No.127
immigrants. Jun Cap Prae, Editor of
The Wykehamist 58-59, Russian Prize,
Gymna (captain) Gold Medal 1959,
Athletics. Scholarship, Trinity Hall,
Cambridge 1959-62, 1 Natural Science
Part 1 and 2 Chemistry Part 2. He
remained at Trinity Hall as a Research
Scholar 1962-65. PhD in Organic
Chemistry 1965. During this time he
supervised some deaf undergraduates,
an experience which prompted him to
explore ways of teaching and learning.
He won a Fullbright Scholarship and
did research at University of Illinois
in Educational Technology 1965-67.
During this time he devised special
‘Programmed Learning’ courses in
Maths to assist students from city-
ghetto schools to prepare for university-
level work. He then went to the
newly formed Centre for Educational
Technology at the University of Sussex
1967, where he remained for the rest
of his working life, rising to become
Professor of Education 1986 and then
became Emeritus Professor in 2006.
During his time there, he supervised
50 PhD students and was Director
of the Institute for Continuing and
Professional
Education
1986-91.
Under his leadership, the Institute
prospered and established a ground-
breaking Diploma in Educational
Technology. He researched and
published many books about Learning
in the Workplace, including Developing
Professional Knowledge and Competence
in 1994. Although a workaholic, he
was always ready to support his sons on
the sports field and his wife’s musical
endeavours – both performing and
teaching. He was a renowned educator
who leaves a legacy in the relationship
between Learning in the Workplace
and Professional Development, which
has global significance. Survived
by Cynthia, his wife of 54 years,
and their two sons.Evelyn Gervase
Carson Hulbert (D, 55-60): died
22.11.2018. Son of JHH (D, 26-31) and
brother of JALH (D, 53-57). Institut
Britannique, Université de Paris.
He pursued a career as a chartered
accountant at Moore Stephens, rising
The Trusty Servant
to be Chairman of Moore Stephens
International
1989-2000.
Early
postings included Bermuda 1968-69
and Athens 1970, and then significant
work through the late 1980s across the
collapsing Soviet bloc to establish the
first professional Western firm of any
kind in Warsaw since the War, while
Poland was still communist. This led
to Moore Stephens opening firms
in Russia, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria
and other satellite states. He was also
instrumental in opening a firm in
China. He was appointed OBE for
services to the accounting profession.
Throughout his life he loved classic
cars and competed in many sprints,
hill climbs and concours d’elegance in a
variety of classic Aston Martins and
Jaguars. He also enjoyed many trips
to European race circuits with family
and friends. In later life, he became an
avid researcher of family history, and
Treasurer of AISPA, a role he much
enjoyed. He is survived by Susannah,
his wife of 50 years, and their two
sons.
Aubrey Philip Lydiat Halford (later
Halford-MacLeod) (G, 55-60) died
31.8.2018. Brother of JRSH-M (G, 57-
62) and TAGH-M (G, 60-64). He was
born in Baghdad where his father
was Third Secretary at the British
Embassy. VIII 1959-60, including
winning the Head of the River. RMAS
1961-62. Commissioned into the Black
Watch 1962. He attended Magdalen
College, Oxford on an In Service
Degree, 3 Modern Languages 1966.
He served with the Black Watch in
BAOR, Cyprus, Gibraltar, the United
Kingdom and Northern Ireland. He
was Adjutant and Training Major 51 st
Highland Volunteers 1971-74. Then
after a tour at HQ BAOR he returned
to 1 BW Commanding A (Grenadier)
Company, where his war-cry ‘Tally
Ho the Grenadiers’ was well known.
He then Commanded Glasgow and
Strathclyde OUTC 1985-87 and was
Chief of Staff, HQ Scottish Division
1988-90 during which time he was the
architect of ‘The Big Blaw’ on Horse
31
Guards Parade – the world’s biggest
gathering of pipers and drummers in
front of seven Royal Colonels. Finally,
he ran the Scottish Division Action
Team, helping those made redundant,
before he retired in 1993. He was for
ten years the Schools Liaison Officer
and the Universities Liaison Officer
for Scotland and was Commandant
of the Black Watch Fife and Kinross
Army Cadet Force Battalion. An
active member of his church, he was
ordained as an elder in the Church of
Scotland and he arranged the formal
re-launch of SSPCK at the Church of
Scotland General Assembly in 2009.
In 1953, he had been given a Britain’s
set of the Queen’s Coronation coach
and he started a collection of lead
soldiers, which later became his great
hobby. Married 1969 Alison Brown,
who survives him with their two sons
and a daughter.
Charles Anthony Lewis Arnold (F, 56-
61): died 17.12.2018. VIII Cox. Trinity
College, Oxford 3 Lit Hum. He first
worked as a merchant banker with
Kleinwort Benson and at 27 became
the bank’s youngest director. He then
became finance director with Unitech
1981. Later he lost his job in the
recession but he met this challenge,
first driving a taxi, then going to France
and selling chateaux to expats. He also
worked in publishing: he spotted a
gap in the market in how travel books
were distributed and started Portfolio
Books Ltd, being a director from 1995-
2006. He worked hard – his numerical
mind knowing the address of every
Waterstones in the country and their
telephone number and how many
copies of travel books in stock. He
published his own book, Mediterranean
Islands. He did not retire but slowed
down and he was still planning trips to
Monaco to sell remote Greek islands to
wealthy yacht owners. He had a great
love of Greece, travel and books and
above all his desire to solve a problem.
Married 1986 Theresa Quartermaine
(marriage dissolved). He is survived by
his partner Marion Fairclough and by
his two sons.