank you to all of you who have supported the ambitions and talents of our brilliant Somerville students. HEATHER WEIGHTMAN, Annual Fund Officer

‘I loved being part of this year’s Telethon, and especially enjoyed having the opportunity to thank a lot of our donors for their generous support. I see the impact of the Annual Fund every day: in my tutorials with some of the best academics in the world; looking at the exciting new onsite building developments from my bedroom window; and at the time when I have turned to the College to ask for support when I’ve been facing financial need. My time at Somerville would have been totally different, and a lot more difficult, if not for the incredible support of our alumni, and I know that this is the same for so many other students too.’ JESS BOLLANDS (English Language and Literature, 2015)

Special thanks from the JCR President: Barnaby Harrison We are hugely fortunate here at Somerville to live and study in a community which prizes academic excellence, yet also feels so much like home. The sense of fulfilment and belonging that students feel here is unique, and something we must not take for granted. As a JCR, we do our utmost to uphold the values which make Somerville such a fantastic place to be, but we are only one small part of the overall framework which makes the College tick. Behind the scenes, countless individuals put in many selfless hours of work to help make this all possible. The alumni form a crucial part of that framework. Your kindness and generosity paves the way for students both to come to Somerville in the first place, and to flourish once they are here. Without this, so much of what students here aspire to, and achieve, would simply not be possible. We, as the undergraduate body at Somerville, are enormously grateful for the time and effort that the alumni commit towards enriching the lives of all our students, and for making our time here the best it can be.

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INVESTING IN EXCELLENCE You are helping us to secure the future of Somerville by funding scholarships, research fellowships and lectureships. Find out how far our projects have come thanks to your support during the last year. We are delighted to report that the Law Appeal has had a strong start, with 44 donors giving a total of just over £61,000 during the last year. Donors to the Appeal automatically become members of the Somerville Law Circle, receiving grateful recognition as well as invitations to special events. ‘It’s enormously exciting to think that we are helping to secure the future of Law at Somerville. Thanks to those of you who are already on board; and to those who might be thinking about it, I hope you will join me in supporting this powerful and important campaign.’

THE RT HON LORD JUSTICE DAVID BEAN (WHOSE LATE WIFE WAS HONORARY FELLOW RUTH THOMPSON) AND DR JULIE DICKSON, TUTORIAL FELLOW AND ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF LAW

The Somerville Law Circle

Sheena Singla (1994), Chair of the Somerville Lawyers’ Committee Thank you so much to those who have already given. If you would like to know more about joining the Law Circle, please contact the Director of Development, Sara Kalim (sara.kalim@some.ox.ac.uk).

In April 2017, Somerville’s Fellows in Law and the Somerville Lawyers’ Committee launched an appeal to support a Stipendiary Lectureship in Law. Somerville has a history of distinguished alumni in Law and it is a thriving subject. Yet Law remains one of the most underfunded subjects in College, with an annual shortfall of around £100k. It has been proposed that the Lectureship be named, at former Principal Alice Prochaska’s request, for Alice’s grandparents, Arnold and Marjorie McNair. Marjorie (née Bailhache) read English at Somerville from 1906 to 1909 and took her degree on the first day when women were allowed to do so in Oxford. In 1912 she married Arnold McNair, later Lord McNair, who taught Law at Cambridge and went on to be President of the International Court of Justice at The Hague and the first President of the European Court of Human Rights. Securing funding for a Stipendiary Lectureship alongside our two Tutorial Fellowships will ensure that Somerville’s first year Law students can be taught in College the specialist subjects that comprise their first year. Our Stipendiary Lecturer is also closely involved in the provision of our annual induction course for Law undergraduates. Held in the week before Michaelmas Term, the induction course is of particular value to those who are among the first in their families or communities to come to university. 16

THE THATCHER SCHOLARS

Thatcher Scholarship Programme Last year we published profiles of the first two scholars in the Thatcher Scholarship Programme. This year, we are delighted to report that Michaelmas Term 2017 will see another six scholars take up their places at Somerville. The Thatcher Scholarships fully fund the tuition fees and living costs of undergraduate and graduate scholars, freeing them from financial difficulty and allowing them to engage fully with the variety of opportunities open to them in Somerville and the wider University, while also


enabling them to graduate without debt. Varying degree course lengths mean that the number of Thatcher Scholars studying at Somerville in any one year will fluctuate, but we anticipate that at least 14 scholars will be in place by the start of the academic year 2020/2021. Scholars and all students at Somerville are able to take part in the Thatcher Development Programme (which offers training and support including internships, career development and study skills) and to apply for Thatcher Development Awards (which offer funding towards projects and travel, with a particular focus on projects that will benefit others).

The Dorothy Hodgkin Project Formally launched last Spring, the Dorothy Hodgkin Project has received inspiring support from the Somerville community. We are delighted to report that the project, which included an innovative and ambitious crowdfunding element, has now reached the point where we are able to fund a five-year Career Development Fellowship for an outstanding early-career research scientist. We take this opportunity to thank all of you who have helped and contributed. In 2014, the College celebrated the 50th anniversary of the award of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry to Somerville’s Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, a pioneer scientist in the field of X-ray crystallography. It was an important moment of reflection. Professor Hodgkin had been a student at Somerville, and it was here that she was supported and encouraged in her research career, an investment that only bore its groundbreaking results after many years of determined persistence. What many people do not know about Dorothy Hodgkin was that Somerville gave her an early, and we believe the first, form of maternity leave at Oxford, although it was

then described as extended ‘sick pay’. Hodgkin was widely admired for her dedicated mentoring and support of younger scientists, in particular women and international students. When a student in her lab faced the prospect of losing funding support because she was getting married, Hodgkin stepped in and ensured the funding continued, and therefore the science continued. She later went on to donate a portion of her Nobel Prize winnings to provide on-site childcare at Somerville, now the Somerville Nursery, which continues to be one of the few provisions of its kind in Oxford. Somerville’s support of Hodgkin proved fruitful. Her key discoveries include the structures of penicillin, vitamin B12, and five years after winning the Nobel, insulin. X-ray crystallography, an experimental technique in Hodgkin’s time, became an essential tool in determining the structures of biological molecules, which is key to understanding how they function. It has played a contributing role in the work of at least 40 other Nobel Prize winners. Hodgkin became the second woman (after Florence Nightingale) to receive the Order of Merit in 1965. She is also the only woman to receive the Royal Society’s Copley Medal. Her astonishing accomplishments are, and should be, hugely gratifying to Somerville and all of its members. She represents a number of the College’s most important principles, which continue to make the College such a special place today. Somerville was founded to recognise the value to society as a whole of providing education to women at a time when such access was highly limited. Today, the College remains fully committed to enabling the very best students - women and men, regardless of background - to benefit from a worldclass, challenging and inspirational education, in a supportive and enlightened community of equals. This longstanding ethos has a

DOROTHY HODGKIN (© JORGE LEWINSKI)

palpable impact on what it is like to study here and what it means to be a member of this community. It is only fitting that Somerville should continue Hodgkin’s legacy by helping address the ongoing problem of low female retention in science. Our project joins and furthers the important efforts of such organisations as the Royal Society and Wellcome Trust to help young scientists return to academia after career breaks and progress to permanent positions. It has been particularly poignant to hear from several Somervillian woman scientists who believed this project would have been helpful to them. We are especially grateful to our wonderful Matched Fund donors, whose leadership helped promote and inspire an outpouring of support and good-will. Our crowdfunding project is a milestone for Oxford and has put us in an excellent position to continue our efforts to support science at Somerville.

Matched Fund Leaders Mrs Clara and Mr Michael Freeman

Ms Ceiri Roberts Mrs Sue and Mr Kevin Scollan Ms Sybella Stanley and Mr Paul Zisman If you have any questions about the Dorothy Hodgkin Project, please contact Brett de Gaynesford (brett.degaynesford@some.ox.ac.uk) 17


OMAR DAVIS

‘THIS SHOULD MATTER TO ALL OF US’ Omar Davis came up to Somerville in 1997 to read PPE. Now with Bank of America Merrill Lynch, he supports Universify, the access summer school held at Somerville. Here, he tells us about his experience of education, and why it made him want to give back.

‘O

urs was a house where education, and its impact on society, was talked about all the time,’ Omar recalls. ‘Both my parents worked in roles connected with teaching, and my brother and I therefore grew up in an environment where learning was both worth pursuing and highly valued.’ And this was learning on an international scale, as Omar’s family lived in Sudan, Kenya, the Philippines, and Pakistan before they came to England. ‘My father’s job meant that we moved around a lot. We got used to the idea that the world is a big place, and we saw how different people live. I’m halfEnglish, half-Pakistani. I speak both languages and feel so connected to both places.’ Omar’s culture shock came when he arrived at school in the UK. ‘It was one of the Midlands’ good independent schools,’ he says. ‘But there were people who’d never gone further than the local area. I remember the guy I sat next to when we went on a rugby tour to the Netherlands. For him, it was the first time he had left his town and was like going to the moon. I had my own learning curve too – calling people by their surname at school for the first few years was quite strange! I was lucky enough to have some amazing teachers who pushed

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me hard. My grades shot up in the time I was there.’ Omar says it was the urge to learn more about life and what makes people tick and the world go round that took him away from a scientific path in the sixth form and led him to look at PPE and Oxford. ‘When I came to Oxford for the first time, I thought it was an amazing place. Someone showed me the trick

“There should be greater equality of opportunity. Somerville was founded on that idea” where you can lean over the railings outside the Radcliffe Camera and breathe in that musty smell of books coming up from the vents. I thought it was really cool to be in this place where the air was filled with knowledge!’ He still remembers the shock of his first essay, though. ‘The title was “Are fascism and Stalinism both forms of totalitarianism?”. I almost had a heart attack. I hardly knew what any of the words meant, even.’ His college parents came to the rescue, giving him tips about how to tackle essay-writing. ‘It was tough,’ he says, ‘but so exciting. I

didn’t crack how to write Economics essays until the Michaelmas Term of my third year. It took me that long.’ You might think it was studying Economics that made Omar such a success in the banking world. In fact, it’s Philosophy that most closely resembles a lot of what he’s had to do. ‘From my first interview to the presentations I give now: it’s all premise, premise, conclusion,’ he says. ‘So much of what I do is about persuasion backed up by good information. My degree really taught me how to think logically, how to form an argument and debate counters to a point of view. The tutorial system certainly helped massively with that.’ The sheer quality of Oxford’s tutorial system is part of what motivates Omar to give – his conviction that others should have the opportunities he enjoyed. ‘For


STUDENTS AT THE 2017 UNIVERSIFY SUMMER SCHOOL

me, I feel like I’ve only achieved the bare minimum, with all the opportunities I’ve been given in life, and have a long way to go. Of course, like with everyone, there were challenges along the way growing up, but, overall, I was dealt a pretty decent hand of a nurturing and supportive environment. For me, it’s about an obligation, a responsibility, to help others who aren’t so fortunate. If people like me don’t do it, who will?’ Omar also believes that there are lessons to be learned from the US culture of giving. ‘Those of us who are doing well financially need to look at what we can give back. UNIQ and Universify are amazing projects – just look at the statistics. They’re enormously worthwhile in themselves, and they also give a huge amount of bang for your buck. My employer offers a matched funding scheme, which is a great way to make my money go further.’

‘The millennial generation is all about valuing experience more than valuing material comforts. Well, these are projects that are all about the experience. The thought that talented students can come to these summer schools when they might not even have thought about coming to university, let alone Oxford, and that they can make that decision to aim high: that’s what matters. There should be greater equality of opportunity,’ Omar says. ‘Somerville was founded on that idea. It’s just there in the College’s history and ethos, and it’s something you come to believe in by the time you leave even if you didn’t believe it when you arrived. This matters to me. This should matter to all of us.’ Thank you to all of you who already give to support Universify and our other College projects. If you would like to find out more about giving to Somerville, please contact development.office@some.ox.ac.uk. To learn more about Universify, go to https://universifyeducation.com. 19


SOMERVILLE WILL POWER Legacies and planned gifts have helped to shape Somerville throughout its history and continue to ensure its success today. Many significant parts of the College owe their existence to a legacy gift, but also deeply moving are the smaller bequests from individuals who decide to include Somerville in their plans. These gifts have often come to the College at crucial times, even when they had been put into place years earlier. Legacies allow the College to thrive and grow, and we couldn’t be more grateful to those who plan ahead and entrust us with these special gifts.

T

his year Somerville was the beneficiary of a generous legacy from Honorary Fellow Ruth Thompson, who remained deeply engaged and supportive of the College throughout her lifetime. She inspired many of us with her warmth, humour and dedication, and it was with characteristic candour that she let it be known she was particularly interested in supporting and encouraging our students. She kindly agreed to speak at a Supporters’ Lunch about why she chose to support Somerville and moved many with her heartfelt words. As well as acknowledging the deep impact of her time at Somerville on her own life, Ruth also said quite simply that one reason she gave to Somerville is because she ‘[trusted] Somerville to do the right thing with it.’ Alice Prochaska wrote that ‘Ruth believed passionately in the importance of access to education and opportunity for everyone. As Deputy Chair of Governors at Birkbeck College, University of London and at the University of Staffordshire (chairing the Education Committee) she was a highly valued Governor with a strong belief in the importance of the universities’ work in the community and for those returning to education later in life. Somerville found in her a thoroughly engaged and influential Honorary Fellow (and her husband David joined her here too), keen to 20

THE NEWLY FINISHED MARY SOMERVILLE ROOM IN HOUSE, WHICH INCLUDES A PLAQUE COMMEMORATING RUTH THOMPSON’S LEGACY (PHOTOGRAPH BY JAMES MACKINTOSH)

meet the students, keen to promote access, and ready with sage advice when asked.’ Her legacy has enabled the College make an important, exciting and timely transformation. After extensive refurbishment, that included adding critical and urgent structural support for House, the Old College Bar/JCR has become one of the College’s finest new rooms, now named for Mary Somerville. The Mary Somerville Room will be used for a number of key functions in College, allowing

us to celebrate our heritage and the pioneer for whom we are named. This beautiful space will benefit Fellows, students and alumni, and will house some of the College’s best and most valuable paintings and artefacts. Its central piece is the plaster bust of Mary Somerville by Sir Francis Chantrey, the marble version of which is displayed by the Royal Society, London. Ruth is commemorated by plaques in the Mary Somerville Room and alongside the Library Study Room which is named for her.

Recognising the transformative role that legacy gifts have played in the history of the College and continue to play today is very important to us. Somerville Will Power, our legacy society, honours the special effort and commitment made by alumni and friends who have pledged a legacy or planned gift to Somerville. If you would like more information on including the College in your estate plans or about Somerville Will Power, please contact Brett de Gaynesford (brett.degaynesford@some.ox.ac.uk).


THE GIFT OF A LEGACY Alumni (ordered by Matriculation year) F = Fellow EF = Emeritus Fellow HF = Honorary Fellow SRF = Senior Research Fellow FF = Foundation Fellow † = Deceased

Legacies Pledged as of 31st July 2017 Dr Margaret Adams 1958 Ms Susan Allard 1962 Ms Pauline Ashall 1978 Mrs Rosemary Baker (Holdich) 1962 Dr Jennifer Barraclough (Collins) 1967 Lady Bingham (Elizabeth Loxley) 1957 Mrs Carol Bird (McColl) 1990 Mr Matthew Blessett 1994 Mrs Clare Bonney (Penny Tillett) 1964 Mrs Karin Bosanquet (Lund) 1951 Mrs Nancy Bower (Thompson) 1939 Dr Margaret Bowker (Roper) 1955 Dr Doreen Boyce (Vaughan) 1953 F Mrs Anne Bradley (Greasley) 1966 Dr Jill Brock (Lewis) 1956 Professor Fiona Broughton Pipkin (Pipkin) 1964 Dr Hilary Brown (Maunsell) 1954 Professor Dr Edwina Brown 1967 Dr Paula Brownlee (Pimlott) 1953 F Mrs Ann Buxton (Boggis-Rolfe) 1971 Mrs Alison Cadle (Cowley) 1974 Mrs Sheena Carmichael (Inglis) 1960 Dr Christian Carritt 1946 Dr Margaret Clark (Sidebottom) 1967 Miss Marieke Clarke 1959 Professor Jennifer Coates (Black) 1962 Mrs Denise Cockrem (Lear) 1981 Mrs Hilda Cole (Robinson) 1950 Miss Beth Coll 1976 Ms Caroline Cracraft (Pinder) 1961 Mrs Ann Currie (Mansfield-Robinson) 1953 Mrs Janet Davies (Welburn) 1958 Mrs Pat Davies (Owtram) 1951 Mrs Chia Dawson (Chang) 1964 Mrs Ann Diamond (Geale) 1950 Dr Daphne Drabble (Fielding) 1961 Mrs Nest Entwistle (Williams) 1952 Mrs Audrey Faber (Thompson) 1944 Mrs Jessi Fayers (Booth) 1929 Dr Janet Fletcher (Bone) 1951 Mrs Jean Fooks (Scott) 1958 Mrs Barbara Forrai (Lockwood) 1946 Mrs Elizabeth Fortescue Hitchins (Baldwin) 1946 Mrs Penelope Gaine (Dornan) 1959 Professor Barbara Goodwin 1966 Miss Charlotte Graves Taylor (Graves-Taylor) 1958 Dr Andrew Graydon 1988

Mrs Mary Grodecki (Vernon) 1943 Miss Jean Hall 1943 Mrs Jane Hands (Smart) 1981 Miss Ann Hansen 1959 Dr Janet Harland (Draper) 1952 Miss Sheila Harris 1943 Professor Pauline Harrison (Cowan) 1944 Miss Barbara Harvey 1946 EF Miss Diana Havenhand 1986 Mrs Lisette Henrey (Coghlan) 1959 Mrs Aileen Hingston (Simkins) 1973 Dr Carol Holmes (Bentz) 1967 Mrs Barbara Howes (Lowe) 1965 Ms Penny Hunt 1975 Ms Nicola Hyman (Tomlinson) 1993 Dr Anne Isba (Lightfoot) 1964 Mrs Lucy Ismail (Deas) 1958 Mrs Sarah Jackson (Venables) 1966 Mr Ian Johnson 1996 Mrs Emily Johnson (Cooke) 1996 Dr Barbara Jones 1973 Mrs Gillian Keily (Gunner) 1953 Mrs Ann Kennedy (Cullis) 1947 Dr Meriel Kitson (De Laszlo) 1968 Miss Bridget Knight 1955 Ms Elizabeth Knowles 1970 Dr Loeske Kruuk (Kruck) 1988 Ms Venetia Kudrle (Thomas) 1966 Professor Laura Lepschy (Momigliano) 1952 F Dr Kate Lesseps (Lay) 1979 Dr Louise Levene 1979 Dr Ruth Lister 1944 Miss Judith Lovelace 1963 Miss Mary Low 1945 Mrs Sue Low (Carpenter) 1949 Miss Pat Lucas 1949 Mrs Vicky Maltby (Elton) 1974 Professor Judith Marquand (Reed) 1954 Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 F Mrs Pamela Mason (Holt) 1966 Mrs Sheila Mawby (Roxburgh) 1962 Mrs Helen Mawson (Fuller) 1957 Mrs Mairi McCormick (MacInnes) 1943 Dr Elizabeth McKay (Norman) 1957 Dr Elizabeth McLean (Hunter) 1950 Dr Minnie McMillan 1960 Mrs Judith Mitchell (Bainbridge) 1967 Dr Jacqueline Mitton (Pardoe) 1966 Miss Helen Morton EF Dr Lynette Moss (Vaughan) 1958 Dr Fahera Musaji (Sindhu) 1990 Ms Hilary Newiss 1974 Miss Denise O’Donnell Mrs Sue Pappas (Dennler) 1962 Ms Hilary Pearson 1962 Mrs Jane Peters (Sheldon) 1950 Dr Alison Pilgrim 1974 Ms Sheila Porter 1951 Ms Sally Prentice 1987 Mrs Niloufer Reifler (Marker) 1968

Miss Joan Richards 1951 Ms Jill Rutter 1975 Mrs Giustina Ryan (Blum Gentilomo) 1954 Mrs Jane Salusbury (Terry) 1953 Mrs Sue Scollan (Green) 1978 Mrs Margaret Selby (Monitz) 1961 Ms Jane Sender (Nothmann) 1974 Professor Caroline Series 1969 F Miss Miranda Shea 1953 Mrs Sandra Skemp (Burns) 1957 Mrs Alison Sloan (Goodall) 1978 Mrs Clare Spring (Thistlethwaite) 1952 Ms Sybella Stanley 1979 Mrs Felicity Staveley-Taylor (Roberts) 1986 Dr Alison Stewart (Lacey) 1988 Dr Joyce Sugg 1944 Dr Vicky Tagart 1967 Mrs Jayne Thomas (Harvey) 1977 Mrs Joan Townsend (Davies) 1955 Professor Meg Twycross (Pattison) 1954 Ms Judith Unwin 1973 Mrs Kate Varney (Leavis) 1958 Mrs Miranda Villiers (McKenna) 1954 Dr Shirley Vinall (Jones) 1965 Mrs Rhiannon Wakefield (Hogg) 1984 Mrs Jenifer Wates (Weston) 1951 Dr Trudy Watt 1971 Ms Jacqueline Watts 1979 Mrs Jennifer Welsh (Husband) 1952 Miss Pauline Wickham 1950 Dr Joan Wilkinson 1955 Mrs Margaret Williamson (Allott) 1956 Mrs Margaret Willis (Andrews) 1940 Mrs Margaret Windsor (Lee) 1957 Mrs Deborah Woudhuysen (Loudon) 1974 41 anonymous donors

Legacies Received

during the period 1.8.2016 – 31.7.2017

Anonymous 1949 † Lady Abdy (Jane Noble) 1952 † Professor Carys Bannister † Dr Maureen Birukowska (Booth) 1954 † Mrs Mary Bowen (Anderson) 1944 † Mrs Mary Burns (Goodland) 1933 † Mrs Marie Corney 1966 † Miss Mary Dobson 1941 † Miss Jean Hamblin 1948 † Mrs Catherine Hughes (Pestell) † Miss Mary Laing 1948 † Miss Eleanor Littleboy 1943 † Mr Robert Lloyd † Dr Ruth Thompson 1971 HF † Dame Anne Warburton 1947 †

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LIST OF DONORS

During the financial period 1st August 2016 – 31st July 2017 Alumni (ordered by Matriculation year)

Miss Kay Davies 1937 Miss Joyce Reynolds 1937 HF Dr Mary Midgley (Scrutton) 1938 HF Mrs Catherine Eden (Sowerby) 1939 Professor Philippa Foot (Bosanquet) 1939 †

Mrs Helge Rubinstein (Kitzinger) 1948 Mrs Helen Sackett (Phillips) 1948 Mrs Theresa Stewart (Raisman) 1948 HF Mrs Prue Stokes (Watling) 1948 Miss April Symons 1948 Lady Dunrossil (Mavis Spencer-Payne) 1948 Anonymous 1949 Miss Marian Brown 1949 Dr Mary Dixon (Barnett) 1949 Professor Jenny Glusker (Pickworth) 1949 HF Mrs Helen Grellier (Brindle) 1949 Miss Pat Lucas 1949 Dr Ruth Roberts (Greenhow) 1949 Mrs Margaret Stewart (Adams) 1949

1940-49

1950-1959

F = Fellow EF = Emeritus Fellow HF = Honorary Fellow SRF = Senior Research Fellow FF = Foundation Fellow † = Deceased

1930-39

Dr Jean Toynbee (Asquith) 1940 Mrs Jean Velecky (Stanier) 1941 Mrs Rosamund Huebener (Benson) 1942 Mrs Marjorie Pattle (Whitter) 1942 Mrs Susan Wood (Chenevix-Trench) 1942 Mrs Hanna Broodbank (Altmann) 1943 Miss Jean Hall 1943 Mrs Marianna Oliver (Egar) 1943 Lady Arthur ( Margaret Woodcock) 1943 † Dr Mary Ede (Turner) 1944 Mrs Audrey Faber (Thompson) 1944 Dr Leonora Goulty 1944 Professor Pauline Harrison (Cowan) 1944 Dr Ruth Lister 1944 Professor Lalage Bown 1945 Mrs Joyce Molyneux (Ormerod) 1945 Mrs Sheila Ormerod (Preece) 1945 Anonymous 1946 Mrs Patricia Clough (Brown) 1946 Mrs Barbara Forrai (Lockwood) 1946 Mrs Gladys Green (Brett-Harris) 1946 Miss Barbara Harvey 1946 EF Mrs Moira Large (Sydney) 1946 † Miss Kathleen Moore 1946 Mrs Avril Wotherspoon (Edwards) 1946 Lady Kirk (Elizabeth Graham) 1946 Dr Patience Barnes (Wade) 1947 Mrs Judy Cazorla (King) 1947 Mrs Pamela Drewett (Evans) 1947 Mrs Marjorie Godden (Snell) 1947 Dr Rosalind Maskell (Rewcastle) 1947 † Mrs Betty Williams (Rollason) 1947 † Mrs Amna Winter (Sankar) 1947 Mrs Philippa Bishop (Downes) 1948 Mrs Mary Brettell (Bennett) 1948 Dr Jean Hunter (Hopkins) 1948 Miss Sheila Richards 1948

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Mrs Chloe Blackburn (Gunn) 1950 Miss Sarah Canning 1950 Mrs Hilda Cole (Robinson) 1950 Dr Bridget Davies 1950 Mrs Ann Diamond (Geale) 1950 Mrs Penny Lee (Hooper) 1950 Dr Rosemary Moore (Filmer) 1950 Mrs Jo Murphy (Cummins) 1950 Mrs Jenny Newman (Hugh-Jones) 1950 Mrs Renate Olins (Steinert) 1950 Mrs Jane Peters (Sheldon) 1950 Mrs Nora Satterthwaite (Cable) 1950 Mrs Maureen Scurlock (Oliver) 1950 Dr Marie Surridge (Thomas) 1950 The Revd Canon Kate Tristram 1950 Mrs Helen Bond (Wilman) 1951 Mrs Karin Bosanquet (Lund) 1951 Dr Joan Christodoulou (Edmunds) 1951 † Miss Celia Clout 1951 Mrs Pat Davies (Owtram) 1951 Dr Janet Fletcher (Bone) 1951 Mrs Margaret Green (Pryor) 1951 Mrs Gaby Gross (Peierls) 1951 Dr Heather Hooton (Shelley) 1951 Miss Cynthia Howard 1951 Mrs Olive Merrick (Lovegrove) 1951 Mrs Dorothy Newton (Casley) 1951 Mrs Ann Paddick (Dolby) 1951 Mrs Corinne Petford (Chambers) 1951 Mrs Frances Playfer (Tindall) 1951 Mrs Margaret Porter (Wallace) 1951 Mrs Vivienne Rees (Farey) 1951 Miss Joan Richards 1951 Mrs Gillian Saunders (Gaisford) 1951 Miss Mary Smith 1951 Mrs Rita Sullivan (Rivera) 1951 Mrs Joy Thompson (Taylor) 1951 Mrs Lucia Turner (Glanville) 1951

Mrs Carol Uhlenbroek (Barnsley) 1951 Mrs Judy Ward (McVittie) 1951 Mrs Jenifer Wates (Weston) 1951 Mrs Erica Wood (Twist) 1951 Mrs Cynthia Coldham-Jones (Coldham) 1952 Mrs Shirley Cordeaux Wilde (Legge) 1952 Miss Anne Dawnay 1952 Professor Angela Downing 1952 Mrs Pamela Egan (Brooks) 1952 Mrs Nest Entwistle (Williams) 1952 Ms Shirley Hermitage (King) 1952 Mrs Catherine Hughes (Pestell) 1952 † Mrs Anne Kirkman (Fawcett) 1952 Mrs Gillian Lawrence (Rushton) 1952 Dr Jenifer Lomer 1952 Dr Hilary Maitland (White) 1952 Miss Daphne Perry 1952 Mrs Isabel Roberts (Ferguson) 1952 Mrs Clare Spring (Thistlethwaite) 1952 Mrs Jennifer Welsh (Husband) 1952 Mrs Daphne Williamson (Gloag) 1952 Mrs Barbara Williamson (Freeman) 1952 † Anonymous 1953 Dr Doreen Boyce (Vaughan) 1953 HF Dr Paula Brownlee (Pimlott) 1953 HF Miss Nadine Brummer 1953 Mrs Susan Cronyn (Cooper) 1953 Mrs Ann Currie (Mansfield-Robinson) 1953 Dr Anne Fuller (Havens) 1953 Mrs Ann Glennerster (Craine) 1953 Miss Ann Gray 1953 Dr Marjorie Harding (Aitken) 1953 Mrs Felicity Hindson (Lambert) 1953 Mrs Joyce Horn (Wilkinson) 1953 Mrs Joan Johnson (Munden) 1953 Dr Jennifer Johnson (Dyson) 1953 Mrs Gillian Keily (Gunner) 1953 Mrs Katharine Makower (Chadburn) 1953 Mrs Isobel Morrison (Taylor) 1953 Mrs Jo Pelly (Hirst) 1953 Mrs Sylvia Rudd (Hafekost) 1953 Mrs Jane Salusbury (Terry) 1953 Miss Miranda Shea 1953 Miss Margaret Smith 1953 Mrs Marion Yass (Leighton) 1953 Mrs Rachel Belash (Phillips) 1954 Dr Maureen Birukowska (Booth) 1954 † Mrs Ena Blyth (Franey) 1954 Dr Hilary Brown (Maunsell) 1954 Mrs June Brown (Fisher) 1954 Mrs Shirley Carnell (Mair) 1954 Mrs Patricia Cocks (Charvet) 1954 Mrs Janet Glover (Hebb) 1954 Dr Nori Graham (Burawoy) 1954 Mrs Daphne Green (Fenner) 1954


Miss Ann Hall 1954 Mrs Birgit Harley (Capps) 1954 Mrs Sheila Harrison (Ashcroft) 1954 Mrs Kathleen Jones (Hennis) 1954 Professor Judith Kennedy (Grundy) 1954 Dr Jill Lewis (Morton) 1954 Dr Susan Lourenco (Loewenthal) 1954 Dr Gill Milner (Sutton) 1954 Mrs Gwyn Pettit (Coulson) 1954 Mrs Giustina Ryan (Blum Gentilomo) 1954 Dr Molly Scopes (Bryant) 1954 Mrs Gillian Simmill (Evans) 1954 Mrs Miranda Villiers (McKenna) 1954 Mrs Margaret Ward (Fenton) 1954 Mrs Anne Weizmann (Owen) 1954 Anonymous 1955 Dr Jo Barstow (Dunn) 1955 Dr Marion Fry 1955 Professor Thelma Hardman (Herrington) 1955 Dr Rosemary MacDonald (Coldwell-Horsfall) 1955 Mrs Sally Marler (Turton) 1955 Dr Priscilla Martin (Jenkins) 1955 Mrs Sally Roberts (Hyder) 1955 Mrs Elizabeth Rogers (Telfer) 1955 Dr Helen Ross 1955 Dr Mary Seed (Selwyn-Clarke) 1955 Mrs Sally Wheeler (Hilton) 1955 Dr Joan Wilkinson 1955 Mrs Gillian Yacomeni (Bruce) 1955 Lady Thomas (Valerie Little) 1955 Mrs Jane Bateman (Bennell) 1956 Dr Jill Brock (Lewis) 1956 Mrs Paddy Crossley (Earnshaw) 1956 Mrs Valerie Diamand (Armstrong) 1956 Mrs Hannah Edmonds (Oppenheimer) 1956 Mrs Shelagh Eltis (Owen) 1956 Mrs Carola Emms (Wayne) 1956 Her Honour Audrey Gale (Sander) 1956 The Hon Victoria Glendinning (Seebohm) 1956 HF Professor Sonia Jackson (Edelman) 1956 Mrs Caroline Kenny (Arthur) 1956 Mrs Christine Parker (Gregory) 1956 Mrs Ann Rice (Creer) 1956 Mrs Jenny Semark (Bullen) 1956 Mrs Joan Shaw (Parry) 1956 Mrs Sheila Shield (Bateman) 1956 Mrs Margaret Thornton (Way) 1956 Mrs Frances Walsh (Innes) 1956 Dr Stephanie West (Pickard) 1956 Mrs Margaret Williamson (Allott) 1956 Anonymous 1957 Dr Miriam Griffin (Dressler ) 1957 EF Mrs Hyacinthe Harford (Hoare) 1957 Mrs Reziya Harrison (Ahmad) 1957 Mrs Susan Hilken (Davies) 1957 Mrs Mary Howard (Maries) 1957 Dame Tamsyn Imison (Trenaman) 1957 HF † Mrs Helen Keating (Caisley) 1957

Mrs Elizabeth Leach (Goddard) 1957 Mrs Elaine Lever (Kelsey) 1957 Mrs Helen Mawson (Fuller) 1957 Ms Isabel Nicholson (Smith) 1957 Mrs Sandra Skemp (Burns) 1957 Mrs Margaret Southern (Browning) 1957 Mrs Shelagh Suett (Hartharn) 1957 Mrs Penelope Walker (Willsher) 1957 Mrs Margaret Windsor (Lee) 1957 Lady Bingham (Elizabeth Loxley) 1957 Anonymous 1958 Dr Margaret Adams 1958 EF Mrs Fran Barker (Flint) 1958 Mrs Rachel Britton (Scott) 1958 Dame Antonia Byatt (Drabble) 1958 HF Professor Dame Averil Cameron (Sutton) 1958 HF Dr Gill Cohen (Richards) 1958 Professor Eileen Denza (Young) 1958 Mrs Virginia Fassnidge (Cole) 1958 Mrs Jean Fooks (Scott) 1958 Mrs Judith Frankel (Noble) 1958 Mrs Judith Gardner (Adams) 1958 Mrs Margaret Goddard (Alston) 1958 Miss Charlotte Graves Taylor (Graves-Taylor) 1958 Mrs Lucy Ismail (Deas) 1958 Dr Lynette Moss (Vaughan) 1958 Dr Katharine Parkes 1958 Mrs Gillian Phillips (Hallett) 1958 Ms Judith Rattenbury 1958 Mrs Carol Rikker (Roberts) 1958 Mrs Christine Shuttleworth (de Mendelssohn) 1958 Ms Auriol Stevens 1958 Mrs Shiela Wharton (Milne) 1958 Mrs Jennifer Wiggins (Walkden) 1958 Lady Adye (Anne Aeschlimann) 1958 Anonymous 1959 Mrs Elizabeth Black (Austin) 1959 † Dr Beryl Bowen (Lodge) 1959 Miss Marieke Clarke 1959 Mrs Sheila Clarke (Blair) 1959 Mrs Angela Costen (Lawrence) 1959 Professor Katherine Duncan-Jones 1959 EF Mrs Liz Finch (Gamble) 1959 Mrs Penelope Gaine (Dornan) 1959 Dr Lucy Gaster (Syson) 1959 Mrs Jane Gordon (Mackintosh) 1959 Mrs Lisette Henrey (Coghlan) 1959 Dr Hazel Jones (Lewis) 1959 Dr Liselotte Kastner (Adler) 1959 Mrs Jane Lawrence (Vaizey) 1959 Mrs Kirsty Leonard (MacKenzie) 1959 Dr Susan Noble (Barfield) 1959 † Dr Ahilya Noone (Nehaul) 1959 Baroness Onora O’Neill 1959 HF Mrs Kristin Payne (Maule) 1959 Mrs Cassandra Phillips (Hubback) 1959 Mrs Jane Robinson (Packham) 1959 Mrs Anne Seaton (Vernon) 1959 The Revd Susan Williams (Millington) 1959

1960-1969 Miss Zein Al Rifai 1960 Mrs Jenny Bagnall (Davey) 1960 Miss Priscilla Baines 1960 Dr Liz Berry (Brown) 1960 Dr Jennifer Bottomley (Smith) 1960 Professor Sarah Broadie (Waterlow) 1960 HF The Hon Helen Brown (Todd) 1960 Mrs Claire Coghlin (O’Brien) 1960 Mrs Margaret Davies (Thomas) 1960 Miss Lydia Howard 1960 Mrs Janet Howarth (Ross) 1960 Dr Carol Huber (Saunderson) 1960 Mrs Margot Levy (Schwartzman) 1960 Mrs Sally Mellersh (Senior) 1960 Mrs Margaret Panter (Daughtrey) 1960 Miss Anne Pope 1960 Dr Rosemary Raza (Cargill) 1960 Mrs Ann Shepherd (Scott) 1960 Mrs Elizabeth Smith (Shearer) 1960 Mrs Carol Woollard (Hearnshaw) 1960 Mrs Ellinor Angel (Goonan) 1961 Ms Jane Belshaw 1961 Miss Gladys Bland 1961 Ms Jennifer Bray 1961 Ms Anne Charvet 1961 Ms Caroline Cracraft (Pinder) 1961 Miss Rhiannon Davies 1961 Mrs Nike De Bellaigue (Kent Taylor) 1961 Mrs Angela Gillon (Spear) 1961 Miss Diana Handford 1961 Professor Dame Julia Higgins (Stretton Downes) 1961 HF Mrs Anne Marie Krassowska (Prom Olesen) 1961 Mrs Helen Lowell (Krebs) 1961 Mrs Jenny McKeown (Chancellor) 1961 Dr Vivien Morris (Evans) 1961 Mrs Alison Neil (Williams) 1961 Mrs Susan Richardson (Holmes) 1961 Dr Irene Ridge (Haydock) 1961 Ms Lyn Robertson 1961 Mrs Margaret Selby (Monitz) 1961 Mrs Sanneke Sole (Pull) 1961 Miss Sonia Spurdle 1961 Mrs Jane Staples (Green) 1961 Anonymous 1962 Miss Pauline Adams 1962 EF Ms Susan Allard 1962 Mrs Rosemary Baker (Holdich) 1962 Mrs Kath Boothman (Scott) 1962 Mrs Margaret Brecknell (Dick) 1962 Dr Gillian Butler (Dawnay) 1962 Mrs Elizabeth Campbell (Nowell-Smith) 1962 Ms Gaby Charing 1962 Mrs Lesley Coggins (Watson) 1962 Ms Rosemary Dunhill 1962 Mrs Lucy Eisenberg (Tuchman) 1962 Mrs Dianne Evans (Love) 1962 Mrs Cynthia Graae (Norris) 1962 Ms Eve Jackson 1962

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Professor Christine Lee (Pounder) 1962 Mrs Bernice Littman (Fingerhut) 1962 Dr Hazel Lucas (Craddock) 1962 Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 HF Dr Penny McCarthy (Gee) 1962 Mrs Lin Merrick (Stephens) 1962 Ms Hilary Pearson 1962 Mrs Jane Peretz (Wildman) 1962 Mrs Arlene Polonsky (Glickman) 1962 Mrs Stephanie Reynard (Ward) 1962 Miss Janet Richards 1962 Mrs Alice Sharp (Gilson) 1962 Miss Della Shirley 1962 Dr Ginny Stacey (Sharpey-Schafer) 1962 Mrs Lesley Brown (Wallace ) 1963 EF Dr Mary Gregory (MacDonald) 1963 Mrs Ursula Gregory (Raeburn) 1963 Mrs Helen Haddon (Parry) 1963 Dr Carola Haigh (Pickering) 1963 Dr Anna Hardman 1963 Ms Jennifer Hurstfield 1963 The Revd Margaret Jones (Cook) 1963 Dr Jane Kister (Bridge) 1963 Ms Gill Linscott 1963 Dr Judith Ricks (Coles) 1963 Ms Clare Roskill 1963 Dr Kirsty Shipton (Lund) 1963 Mrs Jennifer Speake (Drake-Brockman) 1963 Mrs Jean Ward (Salisbury) 1963 Ms Janet Watts 1963 Anonymous 1964 Dr Jilly Aarvold (Stanley-Jones) 1964 Ms Sunethra Bandaranaike 1964 Mrs Jill Batty (Lipsham) 1964 Mrs Margaret Biss (Hunt) 1964 Mrs Clare Bonney (Tillett) 1964 Professor Fiona Broughton Pipkin (Pipkin) 1964 Mrs Deryn Chatwin (Price) 1964 Dr Margaret Cone (Beckham) 1964 Mrs Liz Cooke (Greenwood) 1964 Mrs Chia Dawson (Chang) 1964 Miss Jean Florence 1964 Dr Judy Goldfinch (Oldham) 1964 Mrs Chris Grant (Lyons) 1964 Mrs Sue Griffin (Watson) 1964 Mrs Jill Hamblin (Barnes) 1964 Mrs Ros Henderson (Bloomer) 1964 Ms Susan Hoyle 1964 Dr Anne Isba (Lightfoot) 1964 Ms Penny Jamrack 1964 Ms Denise Jefferson 1964 Mrs Gillian Opstad (Spicer) 1964 Dr Cilla Price (Pantin) 1964 Mrs Jenny Rambridge (Pares) 1964 Mrs Ruth Rostron (Treloar) 1964 Mrs Rosamund Salisbury (Wright) 1964 Mrs Hilary Sherman (Matthews) 1964 Dr Katherine Simmonds 1964 Miss Alison Skilbeck 1964 The Revd Canon Ann Slater (Hollowell) 1964

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Dr Mary Walmsley 1964 Ms Jill Winter 1964 Mrs Linda Wyllie (Akeroyd) 1964 Lady Strathnaver (Eileen Baker) 1964 The Revd Professor Loveday Alexander (Earl) 1965 Dr Kate Badcock (Skerratt) 1965 Mrs Alison Brech (Jones) 1965 Mrs Alicia Cansick (Carew-Robinson) 1965 Dr Sarah Cemlyn (Garstang) 1965 Mrs Margaret Clare (Baldwin) 1965 Mrs Alison Corley (Downes) 1965 Dr Anne Coulson (Rowley) 1965 Dr Gillian Cross (Arnold) 1965 Mrs Nicola Davies (Galeska) 1965 Miss Nan Dunbar 1965 Mrs Erika Fairhead (Morrison) 1965 Mrs Cherry Fang (Foo) 1965 Mrs Sue Hastings (Edge) 1965 Mrs Caroline Higgitt (Besley) 1965 Mrs Barbara Howes (Lowe) 1965 Ms Natalia Jimenez 1965 Mrs Monica Jones (Ayres) 1965 Dr Mary Jones (Tyrer) 1965 Mrs Hilary King (Presswood) 1965 † Dr Helen Lewis (Goodman) 1965 Mrs Mary Ling (Hawley) 1965 Mrs Carolyn Lyle (Williams) 1965 Professor Carole Pateman 1965 Mrs Maggie Pringle (Griffin) 1965 Dr Alice Prochaska (Barwell) 1965 Dr Tessa Sadler (Halstead) 1965 Mrs Tricia Savours (Jones) 1965 Professor Sydney Schultze 1965 Dr Pauline Seymour 1965 Mrs Wendy Smith (Arnold) 1965 Dr Shirley Vinall (Jones) 1965 Professor Fenella Wojnarowska 1965 Lady Morgan (Angela Rathbone) 1965 Anonymous 1966 Dr Nelida Agosto 1966 Mrs Vicki Archard (Lloyd) 1966 Mrs Carole Anne Brown (Leigh) 1966 Dr Marylee Bomboy 1966 Dr Jenny Bywaters (West) 1966 Mrs Jill Crofton (Wright) 1966 Professor Gail Cunningham (Pennington) 1966 Dr Maggie Gee 1966 Ms Lynn Haight (Schofield) 1966 Dr Margaret Hedges (Smith) 1966 Miss Kathy Henderson 1966 Professor Judith Howard (Duckworth) 1966 HF Miss Ann Humphries (Tross) 1966 Mrs Sarah Jackson (Venables) 1966 Mrs Lynette Jeggo (Wilkie) 1966 The Revd Gill Keir (Stannard) 1966 Dame Emma Kirkby 1966 Ms Venetia Kudrle (Thomas) 1966 Mrs Caroline Macpherson (Bacon) 1966 Dr Angela Mills 1966 Dr Jacqueline Mitton (Pardoe) 1966

Miss Margaret Newens 1966 Mrs Alexandra Nicol (Marr) 1966 Mrs Kate Nightingale (Wilson) 1966 Miss Madeleine Poulin 1966 Professor Margaret Rayman (O’Riordan) 1966 Dr Elizabeth Reid 1966 Dr Catherine Richenburg (Frank) 1966 Miss Viv Robins 1966 Mrs Marilyn Robinson (Galt) 1966 Mrs Sue Robson (Bodger) 1966 Ms Virginia Ross 1966 Dr Ilona Roth 1966 Mrs Helen Stammers (Tritton) 1966 Mrs Judy Staples (Bennett) 1966 Dr Mary Warren (Fay) 1966 Mrs Elizabeth Whelan (Tillett) 1966 Dr Judy Wigfield (Knights) 1966 Ms Helen Wise 1966 Mrs Rosemary Wolfson (Reynolds) 1966 Anonymous 1967 Mrs Vanessa Allen (Lampard) 1967 Miss Judy Bainbridge 1967 Miss Rachel Berger 1967 Mrs Miggy Biller (Minio) 1967 Mrs Frances Brindley (Hammersley) 1967 Professor Edwina Brown 1967 Dr Jill Challener 1967 Professor Paul Collier 1967 Mrs Sheila Colls (Duffin) 1967 Dr Freddie Crane (Williams) 1967 Dr Liz Danbury 1967 Mrs Angela Davies (Holdich) 1967 Ms Sian Dodderidge 1967 Miss Rosalind Erskine 1967 Mrs Joanna French (Raeburn) 1967 Mrs Rachel Griffiths (Cullen) 1967 Mrs Sarah Hale (Watkins) 1967 Dr Helen Hammond (Heywood) 1967 Ms Anne Kern (Merdinger) 1967 Mrs Stephanie Klass (Brown) 1967 Dr Margot Lunnon 1967 Professor Sally McClean 1967 Ms Maria McKay 1967 Mrs Judith Mitchell (Bainbridge) 1967 Dr Elaine Moore 1967 Dr Pamela Ormerod (Jackson) 1967 Mrs Sarah Roberts (Hancock) 1967 Mrs Niloufer Reifler (Marker) 1968 Mrs Rosamund Skinner (Forrest) 1967 Mrs Dorothy Sneddon (Cheney) 1967 Mrs Pamela Somerset (Morgan) 1967 Mrs Rosemary Swatman (Cox) 1967 Dr Vicky Tagart 1967 Mrs Susie Worthington (Middleditch) 1967 Lady Scarlett (Gwenda Stilliard) 1967 Dr Pamela Ashton (Suissa) 1968 Professor Irena Backus (Kostarska) 1968 Mrs Helen Barnard (Ratcliffe) 1968 Ms Moira Black 1968 Dr Anne Bloomer Toms (Bloomer) 1968 Mrs Freda Chaloner (White) 1968 Mrs Miranda Corben (McCormick) 1968


Mrs Olwen Curry (Lloyd) 1968 Signora Nicki Dal Pozzo d’Annone (Hibbert) 1968 Dr Michelle Elcoat Poulton (Elcoat) 1968 Mrs Lesley Futcher (Harrison) 1968 Mrs Liz Gibson (Sarson) 1968 Mrs Angela Gillibrand (Parry) 1968 Professor Carole Hillenbrand 1968 HF Ms Jessica Hodge (Obrei Gann) 1968 Dr Meriel Kitson (De Laszlo) 1968 Dr Bridget Long (Lymbery) 1968 Dr Terry Macdonald (Bowe) 1968 Mrs Gillian Manning (Brace) 1968 Mrs Clare Matthews (Davies) 1968 The Revd Joanna Moffett-Levy (Moffett) 1968 Professor Mair Parry (Evans) 1968 Dr Ann Rolinson 1968 Ms Sonja Ruehl 1968 Dr Sara Turner (Greenbury) 1968 Dr Betsy Wiggins (Fumagalli) 1968 Mrs Jenny Wright (Allan) 1968 Lady Beatson (Charlotte Christie-Miller) 1968 Lady Mann (Margaret Sherret) 1968 Miss Louise Amery 1969 Mrs Jackie Andrew (Turner) 1969 Mrs Julie Baddeley (Weston) 1969 Mrs Patricia Baskerville (Lawrence-Wilson) 1969 Ms Gill Bennett (Randerson) 1969 Ms Shelagh Brooks 1969 Ms Jacqueline Clements 1969 Dr Anne Davies 1969 Ms Penny Deacon 1969 Miss Christine Denwood 1969 Mrs Laura Gascoigne (Warner) 1969 Ms Stephanie Hall 1969 Dr Sophia Hartland (Storr) 1969 Mrs Dianne Hillyard (Forshaw) 1969 Dr Jana Howlett (Dorrell) 1969 The Venerable Peggy Jackson (Pegg) 1969 Ms Helen Jones 1969 Mrs Chinta Kallie 1969 Mrs Janet Kennedy (Harrison) 1969 Mrs Eunice Lord 1969 Mrs Sandra Malvern (Strachan) 1969 Mrs Susan Markham (Whitehouse) 1969 Dr Sophie McCormick (Williams) 1969 Ms Charlotte Morgan 1969 Dr Jill Pipe (Pritchard) 1969 Mrs Yolanda Powell (Radcliffe-Genge) 1969 Dr Judith Sear (Partington) 1969 Dr Lorna Stuart (Bennett) 1969 Professor Caroline Series 1969 HF Ms June Stanworth 1969 Mrs Elizabeth Thorne (Westbrook) 1969

1970-1979 Anonymous 1970 Mrs Juliana Abell (Fennell) 1970 Ms Maggie Ainsley 1970

Mrs Ann Barlow (Jones) 1970 Dr Sarah Beaver (Wilks) 1970 Miss Mollie Bickerstaff 1970 Dr Eleanor Broomhead (Harries) 1970 Dr Alison Callaway 1970 Miss Karen Clarke 1970 Mrs Judy Curry (Wilkinson) 1970 Dr Nuala Gibbons (Bole) 1970 Mrs Wendy Holmes (Beswick) 1970 Mrs Ruth Jolly (Foote) 1970 Ms Patricia Kearney 1970 Miss Rowena Loverance 1970 Dr Sabina Lovibond 1970 Dr Catherine MacRobert 1970 Mrs Janet Matcham (Milligan) 1970 Dr Meg Norman (Griffin) 1970 Mrs Elizabeth Philipps (Black) 1970 Mrs Grania Phillips (De Laszlo) 1970 Mrs Hilary Puxley 1970 Dr Sharon Seltzer 1970 Professor Christine Slingsby 1970 Dr Jenny Spurgeon (Paul) 1970 Ms Carolyn White 1970 Mrs Sue Wingfield Digby (Aizlewood) 1970 Anonymous 1971 Mrs Jill Bowman (Watkins) 1971 Mrs Philippa Bridge (Barrett) 1971 Mrs Jeanne Carrington (Flood) 1971 Mrs Wilma Dickson (Frame) 1971 Dr Chris Fletcher (Moerder) 1971 Mrs Clara Freeman (Jones) 1971 HF Mrs Elizabeth Harbord (Harris) 1971 Mrs Nina Lillie (Piggott) 1971 Dr Mary Lloyd (Kramers) 1971 Ms Jehan Magdi 1971 Mrs Stephanie Martin (King) 1971 Dr Jody Maxmin 1971 Mrs Sally Patmore (Wiseman) 1971 Dr June Raine (Harris) 1971 Dr Penelope Rapson (Eltis) 1971 Mrs Manya Romano-Wayne (Romano) 1971 Mrs Pat Sellers (Burns) 1971 Mrs Robyn Spencer (Gee) 1971 Mrs Helena Taylor (Chicken) 1971 Dr Ruth Thompson 1971 † Miss Jessica Tyrrell 1971 Dr Dilys Wadman 1971 Dr Trudy Watt 1971 Lady Stanhope (Jan Flynn) 1971 Anonymous 1972 Mrs Laura Barnett (Weidenfeld) 1972 Dr Janet Beeby (Badcock) 1972 Ms Jenny Bradley 1972 Mrs Alison Brierley (Mowat) 1972 Mrs Kay Brock (Stewart Sandeman) 1972 Dr Chinekwu Davies (Mbanugo) 1972 Dr Gillie Evans 1972 Mrs Alison Evens (Brown) 1972 Dr Susan Farnsworth 1972 Mrs Eleanor Fuller (Breedon) 1972 Professor Joanna Haigh 1972 HF

Miss Rosemary Hall 1972 Dr Alison Hardie 1972 Ms Mary Honeyball 1972 Ms Jane Lethem 1972 Dr Caroline Lucas (MacKinnon) 1972 Mrs Cathy Marriott (Long) 1972 Dr Liz McDougall (Webster) 1972 Ms Dot Metcalf (Metcalfe) 1972 Mrs Karen Niles (Larson) 1972 Mrs Nicky Ormerod (Callander) 1972 Dr Helen Peters 1972 Dr Natasha Robinson 1972 Mrs Deborah Rohan (Hickenlooper) 1972 Miss Ruth Sillar 1972 Ms Hilary Solanki (Reed) 1972 Mrs Liz Watson (Jones) 1972 Professor Wisia Wedzicha 1972 Ms Louise Whitaker 1972 Anonymous 1973 Ms Jane Arkle 1973 Ms Jill Barelli 1973 Dr Pamela Charlton (Clarke) 1973 Dr Jane Darcy 1973 Ms Helen Demuth (Gaworska) 1973 Mrs Karen Dixon 1973 Ms Georgina Ferry 1973 Professor Penelope Gardner-Chloros (Chloros) 1973 Dr Elizabeth Grayson (Thomas) 1973 Ms Barbara Habberjam 1973 Mrs Aileen Hingston (Simkins) 1973 Mrs Sian Lockwood (Palmer) 1973 Mrs Frances Mallary (Neville-Rolfe) 1973 Ms Krystyna Nowak 1973 Mrs Eleanor Pearce (Hartwell) 1973 Miss Elizabeth Potter 1973 Professor Anne Redston 1973 Mrs Janet Rogers (Ersts) 1973 Miss Ruth Thomas 1973 Ms Judith Unwin 1973 Mrs Judith Wainwright (Paton) 1973 Miss Hilary Walters 1973 Mrs Victoria Younghusband 1973 Anonymous 1974 Ms Rachel Anderson 1974 Miss Sophie Balhetchet 1974 Mrs Alison Cadle (Cowley) 1974 Miss Ruth Crocket 1974 Dr Mary Elliott 1974 Mrs Linda Garvin (Clews) 1974 Ms Marie Ann Giddins 1974 Mrs Ruth Harris (Lodge) 1974 Ms Olwyn Hocking 1974 Mrs Alison Jones (Emmett) 1974 Mrs Rachel Kent (Paterson) 1974 Miss Margaret MacDonald 1974 Mrs Vicky Maltby (Elton) 1974 Miss Alison Mathias 1974 Judge Judy Moir (Edwardson) 1974 Ms Susan Morris 1974 Ms Hilary Newiss 1974 Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974 HF

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Ms Monique Rubens 1974 Mrs Gail Sperrin (Kyle) 1974 Miss Bridget Townsend 1974 Mrs Vivien Tyrell (Adams) 1974 Mrs Deborah Woudhuysen (Loudon) 1974 Dr Stephanie Wright (Heywood) 1974 Anonymous 1975 Ms Nazee Batmanghelidj 1975 Dr Amy Bernstein (Daunis) 1975 Mrs Romy Briant (Frampton) 1975 Mrs Victoria Carnegy (Carlstrand) 1975 Mrs Judith Corstjens (Gilchrist) 1975 Mrs Francesca Currie (Kay) 1975 Mrs Sarah Elliott (Nicholls) 1975 Ms Helen Glanville (Glanville-Wallis) 1975 Mrs Rose Golberg (Stanford) 1975 Mrs Alyson Gregory (Roberts) 1975 Mrs Suzan Griffiths (Green) 1975 Ms Joanna Haxby 1975 Mrs Jayne Huntley (Digby) 1975 Mrs Juliet Johnson (Adams) 1975 Ms Richenda Milton-Daws (Milton-Thompson) 1975 Mrs Jane Nicholson (Wilkinson) 1975 Dr Sarah Parish (Williams) 1975 Dr Valerie Rahmani (Sackwild) 1975 Ms Ceiri Roberts (Simister) 1975 Mrs Fiona Sewell (Torrington) 1975 Mrs Jane Shepherd (Booth) 1975 Mrs Judy Sommers (Knapp) 1975 Miss Kate Williams 1975 Miss Sian Williams 1975 Miss Carol Wood 1975 Mrs Penelope Baines (Lord) 1976 Ms Hilary Bates 1976 Miss Sarah Chambers 1976 Mrs Clare Colacicchi (Clutterbuck) 1976 Mrs Alex Cole 1976 Ms Vanessa Couchman 1976 Mrs Anne Cowan (MacKay) 1976 Ms Catherine Darcy 1976 Mrs Angela Dean (Britton) 1976 Ms Frances Dewhurst 1976 Dr Annette Duggan 1976 Ms Lesley Fidler 1976 Mrs Gaynor Fryers (Smith) 1976 Miss Victoria Gibson 1976 Mrs Finola Gowers (Clarke) 1976 Dr Jane Gravells (Schroder) 1976 Dr Jane Macintyre 1976 Mrs Jenny Meader (Heseltine) 1976 Mrs Jane Millinchip (Davenport) 1976 Mrs Rosie Oliver (Rogers) 1976 Ms Erica Paine (Foggin) 1976 Ms Joy Rodger 1976 Mrs Philippa Schofield (Cash) 1976 Ms Jocelyn Stoddard 1976 Dr Jasmine Tickle (Hussain) 1976 Ms Dominique Vaughan Williams 1976 Mrs Anne Williams (Kenyon) 1976 Mrs Kath Wood (Barratt) 1976 Mrs Annabelle Woolf (Spooner) 1976

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Anonymous 1977 Mrs Helen Andrews (Monk) 1977 Mrs Jane Bell (Gilman) 1977 Mrs Sheila Bulpett (Thomson) 1977 Mrs Helen Burton (Hallpike) 1977 Miss Elspeth Corrie 1977 Miss Sally Davenport 1977 Mrs Victoria Elliston (Booth) 1977 Ms Cindy Gallop 1977 Miss Helen Griffiths 1977 Mrs Kati Hughes (Whitaker) 1977 Dr Gill Hunt (Bryson) 1977 Mrs Caroline Jarrett (Sankey) 1977 Dr Kate Lack (Taylor) 1977 Miss Hilary Manning 1977 Mrs Mary McConnell (Norton) 1977 Dr Julia Nehring 1977 Ms Hiroko Ong (Akagi) 1977 Mrs Susan Ott (Congdon) 1977 Ms Helen Roberts 1977 Miss Margaret Robertson 1977 Dr Alexandra Schaapveld (Cook-Schaapveld) 1977 Mrs Julie Skipworth (Deegan) 1977 Miss Frances Truscott 1977 Ms Sarah Whitley 1977 Anonymous 1978 Professor Loranne Agius 1978 Ms Miranda Allardice 1978 Ms Libby Ancrum 1978 Ms Kim Anderson 1978 Ms Pauline Ashall 1978 Mrs Joanna Bell (Priest) 1978 Mrs Liz Brockmann (Madell) 1978 Dr Virginia Brooke (Brember) 1978 Ms Elizabeth Coates ThĂźmmel (Coates) 1978 Professor Helen Dolk 1978 Miss Anna Economides 1978 Ms Fiona Freckleton 1978 Dr Elizabeth Gladstone (Hare) 1978 Mrs Helen Harkness (Lyon) 1978 Mrs Ruth Hazel (Grieves) 1978 Miss Sian Jones 1978 Dr Yuki Konii 1978 Dr Ruth Paynter 1978 Professor Carole Perry (Fairbairn) 1978 Dr Jacqueline Phillipson (Williams) 1978 Dr Rebecca Pope 1978 Ms Annette Rathmell Mrs Sue Scollan (Green) 1978 Ms Kim Severson 1978 Dr Jane Sinclair 1978 Mrs Diane Smith (Lightowler) 1978 Mrs Catherine Steers (Francey) 1978 Dr Tessa Webber (Russill) 1978 Anonymous 1979 The Revd Wendy Baskett 1979 Mrs Jennifer Bennet (Caldwell) 1979 Professor Dona Cady (Millheim) 1979 Miss Penny Chapman 1979 Mrs Judith Dingle (Martin) 1979 Mrs Julie Fox (Allison) 1979

Dr Diane Gray (Paterson) 1979 Mrs Sian Hastewell (Owen) 1979 Mrs Gail Higgins (Hudson) 1979 Dr Katherine Innes Ker (Jones) 1979 Ms Mary Kirk 1979 Ambassador Marita Landaveri Porturas (Landaveri) 1979 Dr Kate Lesseps (Lay) 1979 Professor Angela McLean 1979 HF Miss Christina Morton 1979 Mrs Rachel Parker (Nicholls) 1979 Mrs Harriet Pickering (Jump) 1979 Mrs Isha Ray 1979 Ms Sybella Stanley 1979 Ms Chrissie Tooze (Simpson) 1979 Mrs Elizabeth Waggott (Webster) 1979 Mrs Karen Willis (Harley) 1979 Miss Liz Wilmott 1979

1980-1989 Anonymous 1980 Ms Debbie Beckerman 1980 Mrs Jane Bluemel (Boorman) 1980 Mrs Fabia Bromovsky (Sturridge) 1980 Ms Nancy Brown (Freeman) 1980 Ms Margaret Casely-Hayford 1980 Ms Andrea Davison 1980 Mrs Tanya Diver 1980 Mrs Catherine Fleming (MacKesy) 1980 Mrs Mary Giles (Puntis) 1980 Mrs Claire Hayes (Lines) 1980 Ms Anne Heal 1980 Mrs Hannah Houghton-Berry (Sunderland) 1980 Dr Susan Karamanian 1980 Ms Betsy Kendall 1980 Mrs Anne Locke (Hill) 1980 Mrs Debbie Megone (Barker) 1980 Mrs Kerry Monaghan-Smith (Monaghan) 1980 Mrs Jill Moulton (Ford) 1980 Ms Neeta Patel 1980 Mrs Jacky Rattue (Roynon) 1980 Mrs Carole Rumsey (Austin) 1980 Mrs Judith Shepherd (Bos) 1980 Dr Fiona Somerville 1980 Mrs Jackie Stopyra (Oliver) 1980 Dr Judith Sumnall (Aldred) 1980 Mrs Veronica Tregidgo (Innes) 1980 Mrs Sharon White (Duckworth) 1980 Mrs Jane Wickenden (Stemp) 1980 Anonymous 1981 Dr Anasuya Aruliah 1981 Ms Hazel Barton 1981 Dr Sally Browne (Mellor) 1981 Ms Jennifer Bruce-Mitford 1981 Ms Sara Burnell 1981 Mrs Denise Cockrem (Lear) 1981 Miss Elaine Cook 1981 Dr Ursula Cox (Nicholls) 1981 Ms Fiona Crozier (Rawlinson) 1981 Mrs Heather Cunningham (Sharp) 1981 Miss Sue Elliott 1981 Mrs Naomi Emmerson (Fletcher) 1981


Mrs Jane Hands (Smart) 1981 Mrs Christine Kavanagh (Armand) 1981 Ms Jenny Ladbury 1981 Mrs Sally McEnallay (Allison) 1981 Ms Catherine McLoughlin 1981 Dr Pamela Neville-Sington (Neville) 1981 † Mrs Rachael Nichols (Warner) 1981 Ms Nilly Sarkar 1981 Dr Louise Thurston (Wilkinson) 1981 Professor Ruth Webb 1981 Anonymous 1982 Ms Kathryn Bourke 1982 Mrs Fiona Carley (McLeod) 1982 Dr Catherine Clarke 1982 Mrs Judith Crosbie-Chen (Crosbie) 1982 Mrs Kate Ferguson (Banner) 1982 Ms Nina Formby 1982 Dr Christine Franzen 1982 Miss Helen Hibbert 1982 Ms Frances Hudson 1982 Miss Carol Jackson 1982 Mrs Martha Jones (Andrew) 1982 Mrs Karen Lindley (Smalley) 1982 Ms Anneli Mclachlan 1982 The Revd Frances Nestor (Benn) 1982 Ms Alannah Osborough (Seaward) 1982 Mrs Wendy Seago (Lucas) 1982 Dr Camilla Toulmin 1982 Mrs Julia Walsh (Hope) 1982 Miss Judith Bird 1983 Dr Rebecca Brown 1983 Mrs Sue Coote (Challans) 1983 Miss Karen Eldred 1983 Madame Nicky Gentil (Jenkins) 1983 Professor Helena Hamerow 1983 Ms Susan Hyland 1983 Mrs Anna Kingsmill-Vellacott (Kingsmill-Stocker) 1983 Mrs Julia Nisbet-Fahy (Nisbet) 1983 Ms Tish Reid 1983 Mrs Jacqueline Todd (Steers) 1983 and Mr Anthony Todd Anonymous 1984 Mrs Wendy Adeney (Padley) 1984 Mrs Sarah Adkins (Holmes) 1984 Mrs Christina Bayly (Hindson) 1984 Mrs Lucy Borland (Dean) 1984 Miss Susan Bright 1984 Mrs Jacqueline De Cristofaro 1984 Miss Robyn Field 1984 Mrs Alice Hamilton (Bates) 1984 Ms Antoinette Jackson 1984 Miss Janette Jones 1984 Ms Danita Lowes 1984 Ms Andrea Lyons 1984 Mrs Jo Magan (Ward) 1984 Miss Helen Prandy 1984 Mrs Cathy Reid-Jones (Reid) 1984 Ms Liz Reynolds 1984 Mrs Deborah Starrs (Jeffrey) 1984 Mrs Eleanor Sturdy (Burton) 1984 Ms Caroline Totterdill 1984 Mrs Rhiannon Wakefield (Hogg) 1984 Dr Alison Warry 1984

Anonymous 1985 Dr Susan Allen 1985 Mrs Janine Coulthard (Bailey) 1985 Ms Bev Cox 1985 Mrs Fiona Freely (Say) 1985 Mrs Lucy Kilshaw (Butt) 1985 Mrs Emma Knight (Giles) 1985 Mrs Maggie Knottenbelt (Taylor) 1985 Professor Irene Lynch Fannon (Lynch) 1985 Mrs Anna McGowan (Heselden) 1985 Ms Nina Molyneux 1985 Ms Kate Rogers (Wall) 1985 Mrs Julie Rouffiac (Edwards) 1985 Dr Lisa Teoh (Webber) 1985 Mrs Carys Walshe (Cassidy) 1985 Mrs Barbara Wastle (Carter) 1985 Mrs Robyn Wright (Payne) 1985 Lady Tavener (Maryanna Schaefer) 1985 Dr Fiona Andrewartha (Haworth) 1986 Miss Rachel Belsham 1986 Mrs Katharine Finn (Morgan) 1986 Miss Malgorzata Grzyb 1986 Miss Diana Havenhand 1986 Miss Helen Mussell 1986 Ms Sian Snelling 1986 Miss Suzanne Stebbings 1986 Dr Jackie Watson 1986 Mrs Emma Wattam (Goddard) 1986 Mrs Rebecca Clarke (Haynes) 1987 Mrs Katharine Cook (Chapman) 1987 Mrs Joanne Donnachie (Featherstone) 1987 Mrs Elenore Falshaw (Lawson) 1987 Mrs Jane Follows (Hughesdon) 1987 Mrs Alysoun Glasspool (Owen) 1987 Ms Lisa Gygax 1987 Miss Sarah MacCormick 1987 Dr Jennifer Mathers (Jenkins) 1987 Dr Liane Saunders 1987 Mrs Natalie Smith (Nurock) 1987 Dr Katherine Stevenson 1987 Dr Mira Tewari 1987 Mrs Rachel Tothill (Burns) 1987 Miss Philippa Wright 1987 Lady Heywood (Suzanne Cook) 1987 Dr Julia Aglionby 1988 Mrs Talya Baker (Cohen) 1988 Dr Jaine Blayney (Bell) 1988 Mrs Rebecca Briscoe (Copsey) 1988 Miss Judith Buttigieg 1988 Dr Joanne Ferrier (Sitch) 1988 Ms Katie Ghose 1988 Mrs Alex Hems (Bailey) 1988 Mrs Claire Jacob (Evans) 1988 Professor Essaka Joshua 1988 Miss Gillian Kane 1988 Mrs Sara Nix (Field) 1988 Mrs Rachel Owens (Fox) 1988 Ms Anna Poole 1988 Dr Alison Stewart (Lacey) 1988 Ms Rachel Sylvester 1988 Mrs Eileen Wyatt 1988 Anonymous 1989

Miss Joanna Ball 1989 Mrs Tobie Brealey (Williams) 1989 Mrs Ayla Busch 1989 Mrs Kristina Dziekan (Quattek) 1989 Mrs Sophie Forsyth (Wallis) 1989 Mrs Sharon Gould (Rowland) 1989 Dr Dakota Hamilton 1989 Mrs Jo Hill (Clarke) 1989 Mrs Victoria Hodges (Edwards) 1989 Mrs Carolyn Howard-Jones (Harrison) 1989 Mrs Clare Joy (Jwala) 1989 Ms Tamar Kasriel 1989 Mrs Claire Long (Jameson) 1989 Ms Adrienne Mallinson 1989 Ms Auriol Miller 1989 Dr Emma Sokell 1989 Mrs Sian Thomas Marshall (Thomas) 1989 Dr Nermeen Varawalla 1989 Mrs Sarah Von Schmidt (Fatchen) 1989

1990-1999 Anonymous 1990 Dr Ruth Alcalay (Mayers) 1990 Dr Shahnaz Ahmad 1990 Dr Nilanjana Banerji (Roy) 1990 Dr Claire Cockcroft 1990 Mrs Emma Cross (Rich) 1990 Mrs Abigail Gayer (Macve) 1990 Mrs Jo Greenslade (Harford) 1990 Mrs Fiona Hardcastle (McPhillips) 1990 Miss Eugenie Hunsicker 1990 Ms Sara Kalim 1990 Mrs Kasia Kilvington (Johns) 1990 Ms Samantha Knights 1990 Mrs Angela Kotlarczyk (Quigley) 1990 Ms Penelope Liechti 1990 Mrs Jane Mayhew-Smith (Caley) 1990 Ms Sally Mitcham 1990 Mrs Pippa O’Donnell (Gibson) 1990 Ms Dawn Ohlson 1990 Miss Rachel Pallas-Brown 1990 Dr Dorothy Satterfield 1990 Ms Sara Smith 1990 Miss Rebecca Stubbs 1990 The Revd Katie Thomas (Baxendale) 1990 Ms Nicola Williams 1990 Ms Zoe Cross 1991 Dr Roberta Hamme 1991 Ms Julie Hopkins 1991 Mrs Emma Ingall (Gordon) 1991 Ms Katie Jackson 1991 Mrs Miranda Jollie (Oakley) 1991 Mrs Kay Kiggell (Adam) 1991 Mrs Janita Tan (Patel) 1991 Mrs Nicola Thompson (Herbert) 1991 Dr Marisa Wray (Le Masurier) 1991 Anonymous 1992 Dr Anne Bishop 1992 Mrs Clare Bone (Swinburn) 1992 Mrs Mair Crouch (Hughes) 1992 Miss Eleonor Duhs 1992 Mrs Julia Hall (Fitzhugh) 1992

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Dr Joanna Hart (Edmonds) 1992 Mrs Kate Jones (McCleery) 1992 Miss Caroline Keam 1992 Professor Anne Lofaso 1992 Mrs Kate Markham (Farquhar) 1992 Mrs Sarah Newman (Goddard) 1992 Ms Natasha Phillips 1992 Mrs Alexandra Pownall (Goulding) 1992 Mrs Linda Scott (Love) 1992 Mrs Alexandra Watts (Bigland) 1992 Mrs Cathy Godfrey (Lewis) 1993 Mrs Nicola Hopkins (Bird) 1993 Ms Emma Hyman (Tomlison) 1993 Mrs Emma Kenyon (Tobin) 1993 Mrs Joanna May (Froggatt) 1993 Mrs Esther Moffett (Schutzer-Weissmann) 1993 Miss Mari Nicholas 1993 Dr Rebecca Parker (Green) 1993 Mrs Vicky Price (Snell) 1993 Dr Brenda Scott (Neece) 1993 Miss Sara Stepney 1993 Miss Daisy Turville-Petre 1993 Dr Mona Wahba 1993 Ms Sarah Watson 1993 Miss Emma Wright 1993 Anonymous 1994 Mrs Rosamund Akayan (Brown) 1994 Mrs Daphne Alexander (Chrysostomides) 1994 Mr Alan Connery 1994 Mrs Emily Forrest (Freedland) 1994 Mr Richard Forrest 1994 Ms Winnie Man 1994 Miss Debbie Mulloy 1994 Miss Joanna Myerson 1994 Ms Hilary Osborne 1994 Mrs Lara Payne Hallström (Payne) 1994 Mr Ian Pickett 1994 Ms Eleni Potamianos 1994 Mr Ian Potter 1994 Miss Barbara Rapetti 1994 Mr Kallol Sen 1994 Ms Sheena Singla 1994 Mrs Elizabeth Stanton (Slater) 1994 Mr Matthew Stanton 1994 Mr Eu-Gene Toh 1994 Miss Zoe Trinder-Widdess 1994 Dr Falk Tschirschnitz 1994 Mr Andrew Whitworth 1994 Anonymous 1995 Dr David Buttle 1995 Professor Christopher Bruner 1995 The Revd Mr Tim Carter 1995 Mrs Florence Collier (Coupaud) 1995 Mrs Anna Halliday (Wignall) 1995 Mrs Emily Hammer (Carlisle) 1995 Miss Frances Harrison 1995 Mr Richard Hartshorn 1995 Mrs Jo Howard (Cooper) 1995 Mr Frank Hyman 1995 Dr Rachel Isba 1995 Dr Jane Loader (Aspell) 1995 Ms Lucia Nixon 1995

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Dr Sarah Pickett (Campbell) 1995 Dr Zornitza Stark (Grozeva) 1995 Ms Anna Tweedale 1995 Mrs Rachel Willis (Gooden) 1995 Mr Martin Wright 1995 Mr Ben Booth 1996 Dr Richard Evans 1996 Dr Vasiliki Giannopoulou 1996 Mrs Frances Green (Chapman) 1996 Dr Matthew Grubb 1996 Dr Niels Kroninger 1996 Mr David Lewsey 1996 Ms Kirsty McShannon 1996 Mrs Victoria Noble (Dugdale) 1996 Mr Peter Robertson 1996 Mr Eduard Ruijs 1996 Mr Alan Saunders 1996 Mrs Eleanor Smith (Reid) 1996 Mr Terry Stickland 1996 Dr Xand Van Tulleken 1996 Mr Dan Woodbridge 1996 Mr Stephen Abletshauser 1997 Miss Sarah Barker 1997 Mr Chris Barron 1997 Dr Gemma Bramley 1997 Mr David Brooks 1997 Mr Omar Davis 1997 Dr Gordon Hamilton 1997 Mr Daniel Harris 1997 Mr Tim Knipe 1997 Mr Daniel Lester 1997 Mr Alex Miller 1997 Mr Sam Newhouse 1997 Mr Rajesh Nihalani 1997 Mr Kevin O’Reilly 1997 Mr Piers Ovenden 1997 Miss Charlotte Regan 1997 Miss Kate Rennoldson 1997 Dr Claire Rosten (Popper) 1997 Dr Jacob Rosten 1997 Mr Marc Wilkinson 1997 Anonymous 1998 Mr Adam Alvarez 1998 Mrs Anica Alvarez (Brooks) 1998 Mr Andy Bickmore 1998 Miss Kathryn Bonnici 1998 Dr Barbara Gabrys 1998 Mr Peter Gibb 1998 Dr Adele Graves 1998 Mr Ibrahim Jalloh 1998 Mr Peter Jolly 1998 Dr Hiromi Kinoshita 1998 Mr Johannes Krauledat 1998 Mr Daniel Levy 1998 Dr Ruth Lexton 1998 Mr Aaron Maniam 1998 Miss Charlotte Muskett 1998 Mr Chris Pell 1998 Ms Louisa Radice 1998 Mr Mark Richards 1998 Mr James Sadri 1998 Mr Guy Scadding 1998 Anonymous 1999

Mrs Hannah Capgras (Gold) 1999 Mr Timothy Cheung 1999 Mrs Clair Harris (Stuart) 1999 Mr Stuart Hook 1999 Mrs Jennifer Hook 1999 Dr Katerina Kaouri 1999 Mr Ferdy Lovett 1999 Mrs Anna Mayadeen (Ryan) 1999 Miss Laura McMaster 1999 Ms Tabitha Ross 1999 Mr Ben Salter 1999 Miss Caroline Smith 1999

2000-2009 Anonymous 2000 Mrs Tara Ballinger (Reeves) 2000 Mr James Ballinger 2000 Mrs Afua Dickinson (Kyei) 2000 Ms Laura Evans 2000 Dr Alistair Fair 2000 Mrs Emily Harvey (Wentz) 2000 Miss Isabelle Hung 2000 Dr Andrew James 2000 Miss Caroline Reid (Baxter) 2000 Mr Richard Stedman 2000 Ms Jung-Ui Sul 2000 Miss Kate Taheri 2000 Miss Verena Timbul 2000 Mr Tom Winchester 2000 Mr Angus Young 2000 Mr Nicholas Blazey 2001 Mr Adam Cannell 2001 Mrs Hannah Cannell (Smith) 2001 Mrs Aimee Donnison 2001 Mr Simon Lynch 2001 Dr Alice McKay Hill 2001 Miss Rachel Sales 2001 Mr Martin Scott 2001 Mrs Antonia Stirling (Lee) 2001 Mr Kaj Thuraaisingam 2001 Mr Christopher Vessey 2001 Mr Alexander Webb 2001 Mr Duncan Weldon 2001 Mr Caradog Williams 2001 Anonymous 2002 Mr Christopher Allan 2002 Mr Frank Clarke 2002 Mr William Costigan 2002 Miss Belinda Crerar 2002 Mr Robert Dickinson 2000 Mr Jim Dickins 2002 Ms Annabel Gaba 2002 Miss Kezia Gaitskell 2002 Mr Tom Hoskins 2002 Dr Rachel Imrie 2002 Mr Tom Jenkins 2002 Mr Tom Lilley 2002 Mr Nick Martlew 2002 Mr William Packer 2002 Mrs Jennifer Packer (Barton) 2002 Miss Naomi Weiss 2002 Anonymous 2003 Mr Nicholas Bell 2003


Mr Roger Cotes 2003 Mr Richard Greenberg 2003 Mr Thomas Hodson 2003 Mr Andy Overton 2003 Mr Huw Thomas 2003 Mr Lee Thomas 2003 Mr Andrew Wicker 2003 Mr Francis Wynne 2003 Mr Michael Blatherwick 2004 Miss Eleanor Broughton 2004 Dr Rachel Brown 2004 Ms Stephanie Clive 2004 Miss Lucinda Fraser 2004 Dr Philip Gemmell 2004 Ms Annabel Hirani (Harrison) 2004 Dr Ales Janda 2004 Ms Karin Lai 2004 Miss Amanda Morgan 2004 Miss Beth Seaman 2004 Ms Zoe Sprigings 2004 Ms Clarissa Tam 2004 Mr Márk Torok (Török) 2004 Mr Zephan Trent 2004 Mr Mark Wassouf 2004 Mr Younan Zhang 2004 Anonymous 2005 Mr David Broadbent 2005 Mr David Marshall 2005 Miss Chloe Mattison 2005 Miss Maria Mavridoglou 2005 Miss Latika Shah 2005 Miss Kathryn Skelton 2005 Mr Sean Smith 2005 Miss Angela Wright 2005 Ms Clover Ye 2005 Anonymous 2006 Mr George Abraham 2006 Mr Michael Ashdown 2006 Ms Gabriela da Costa 2006 Mr Guy Fletcher-Wood 2006 Ms Sarah Glenister 2006 Mr Lewis Gurran 2006 Mr Philip Kemp 2006 Mr Jan Komarek 2006 Miss Fiona Lyle 2006 Mr Chris Nicholls 2006 Mr Alexander Parker 2006 Ms Elizabeth Prochaska 2006 Mr James Richardson 2006 Miss Rebecca Scanlon 2006 Mrs Rosemary Shakespear-Reeve (Shakespear) 2006 Miss Nicola Smith 2006 Mr Robert Sturgeon 2006 Mr Daniel Thompson 2006 Ms Cordelia Witton 2006 Anonymous 2007 Miss Elizabeth Allan 2007 Miss Alexandra Baxter 2007 Mr Steven Burr 2007 Miss Katharine Bush 2007 Mr Andrew Cairns 2007 Mr Sion Carruthers 2007

Mr Wojciech Chrobak 2007 Dr Rowena Fletcher-Wood (Scott) 2007 Mr Dexter Harries 2007 Miss Louise Knight 2007 Mr Joseph Matthews 2007 Mr Will McPhail 2007 Miss Samantha Miller 2007 Ms Michaela Peck 2007 Ms Sacha Wason 2007 Dr Kim Yahya 2007 Mr David Blagbrough 2008 Miss Katie Borg 2008 Mr David Burgess 2008 Mr Constantin Calavrezos 2008 Mr James Gundry 2008 Mr Mike Johnson 2008 Mr Dominic Macbean 2008 Miss Bethan Meadowcroft 2008 Mr Iain Moss 2008 Mr Samuel Newton 2008 Miss Helena Powell 2008 Miss Laura Schofield 2008 Miss Katherine Steiner 2008 Miss Andrea White 2008 Mr Almat Zhantikin 2008 Anonymous 2009 Dr Simi Bansal 2009 Miss Pria Ghosh 2009 Mr Ben Partridge 2009 Miss Stephanie Peate 2009 Mr Kumaran Perinpanathan 2009 Mr David Railton 2009 Miss Hannah Riley 2009 Mr Jacob Williamson 2009

2010 Onwards Anonymous 2010 Miss Alexandra Dutson 2010 Mr Barnaby Geddes-O’Dolan 2010 Miss Catherine Hastings 2010 Miss Rachel Hutchings 2010 Miss Aparajita Kashyap 2010 Mr Douglas Knight 2010 Miss Martha-violet Mends 2010 Ms Katie Paul 2010 Ms Rosa Schiller-Crawhurst 2010 Mr Nicholas Shinder 2010 Mr David Springer 2010 Miss Sally Stevenson 2010 Mr Alim Thawer 2010 Mr Robert van Wijk 2010 Mr Daniel Yon 2010 Anonymous 2011 Ms Tallulah Andrews 2011 Miss Adiya Belgibayeva 2011 Ms Alice Broughton 2011 Miss Rosie Carpenter 2011 Mr Victor Feng 2011 Miss Amy Fowlie 2011 Mr Dave Henckert 2011 Ms Deborah Lo 2011 Mr Leo Marx 2011 Mr Josh Milner 2011

Miss Soph Philbrick 2011 Anonymous 2012 Mr Fredrik Hellstrom 2012 Mr Richard Higson 2012 Mr Jonathan Lawrence 2012 Mr Henry Maxwell-Lyte 2012 Miss Beth McMillan 2012 Mr Sacha Scott 2012 Ms Brigitte Stenhouse 2012 Miss Emma Beer 2013 Ms Henrietta Hakes 2013 Mr Akira Marusaki 2013 Anonymous 2014 Mr Alex Barasch 2014 Miss Rebekah Batt 2014 Mr Douglas Boyes 2014 Mrs Talita De Souza Dias 2014 Mr Alex Fraser 2014 Mr Thomas Gaudelet 2014 Mr Reece Johnson 2014 Miss Rebecca Kuperberg 2014 Mr Andrew Macaulay 2014 Mr Jeffrey Martin 2014 Mr Jake Quinn 2014 Miss Madison Taylor 2014 Anonymous 2015 Miss Kate Asquith 2015 Miss Jess Bollands 2015 Mr Arun Dawson 2015 Miss Tess Dupont 2015 Mr Daniel Escott 2015 Miss Alice Eva 2015 Miss Lauren Forwood 2015 Miss Sofia Karlsson 2015 Miss Jessica Larwood 2015 Anonymous 2016 Miss Katie Bastiman 2016 Miss Lavanya Chowdhury 2016 Miss Grace Lee 2016 Miss Claudia Rowan 2016

Fellows Dr Margaret Adams 1958 EF Miss Pauline Adams 1962 EF Professor Sarah Broadie (Waterlow) 1960 HF Mrs Lesley Brown (Wallace ) 1963 EF Dame Antonia Byatt (Drabble) 1958 HF Professor Dame Averil Cameron (Sutton) 1958 HF Professor Katherine Duncan-Jones 1959 EF Dr Karin Erdmann EF Mrs Clara Freeman (Jones) 1971 HF The Hon Victoria Glendinning (Seebohm) 1956 HF Dr Miriam Griffin (Dressler ) 1957 EF Professor Joanna Haigh 1972 HF Miss Barbara Harvey 1946 EF Professor Dame Julia Higgins (Stretton Downes) 1961 HF Professor Carole Hillenbrand 1968 HF Professor Judith Howard (Duckworth) 1966 HF

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Dame Tamsyn Imison (Trenaman) 1957 HF † Dame Emma Kirkby 1966 HF Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 HF Professor Angela McLean 1979 HF Dr Mary Midgley (Scrutton) 1938 HF Dr Hilary Ockendon (Mason) EF Baroness Onora O’Neill 1959 HF Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974 HF Miss Joyce Reynolds 1937 HF Professor Caroline Series 1969 HF Mrs Theresa Stewart (Raisman) 1948 HF

Friends of Somerville Mr Mark Adeney Ms Carolyn Alderson Mr James Alexander Mr Richard Allen Mr Simon and Mrs Tracey Backshall Dr Peter Barber Dr Peter Barnes Ms Paola Bergamaschi Broyd Lord Michael Bishop Mr Henry Blacksell Mr Thomas Bolt Mrs Sarah Botcherby Dr Susanne Brand Professor David Broomhead Dr Brendan Brown Mr Richard Broyd Mr Lev Bukhman Mr Douglas Carter Dr David Carter Lord Michael Cashman Mrs Virginia Chichester Ms Sian Clark Mr David Clark Mr Nigel Coates Mrs Toni Coffee Mrs Yvonne Conroy Mr Govert Coppens Ms Sharon Costi Mr Luigi D’Antonio Dr Michael d’Arcy Ms Brett de Gaynesford Mrs Judy Dean Mr William DeNigris Mr Kaelan Desilets Langelier Dr Leslie Dunn Miss Lucy Erickson Mr Arthur Fleiss Ms Louise Fluker Ms Susanne Fuchs Mr Christopher Graves Dr Andrew Graydon Mr Phil Greenwood Sir Christopher Greenwood Mrs Sally Greenwood Ms Monica Gurau Mrs Corinne Hardie Mr Terrence Harper

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Mr John Havard Mrs Eugenia Hibbs Mrs Tisa Hibbs Mr Billy Hibbs Ms Ching Ho Dr Corina Horvath-Bojan Dr Trevor Hughes Dr Thomas Jevon Mr Duncan Johnston-Watt Mr Roy Jones Mr Christopher Kenyon Ms Shalima Khan Professor Semen Koksal Mrs Maro Limnios (Papathamos) Mr Robert Lloyd Professor George Mackie Mr David Macpherson Mr Colin Maltby Mr Ian McKemmie Professor Andre McLean Mr Raymond Morris Ms Susan Murdoch Dr Yoko Odawara Sir David Ord Sir Michael Pakenham Miss Susan Partridge Mrs Yvonne Pidgeon Mr Robert Pidgeon Mr Antony Poppleton Ms Rebecca Rendle Professor Louise Richardson Mr Steve Rivet Mr Russel and Mrs Penny Roberts Dr Tim Roberts Professor Sir Adam Roberts Mrs Devyani Sahai Mr Hemant Sahai Mr Richard and Mrs Heather Scourse Dr Christian Seidel Ms Nehali Shah Dr Nicholas Shea Mrs Arati Sholapurkar Mrs Deborah Southwell Mr Graham Stowell Mr Ian Swan Mr Ian Travis Mr John Upton Mr Keki Wadia Mr Thomas Ward Mr Terry Weiss Mrs Phyllis Weiss Dr John Wells Ms P Whitehead Mr John Wilks Ms Mary Williams Mr P Williams Mr Robert Worrell Professor Henry Woudhuysen Mr Arshad Zaidi Mr Sarosh Zaiwalla Dr Justin Zaremby

Companies and Trusts Aberdeen Asset Management Ltd Cambridge University Press Don’t Leave Me As I am Charity Fund Eleanor Rathbone Charitable Trust Ensix Charitable Trust Follett Trust GE Foundation International Grants Fund il Circolo Londra John R Murray Charitable Trust National Manuscripts Conservation Trust Ng Teng Fong Charitable Foundation Oxford University Press Prem Suki Foundation Temasek International Pte. Ltd. Valdemarsviks Sparbank

The Somerville Law Circle Anonymous 2002 Mrs Sarah Adkins (Holmes) 1984 Ms Miranda Allardice 1978 Mr Adam Alvarez 1998 Ms Pauline Ashall 1978 Mr Michael Ashdown 2006 Lady Beatson (Charlotte Christie-Miller) 1968 Mr Henry Blacksell Miss Susan Bright 1984 Ms Shelagh Brooks 1969 Ms Margaret Casely-Hayford 1980 Miss Penny Chapman 1979 Mrs Clare Colacicchi (Clutterbuck) 1976 Mrs Liz Cooke (Greenwood) 1964 Mrs Judith Crosbie-Chen (Crosbie) 1982 Professor Eileen Denza (Young) 1958 Mrs Emily Forrest (Freedland) 1994 Lady Fox (Hazel Stuart) 1946 HF Mr Barnaby Geddes-O’Dolan 2010 Mrs Emily Hammer (Carlisle) 1995 Mrs Tisa Hibbs Ms Samantha Knights 1990 Ms Karin Lai 2004 Professor Anne Lofaso 1992 Ms Danita Lowes 1984 Professor Irene Lynch Fannon (Lynch) 1985 Mrs Caroline Macpherson (Bacon) 1966 Mr Jeffrey Martin 2014 Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 HF Miss Joanna Myerson 1994 Ms Hilary Pearson 1962 Mr Chris Pell 1998 Miss Elizabeth Potter 1973 Dr Alice Prochaska (Barwell) 1965 Ms Elizabeth Prochaska 2006 Miss Barbara Rapetti 1994 Miss Rachel Sales 2001 Miss Rebecca Scanlon 2006 Ms Sheena Singla 1994 Mrs Sandra Skemp (Burns) 1957 Mrs Pamela Somerset (Morgan) 1967 Judge Deborah Taylor 1979 and Mr Michael Stevenson Mrs Nadja Tollemache (Benziger) 1954 Ms Louise Whitaker 1972


Thank you to our growing group of leaders providing Matched Funding opportunities for key projects Ms Basma Alireza 1991 Lady Beatson (Charlotte Christie-Miller) 1968 Ms Moira Black 1968 Mr Thomas Bolt Mrs Ayla Busch 1989 Mr Alan Connery 1994 Mrs Janine Coulthard (Bailey) 1985 Mrs Sophie Forsyth (Wallis) 1989 Mrs Clara and Mr Michael Freeman (Jones) 1971 HF Mrs Jo Greenslade (Harford) 1990 Ms Lynn Haight (Schofield) 1966 Mrs Emily Harvey (Wentz) 2000 Mrs Tisa and Mr Billy Hibbs Mrs Eugenia Hibbs Mrs Margaret Kenyon 1959 and Mr Christopher Kenyon Dr Niels Kroninger 1996 Mr Max Luedecke 1999 Ms Nadine Majaro (Pilgrim) 1975 Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 HF Ms Hilary Newiss 1974 Mr John Nicoll Dr Alice Prochaska (Barwell) 1965 Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974 HF Ms Ceiri Roberts 1975 Mrs Sue Scollan 1978 and Mr Kevin Scollan Mrs Pamela Somerset (Morgan) 1967 Ms Sybella Stanley 1979 and Mr Paul Zisman Dr Ruth Thompson 1971 † Mrs Sian Thomas Marshall (Thomas) 1989 The Government of India The Somerville City Group The Somerville London Group The Somerville JCR

DONATIONS IN MEMORY OF... DONOR

IN MEMORY OF

Mrs Clare Spring (Thistlethwaite) 1952

Lady Abdy (Jane Noble) 1952 †

The Hon Mr David Wedgwood Benn

The Hon Mrs June Benn (Barraclough) 1949 †

Mr Russell & Mrs Penny Roberts

Mr Jonathan Roberts 2010 †

Mrs Kay Brock (Stewart Sandeman) 1972

Dr Ruth Thompson 1971 †

Ms Barbara Habberjam 1973

Dr Ruth Thompson 1971 †

Sir Christopher Greenwood

Dr Ruth Thompson 1971 †

Ms Louise Fluker

Dr Ruth Thompson 1971 †

Anonymous 1984

Ms Joanna Nicholson 1984 †

Professor Edwina Brown 1967 and Dr Brendan Brown

Irene Brown (Goodman) 1939 †

Mr Richard and Mrs Heather Scourse

Mr David Scourse 1999 †

THANK YOU TO OUR VOLUNTEERS The Principal and Fellows would like to thank all those who have given their time and commitment to the College during the year 2016-17. ‡ = Chairs and Vice-Chairs Development Board Members Ms Basma Alireza 1991 Mr Thomas Bolt Ms Ayla Busch 1989 Mrs Clara Freeman (Jones) 1971 ‡ Ms Lynn Haight (Schofield) 1966 Dr Niels Kroninger (Kroner) 1996 Ms Hilary Newiss 1974 ‡ Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974 Mrs Sybella Stanley 1979 Mrs Sian Thomas Marshall (Thomas) 1989 Honorary Development Board Members Dr Doreen Boyce (Vaughan) 1953 Mrs Paddy Crossley (Earnshaw) 1956 Mrs Margaret Kenyon (Parry) 1959 Ms Nadine Majaro 1975 Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 Mr Roger Pilgrim Somerville Association Committee

We would also like to thank everyone who donated to our crowdfunding projects between 1st August 2016 and 31st July 2017: The Dorothy Hodgkin Project; Get Dates to the Edinburgh Fringe; The Pind Collective; Fantastic Beats and Where to Find Them – Get In the Pink to the Edinburgh Fringe; The Oxford Commas USA Tour; Somerville Arts Festival.

Mr Nick Cooper 2008 Mr Richard Forrest 1994 Dr Natasha Robinson (Sprigings) 1972 Ms Virginia Ross 1966 Ms Susan Scholefield 1973 ‡ Miss Beth Seaman 2004 Miss Lorna Sutton 2010 Ms Karen Twining Fooks (Twining) 1978 Mrs Frances Walsh (Innes) 1956 City Committee Ms Judith Buttigieg 1988 Dr Niels Kroninger Miss Sara Glenister (2006) Dr Ruth Middleton 1994 Mr Dan Mobley 1994 Miss Charlotte Morgan 1969 ‡

Mrs Nicola Ralson (Thomas) 1974 ‡ Mrs Clare Whittaker 1978 Miss Cordelia Witton 2006 Lawyers Committee Ms Pauline Ashall 1978 Dr Michael Ashdown Mrs Emily Forrest (Freeland) 1994 Ms Mary Jones 2005 Mr Tim Knipe 1997 Mrs Elizabeth Philipps (Black) 1970 Miss Sheena Singla 1994 ‡ Miss Hayley Smith 2003 London Committee Miss Kim Anderson 1978 Ms Bev Cox 1985 Ms Ruth Crawford 1980 Mrs Rachel Kent (Paterson) 1974 Miss Jenny Ladbury 1981 Ms Krystyna Nowak 1973 Mrs Sue Robson (Bodger) 1966 Ms Eleanor Sturdy (Burton) 1984 ‡ Miss Caroline Totterdill 1984 Mrs Sara Wyles (Ryle) 1987 Medics Committee Dr Mary Jane Attenburrow 1980 Ms Farah Bhatti 1984 Dame Fiona Caldicott – President Dr Susanna Graham-Jones 1968 Ms Jo Holland (MCR) 2008 Professor Christine Lee 1962 Ms Natalie Morris (Shenker) 1997 Dr June Raine (Harris) 1971 ‡ Dr Natasha Robinson 1972 Dr Nermeen Varawalla 1989 Professor Wisia Wedzicha 1972

Please let us know if your name/title needs updating by emailing us at development.office@some.ox.ac.uk 31


Somerville College Woodstock Road, Oxford OX2 6HD E: development.office@some.ox.ac.uk T: +44 (0) 1865 270600 (General) T: +44 (0) 1865 280626 (Development Office)

www.some.ox.ac.uk/alumni Somerville is a registered charity. Charity registration number: 1139440

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