The Trusty Servant Nov 2019 No.128 | Page 18

No.128 and did not qualify for the 1500 final. Was it also part of the wider education for pupils which he so thoroughly espoused? Hew Bruce-Gardyne (K, 84-89): I had cause to recruit a handful of PhD astrophysicists a couple of years ago. I gave them them Q8, complete with instructions that it be solved quickly and without calculator, and they were flummoxed. I strongly believe that the truly great thing about Win Coll was that it could set such apparently – to the outside world – absurdly high standards. Cocooned within the bubble, we were unaware that said standards were absurdly high, so just set about trying to attain them. I was blissfully unaware that any such war was raging through the Mathmā Department, but we were undoubtedly the better for it. Luke Dolman (C, 85-88): I have, for years, attempted to describe Funky’s mannerisms, general appearance and eccentricities to friends and family, mostly, it must be said, to polite indulgence. However, this indulgence has verged on outright scepticism whenever I have described the occasion on which he fell out of a window. I cannot remember for sure why it was open, or who opened it, but I have a hazy recollection that it was a prank. Funky used to sit folded completely inside the window frame with his back against one side and his feet up on the sill pressed against the other. On this occasion, he leaned back against empty space and fell – my memory is he fell incredibly slowly – backwards with hardly a hint of flailing before hitting the ground outside. This would have been enough to create the legend but it was cemented when he simply got up, walked back through the passageway and carried on with the lesson, as if nothing had happened. You can only imagine my delight at finally being The Trusty Servant able to show written proof to my wife and children! John Woolmer (Co Ro, 63-75): The highly entertaining ‘Algebra Wars’ rather fails to do justice to the serious success of the School Mathematics Project. Its real heroes (from a Win Coll standpoint) were Sir Desmond Lee (Informator) and Tom Jones (long-time head of Mathmā) who, circa 1961, with seven other schools, took the enormous risk of helping to launch SMP. Win Coll was producing many top-class mathematicians and any change of emphasis in its teaching was fraught with dangers. SMP was a bold undertaking, seeking to change the way that Mathmā was taught and understood. The Times (Nov 20 th , 2014) extolled the virtue of SMP while lamenting the decline in the standards of current British text books. I rest my case. ‘Bogling for Ekker’ (TS127) Hubert Montagu-Pollock (Coll, 48-53): On reading Ian Alexander’s article, it occurred to me that the correct spelling of the word that is indeed pronounced as ‘Bogle’ is in fact ‘Bogwheel’. I enjoyed his evocation of cycling freedom up in the chalk downs, which brought back memories of trips to chat to itinerant charcoal- burners near Farley Mount and of long rides to small dusty hot churches in remote parts of Hampshire, the purpose of these being the ringing of bells, once my friend Maurice Keen had managed to get in touch with the various vicars and get their permission. Fortunately for bogling, the amount of motor traffic was minuscule even if we had to use the odd stretch of A road, as this was a couple of decades before Ian’s time. How much long-distance bogling at Win Coll is there now? ‘Tolling: the Golden Years’ (TS127) Leo Aylen (Coll, 47-53): I was Prefect of Hall and Captain of Athletics at Winchester, and I did manage to set 18 up an athletics match in my final summer term. (In the Winchester Steeplechase I had a cramp, and misjudged the gap I had to catch up, and so only came third.) But I did also run cross-country, and kept running until about ten years ago when a knee had to be replaced. (I’m now recovering from the operation on my second knee.) I carried on running at Oxford with the Tortoises, and basking in Bannister glory in the summer of 1957 we challenged Cambridge to a road race. They refused, so we decided to run the 880 miles from Land’s End to John O’Groats instead. We did it in 105 hours, thereby setting a world record. Last year I attended the Oxford- Cambridge athletics match, and was hosted by the Oxford second string for the 800. We discovered that our personal bests were only two seconds apart. Not bad when I was running half miles, 8 yards further than 800 metres, and of course, on cinder with those hideous long spikes! The 2018 first string was quite a lot faster. I was only mediocre at Oxford. But, apart from Bannister, Oxford middle distance then was very strong, and we did have the world-record holder for the half mile at the time. Leo’s account of his world-record run, written for the Oxford Alumni online magazine, can be found at www. wincollsoc.org. Monty Rendall Max Rendall (I, 47-52): I was amused to see Monty Rendall’s radio at Butley Priory (TS126). In the late 1940s my family went to live at Butley with my great uncle, who was in failing health. I may be able to shed some light on the meaning of the Greek inscription, as I am virtually certain that it said ‘The voice of the ether’. He was much given to quotations – usually in Greek.