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Clare College Cambridge Annual Report 20 13

Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

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Page 1: Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

Clare CollegeCambridge

Annual Report

2013

Page 2: Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

2

ContentsMaster’s Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Teaching and Research . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4–5

Selected Publications by Clare Fellows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6–9

College Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10–12

Access & Outreach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

Financial Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14–15

Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16–17

List of Master & Fellows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

Captions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

Page 3: Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

The College introduced these annual reports in 2004 in order tointroduce greater accountability and transparency, particular for itsexpenditure of public funds and for the ever increasing funding fromits alumni. This report is the last one I will introduce as Master. I ampleased to report another good year for the College in terms ofacademic performance, access to students of all backgrounds, financialmanagement and the condition of the College’s estate.

Our undergraduate results were good, especially for our final yearstudents. They should be good given the quality of the students weadmit and the resources devoted to their teaching. The results are lessgood in the first year. The improvement in those results over the threeor four years students are in Cambridge can be taken as testimony to

the ‘value added’ by the college teaching. The Senior Tutor has launched various initiatives to improvethe study skills of first year students, new to the University. But these results do need to improve.

Academic excellence in terms of research can be found in the list of Fellows’ publications, theircontinued success in terms of grant applications and the promotion of Gordon Ogilvie, Tim Lewens,and Bill Byrne to personal chairs. It is a measure of their distinction that they were all first elected toFellowships in the past thirteen years. It is important to remember that the College makes a majorcontribution to research by funding six Junior Research Fellowships at any one time: a majorcommitment to providing the next generation of academic leaders at a cost of £250,000 a year.39 Clare graduate students received their PhDs this year.

The College is committed to admitting the best students, whatever their social and economicbackground. We currently admit between 68% and 70% of our home-based students from the statesector which reflects the proportion of state school students applying to Clare. It will require a constantcommitment to increasing the number of state school applicants in the future to ensure that wecontinue to improve on those figures. This is the tenth year of our Partnership for Schoolsprogramme, funded by corporate sponsors associated with our alumni. The work of our SchoolsLiaison Officers in Tower Hamlets and Hackney is the College activity which gives me greatest pride.The programme is about raising aspirations for university education in general in those communities.Last year the College organized 159 events for 6,328 schoolchildren. In 2012 40 students from TowerHamlets came to interview preparation days: in 2013 120 came. We bring children from age 10 toCambridge, the only programme in Oxbridge to do so. Teachers in Tower Hamlets and Hackney haveexcelled in recent years in producing a dramatic improvement in the academic results in theirboroughs. I am pleased that the College has made a contribution to that improvement.

As will be seen from the financial statements, conference income and funds raised from our alumniconstitute over 50% of the College’s income. These were income streams that scarcely existed tenyears ago. The College has raised over £24 million from alumni over the past decade. TeachingFellowships, student bursaries to enable the college to follow a needs-blind admissions process, supportfor music and rowing, all have benefited from the loyalty and support of alumni. A major change hasbeen in the College estate: the major refurbishment of student rooms in Thirkill Court and Castle End,the building of the Gillespie Centre and Lerner Court, and the completion of two excellent additions tothe college’s graduate accommodation on Newnham Road. These projects have cost over £20 million.

The College is well-placed to meet the challenges ahead. But challenges there are. Decisions taken inthe next ten years will determine whether colleges survive in the long-term as providers of excellencein learning and research. The funding drives to ensure the University remains a world-leading researchinstitution will put pressure on college fund-raising and the research thrust of the University will make itall the more important, and harder, for Colleges to sustain excellent undergraduate education. We facea crisis in graduate funding. Graduates now constitute one third of Clare’s student body – perhaps thebiggest change in the College over the past fifty years. Unless new funding sources for graduate studentsare found, graduate studies in Clare and Cambridge will become, particularly in the arts and humanities,the preserve of the well-off. The need to sustain the College estate, notably the once-in-a-lifetime needto refurbish Old Court, will require that the College’s success in fund-raising will need to be continuedand improved on. The College is, thanks to its Fellows and alumni, in a good position to meet thosechallenges. But it will only succeed if the University also succeeds. The Colleges collectively need torespond positively, not fatalistically, to these challenges. It is by no means certain that the collectivecapacity of the Cambridge Colleges to engage with these challenges constructively is sufficiently robust.

I have to end on a sad note. The academic year 2011-12 was overshadowed by the tragic death offinal year student Rebecca Chamberlain. The academic year 2012-13 was overshadowed by thedesperately sad and untimely death of Professor Philip Ford. No career could have highlighted more thegood fortune of this College in having senior academics of international distinction whose commitmentto research in no way compromised their commitment to graduate and undergraduate teaching. Philipwas a role model for collegiality and good citizenship in both the College and the University. Heexemplified the values that the College needs to sustain in the face of the challenges ahead.

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Master’s Introduction

Page 4: Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

Examination Results 2013

In 2013, Clare ranked 11th in the university table of allundergraduates performances, and 5th in the table offinalists. Of particular note is the high level of “value added”– Clare has established a strong record of each cohort ofstudents moving up the tables as they progress through theirtime in Cambridge. In 2013, Clare undergraduates recordedparticularly strong performances in Law and Mathematics.

Teaching

Clare has been fortunate to be able to appoint someoutstanding new academic Fellows. In 2013, we admittedtwo new Fellows in French: Dr Alexander Roose, whospecialises in French literature in the early modern period,and Dr Tim Chesters, who is a University Lecturer inSixteenth-Century French Studies. The College alsoadmitted Dr Hester Vaizey, who is a Lecturer in ModernGerman History, and Dr Jason Carroll, who combines hisrole as Group Leader/Principal Investigator of the Carroll labat the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute with therole of Careers Tutor at Clare. Four Junior Research Fellowswere also admitted: Jessica Goodman (Modern & MedievalLanguages), Clemens Matthiesen (Physics), Jonathan Fawcett(Cognition and Brain Science), and Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite (Modern British History).

UK

EU

Overseas

Undergraduate Numbers 2012–13

4

Teaching and Research

Undergraduates by country/region of origin

Subject Year1

Year2

Year3

Year4

Years5-6 Total

Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic 1 2 2 5Archaeology & Anthropology 3 3 2 8Architecture 2 2 3 7Asian & Middle Eastern Studies 2 2 2 3 9Chemical Engineering 6 4 1 11Classics 5 5 6 1 17Computer Science 4 4 2 10Economics 6 6 7 19Engineering 8 8 9 5 30English 10 10 8 28Geography 3 3 6History 8 9 8 25History of Art 1 1 1 3Land Economy 3 2 3 8Law 5 5 6 16Linguistics 3 2 1 6Management Studies 1 1Mathematics 10 11 9 8 38Medical and Veterinary Sciences 14 15 12 18 59Modern & Medieval Languages 7 7 9 11 34Music 4 4 4 12Natural Sciences 22 25 41 19 107Philosophy 1 2 1 4Politics, Psychology & Sociology 5 5 6 16Theology 2 2 4 8Total 135 139 135 60 18 487

5%

3%

92%

Page 5: Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

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Graduate Students bycountry/region of origin

Graduate Student Numbers 2012–13

Research postgraduates 245Taught postgraduates 21Total 266

PhD theses successfully defended by Clare graduate students 2012-13

Andreacchio, M. A.: Dante’s philosophical interpretation of religious authority: a Vichian investigationBakshi, A.: Urban memory in divided nicosia: Praxis and imageBantval Rao, R.: Understanding the role of Huntingtin interacting protein 1 (HIP1) in prostate

carcinogenesis and cancer progressionBertolani, M. P.: Ranging and travelling patterns of wild chimpanzees at Kibale, Uganda: a GIS approachCox, C. L.: Transcriptional functions of the co-repressor Sin3A in skinDow, P. E.: The influence of American evangelical missionaries on US relations with East and Central

Africa during the Cold WarEnter, K. L.: Racial integration in southern public higher education, 1945–1972Gershon, T.: Strategies for improving solution-processed ZnO/Cu2O photovoltaics

Gilbert, A. J.: Morality, soldier-poetry, and the American War in VietnamHolmstrom, A.: Arakelov motivic cohomologyJagger, B. W.: The influenza A polymerase in viral pathogenesisKastrissianakis, K.: Reassessing public space in Beirut: continuity and change since the Ta’if Agreement,

1990–presentKaus, A.: Extremal charged brane world black holesLai, T.-H.: Computational studies of defect distribution and diffusion near interfaces in Yttria-stabilized

ZirconiaMcCaig, R. J.: The legality of unrestricted submarine warfare in the first world warMorgan, H. L.: The construction and maintenance of a sense of ownership over one’s body:

behavioural, pharmacological and psychiatric investigationsMulherin, R. C.: Fully conjugated diblock copolymers for photovoltaic devicesNarendra, D.: Involvement of PINK1 and Parkin in the pathogenesis of Parkinson’s diseaseOsei-Poku, J.: The evolution and genetics of vector competence in mosquito disease vectorsOstojic, L.: Social cognition in a cooperative context: are perceptions of a social partner distinctly social?Palmer, C. M.: A cylindrical specimen holder for electron cryo-tomographyPaterson, S.: Elucidating surface dynamics in systems of atomic and molecular adsorbatesPawlowska, M. M.: Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of the late mesoproterozoic kumakha

subformation (Lakhanda group) – a multiproxy approachReams, C. A. L.: Modelling energy efficiency for computationRussell, A. D.: Microwave-assisted pyrolysis of HDPE using an activated carbon bedRussell, V. H.: Towards G-factor engineering: electron transport in low dimensional InGaAs and AlGaAs

devicesSchenk, M.: Folded shell structuresSchweizer, S.: Executive control in affective contexts: a cognitive neuroscientific investigationShaw, R. C.: The social cognition of Eurasian Jays: gaining insight into cognitive evolution in CorvidsStojnic, R.: Critical assessment and further development of statistical modelling and machine learning

methods in computational biologySutcliffe, L. F. R.: Environmentally conscious design of medical devicesSzamalek, J. K.: The Bosporan kingdom and its environs, c.600–100 bc: archaeology of cultural

interactionsTarasewicz, J. P. T.: Microseismicity associated with the 2010 eruption of Eyjafjallajökull volcano, IcelandThomas, S. E.: The role of cell cycle checkpoints in the survival of endoplasmic reticulum stressWalkden, G. L.: Syntactic reconstruction and proto-germanicWalsh, O. M.: Linguistic purism in France and QuebecWatanabe, A.: Metacognition by western scrub-jays (Aphelocoma californica)Wharton, S.: The application of international criminal law to non-state actors in the contemporary

international criminal courts and tribunalsWhite, C. E.: Work and leisure in late nineteenth-century French literature and visual culture

UK

EU

Overseas

51%

28%

21%

Page 6: Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

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Selected publications by Clare Fellows

Professor Neil Andrews

Andrews, N J: Andrews on Civil Processes: VOLUME 1 - CourtProceedings and Principles. (Cambridge: Intersentia, 2013)

Andrews, N J: Andrews on Civil Processes: VOLUME 2 -Arbitration and Mediation. (Cambridge: Intersentia, 2013)

Andrews, N J: Justicia Civil Inglesa. (Bogota: Colombia, 2013)

Dr Andrew Balmford

Balmford, A: “Pollution, politics and vultures.” Science 339(2013), pp653-654.

Laurance WF, & Balmford A: “A global map for roadbuilding.” Nature 495 (2013), pp308-309.

McCarthy DP, Donald PF, Scharlemann JPW, BuchananGM, Balmford A, Green JHM, Bennun LA, Burgess ND,Fishpool LDC, Garnett ST, Leonard DL, Maloney RF,Morling P, Schaefer HM, Symes A, Weidenfeld DA, &Butchart SHM: “Financial costs of meeting two globalbiodiversity conservation targets: current spending andunmet needs.” Science 338 (2012), 946-949.

Professor Bob Blackburn

Jarman J, Blackburn RM, & Racko G: “The Dimensions ofOccupational Gender Segregation in Industrial Countries.”Sociology 46(6) (2012), pp1003-1019.

Sir Nicholas Barrington

Barrington, N: Nicholas meets Barrington: the PersonalJourney of a Former Diplomat (London: I.B.Tauris, 2013)

Barrington, N: Envoy: a Diplomatic Journey (London:I.B.Tauris, 2013)

Dr Paul Bristowe

Chang BK, Bristowe PD, & Cheetham AK: “Computationalstudies on the adsorption of CO2 in the flexibleperfluorinated metal-organic framework zinc 1,2-bis(4-pyridyl)ethane tetrafluoroterephthalate.” Physical ChemistryChemical Physics, 15 (2013), pp176-182.

Muñoz Ramo D, Chroneos A, Rushton MJD & BristowePD: “Effect of trivalent dopants on local coordination andelectronic structure in crystalline and amorphous ZnO.”Thin Solid Films (2013) [Available online 14 June 2013,ISSN 0040-6090]

Zhang C, & Bristowe PD: “First principles calculations ofoxygen vacancy formation in barium-strontium-cobalt-ferrite.” RSC Advances, 3 (2013), pp12267-12274.

Dr Simon Buczacki

Buczacki SJA, Ireland Zecchini H, Nicholson AM, Russell R,Vermeulen L, Kemp R, & Winton DJ: “Intestinal label-retaining cells are secretory precursors expressing Lgr5.”Nature Mar 7; 495(7439) (2013), pp65-9.

Dr William Byrne

de Gispert A, Blackwood G, Iglesias G & Byrne W: "N-gram posterior probability confidence measures forstatistical machine translation: an empirical study." MachineTranslation Journal, Volume 27, Issue 2 (2013), pp85-114.

Dr Rodrigo Cacho

Cacho, R: La esfera del ingenio: las silvas de Quevedo y latradición europea. (Madrid: Biblioteca Nueva, 2012).

Cacho, R: "El événement barroco: Lope vs. Góngora."Mélanges de la Casa de Velázquez 42 (2012), pp163-182

Cacho, R: "Luis Zapata y el poema heroico: historia,entretenimiento y parodia." Criticón 115 (2012), pp67-83.

Professor Paul Cartledge

Cartledge, P: After Thermopylae: The Oath of Plataea andthe End of the Graeco-Persian Wars. (New York & Oxford:OUP (USA), 2013)

Cartledge, P: 'Introduction' and 'Notes' to Tom Holland(translator) Herodotus: Histories - A New Translation(Penguin, 2013)

Cartledge, P: Co-editor, War-Peace and Panhellenic Games(International Institute of Ancient Hellenic History“SOSIPOLIS”) (Athens: Kardamitsa, 2013)

Dr Jason Carroll

Mohammed H, D'Santos C, Serandour AA, Ali HR, BrownGD, Atkins A, Rueda OM, Holmes KA, Theodorou V,Robinson JL, Zwart W, Saadi A, Ross-Innes CS, Chin SF,Menon S, Stingl J, Palmieri C, Caldas C, & Carroll JS:“Endogenous purification reveals GREB1 as a key estrogenreceptor regulatory factor.” Cell Report Volume 3 Issue 2(2013), pp342-9.

Theodorou V, Stark R, Menon S, & Carroll JS: “GATA3 actsupstream of FOXA1 in mediating ESR1 binding by shapingenhancer accessibility.” Genome Research 23(1) January(2013), 12-22.

Meyer KB, & Carroll JS: “FOXA1 and breast cancer risk.”Nature Genetics 44(11) November (2012): 1.

Professor Nicola Clayton

Ostojic L, Shaw RC, Cheke LG & Clayton NS: “Evidencesuggesting that desire-state attribution may govern foodsharing in Eurasian jays.” Proceedings of the NationalAcademy of Sciences 1101 (2013), 4123-4128.

Shaw RC, & Clayton NS: “Careful cachers and pryingpilferers: Eurasian jays (Garrulus glandarius) limit auditoryinformation available to competitors.” Proceedings of TheRoyal Society 280 (2013): (1752), 1-7.

Cheke LC, Loissel E, & Clayton NS: “How Do ChildrenSolve The Aesop's Fable Task?” PLOS ONE 7(2012), e40574.

Dr Adrià de Gispert

de Gispert A, Blackwood G, Iglesias G & Byrne W: "N-gram posterior probability confidence measures forstatistical machine translation: an empirical study." MachineTranslation Journal, Volume 27, Issue 2 (2013), pp85-114.

Dr Maciej Dunajski

Dunajski, M: “Skyrmions from gravitational instantons.”Proceedings of the Royal Society A, vol 469 (2013),20120576.

Casey S, Dunajski M, & Tod P: “Twistor geometry of a pairof second order ODEs.” Communications in MathematicalPhysics, vol 321 (2013), 681.

Doubrov B, & Dunajski M: “Co-calibrated $G_2$ structurefrom cuspidal cubics.” Annals of Global Analysis andGeometry 42 (2012) pp247-265.

Dr Giancarlo Corsetti

Corsetti G, Kuester K, Meier A, & Mueller G: “SovereignRisk, Fiscal Policy, and Macroeconomic Stability.” EconomicJournal, February 2013, 99-132.

Corsetti G, Martin P, & Pesenti P: “Varieties and the transferproblem: the extensive margin of current accountadjustment.” Journal of International Economics, January2013, 89(1):1-12. [Leading article]

Corsetti G, Meier A, & Mueller G: “What determinesgovernment spending multipliers?” Economic Policy,October 2012, 72:523-565. [Leading article]

Dr Nathan Crilly

Crilly, N: “Function propagation through nested systems.”Design Studies, 2013 34(2), 216–242.

Da Silva O, Crilly N, & Hekkert P: “Aesthetic Appreciationof Products: The Effect of Ideas Underlying Design.” In K.Sugiyama (Ed.): Fifth International Congress of InternationalAssociation of Societies of Design Research (Vol. 2, pp.2558–2566). (Tokyo, Japan: Shibaura Institute ofTechnology, 2013)

Schoen KL, & Crilly N: “Implicit methods for testingproduct preference: exploratory studies with the affectiveSimon task.” In Brasset J, McDonnell J, & Malpass M (eds.):Proceedings of 8th International Design and EmotionConference (Central Saint Martins College of Art & Design:London, 2012)

Dr Paul Edwards

Newman S, Howarth KD, Greenman CD, Bignell GR,Tavaré S, & Edwards PAW. “The relative timing of mutationsin a breast cancer genome” PLoSOne (2013), 0064991

Schulte I, Batty EM, Pole JCM, Blood KA, Mo S, Cooke SL,Ng C, Howe KL, Chin S-F, Brenton JD, Caldas C, HowarthKD, & Edwards PAW: “Structural analysis of the genome ofbreast cancer cell line ZR-75-30 identifies twelve expressedfusion genes.” BMC Genomics 13:719 (2012)

Page 7: Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

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Dr Patricia Fara

Fara, P: Erasmus Darwin: Sex, Science and Serendipity(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012)

Fara, P: Bilim: Dört Bin Yillik Bir Tarah (Istanbul: Metis, 2012)[Turkish translation of Fara, P: Science: A Four Thousand YearHistory (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009)]

Fara, P: “Weird sisters.” Nature 495 (7 Mar 2013), pp43-4.

Dr Phil Faulkner

Faulkner P, & Runde J: “Technological Objects, SocialPositions, and the Transformational Model of SocialActivity.” Management Information Systems Quarterly, 37(3),(2013) pp803-818.

Faulkner P, & Runde J: “On sociomateriality." In LeonardiPM, Nardi BA, & Kallinikos J (eds.): Materiality andOrganizing: Social Interaction in a Technological World.(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012).

Dr Jonathan Fawcett

Fawcett JM, Russell EJ, Peace KA, & Christie J: “Of guns andgeese: a meta-analytic review of the ‘weapon focus’literature.” Psychology, Crime & Law, 19(1) (2013), pp35–66.

Russell EJ, Fawcett JM, & Mazmanian D: “Risk ofObsessive-Compulsive Disorder in Pregnant andPostpartum Women: A Meta-Analysis.” The Journal ofClinical Psychiatry, 74(4), (2013), pp377–385.

Lee Y-S, Lee H-M, & Fawcett JM: “Intentional ForgettingReduces Color-Naming Interference: Evidence From Item-Method Directed Forgetting.” Journal of ExperimentalPsychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 39(1), (2013)pp220–236.

Dr Elizabeth Foyster

Foyster, E: “The 'new world of children' reconsidered: childabduction in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-centuryEngland.” Journal of British Studies vol.52, 3 (July 2013),669-92.

Dr Marina Frolova-Walker

Frolova-Walker, M: “‘Music is Obscure’: Textless Sovietworks and their Phantom Programmes”, in Representationand Meaning in Western Music, ed. Joshua S. Walden(Cambridge: CUP, 2013), 47-63.

Frolova-Walker, M: “Shostakovich v Komitete po Stalinskimpremiyam” [Shostakovich in the Stalin Prize Committee], inKovnatskaya LG et al (eds.): Sever v traditsionnïkh kul’turakhi professional’nïkh kompozitorskikh shkolakh. (Petrozavodsk:PetrGU, 2012), 239-53. [In Russian].

Professor Robert Glen

Kirchmair J, Williamson MJ, Afzal AM, Tyzack JD, Choy AP,Howlett A, Rydberg P, & Glen RC: “FAst MEtabolizer(FAME): A Rapid and Accurate Predictor of Sites ofMetabolism in Multiple Species by Endogenous Enzymes.”Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling 2013, 53 (11),2896-907.

Fauzi FM, Koutsoukas A, Lowe R, Joshi K, Fan TP, GlenRC, & Bender A: “Linking Ayurveda and Western medicineby integrative analysis.” Journal of Ayurveda and IntegrativeMedicine 2013, 4 (2), 117-9.

Mak L, Liggi S, Tan L, Kusonmano K, Rollinger JM,Koutsoukas A, Glen RC, & Kirchmair J: “Anti-cancer drugdevelopment: computational strategies to identify andtarget proteins involved in cancer metabolism.” CurrentPharmaceutical Design 2013, 19 (4), 532-77.

Dr John Gibson

Milligan C, Rees DC, Ellory JC, Osei A, Browning JA,Hannemann A, & Gibson JS: “A non-electrolyte haemolysisassay for diagnosis and prognosis of sickle cell disease.” TheJournal of Physiology 591 (2013), 1463-1474.

Milner PI, Smith HC, Robinson R, Wilkins RJ, & Gibson JS:“Growth factor regulation of intracellular pH homeostasisunder hypoxic conditions in isolated equine articularchondrocytes.” Journal of Orthopaedic Research 31 (2013),97-203.

Ma Y-L, Rees DC, Gibson JS, & Ellory JC: “Theconductance of red blood cells from sickle cell patients: ionselectivity and inhibitors.” The Journal of Physiology 590(2012), 2095-2105.

Dr Jessica Goodman

Goodman, J: “Personne to personnage: names, fame andidentity games in eighteenth-century theatre.” RomanceStudies, 31, 3-4 (2013), pp212-23.

Goodman, J: “L’Anonymat à la Comédie-Italienne au 18esiècle: un enjeu ou un outil.” L’Anonymat de l’œuvre àl’époque moderne (= Littératures Classiques, 80 (2013)),pp123-34.

Dr Jonathan Goodman

Grayson MN, & Goodman JM: “Understanding theMechanism of the Asymmetric Propargylation of AldehydesPromoted by BINOL-Derived Catalysts.” Journal of theAmerican Chemical Society 135 (2013), 6142-6148.

Gibb JN, & Goodman, JM: “The formation of high-purityisocyanurate through proazaphosphatrane-catalysedisocyanate cyclo-trimerisation: computational insights.”Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry 11(2013), 90-97.

Simon L & Goodman JM: “The mechanism of theamination of β-keto esters by azadicarboxylates catalyzedby an axially chiral guanidine: acyclic keto esters reactthrough an E enolate.” Journal of the American ChemicalSociety. 134 (2012), 16869-16876.

Dr Neil Greenham

Wang J, Chepelianskii A, Gao F, & Greenham NC:“Control of exciton spin statistics through spin polarizationin organic optoelectronic devices.” NatureCommunications, 3, 1191 (2012).

Ehrler B, Musselman KP, Boehm ML, Friend RH, &Greenham NC: “Hybrid pentacene/a-silicon solar cellsutilizing multiple carrier generation via singlet excitonfission.” Applied Physics Letters, 101, 153507 (2012).

Ehrler B, Musselman KP, Bohm ML, Morgenstern FSF,Vaynzof Y, Walker BJ, MacManus-Driscoll JL, & GreenhamNC: “Preventing interfacial recombination in colloidalquantum dot solar cells by doping the metal oxide.” ACSNano, 7, 4210-4220 (2013).

Dr John Guy

Guy, J: The Children of Henry VIII (Oxford: OUP, 2013)

Guy, J: The Tudors: A Very Short Introduction [2nd revisedand expanded edition]. (Oxford, OUP, 2013)

Guy, J: Thomas Becket: Warrior, Priest, Rebel, Victim.(Penguin Books, 2013) [new paperback edition]

Professor William Harris

Randlett O, MacDonald RB, Yoshimatsu T, Almeida AD,Suzuki SC, Wong RO, & Harris WA: “Cellular requirementsfor building a retinal neuropil” Cell Reports: 3 (2013)pp282-90.

Agathocleous M, & Harris WA. “Metabolism in physiologicalcell proliferation and differentiation.” Trends in Cell Biology:Jun 4 (2013).

Lupo G, Novorol C, Smith JR, Vallier L, Miranda E,Alexander M, Biagioni S, Pedersen RA, Harris WA:“Multiple roles of Activin/Nodal, bone morphogeneticprotein, fibroblast growth factor and Wnt/beta-cateninsignalling in the anterior neural patterning of adherenthuman embryonic stem cell cultures.” Open Biology3:120167 (2013).

Dr David Hartley

Hartley, D: “CPL - failed venture or noble ancestor?” IEEEAnnals of the History of Computing, 35:3 (2013), pp55-63.

Sir Bob Hepple

Hepple, B: “Young Man with a Red Tie: a memoir ofMandela and the Failed Revolution 1960-63.”(Johannesburg: Jacana Media, 2013)

Hepple, B: “Back to the Future: Employment Law underthe Coalition Government.” Industrial Law Journal 42(2013) 203-23.

Hepple, B: “Wedderburn’s The Worker and the Law: anappreciation.” Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 34(2013) 215-27.

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Professor Andrew Holmes

Krenske EH, Agopcan S, Aviyente V, Houk KN, JohnsonBA, & Holmes AB: “Causation in a Cascade: The Originsof Selectivities in Intramolecular Nitrone Cycloadditions.”Journal of the American Chemical Society 134 (2012)12010-12015

Seyler H, Haid S, Kwon T-H, Jones DJ, Bäuerle P, HolmesAB & Wong WWH: “Continuous Flow Synthesis ofOrganic Electronic Materials - Case Studies in MethodologyTranslation and Scale-up.” Australian Journal of Chemistry 66,(2013) 151-156. [Published on the web 19/11/2012].

Catimel B, Kapp E, Yin MW, Gregory M, Wong LS,Condron M, Church N, Kershaw N, Holmes AB &Burgess AW: “The PI(3)P Interactome from a ColonCancer Cell.” Journal of Proteomics 82 (2013) 35-51.[Published on the web 14/02/2013]

Mr David Howarth

Howarth, D: Law as Engineering: Thinking about whatlawyers do (Cheltenham: Elgar, 2013)

Howarth, D: “Lawyers in the House of Commons.” InFeldman, D (ed.): Law in Politics, Politics in Law (Oxford:Hart, 2013)

Professor Ottoline Leyser

Shinohara N, Taylor C, & Leyser O: “Strigolactone canpromote or inhibit shoot branching by triggering rapiddepletion of the auxin efflux protein, PIN1, from theplasma membrane.” PLoS Biology 11(1) (2013), e1001474.

Challis RJ, Hepworth J, Mouchel C, Waites R, & Leyser O:“A role for MAX1 in evolutionary diversity in strigolactonesignalling upstream of MAX2”. Plant Physiology 161: 1885-1902 (2013).

Ward SP, Salmon J, Hanley SJ, Karp A, & Leyser O: “UsingArabidopsis to study shoot branching in biomass willow(Salix spp.).” Plant Physiology 162: 800-811 (2013).

Dr Francesco Lucioli

Lucioli, F (ed.): Critical edition of Giuliano Dati, AedificatioRomae [Roma, Johann Besicken und Sigismund Mayr,1494]. (Rome, Roma nel Rinascimento, 2012)

Lucioli, F: “Poesia e profezia nello ‘Staurostichon’ di GiovanFrancesco Pico della Mirandola.” Archivio italiano per lastoria della pietà, XXV (2013), pp275-301

Lucioli, F: “Scrittura e riscrittura nella poesia di JacopoDurandi.” Atti e memorie dell'Arcadia, n.s., 1 (2012),pp187-217.

Professor Donald Lynden-Bell

Lynden-Bell, D (with Schweizer, F) “Allan Rex Sandage1926-2010.” Biographical Memoirs of the Royal Society 58(2012), 247-264.

Bicak J, Katz J, Ledvinka T, & Lynden-Bell, D: “Effects ofrotating gravitational waves.” Physical Review D 85 (2012),124003.

Mr Clemens Matthiesen

Matthiesen C, Geller M, Schulte CHH, Le Gall C, HansomJ, Li Z, Hugues M, Clarke E, & Atatüre M: "Phase-lockedindistinguishable photons with synthesized waveforms from asolid-state source." Nature Communications, 4:1600 (2013).

Dr Charles Melnyk

Melnyk CW, & Harris CJ: “RNA Silencing in Plants.” InMeyers, RA: Encyclopedia of Molecular Cell Biology andMolecular Medicine. (John Wiley & Sons, 2013).

Dunoyer P, Melnyk C, Molnar A, & Slotkin RK: “PlantMobile Small RNAs.” Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives inBiology 1;5 (7) (2013).

Dr Terence Moore

Moore, T: “John Locke and Damaris Masham, neeCudworth: Questions of Influence” Think (CUP, Volume12, Issue 34, Summer 2013), pp97-108.

Moore, T: “Locke's Second ‘Secret Reference’.” Think(CUP, Volume 12 Issue 33, Spring 2013), pp25-35.

Moore, T: “An Untenable Dualism.” Think (CUP, Volume11, Issue 31, Summer 2012), pp9-20.

Moore, T: “Locke on Morality.” Think (CUP Volume 10Issue 28, Summer 2011), pp77-87.

Dr Gordon Ogilvie

Latter HN, Ogilvie GI, & Chupeau M: “The ballistictransport instability in Saturn's rings - I. Formalism andlinear theory.” Monthly Notices of the Royal AstronomicalSociety, vol 427 (2012), pp2336-2348.

Ogilvie, G I: “Tides in rotating barotropic fluid bodies: thecontribution of inertial waves and the role of internalstructure.” Monthly Notices of the Royal AstronomicalSociety, vol 429 (2013), pp613-632.

Ogilvie GI & Latter HN: “Local and global dynamics ofwarped astrophysical discs.” Monthly Notices of the RoyalAstronomical Society, vol 433 (2013), pp2403-2419.

Dr Fred Parker

Parker, F: “Philosophy.” In Lynch, J (ed.): Samuel Johnson inContext (Cambridge: CUP, 2012)

Parker, F: “Travesty and Mock-Heroic.” In Hopkins D, &Martindale C (eds.): The Oxford History of ClassicalReception in English Literature: Volume 3:1660-1790.(Oxford: OUP, 2012)

Lawrence Paulson

Bridge JP, & Paulson LC: “Case Splitting in an AutomaticTheorem Prover for Real-Valued Special Functions.” Journalof Automated Reasoning 50:1 (2013), pp99–117.

Sultana N, Blanchette JC, & Paulson LC: “LEO-II andSatallax on the Sledgehammer test bench.” Journal ofApplied Logic 11:1 (2013), pp91–102.

Blanchette JC, Böhme S, & Paulson LC: “ExtendingSledgehammer with SMT Solvers.” Journal of AutomatedReasoning 51:1 (2013), pp109–128.

Dr Arno Pauly

Pauly A, & Ziegler M: “Relative computability and uniformcontinuity of relations.” Journal of Logic & Analysis 5:7(2013), pp1-39.

Higuchi K, & Pauly A: “The degree structure of Weihrauch-reducibility.” Logical Methods in Computer Science 9(2)(2013), pp1-17.

Le Roux S, & Pauly A: “Closed Choice for Finite and forConvex Sets” Proceedings of the Conference onComputability in Europe (2013), pp294-305.

Dr Anna Philpott

Hindley C, & Philpott A: “The cell cycle and pluripotency.”Biochemical Journal 451 (2013), pp135-43.

McDowell G, & Philpott A: “Non-canonical ubiquitylation:mechanisms and consequences.” International Journal forBiochemistry and Cell Biology 45 (2013),pp1883-1842.

Hindley C, & Philpott A: “Co-ordination of cell cycle anddifferentiation in the developing nervous system.”Biochemical Journal 444 (2012) pp375-82.

Professor Jaideep Prabhu

Nari Kahle H, Dubiel A, Ernst H, & Prabhu J: "Thedemocratizing effects of frugal innovation: Implications forinclusive growth and state-building". Journal of IndianBusiness Research, Vol. 5 Issue: 4 (2013), pp.220-234.

Radjou N, Ahuja S, & Prabhu J: “Jugaad Innovation: A Frugaland Flexible Approach to Innovation for the 21st Century.”(Noida, UP: Random House India, 2012) [also 3 differenttranslated versions published in Brazil, France & theNetherlands]

Dr Andrew Preston

Preston, A: “Peripheral Visions: American MainlineProtestants and the Global Cold War.” Cold War History,13:1 (February 2013), pp109-130.

Preston, A: “Globalized Faith, Radicalized Religion, and theDomestic Sources of U.S. Foreign Policy.” In Gavin FJ, &Lawrence MA (eds.): Beyond the Cold War: Lyndon Johnsonand the New Global Challenges of the 1960s. (New York &Oxford: OUP, 2013), pp 247-270.

Preston, A: “Tempered by the Fires of War: Vietnam andthe Transformation of the Evangelical Worldview.” InSchäfer, AR (ed.): In and of the Times: New Perspectives onAmerican Evangelicalism and the 1960s. (Madison:University of Wisconsin Press, 2013), pp189-208.

Selected publications by Clare Fellows

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Dr Wendy Pullan

Pullan W, & Sternberg M: “The Making of Jerusalem's HolyBasin.” Planning Perspectives, 27.2 (2012), pp225-48.

Pullan, W: “Conflict's Tools. Borders, boundaries andmobility in Jerusalem's spatial structures.” Mobilities 8.1(2013), pp125-47.

Pullan, W: “Spatial Discontinuities: Conflict Infrastructures inContested Cities.” In Pullan W, & Baillie B, (eds.): LocatingUrban Conflicts: Ethnicity, Nationalism, Everyday Life.(Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013)

Dr Ken Riley

Riley, K: In Loco Parentis: A light-hearted look at the role of aCambridge Tutor. (2013) [solely available through theCollege website under ‘Alumni – Publications’]

Professor John Robertson

Robertson, J: “Sacred history and political thought:Neapolitan responses to the problem of sociability afterHobbes.” The Historical Journal, 56, 1 (2013), p1-29.

Dr Alexander Roose

Roose, A: "The book of nature: the book of metaphors." InGilby, E (ed.): Method and variation : narrative in earlymodern French thought. (Oxford: Legenda, 2013), pp57-69.

Roose, A: “La délicatesse de Pétrone ou la galanterie deSaint-Evremond.” Litteratures Classiques 77 (2012),pp53-67.

Roose, A: “Au-delà de la vertu, Corneille néo-stoïcien.” InDufour-Maître, M: Pratiques de Corneille (Rouen: PressesUniversitaires de Rouen, 2012), pp651-661.

Dr Helena Sanson

Mitchell K, & Sanson H (eds.): Women and Gender in Post-Unification Italy: Between Private and Public Spheres. (Bernand Oxford: Peter Lang; 'Italian Modernities' series, 2013)

Sanson, H: “The Romance Languages in the Renaissanceand after.” In Ledgeway A, Maiden M, & Smith JC (eds): TheCambridge History of the Romance Languages (Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, 2013), 2 vols, II, 237-82.

Sanson, H, “‘La madre educatrice’ in the Family and inSociety in Post-Unification Italy: The Question ofLanguage.” In Mitchell K, & Sanson H (eds.): Women andGender in Post-Unification Italy: Between Private and PublicSpheres. (Bern and Oxford: Peter Lang; 'Italian Modernities'series, 2013), pp39-63.

Professor Alison Sinclair

Sinclair, A: “La forja del prodigio: Pepito Arriola.” In BaconK, & Thornton N (eds.): The Noughties in the Hispanic andLusophone World. (Newcastle: Cambridge ScholarsPublishing, 2012), pp142-163.

Sinclair, A: “Read all about it! Wrongdoing in Spain andEngland in the long nineteenth-century.” [Exhibitionopened at University Library 29 April 2013, availabledigitally at https://exhibitions.lib.cam.ac.uk/]

Professor Timothy Smiley

Oliver A & Smiley TJ: Plural Logic (Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press, 2013)

Oliver A & Smiley TJ: “Zilch.” Analysis 73 (2013),pp601-613.

Dr Martin Smith

Smith, MR: “Affinity, ecology and diversity of the early'cephalopod' Nectocaris." Paleobiology 39 (2013),pp297-321.

Smith MR & Butterfield NJ: "A new view onNematothallus: coralline red algae from the Silurian ofGotland". Palaeontology 56 (2013) pp345-357.

Smith, M R: “The mouthparts of Odontogriphus andWiwaxia: implications for the ancestral molluscan radula”.Proceedings of the Royal Society B 279 (2012) pp4287–4295.

Professor Anthony Snodgrass

Snodgrass, A: “The Olpe Chigi and iconography in KypselidCorinth.” In Menichetti M, and Cerchiai L (eds.): L'olpe Chigi:storia di un Agalma (Università di Salerno, 2012), pp 9-16.

Snodgrass, A: “Penser l'art antique: alliances et resistancesdisciplinaires.” Perspective (Institut nationale d'histoire del'art, Paris), 2012.2, pp213- 215. [Éditorial]

Snodgrass, A: “Setting the frame chronologically.” In KaganD, & Viggiano G (eds.): Men of Bronze: Hoplite warfare inAncient Greece. (Princeton University Press, 2013), pp85-94.

Professor Roel Sterckx

Sterckx, R: “Zhi shen Shennong de tianyuan"置身神農的田園 (‘In the fields of Shennong’), Hanxueyanjiu tongxun漢學研究通訊 32.1 (2013), pp.1-8.

Sterckx, R: “Mozi 31: Explaining Ghosts, again." In DefoortC, & Standaert N (eds.): The Mozi as an Evolving Text:Different Voices in early Chinese Thought (Leiden: E.J. Brill,2013), pp.96-141.

Sterckx, R: “Zoomorphism and Sacrificial Religion in EarlyChina.” Hanxue yanjiu 30.4 (2012), pp.305-334

Ms Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite

Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, F: “Neo-liberalism and morality in themaking of Thatcherite social policy.” The Historical Journal(2012), pp497-520.

Sutcliffe-Braithwaite F, & Lawrence J: “Margaret Thatcherand the decline of class politics.” In Jackson B, & Saunders R(eds.): Making Thatcher’s Britain (CUP, 2012), pp132-147.

Dr Jaqueline Tasioulas

Tasioulas, J: “The Idea of Beauty in Troilus and Criseyde, orCriseyde’s Eyebrow.” In Brewer C & Windeatt B (eds.):Traditions and Innovations in the Study of Medieval EnglishLiterature: The Influence of Derek Brewer (Cambridge:D.S.Brewer, 2013).

Tasioulas, J: “Dying of Imagination in the First Fragment ofthe Canterbury Tales.” Medium Aevum LXXXII (2013),pp213-35.

Dr Dorothy Thompson

Thompson, D J: “P.Enteux. 27 and the Nile transport ofgrain under the Ptolemies.” In Schubert, P (ed.): Actes de26e Congrès international de papyrology. Genève, 16–21août 2010. (Geneva: Droz 2012).

Thompson, D J: “Hellenistic royal barges” in Buraselis K,Stefanou M, & Thompson DJ (eds.): The Ptolemies, the Seaand the Nile: Studies in Waterborne Power. (Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, 2013), pp185–196

Thompson DJ, Rathbone DW, & Verhoogt A: “Areconstructed land survey from Kerkeosiris.” In Ast R,Cuvigny H, Hickey TM, & Lougovaya J (eds.): PapyrologicalTexts in Honor of Roger S. Bagnall [American Studies inPapyrology 53]. (Durham, NC: American Society ofPapyrologists, 2013), pp243–265.

Dr Toby Wilkinson

Wilkinson, T: “Through the cracks” [review of Kemp, B:The City of Akhenaten and Nefertiti.] Times LiterarySupplement No. 5736 (March 8, 2013), p32.

Wilkinson, T: “Questions at the Frontiers of Egyptology.”Focus, September 2012, pp32-33.

Dr Nigel Woodcock

Nance RD, Gutiérrez-Alonso G, Keppie JD, Linnemann U,Murphy JB, Quesada C, Strachan RA, & Woodcock NH:“A brief history of the Rheic Ocean.” Geoscience Frontiers, 3(2012), pp125-135.

Treagus JE, Treagus SH, & Woodcock NH: “Thesignificance of the boundary between the Rhoscolyn andNew Harbour formations on Holy Island, North Wales, tothe deformation history of Anglesey.” Geological Magazine,150 (2013), pp519-535.

Professor Jim Woodhouse

Legault J, Langley RS, & Woodhouse J: “Physicalconsequences of a nonparametric uncertainty model instructural dynamics.” Journal of Sound and Vibration 331,(2012), 5469-5487.

Choi W, Langley RS, & Woodhouse J: “Boundary effectson the vibration statistics of a random plate.” Journal ofSound and Vibration 332, (2013), 850-866.

Woodhouse J, Rene JC, Hall CS, Smith LTW, King FH, &McClenahan JW: “The dynamics of a ringing church bell.”Advances in Acoustics and Vibration (2012). Article ID681787, 19 pages.

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College Life

Sports

Full Blues

Joel Jennings – RowingEsther Momcilovic – RowingScott Annett – Rugby UnionDaniel Murrell – SquashQuentin Gouil – AthleticsRichard Wheater – AthleticsOlivia Robinson – NetballClaire Watkins – RowingJessica Denman – RowingKatrin Harding – OrienteeringClare Parrish – HockeyJosie Faulkner – Water poloAlex Defroand – HockeyDale Waterhouse – SwimmingTim Tito Rademacher – Rugby LeagueOli Flynn – GolfGeordie Ting – GolfMatthew Halliday – Orienteering

Half-Blues

Jess Palmer – Lightweights RowingMadzia Kowalski – TriathlonCyril Uy – Men’s LacrosseChris Cavanagh – Men’s LacrosseJack Malde – Rugby FivesFred Beardmore – Rugby FivesNick Evans – Men’s LacrosseJonathan Waite – Pistol & Smallbore Rifle ShootingChloe Colliver – Mixed LacrosseHarriet Boswell – Golf

Lawrence Rowles – JudoJames Marshall – PoloJames Chettle – Cross-countryTeale Phelps Bondaroff – Ice HockeyRachel Wijsmuller – Ice HockeyBennett Waxse – VolleyballJo Brant – BadmintonJames Cooper – Canoe PoloMatthew Halliday – Lacrosse

Other

Moos Peters – Rowing (spare)Anna Slotala – Rowing (Blondie)Rachel Boyd – Rowing (Blondie)Annie Elkington – Rowing (Blondie)James Frake – Rowing (spare)

Other achievements

Rowing: Clare Women's VIII went head of the river in MayBumps. The Men’s IV+ won University Fours. EstherMomcilovic (2007) is President of the University Women’sBoat Club 2013-14, Andrzej Hunt (2011) is President of theUniversity Lightweight Rowing Club 2013-2014. ClaireWatkins and Esther Momcilovic are trialling for GB rowing

The Clare College Tennis Club topped the University TennisLeague Division 3 and have now reached Division 2 for thefirst time. Martin Bachman, Benjamin Low and Thomas Hewittrepresent the University at Tennis

Rugby: Scott Annett played his forth varsity match atTwickenham in December 2013. Additionally, Clare was wellrepresented in the U21 XVI by Angus Strachen, GeorgeWilliams and Harry McLeer – with Jacob Poulton being namedas a replacement.

Music

In addition to the regular Monday lunchtime recitals in Chapel,Clare College Music Society (CCMS) is the only college musicsociety ambitious enough to hold regular concerts in the WestRoad Concert Hall and, under President Hugo Popplewell (2011),CCMS presented a series of exciting and varied concertsthroughout the year. The Michaelmas Term concert, conducted byWilliam Cole (2010), Hugo, and Patrick Milne (2011) featured aprogramme of Vaughan Williams’ Wasps Overture, Oboe Concertoand Tippett’s oratorio A Child of our Time with soloists Maud Millar(2007), Abigail Gostick (2009), Peter Aisher (2008) and NicholasMogg (2008). The Lent Term concert presented Brahms’Academic Festival Overture, Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto with bassetclarinet soloist Oliver Pashley (2010), and Dvorak Symphony No.9. The May Week concert presented an eclectic programme ofNielsen, Rachmaninov, Finzi and Butterworth in the Great Hall.

The College hosted masterclasses for undergraduate singerswith the acclaimed baritone Roderick Williams, and NicholasSears, Head of Vocal Studies at Royal College of Music,London.

The College welcomed once again the Schubert Ensemble(featuring alumni Simon Blendis (1989) and Jane Salmon(1977)) for a day of masterclasses and workshops with Clarestudents.

The eighth annual CCMS Opera, a production of Milhaud’sLe pauvre Matelot in the College Cellars in May, featured anumber of Clare choral scholars and instrumentalists.

William Cole (2010) was Principal Conductor of CUSO andthe CUMS Conducting Scholar, and conducted CambridgeUniversity Opera Society’s production of The Cunning LittleVixen, featuring soloist Heloise Werner (2010), a choruscomprised of a number of Clare choral scholars, and producedby Leo Cairns (2011).

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Chapel Choir

In addition to its regular commitments in the Chapel, the Choir hasundertaken a number of exciting national and internationalengagements, performing with leading orchestras and conductors.

Highlights of the year included:

Being awarded ‘Best Orchestral Concert of the Year’ byAustralia’s Limelight Magazine, following eleven performancesacross Australia in summer 2012, praised by critics as ‘warm,true, magnificent’ (Sydney Morning Herald) and ‘aperformance for the history books’.

Instrumentalists joining the Chapel Choir for Choral servicesincluding Byrd’s Mass for five voices, Monteverdi’s Beatus virand the premiere of I do not sleep by Composer-in-ResidenceGiles Swayne to mark the death of student RebeccaChamberlain.

Release of the Choir’s first recording on the Harmonia MundiUSA label of Choral Works by Imogen Holst, hailed as‘thrilling…impeccable’ by Gramophone Magazine, earning aDiapason d’Or and Le Choix de France Musique award, andshortlisted for a 2013 Gramophone Award.

Christmas concerts in Manchester, Suffolk and the Choir’sannual appearance at St John’s, Smith Square, London inDecember.

BBC Radio 3 appearances on In Tune and a live ChoralEvensong broadcast from Aldeburgh Parish Church, Suffolk, atthe start of the Benjamin Britten centenary celebrations.

Concert of Elgar’s The Dream of Gerontius with LondonPhilharmonic Orchestra under Sir Mark Elder in Royal FestivalHall, London.

Performance of Bach’s St John Passion with alumni EvangelistNicholas Mulroy and leader Margaret Faultless, under GrahamRoss, with all solos taken by members of the Chapel Choir. Arepeat performance given in King’s Place, London, with AuroraOrchestra and conductor Nicholas Collon (2001).

Joint services in Cambridge with Choirs of Jesus, Gonville andCaius and St John’s Colleges, and visiting schools from London,Cambridge and Birmingham.

Participation in a song-writing project with Alzheimer’s andDementia sufferers, culminating in a performance of musicwritten by the participants in West Road Concert Hall.

Premiere of Giles Swayne’s Uncommon Prayers in St John’s,Smith Square, London, with Clare instrumentalists OliverPashley (2010) and Joy Lisney (2010).

Choral Evensong at St Paul’s Cathedral.

Summer Festival appearances at Spitalfields, London,Fenstanton, Cambridgeshire and Dingley Hall,Northamptonshire.

Six-concert European tour with European Union BaroqueOrchestra, managed by Clare alumnus Paul James, withconcert performances of Handel under Lars Ulrik Mortensenin Bruges, Milan, Utrecht, Hagen, Darmstadt and London.

Societies & Arts

Union of Clare Students: Harry Peto, UCS President writes:UCS has seen some great improvements take place over thepast year, including a particularly popular coffee machine for theLibrary Common Room! The current Committee is reformingthe room balloting system, and will be holding a referendumon welfare and gender representation in the UCS. The Orielexchange was renewed for the first time in a few years, andafter a successful trip to Oxford last term we look forward towelcoming them to Clare in Lent. We're now about topurchase new equipment for the Colony Gym. We lookforward to welcoming the new Committee after elections laterthis term.

MCR: Ross Buckingham, MCR President writes: The ClareCollege MCR has experienced a great deal of change in thepast year, particularly as a consequence of our newly

refurbished MCR Bar. As always, our MCR has experienced aseries of spectacular social events including BOPs, FormalSwaps with Cambridge and Oxford colleges and our very ownMCR Bridgemas. As the current MCR Committee's tenurecomes to a close, we believe that the MCR has taken greatstrides in both entertaining and representing the graduatecommunity at Clare College, whilst we look forward to thenext committee continuing the evolution of our MCR.

Clare Actors have funded several shows through the yearincluding 'Spleen', a sketch show at the Corpus Playrooms;'Songs for a New World' (musical, ADC); 'One Million TinyPlays About Britain' (comedy at the ADC, featuring 2nd yearHenry Jenkinson); 'What the Butler Saw' (comedy, Corpus);'Pornography' (drama, ADC); 'Grey Matters' (new writing,King's College); and 'Continuum' (sketch show, ADC).

The Dilettante Society: the committee of 2013-2014 consistsof Kit Preston Bell (President, 3rd year Theology), Erica Cao(Secretary, MPhil in Music and Science) and Robert Wilson(Treasurer, 3rd year Philosophy). This year the society hascontinued with great success, and attracted many more gueststo its meetings. Talks of particular popularity include "Help:everything I own is blue" by last year's treasurer, FreddieCrossley, and a fascinating introduction to symmetry and itspresence in art, given by Volker Heine, a Fellow in physics. Thesociety has exciting plans for the rest of the year, with an artexhibition opening in week 7 of Lent Term, and a philosophicalpuppet show taking place at the end of Easter Term.

Clare Politics continues to welcome politicians, journalists,academics and other public figures to the college to discusstopics in current affairs with students, staff and Fellows. Thesociety has had a successful year so far with speakers includingClare alumni Michael Keating, former UN Deputy Envoy toAfghanistan, and Lord Wilson of Dinton, former CabinetSecretary and Head of the Home Civil Service and Master ofEmmanuel College.

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Clare Student Investment Fund (CCSIF), now in its sixth year,has performed impressively; beating the benchmark (FTSE100)by 13%. The society currently manages approximately£37,000 on behalf of the Nicholas Hammond Foundation,investing on the British stock market. Interest in the society hasbeen strong with 15-20 members contributing to the recentsuccess. The society functions as an invaluable learning tool forthose interested in personal investment or a career in thefinancial industry. Many past members now work in thefinancial industry, citing the society as key in differentiating themfrom other candidates in the interview process.

Gardens Report

2013 must go down as an exceptional gardening year not just atClare but country-wide.

January, February and March gave very much below averagetemperatures with daytime struggling to rise above 0º Centigrade.We used the extended winter to our advantage as it gave us timeto complete our winter work in the herbaceous borders, winterpruning and tying in of the wall climbers in the Master’s and theScholars’ Gardens before the start of the much-delayed spring.The prolonged winter delayed the flowering of snowdrops andwinter aconites on the Avenue until early April which coincidedwith the flowering of the daffodils, crocus and species tulip. TheAvenue was a riot of colour and interest not seen for many years,with all the late winter and spring plants flowering together. Frommid-April to early June it was very wet, which was just what wasneeded to get some really good growth on the herbaceousplanting. Thankfully the rain relented for May Ball, which passedwithout too much damage; then summer broke with long sunnyperiods and high temperatures, the borders responded with a finedisplay of colour which was much admired by Fellows, students,staff and many hundreds of visitors to Clare.

Towards the end of the year, the new development of graduateaccommodation at Clare Court on Newnham Road wascompleted, with the garden department charged with thelandscaping and planting of the various courts. We have chosentrees to give interest throughout the year: Catalpa Aurea for its lushgreen large leaves and splendid seed pods, Prunus Autumnus Roseafor its winter flowering, and Acer ‘Bloodgood’ for its beautiful redleaves. The lower planting has a good selection of herbs and culinaryspecies including Rosemary, Thyme, Fennel and Lavender intended tobe picked by culinary graduates. Asplenium, Dryopteris, Vinca, andPachysandra are being used in the shady courtyard borders.

Our Open Garden Charity Days for the British Red Cross and theNational Gardens Scheme raised over two thousand pounds, agreat improvement on the previous year; both days had increasedvisitor numbers.

The garden year ended with one of the best autumn displays ofcolour we have had for many years, the tints produced by theOaks, Limes, Hawthorn and Alder on the Backs have been apleasure for the whole College.

Forbes Mellon Library & the College Archive

Members of the College Library and Archive staff continue toprovide an up-to-date, efficient and welcoming service for allmembers of the College and for visitors to the collections. Thenew systems for security and library management, both installed in2012, are working well. The students now find it easier to issuebooks and to keep track of their loans, whilst the circulationprocesses are much quicker for staff to carry out and there arefewer false alarms at the security gates. A great deal of time thisyear has been spent on general ‘housekeeping’ tasks such asreclassifying the music section, updating the collection developmentpolicy and getting to grips with a new cataloguing standard,

Resource Description and Access, which provides scope for thedetailed cataloguing of all media from traditional library material tothe increasing number of digital resources. Over 700 new bookswere purchased in 2012-13, and donations received during theyear include a handsome collection of 90 specialist Ancient Greekand Latin language books donated by Mrs M.M. Jones in memoryof her husband, Iwan Elis Jones. As part of the FML’s responsibilityfor information provision a large digital information screen has beeninstalled in the Library foyer on which College-related events andnews can be displayed.

Following the external redecoration last summer the Library nowlooks smart and in good repair, and a thorough overhaul andupgrade of the emergency lighting and smoke detection systemshas happily brought us well in line with current safety guidelines.

Evidence of the relevance of, and interest in, the history of theCollege is clear from the popularity of the Archive. The monthlyClare Through Time articles (http://www.clare.cam.ac.uk/Clare-Through-Time/) are eagerly anticipated, and regularly generatefollow-up correspondence from the unlikeliest of quarters. Therecontinues to be a considerable number of Archive visits andenquiries, and exhibitions and displays are provided for all mannerof College occasions. Our collaboration with the English Folk Danceand Song’s Full English Project, launched in June 2012, has beenparticularly rewarding, and a related study day was held in Collegein December. Various items from the College Archive have beensent for conservation this year including the Letters Patent dating to1567 on which are a portrait of Elizabeth I, plans of College estatesand properties and architectural drawings. The College’s recordsmanagement programme continues to work well.

College Life

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Access and Outreach

Efforts have continued to encourage the brightest students,regardless of background, to apply to Clare and to considerhigher education more generally.

New Schools Liaison Team

Rebecca Blaylock, who is a recent graduate of Clare College, tookover from Ruth Dewhirst in September 2013 as the full-timeSchools Liaison Coordinator. She was later joined by StephanieBaughen, a graduate of Homerton College, as the part-timeSchools Liaison Officer. Clare College continues to boast one ofthe largest outreach schemes in either Oxford or Cambridge.

Schools Liaison Programme

Rebecca Blaylock, and her predecessor Ruth Dewhirst, led effortsto expand and enrich Clare’s schools liaison activity in the College’slink areas of Tower Hamlets, Hackney, Coventry and Warwickshire.The College hosted around 95 visits from school groups from theprimary, secondary, state and independent sectors. This is anincrease of 30 events on 2012.

Highlights of a very full programme included:

Continuing with a year-long STEM enrichment programme forsixth formers in Hackney, in partnership with BSix Sixth FormCollege, culminating in a week-long residential during August.

Continuing links with charitable organisations working in thelocal communities of Tower Hamlets and Hackney including It’sYour Life, INTOUniversity and The Brilliant Club.

Establishing a new partnership with the Civil Service and theCabinet Office in the form of “The Spending Challenge”. Theoutreach programme aimed to give A-level students an insightinto working in government. Volunteers from HM Treasuryand the Cabinet Office gave up their afternoon to helpstudents play the role of ministers, competing with each otherfor a slice of HM Treasury’s annual budget. This took place at

Admiralty House in Whitehall and involved students fromacross Tower Hamlets.

Clare Sports Camp took place in July giving the opportunity forstudents from less advantaged backgrounds to learn to row atClare, stay in college and learn about University admissions.

Continuing to work closely with Tower Hamlets Council andHackney Learning Trust on a regular basis to run borough wideinformation events for students, teachers and their parents.

The Clare Partnership for Schools

Now in its thirteenth year, the Clare Partnership for Schools workswith pupils of all ages in the London borough of Tower Hamlets toraise aspirations and encourage the pupils to make informedchoices regarding higher education. The annual mentoringprogramme for sixth form students is particularly successful, withmany mentees gaining places at leading universities. Clare remainsdeeply grateful to its three corporate partners, KPMG, CliffordChance and Morgan Stanley, for their active and on-going support.

Education Enrichment in Hackney

This year saw the continuation of a successful lecture series in theborough. Several Clare Fellows, including the Master, visited schoolsin Hackney to deliver lectures in their particular area of interest. Thisgave students an insight into the depth and breadth of a universityeducation as well as the chance to reach beyond the NationalCurriculum. Lectures included but were not limited to, ProfessorBadger on Martin Luther King Jr., Dr Helen Thompson on the USelection, and Dr Hester Vaizey on the fall of the Berlin Wall.

2013 also saw the maintenance of a year-long STEM enrichmentprogramme for sixth formers across the whole of Hackney, run inpartnership with BSix Sixth Form. This programme incorporatesvisits to Clare, a lectures series, individual mentoring provided byour own postgraduate community, and a week-long residential visit

to College during August. This residential visit took the form of aweek living as an undergraduate student, with supervisions,independent study and social activities. Upon finishing theenrichment programme the students’ achievements werecelebrated with a graduation ceremony. Commending theachievements of our young people is crucial if we are to raise theirconfidence and steer them towards future success.

The Clare Access Tour

In the Easter vacation, the Clare Access Tour ventured to Coventryand Warwickshire visiting 17 different schools, giving around 600school pupils the opportunity to meet Clare undergraduates, learnabout higher education and the Oxbridge admissions process- all infive days! This longstanding initiative has received overwhelminglypositive feedback which is a testament both to the Access Tour andthe Schools Liaison Programme more broadly.

Community and Charitable Activities

This year the Clare Bermondsey trust sponsored Isobel Scott-Barrett, who graduated in 2013 in Asian and Middle EasternStudies, to undertake a placement at Bede House in Southwark,London. Bede House helps vulnerable members of the localcommunity, and those with learning disabilities. For moreinformation please visit www.bedehouse.org.uk

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ExpenditureTotal operating expenditure is expected to be £10.7 million.

The College continues to be in sound financial health but mustnow meet new challenges in supporting students from lowincome families and refurbishing Old Court. The College forecastsa surplus of £0.8 million for 13/14 and beyond.

The College is determined to achieve financial independence inorder to preserve small group teaching for undergraduates andalso to ensure that talented students from low incomebackgrounds are still able to come to Clare. The College spendsalmost £7,500 on each undergraduate student’s education. Thestudents are paying more than half of this cost themselves, withannual fees of £9,000 (with repayment of the debt deferred untilthey are earning). The College retains half the fees and pays theresidue to the University to cover its educational costs.

At present almost a third of all British undergraduates at Clare arereceiving bursaries, of which almost half (66) are receiving themaximum bursary as their family household income is less than£25,000. It is clear that in the future there will be a need forsubstantially increased bursary provision. Increased levels of debtfor students will also inevitably lead to heavy pressure on Clare’shardship funds.

14

Financial Report

Expenditure £mEducation 4.3Accommodation 2.7Catering and Conferences 3.0Administration 0.7Total 10.7

IncomeTotal operating income is expected to be £11.5 million forthe year ended 30 June 2014.

Income £mAcademic Fees 2.8Accommodation 2.5Catering and Conferences 3.4Endowment drawdown 2.8Total 11.5

■ Academic Fees

■ Accommodation

■ Catering and Conferences

■ Endowment drawdown

■ Education

■ Accommodation

■ Catering and Conferences

■ Administration

Operating Budget 2013/14

Funding for the College’s activities comes from four main sources: academic fees, student rents, conference income, and endowmentincome. In addition, new donations every year of £3.5 million make a very significant contribution to covering the costs of bursaries andmajor building refurbishments. The donations are not shown in the income chart as most donations go to capital, and therefore only theincome from the endowment (some of which is accrued by donations) is shown.

24.3% 24.3%

21.7%29.6%

6.5%

28.0%40.2%

25.2%

Page 15: Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

15

Historic Buildings

The College aims to generate an operating surplus to ensure thatadequate funding is available to maintain the fabric of the College’soperational buildings over the long term. The aim is to spend 1.5%of the insurance value which would represent an annual budget of£2.7 million. In recent years the College has met this target withextensive refurbishments taking place in Memorial Court and theColony, and this year we have completed a £5.8 million project toreplace the derelict graduate housing on Newnham Road. Thecondition of the College’s entire building stock has been surveyed,so that it is possible to make some difficult decisions over the keypriorities for the long delayed refurbishment of Old Court ascompared with other building priorities.

The refurbishment of Old Court will cost around £20 million andthe College will have to decide soon on when it can afford toundertake the long-overdue work.

Endowment

The endowment at £81 million is now well ahead of the levelbefore the recession. The College is still positioned on a cautiousbasis to re-invest £9.5 million of cash into equities at the rate of£1 million each month. Since the Investments Committee (mainlyconsisting of alumni working in the City) considers that the stockmarket is currently overvalued, the re-investing will only resumewhen there has been a fall from the levels at the end of December.

Clare’s endowment drawdown of £2.8 million reflects the policydecision to distribute between 3.5% and 4.0% of the trailing threeyear market value of the endowment. In this way, the endowmentsupports the work of the College while being protected againstinflation, preserving the capital for the future. The long-term targetallocation is 80% in global equities and 20% in commercialproperty.

The College took advantage of a historic opportunity in October2008 to enter into an inflation swap on a £15 million loan for 40years. The inflation-linked interest rate of 1.09% was unusuallylow due to the turbulent market conditions at that time. Thispresented a very significant opportunity to invest in global equitytracker funds at a low point in the cycle. Clare expects to achievea real return of over 4% pa, which would almost double the sizeof the endowment by 2048. The inflation-linked borrowing hashad a promising start, showing a surplus of £4 million so far, in linewith the original projection.

Budget Forecast Forecast2013/14 2014/15 2015/16

£m £m £m

Operating Income 8.7 9.1 9.4

Endowment drawdown 2.8 2.9 3.0

Donations 3.5 3.5 4.0

______ ______ ______

15.0 15.5 16.4

Operating Expenditure 10.7 11.4 11.8

______ ______ ______

Surplus 4.3 4.1 4.6

Newnham Road development 2.6 0.1 -

Other capital projects 1.9 2.9 2.9

______ ______ ______

Increase (reduction)

in funds (0.2) 1.1 1.7

Forecasts

The College’s financial projections for the next five years show anincrease in the level of donations to £4.0 million by 2016, as theCollege concentrates its fund-raising initiatives on the refurbishmentof Old Court. The forecast for the immediate future shows howthe building of new graduate accommodation in Newnham Road isbeing funded by the sale of surplus graduate houses.

Page 16: Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

Development

Clare has always been a College which looks to the future. Thepurpose of Clare’s development programme is to sustain andenhance the College as a place of education, learning andresearch, for current and future generations. The involvement ofalumni is critical to the future success of Clare.

At the beginning of 2013, we launched our new initiatives buildingto our 700th Anniversary to be celebrated in 2026. So far, thanksto the generosity of alumni and friends, over £7 million has beenpledged of the £50 million target for the new campaign. Ourobjectives for the campaign are listed below.

Securing our endowment: a sustainable future

Lady Clare revolutionised the college’s fortunes in 1338 by givingClare its endowment. As part of our new campaign we aim tobolster the College endowment by at least £10 million- the currentendowment, of £80 million, supports all elements of College life bycontributing around £3 million per year to the College’s operatingincome. By increasing the endowment, we will secure our futureand be more independent of changes in government funding ofHigher Education.

Old Court refurbishment

We estimate that the Old Court refurbishment will cost around£20 million- this is in part essential work to stop the fabric of ourhistoric buildings from deteriorating further. It is also in order tocomply with 21st Century regulations so Old Court can continueto thrive as the living and working heart of Clare. The project willalso provide enhanced accommodation for students, and betterfacilities for catering and entertaining, which will have a positiveimpact on our already successful conference business.

We seek the help of alumni and friends to enable us to raise fundsfor this important renovation project- we have the benefit of theMellon fund, which supports some essential maintenance, but thisonly generates £160,000 per year. As the main part of the Collegeendowment is needed to provide for teaching staff and studentsupport and £1million of our endowment income is spent eachyear on simply maintaining Old Court, we cannot use up ourendowment capital for this vital project.

‘Discover and acquire’: recruiting the best students

Clare has been immensely successful in recruitment, remaining apopular college for applicants in spite of the increase in feesbrought in in 2012. We continue to have a large number ofbursaries to attract the brightest and best regardless of financialbackground. Our outreach programme, Partnership for Schools, isthe best of any college in Cambridge, thanks to the work of theSchools Access and Liaison team and generous support from ourfunding partners, Clifford Chance, KPMG and Morgan Stanley.

In our new development phase, we seek to raise at least another£10 million for bursaries for undergraduate and postgraduatestudents. In this last year, we have had a magnificent gift of over£1 million to support postgraduate students from the EirikFoundation, to fund the Nigel and Judy Weiss PhD scholarship fund.

Additionally we aim to increase the funding endowment forundergraduate bursaries- near to £2million is currently endowedfor the support of undergraduates, but as the Cambridge BursaryScheme subsidy for College bursaries is being scaled down,Colleges will have to make up the shortfall. In Clare’s case thisrequires another £2 million of endowment funding forundergraduate bursaries, or £80,000 of annual funding.

We see this as an important target to ensure that students are wellsupported financially while at College and those from lower-income backgrounds are not deterred from applying.

‘Study and teaching’: a world-class education

In order to continue to deliver a world-class undergraduateeducation, we intend to add a further £10 million to theendowment to safeguard the provision of small-group teachingthrough the College-based supervision system. We urgently needto continue to support teaching in arts subjects, as some teachingposts in Modern Languages, English, Economics are no longerbeing funded by the faculties. The College seeks endowment ofFellowships to guarantee excellent teaching provision continues inthese areas.

We will continue to seek to enhance the tutorial system byencouraging support for the Nicholas Hammond Foundation (aseparate registered charity). This foundation has enabled theappointment of a dedicated Careers Tutor, to prepare Clarestudents for increasingly competitive graduate recruitment. Careersinitiatives have been very successful and have led to better linksbetween alumni and current students.

‘The precious pearl’: enriching lives

In 2013 we held continued our celebrations of the 40th anniversaryof the admission of women to Clare, with a talk featuring womenwho had matriculated since 1972 given at Churchill College overthe Alumni Weekend in September. Anne Glover (1973) spokeabout her experience as a woman working in the engineeringsector then moving into private equity, Professor Ottoline Leyser(2012) spoke about being head of a major research departmentand academic careers for women, and Jane Purdon (1985) spokeabout her experiences as a legal advisor and now head ofgovernance for the Premier League.

The City Network hosted Clare Spottiswoode (1972) who washead of Ofgas and a member of the Vickers Commission onbanking regulation, at an event kindly sponsored by CliffordChance and hosted by alumnus Tony Briam (1968).

16

Development

Page 17: Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

17

We were delighted to welcome Professor Barry Eichengreen,Professor of Economics and Public Policy at the University ofCalifornia, Berkeley, to speak about internationalisation of theRenminbi. This event packed the Riley auditorium for the ClareDistinguished Lecture in Economics and Public Policy, sponsoredby Smithers & Co.

The College Chapel Choir undertook a successful summercollaboration with the European Union Baroque Orchestra in thesummer, followed by a tour of various locations in the USA. TheChoir’s latest CD ‘Veni Emmanuel’ reached number 4 in theClassical album charts just before Christmas.

Thanks to ongoing support from Andrew Walters (1975), theCollege hosted another sports camp for children from DevonportHigh School for Boys and Devonport High School for Girls, twostate schools in Plymouth.

Clare Gala Day, the reconfigured Alumni Day, was a tremendoussuccess, attracting over 300 alumni and their families and guests.Lectures took place given by former energy regulator ClareSpottiswoode (1972), film producer David Kerr (1986) and HesterVaizey, current Fellow in History. There was also a tour of theFellows’ Library and a talk by Fiona Edmonds, Fellow in ASNAC,on medieval manuscripts.

As well as lunch, guests enjoyed picnics and children’sentertainments in the Master’s Garden and the Scholars’ gardenon a midsummer’s day.

We were also delighted that the Clare City Network sponsoredthe Great Books initiative, a series of lectures in the Lent termfeaturing Fellows speaking on a particular book which has changedour understanding of the world- ranging from the Bible to Darwin’s‘Origin of Species’. The series will continue in the Lent term 2014.

For all these contributions towards Clare’s continuing, essentialpurpose, we are extremely grateful.

A lifelong relationship

The support and involvement of alumni in the life of the Collegebrings great benefits to the students of today and tomorrow (justas alumni benefited in their own time from the generosity of theirpredecessors). In return, College continues to be committed toproviding opportunities for alumni to maintain and develop theirlifelong relationship with the College, to meet old friends, and toenjoy the intellectual distinction of Clare’s Fellows and graduates.With advice and support from the Alumni Council and its EventsCommittee, Clare’s alumni programme is the most comprehensiveof any Cambridge college - and we continue to expand our activityin our new campaign phase. Events during 2012-13 included:

Reunion Dinners for 1960/61, 1970/1 and up to and including1951 were held between March and September.

The Benefactors’ Dinner was held in January 2013 and SamuelBlythe Society lunch in May 2013.

London drinks were held at Corney and Barrow in the City,Abernach in Trafalgar Square and the Old Bank of England onFleet street.

Parents’ Day was held in February.

The Clare City Dinner in February 2013 was generouslyhosted by Clifford Chance and Mr Tony Briam (1968) andfeatured a talk by Clare Spottiswoode (1972).

A 5 yearly alumni dinner took place for 1992-95 matriculants.

The MA ceremony was followed by a dinner for MAgraduands in March 2013.

The Master hosted a talk ‘From Fenners to the Sydney CricketGround’ featuring Bob Barber and John Crawley inconversation with Colin Schindler.

A tour of Bletchley Park and the National Museum ofComputing was hosted by Dr David Hartley (1956).

A City Network talk by Professor John Robertson on AdamSmith’s Wealth of Nations, was hosted by alumnus PaulGreatbatch (1977) and Genesis Partners.

An event was held to celebrate the 60th Anniversary of theDNA discovery made by Sir James Watson (1951) and FrancisCrick.

Receptions were held for alumni in Darmstadt and Utrecht tocoincide with the Choir’s summer tour.

The Clare Distinguished lecture in Economics and Public Policyfeatured a talk by Professor Barry Eichengreen and attractedover 150 attendees, a dinner was also held afterwards.

The 23 Club held its 50th anniversary dinner in the Small Hallin September.

The annual meeting and dinner of the Alumni Council tookplace in September 2013 with added afternoon workshops forYear Group Representatives.

An alumni gathering was held at the Varsity Rugby Match inDecember 2013.

The annual Alumni Day was reconfigured as Clare Gala Dayheld at the end of June 2013, and featured a morning oflectures as well as informal musical and children’sentertainment (see above).

The interest, support and involvement of Clare’s alumni andfriends enrich the whole College community – as they have fornearly 700 years, and will continue to do for generations to come.

Page 18: Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

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Master & Fellows

As of 3 October 2013, by year of election,showing higher doctorates, external honours,and Fellowships of the British Academy & theRoyal Society only. Where appropriate, dates ofprevious election to the Fellowship are indicatedin square brackets.

Master2003 Prof. Anthony Badger

Fellows1954 Prof. Richard West ScD FRS1955 Prof. Timothy Smiley FBA1958 Dr Gordon Wright MD1960 Prof. Volker Heine FRS1961 Dr Michael Bown

Mr Colin TurpinDr Kenneth Riley

1962 Dr Roger Tapp1964 Dr Peter Knewstubb1965 Prof. Nigel Weiss ScD FRS1966 Dr Malcolm Mitchinson MD

Dr Robert Blackburn1970 Dr Roger Schofield FBA [1962]

Mr John Newton [1961]1971 Prof. Alison Sinclair1972 Prof. Donald Lynden-Bell FRS [1960]

Dr Richard Gooder1973 Prof. Andrew Holmes ScD FRS1976 Dr William Foster

Mrs Elizabeth FreemanDr Terence MooreProf. Anthony Snodgrass FBA

1979 Prof. James WoodhouseMr Timothy BrownProf. Peter Leadlay

1980 Prof. Simon FranklinDr Fred Parker

1981 Prof. Paul CartledgeMr Aylmer Johnson

1982 Prof. Rosalind O’HanlonProf. Alan Lucas

1985 Mr David Howarth1986 Dr David Hartley

Prof. Andrew Thomason1987 Prof. Dominic Scott

Dr Nigel WoodcockProf. Lawrence Paulson

1988 Dr Adrian TravisProf. Gillian Brown CBE LittD

1990 Dr Jonathan GoodmanProf. Michael Lapidge LittD

1991 Dr Paul EdwardsProf. Sir Malcolm Grant CBE LLD

1992 Prof. Richard Phillips1993 Prof. Sir Bob Hepple OBE QC LLD FBA [1968]1994 Dr Helen Thompson1995 Prof. Neil Andrews

Mr Duncan Robinson CBE DL [1974]Prof. Catherine Clarke

1996 Prof. Neil Greenham1997 Dr Rachael Harris

Prof. Bill Harris1998 Dr Marta Lahr [1992]

Dr Patricia FaraProf. Michiel SprikDr Douglas Hedley

1999 Dr Anna PhilpottDr Tamara FolliniDr Wendy PullanDr Celia Duff

2000 Dr Paul BristoweDr Hubertus JahnDr Timothy LewensDr Nicola HoldstockDr Marina Frolova-Walker MarinaProf. Robert GlenProf. Lorraine TylerProf. Nicola Clayton FRSDr Gordon Ogilvie

2001 Dr Melvyn WeeksThe Rev’d Roger GreevesDr Richard Dyball ScDProf. Jeremiah OstrikerMr Donald Hearn

2002 Professor Howard GriffithsDr John GibsonDr Andrea Manica

2003 Dr Maciej DunajskiDr Hendrick van Veen

Dr Charles WeissDr John GuyDr Elizabeth FoysterDr Toby Wilkinson

2004 Dr Philip JonesDr Jaqueline Tasioulas

2005 Dr William ByrneDr Sian LazarDr Helena SansonDr Flavio ToxvaerdMr Stephen JollyMr Michael Petty

2006 Prof. David SwensenProf. Roel SterckxDr Fiona EdmondsDr Dorothy Thompson FBADr Ioannis LestasDr Robert SempleDr Rodrigo CachoDr Andrew Preston

2007 Prof. Henry Gates JrDr Andrew Friend

2008 Prof. Andrew Balmford FRSProf. Paul FletcherDr Josip GlaurdicDr Colin RussellThe Rev’d Gregory SeachDr Anne Stillman

2009 Prof. Philip AllmendingerDr Nathan CrillyDr Philip FaulknerProf. David HodellDr Kirsty HughesDr Julian Huppert MPDr Rory NaismithProf. Jaideep Prabhu

2010 Dr Kirsty McDougallDr Andrew CarterMr Graham RossProf. John RobertsonDr Ruth Watson

2011 Dr William CavertDr Charles Melnyk

2012 Ms Jocelyn WyburdMs Francisca MalaréeProf. Giancarlo Corsetti

Prof. Ottoline LeyserDr Andrew FergusonDr Martin SmithDr Adria de Gispert

2013 Dr Timothy ChestersDr Jason CarrollDr Jonathan FawcettDr Jessica GoodmanMr Clemens MatthiesenMs Florence Sutcliffe-BraithwaiteDr Hester VaizeyMr Paul Warren

Honorary Fellows1967 Prof. James Watson KBE ScD FRS1980 Sir David Attenborough OM CH CVO CBE FRS1987 The Rt Rev’d Mark Santer1989 Sir Walter Bodmer FRS1990 Sir Roger Norrington CBE1992 Sir Nicholas Barrington KCMG CVO

Sir Henry CatherwoodSir Philip Dowson CBE

1994 Sir John Boyd KCMGThe Rt Rev’d and Rt Hon the Lord Williams ofOystermouth PC DD FBA

1997 Sir Andrew Wiles FRS1998 The Rt Hon the Lord Wilson of Dinton GCB

His Excellency Fernando Cardoso LLD2001 Dr John Rutter CBE DMus2002 Sir Tim Hunt FRS2004 Prof. Frances Kirwan FRS2006 Mr Peter Ackroyd CBE DLitt(hon)

Mr Matthew ParrisProf. Jonathan Spence CMG

2012 Sir Mark Walport FRSProf. Sir David Cannadine LittD FBAProf. Susan AlcockThe Very Rev’d Vivienne Faull

Elizabeth De Clare Fellows2008 Mr Randolph Lerner

Dr Alan Gillespie CBEMr Ian Riley

2010 Dr Colin Forbes

Page 19: Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

19

Captionsp. 2� Alumnus of the year 2012/2013: Mr Jon Lane (1976)

� Chapel Lantern

� Dr Charles Weiss (Praelector)

� Main Picture: Bicycle with sunflowers in Old Court

p. 3� The Master, Professor Tony Badger

p. 5� Double Helix sculpture in Memorial Court

� Law Graduands Max Evans and Sophie Shaw withFellow Dr Kirsty Hughes (centre)

� Lecture in the Gillespie Centre

p. 11� Choir Rehearsal

� MCR Pumpkin Carving

� 1st Women’s VIII Headship row(Credit: Henry Elkington)

p. 13� Fellows’ Garden

� Rebecca Blaylock (Schools Liaison Coordinator)

� Autumn view from Queen’s Road

p. 15� Donald Hearn (outgoing Bursar)

� The Avenue

� Paul Warren (incoming Bursar)

p. 17� Plaque on the Richard and Wendy Music Room

� Main Gate on Gala Day

� Francisca Malarée (Development Director)

p. 19� Sports Camp 2013

� Catering supervisor, Bonna Serra Slone receivingan award at the 2013 Cambridge CulinaryCompetition

� College and University flags

� Main Picture: Clare Bridge

Page 20: Clare College Annual Report 2012-13

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