The Trusty Servant May 2020 Issue 129 | Page 24

No.129 Michlā Update The refurbishment is now very nearly complete, although COVID-19 has hampered efforts to deal with some final snags. Pupil Achievements: Academic From the now-customary clutch of gold-medal winners in various olympiads, the following pupils have qualified for the national selection round (top 20 or so): Sean Jaffe (Coll, 16-) in Maths; William Leung (Coll, 16-) and Ben Fawcett (Coll, 15-) in Biology; Max Wong (F, 15-) in Physics; and Peter Brealey (Coll, 15-) in Linguistics. The preliminary round in Chemistry has not yet taken place, but Rtvik Patel (Coll, 16-) will be hopeful, having obtained the top UK mark out of 9187 entrants in round one. Geographer Sam Barwood (C, 15-) will be one of four members of the UK International iGEO team. In the previous edition we reported the school’s best-ever performance in the Senior Team Maths Challenge (9 th ). It has been immediately surpassed by Sean Jaffe, Reuel Armstrong (H, 15-), Max Wong and Rtvik Patel, who came 3 rd out of 1,200 schools this year. The Trusty Servant Doubles and Harry Coombs (B, 17-) has been selected for the U16 London Irish rugby team. Book review Nick Townson (History, since 2016) writes: A new biography of Frank Ramsey (Coll, 1915-20) has been written by Cheryl Misak, describing the experience and achievements of this extraordinary Collegeman, who died in 1930 at just 26. She takes a dim view of Ramsey’s time at Winchester, turning the spotlight on boarding-school brutality and conservatism – it ‘nearly unmade’ him – and provides a vivid account of the austerity of College life during the Great War. Ramsey’s keen intelligence and independence of mind shine through: he thought LM Milne-Thompson (Co Ro, 1915- 21), his Mathematics don, a poor teacher and ‘a bad explainer’, though he appreciated being lent recent works by Louis Couturat. Amidst this bleak picture, Misak does record Monty Rendall praising Ramsey for his ‘eager intellectual outlook’ and genuine concern for social questions, perhaps offering a glimpse of some Wykehamical sympathy and broad- mindedness. Oxford University Press; ISBN 978-0198755357. Treasury & Fellows’ Library Anthony du Boulay (C, 43-46) has donated to Win Coll about 30 pieces of Chinese pottery and porcelain from his own collection. The gift includes examples of Chinese ceramics not well represented in the Duberly Collection, particularly some superb pieces from the Song Dynasty (960-1279 AD). There will be a special exhibition of Anthony’s donation early in 2021, after which it will be on permanent display in Treasury. A full article on the collection will follow in a future edition of The Trusty Servant. To celebrate the 250 th anniversary of William Wordsworth’s birth, the Fellows’ Library has recently acquired a copy of the 1802 third edition of Lyrical Ballads by Wordsworth and Coleridge. The blank leaves at the end of both volumes contain silhouette illustrations by an early reader of moments from the poems. Pupil Achievements: Extra-Curricular Kassian Meier (I, 19-) went undefeated in school fencing fixtures and will represent Germany at the European Championships in Croatia. Felix Townend (B, 19-), Max Lee (G, 18-) and Michael Pan (G, 18-) won golds at the HMC Schools Judo Competition, in which Win Coll finished 2 nd overall. Mario Gianni Garcia (B, 19-), Chris Batten (A, 18-) and Will Cresswell (A, 16-) have been selected for their county hockey teams. Not content with excelling merely at the sports offered at Winchester, Henry Nicholls (A, 19-) and Bertie Vallat (F, 19-) have won the Public School Real Tennis U14 National Richard Foster and Anthony du Boulay 24