The Trusty Servant Nov 2019 No.128 | Page 28

No.128 Simon Alexander Gourlay (K, 1947-52): died 31.07.2019. Brother of TDG (K, 1942-46) and uncle of ADG (K, 1966- 70) and NTG (K, 1968-72). 2Lt 16/5 Lancers 1954-5; Royal Agricultural College but left after six weeks. In 1958 started farming at Hill House Farm on the English/Welsh border, first rearing beef before turning his hand to dairying and later free-range egg production. Vice President NFU 1982, Deputy President 1984, President 1986- 91. Among the issues he was called to deal with during his time at the helm was the 1988 poultry-industry crisis, sparked by comments by health minister Edwina Currie about potential risks of salmonella associated with eating eggs. A passionate moderniser whose reforms changed the NFU for the better and who displayed unwavering commitment to farmers. Director, Agricultural Mortgage Corporation from 1991; Governor, Harper Adams Agricultural College 1992-99. Knighted 1990. An environmentalist, he passionately wanted the UK to remain in the EU. He was an internationalist, antiwar and an advocate for alternative energy. Married (1) Sally Garman (dissolved); (2) Caroline Mary Clegg, who survives him together with his four sons. Obituaries in Farmers Weekly and Guardian Walter Evelyn Fraser Oakeshott (F, 47-52): died 16.10.2018. Son of WFO (Co Ro, 31-38; HM, 46-54). Soccer XI and VI. National Service with the 13/18 Hussars, with whom he served in the Malayan Emergency. Scholarship, Corpus Christi College, Oxford, 2 Lit Hum. He first worked as a trainee apprentice with Steele Peech and Tozer, during which time he witnessed the stoking of blast furnaces at close range and he handled export contracts for steel strip for rail and railways. He then went back to study at the University of East Anglia, Economics MA 1968. He then joined the Civil Service as Economics Adviser, the Department of Trade and Industry. With the discovery of North Sea Oil, he was closely involved with the economics of gas-gathering pipe lines and the calculation of what speed oil should or should not be extracted. He then The Trusty Servant moved to the Department of Agriculture and Fisheries at the Scottish Office, where he advised on harbour extensions on the Scottish coast and liaised with fishermen on the preservation of stocks and the size of trawlers. On retirement, he became a director of MORI Research Ltd – concerned with economic strategies for sea-water fisheries. As a farmer he regularly produced high-quality malting barley. He was especially proud of his three daughters, who were highly successful in their fields of journalism, political campaigning and fine art and photography. Married 1973 Charlotte Eastwood who survives him with their three daughters. Andrew Walter Loraine Paterson (A, 47-52): 10.2.2019. Father of HALP (A, 82-86). He played golf at school and later for OWGS. Trinity College, Oxford 1953-56 2 PPE. After a brief spell as a teacher he worked for Express Dairies, rising to become Managing Director of the South East Division. In 1977 he decided on a complete change of lifestyle, setting up his own estate-agency business in Oxfordshire. He is survived by Victoria, his wife of 54 years, and their two sons and two daughters. Antony Cowburn Whitaker (H, 47-52): died 26.3.2019. Son of ACW (Co Ro, 42- 69) and father of HWW (K, 76-81) and SAW (K, 81-86). National Service with 3 rd Carabiniers, with whom he served in BAOR 1952-54. Magdalen College, Oxford, 2 Law 1957. He was called to the Bar by Gray’s Inn 1958, serving as a barrister 1958-68. He was then legal adviser, Daily Mirror Newspapers 1968-72 and then for Times Newspapers 1972-2006. When The Sunday Times wrote about a man who survived being swallowed by a python he took the case and wrote, ‘I cannot accept that our published summary was within miles of being defamatory with the possible exception of the python for its unbridled appetite and greed.’ He successfully opposed the Cabinet Secretary’s attempt to prevent The Sunday Times revealing Richard Crossman’s Diaries. During a libel trial in Dublin he was supplied with an armed bodyguard, which he 28 appreciated when one of the witnesses, a member of the IRA, was later killed. In 1997 he was appointed OBE for services to newspapers. Published 2006 The Regicide’s widow about Lady Alice Lisle, the last woman to be beheaded in 1685. He was a member of The Garrick and church warden of St Giles in the Fields. A legal manager who won several notable battles for press freedom. Married (1) 1962 Agnes Rambaut (died 1986) and (2) 1993 Pat Thompson Blair, who survives him with his three sons and two daughters. David James Thouless (Coll, 47-52): died 6.4.2019. He taught himself to read and write and counted to 1,000 to see how far counting went, aged four. 1 st on 1947 Roll. Duncan and Richardson Prizes. His termly reports enthused over his progress in Mathematics, but were less complimentary about his untidy presentation and handwriting. Scholarship, Trinity Hall, College Cambridge, 1 Natural Science pt 1, 1 Physics pt 2. BA 1955. PhD Theoretical Physics at Cornel University. Physicist Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, Berkeley 1958-59. ICI Research Fellow Birmingham University 1959-61; founding Fellow, Churchill College, Cambridge 1960-65; Professor of Mathematical Physics, Birmingham University 1965-77. He then went to the USA and was Professor of Physics at the University of Washington 1980-2003. He won the Maxwell Prize in 1973; FRS in 1979; Wolf Prize for Physics in 1990; and the London Prize for Low Temperature Physics 1994. He was received Ad Portas in absentia in 2011 when Fellows of the Royal Society and British Academy were honoured. He won half of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2016, for work resulting in an entirely new understanding of phase transitions, regarded as one of the 20 th century’s most important discoveries in the theory of condensed-matter physics. Although suffering from dementia he was well enough to enjoy every moment of the Nobel week in Stockholm. Publications include Topological Quantum Numbers in Nonrelativistic Physics 1998. A Nobel laureate whose advances in physics were