The University of Leeds Ladies' Club

Autumn 2024

December

Xmas Golf Club 2024

Diary Dates

Tuesday Drop-in Coffee Mornings (10.30am at the Golden Beam, Otley Road, Headingley LS6 1BL)

Photo: Joanne Fox

https://www.universityofleedsladiesclub.co.uk

14th January 13th May 9th September

11th February 10th June 14th October

11th March 8th July 11thNovember

8th April     12th August     9th December (TBC)

Visit the website to see more photos taken at The Golden Beam – and at many other places too!

Thursday 23rd January: Talk at 1.30 for 2.00 at Headingley Golf Club

‘Women and the Baths: Ancient Medicine, Hydrotherapy, and the Female Body in Renaissance Italy’ :  Dr Giacomo Savani (Department of Ancient History, University of Leeds) 

Flyer and booking form for the above have already been circulated.  Bookings should be made with the Club Secretary, Mrs Moira Wallace, by 16th January  

 

President’s Message and Review of the Year    -   December 2024

 

Dear Ladies,

2024 has been a very busy and successful year for the Ladies’ Club but for those who may have missed any meetings or news I have compiled a short Review of the Year which I hope you will find of interest.

We have had a number of very well attended meetings and, of course, in October we celebrated the centenary of our founding in 1924. 

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There have been a number of changes to the general membership. Both Pat Dixon-Lewis and Militza Srivastava have moved to other parts of the country to be nearer their families, and Francoise Logan has returned to live in Switzerland, again to be nearer to her family.  We wish them all every happiness in their new homes. We shall miss them.

Despite losing several long standing members, the overall membership of the Club is booming, with 9 new members in the past year, to whom we send a very warm welcome and we hope that you enjoy your membership and make many new friends.

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As the New Year dawns and we say farewell to 2024, I am conscious that, whilst this has been a good year for the Club and many of its members, nevertheless there are a number of members, and their spouses, who have experienced illness, injury, surgery and loss during the last twelve months.

 

To all those who have experienced loss this year we send our most sincere condolences.

 

To all our members for whom 2024 has been a difficult year, we send our best wishes for happier and more settled times ahead.

 

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Events

 

We have held a number of successful and well supported events during the year.  

 

The popular coffee mornings on the second Tuesday of each month continued at the Lawnswood Arms until February when, due to the closure of the Lawnswood, we had to find an alternative venue.  We moved to the Wetherspoons pub, the ‘Golden Beam’ on the Otley Road in Headingley and this has proved to be an equally popular venue.  So much so that we have continued the regular bookings for the whole of 2025. (See above.)

 

 

 

 

As in previous years, we held a number of events at the Headingley Golf Club in Adel. 

 

  • We held talks on a variety of topics - the History of Origami, in which we all had the opportunity to try our hand at the craft; the history of Spinning in the woollen industry in pre-industrial Yorkshire; what is involved in Television Production and all its complexities and finally, in November a talk on the growth of, and the new developments on, the University campus. (For more information see below).

 

  • In addition to the regular talks, we held several well supported lunches, again at the Headingley Golf Club. The annual Spring Lunch and the Christmas Lunch were both held there and our thanks go to Andrew, Tracy and all their team for the excellent service and delicious food they give us all year round. 
  • Headingley Golf Club Dc 2024

 

Our most prestigious event of the year was, of course, the splendid celebratory afternoon tea held at the Weetwood Hall Hotel at the end of October to mark the one hundredth anniversary of the foundation of the Club in 1924.  55 members and guests assembled on 24th October, one hundred years to the day since the foundation, and enjoyed a sparkling wine reception followed by a most delicious afternoon tea. 

 

We were greatly honoured to receive the good wishes of Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales on the occasion of our centenary.  Her Royal Highness, as Catherine Middleton, is the great grand-daughter of one of the founding members of the Club, Olive Middleton.  

 

Our thanks go to all the staff at Weetwood Hall for making our very special occasion so successful.

For more information, see previous newsletters and for photographs see moving images in our gallery: Centenary Tea

 

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Local and Interest Groups

The Garden group has continued to meet regularly once a month and has covered a number of interesting subjects over the year.  

The Adel and Roundhay local groups have held several, very popular, meetings.  

Both Book Groups continue to thrive and have held a number of monthly meetings, at which lively discussion of the book of the month was followed by lots of tea and delicious cakes! 

Book Club Xmas 2024Book Club 2024 Xmas lunch C Cox's

 

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Monthly Quizzes

 

The monthly quizzes continue to be popular.  Most members are aware that a number of the quizzes are compiled by my husband, Geoff, but not all of them.  My thanks go to Dr Diana Wetherill for sending in so many varied and interesting quizzes throughout the year. I am very grateful for your continued interest and support.  

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Website

Special thanks go to Joanne Fox, for all the hard work she puts in to the ULLC website.  

I am not sure that many members are aware that Joanne, whilst no longer on the committee, nevertheless still maintains and updates this most important PR tool on our behalf.  Without her knowledge the website would not have anything like the quality, or impact, it displays.  

 

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Finally, I would like to send my sincere thanks to all the members of the committee. I am very grateful to you all for your hard work, support and friendship during the year. 

 

Three members have left the committee this year, Gillian Roche, Janet Herbert and Anne Mark and I send the thanks of all the members of the club for your commitment and hard work through the years. 

 

Happily, we welcomed three new members to the committee, Judith Partridge, Diana Bell and Carol Gleisner and I send our thanks to you for agreeing to serve the Club in this way.  I hope you enjoy being a member of the group. 

 

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So, now we look forward to 2025 and a year of new opportunities.  I hope that the New Year brings good times for all.

 

With my best wishes for a Happy, Peaceful and Healthy New Year,

                                                                                                                                                        Carole

Trophy and Tinsel Xmas 2024

Dear Ladies,
I hope this email finds you well and in good spirits as we approach Christmas.  In view of the long Christmas and New Year Holiday, I am sending out in advance the Flyer and Booking form by email for our next meeting at the Headingley Golf Club, which will take place in the TV Lounge on Thursday 23rd January 2025 at the usual time of 1.30pm for 2.00pm.
The talk is entitled, '' Women and the Baths: Ancient Medicine, Hydrotherapy, and The Female Body in Renaissance Italy''.  
It is to be given by a former student of Leeds who has recently been appointed to the University Classics Department staff, Dr Giacomo Savani.  He is a Roman archaeologist, and his research explores the spread and adoption of Roman culture across different spaces and times, focusing on Roman material culture – especially baths and bathing – as a vector and an expression of political, social, and cultural relations.  His talk encompasses the growing interest in women’s contribution to texts, works of art, and cultural strata of society during the Renaissance, despite little attention having been paid so far to the connections between women’s agency and one of the most popular medical practices of the time: bathing. 
Baths and daily exercise were recognised as an essential part of the health routine of the ancients, and this routine was revived by early modern physicians and prescribed for all sorts of ailments. However, recent works on baths in Renaissance Italy dedicate only a few paragraphs to women within broader discussions of aristocratic bathing practices.
Giacomo's talk re-evaluates women’s experience of baths in Renaissance Italy, revealing their prominent role as consumers and patrons of medical treatises as well as users of spas. The focus is on one of the country’s most famous spas: Bagni di Lucca in Tuscany. A detailed survey of the site, together with the analysis of contemporary medical sources, will shed light on the role of the senses in the construction of gender and place-specific medical knowledge and how this influenced female bathing practices in Renaissance Italy and beyond.
His book Rural Baths in Roman Britain: A Colonisation of the Senses is forthcoming with Routledge in 2024.Dr Savani
Book on Roman Baths
Giacomo is a charming and knowledgeable lecturer and I am sure that the afternoon will prove to be a most interesting and enlightening one.
I look forward to seeing as many members as possible at the talk,
In the meantime, may I take this opportunity to wish you all a very Happy Christmas and a peaceful and healthy New Year.
Carole

Newsletter

November 

 

Photo: Joanne Fox

Diary Dates

Thursday 28th November 1.30 for 2.00 at Headingley Golf Club

‘Reflections on the Development of the University of Leeds – from Gothic Revival to Brutalism’:  Robert Sladdin, former Director of Estates, University of Leeds

 

Tuesday Drop-in Coffee Mornings (10.30 am at the Golden Beam (Wetherspoons), Otley Road, Headingley  LS6 1BL

10th December    

Dates from January 2025 onwards to follow

Monday 16th December:  Annual Christmas Lunch at 12.30 for 1.00pm at Headingley Golf Club

Reminder: Bookings, menu choices and payment have to be made by Monday 9th December to Moira Wallace, Club Secretary.  (All details on recently circulated forms)

Thursday 23rd January: Talk at 1.30 for 2.00 at Headingley Golf Club

A talk on Women and Bathing in Classical Times by Dr Giacomo Savani (Department of Ancient History, University of Leeds)  Details and booking form to follow

 

 

Further to the Ribbons article in October Newsletter:

Gill Moore writes: Looking at the names listed on the Ribbons sculpture I realised we have had talks about two of these women.  In  autumn 2010 (when I was President) we had a talk about Isabella Ford, a Suffragist who lived in Adel, given by Janet Douglas, formerly principal lecturer in Politics in the School of Cultural Studies at what was then LMU.   We also had a talk about Lizzie Deignam (Olympic Cycling Silver Medalist) given by her mother Carol Armistead in March 2014.  This talk was arranged by Moira Wallace, a neighbour of the speaker.

CENTENARY TEA

 

 

 As members will be aware, 29th October 2024 was the centenary of the formation of the University of Leeds Ladies’ Club (ULLC). This momentous occasion was marked on the exact 100th anniversary by a “sparkling” Afternoon Tea held in the Jacobean Suite of the Weetwood Hall Hotel, attended by 53 members and their guests. The afternoon began with a glass of Buck’s Fizz when members could mingle and greet friends old and new. We then sat down to a delicious tea of finger sandwiches, warm savouries, scones with jam and clotted cream and assorted small cakes, together with tea or coffee.

Our President, Mrs Carole Tabbron welcomed everyone to the celebration, especially vice-Patron Mrs Jill Dilks and long-standing member Dr Layinka Swinburne, who is now over 90 years old.  The President then announced apologies for absence from several members including Patron Professor Dame Jane Francis and vice-Patron Mrs Margaret Roberts.  Mrs Tabbron sent our good wishes to those members who were unwell and unable to attend.     

 The President then outlined the history of the Club and mentioned that one of the founding members was Miss Elinor Lupton, an ancestor of HRH The Princess of Wales, who had been an active member of the club.  Mrs Tabbron had written to inform the Princess of Wales of our forthcoming centenary.  She then read out a charming letter from the Princess’s private secretary, written on her behalf, wishing us well for the future.  

The President expressed her thanks to those who had helped organise the celebration - Mrs Gill Lydon, Mrs Angie Robinson and Dr Diana Wetherill - and particularly Dr John Lydon for producing the splendid souvenir booklet for the tea.  Thanks were also due to the staff at Weetwood Hall. Mrs Tabbron drew attention to the display of photographs of past events in the room, which many members had provided. 

The President said that, as far as we are aware, ULLC is the only university ladies’ club still in existence. Over the years, the Club has changed and adapted, but we currently have 90 members, only slighter fewer than the 102 members who attended the inaugural meeting in 1924.  Mrs Tabbron then proposed a toast to “the future of the University of Leeds Ladies’ Club”, which was drunk with a glass of Prosecco.

She invited vice-Patron Mrs Dilks to say a few words and to cut the celebration cake. Mrs Dilks told us that she had been a member of the Club for over 50 years and she thanked those who, over the years, had served as President, many of whom were in the room.

Mrs Dilks then cut the magnificent cake, which was beautifully decorated with the University coat of arms and ribbons of maroon and green, the University colours.  A piece was given to everyone, which brought the afternoon’s proceedings to a close.  DMW

Gardening Group:  In October we paid an informal visit to Harlow Carr Gardens on a day when by chance the sun shone in a blue sky and the autumn colours were glorious. We fortified ourselves with refreshments in the recently opened Harrogate Arms Cafe, which is now part of the Gardens, before setting off in small groups to admire the variety of planting schemes and colours which seemed never-ending, all pathways leading to a different view and stunning colours. The fruit and vegetable gardens and the alpine house were also well worth a close look. With so much ground to cover some of us only met others in our party when we reassembled at the cafe for a late lunch. After this further nourishment those of us with time to do so enjoyed investigating what was on offer in the nursery and the shop, and then home. 

 

 Our November meeting was a return to the usual format.  We started with a quick review of a number of recent articles about matters such as the negative impact in the place of origin of plants being imported across the world to feed interior design fashion.  We then looked at photographs of Animals in my Garden.  The creatures featured ranged from slugs and snails to foxes, taking in dragonflies, red lily beetles, hens and many others on the way. This gave opportunity for identification and decision as to what was or was not a desirable garden presence, and why.  Tea and cake and further conversation brought the meeting to an end. Heather Harrison

 

Book Group 2: The feature of our book group that I most appreciate is that we rarely, if ever, agree about our chosen book. This was certainly the case with our October book Autumn by Ali Smith.  Many thanks to Jennifer who had the difficult task of introducing a book with little obvious plot and a distinctly fragmentary and non-chronological nature.  As usual, Jennifer more than rose to the challenge.  The one thing I believe we did all agree on was the brilliance of the descriptive writing, especially the descriptions of nature. On all other aspects there was clear division.  The literary device of repetition of phrases which impressed some of us irritated others almost to screaming point. This was most apparent at the beginning of the chapter describing the atmosphere in the times immediate post Brexit.  Some loved the allusions to the history of the UK such as the Profumo affair while others certainly did not enjoy this. The references to the only female pop artist Pauline Boty evoked a similar response.  Response to the creation of the main characters was similarly divided. I don’t know what we will do if we ever find a book we all agree on.  Probably a complete lack of any discussion and, therefore, consumption of more cake!  Christine Roy

And  Finally………

 

If any members face transport difficulties in attending Club events, they are advised to contact Carole Tabbron or a committee member who will then try to arrange a lift for them (text/phone 07504 001895 or email g.c.tabbron@gmail.com)

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If you haven’t yet seen the photographs taken by Joanne Fox at the very successful Centenary Tea then do go to the University of Leeds Ladies’ Club website.  You may well see yourself there!

https://www.universityofleedsladiesclub.co.uk

 

 

 

Reminder:  the closing date for payment of the 24/25 membership subscription is 31st December after which  membership will be deemed to have lapsed (excluding of course life and honorary members). Payment details in earlier newsletters.  Any queries should be made to Margaret Bradbury, Membership Secretary 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

October 2024

 

President in the Club’s 100th Year: Mrs Carole Tabbron

Carole with Teaparty prog

To the University of Leeds Ladies’ Club

(originally known as the Ladies’ Tea Club)

  Congratulations!

Diary Dates:

Tuesday Drop-in Coffee Mornings

(10.30 am at the Golden Beam (Wetherspoons),

Otley Road, Headingley  LS6 1BL

12th November

10th December

 

Thursday 28th November :

Talk at 1.30pm for 2.00 at Headingley Golf Club

Back Church Lane, Adel, Leeds. LS16 8DW

Reflections on the Development of the University of Leeds – from Gothic Revival to Brutalism’:

Robert Sladdin, former Director of Estates,

University of Leeds

£7.00 per person payable on the door to include refreshments

Bookings should be made with Mrs Moira Wallace (refer to your email for her details).

(Please note that for catering purposes, attendance must be booked no later than 

Thursday 21st November 2024)

 

Monday 16th December:

Annual Christmas Lunch at Noon for 12.30 at Headingley Golf Club 

(flyer and booking form to follow)

 

Details of Spring Programme Events will be in the November Newsletter but one date to save is Thursday 23rd January when Dr Giacomo Savani (University of Leeds) will be giving us a talk at Headingley Golf Club at 2pm.  Details next month.

 

 

The November newsletter will include a report on the Centenary Tea to be held on 29th October, 2024 – and there will be photos on the website.

 

Reports from Groups:

 Book Group 2: 

Our book for September was The Last Testament by Sam Bourne.

On the whole this book had not been a popular choice. I had the ‘privilege’ of introducing it and was one of the few who had actually enjoyed it as a good thriller, although well aware of the aspects others had not liked.  Sam Bourne is the pseudonym of the journalist Jonathan Freedland who is known for his weekly Guardian column and his Radio 4 series ‘The Long View’.  He is certainly well qualified to write a novel focused on the dangerous politics of the Middle East and, although written some years ago, the references are surprisingly contemporary.  Unusually, two of us had abandoned reading the novel. Criticisms included the large number of characters, many with names unfamiliar to the English reader.  The plot was convoluted and the introductory section set in New York, unconvincing.  None of us liked the female protagonist. 

Many thanks to Jennifer Milligan for hosting us.  I can’t think of a better place to have been on such a wet and windy afternoon.  It was lovely to get back together again after our break over the summer although we were missing both Anne Mark and Carole Tabbron who had sent apologies.

Christine Roy

The book chosen for October by Book Group 2 is appropriately Autumn’ by Ali Smith (the first book in her Seasonal Quartet)

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Setting up a second Gardening Group: 

As yet no-one has volunteered to coordinate a second group but maybe….…….? Please let Carole Tabbron or a committee member know if you are interested in doing this. The demand is there.

 

 

News of Members:

Welcome to Mrs Trisha Underwood (Adel) who joined the Club this month.

Reminder:

  24/25 subscriptions (£10) should be paid by December 31st (see earlier newsletters)

 

Newsletter September 2024

Diary Dates:

Tuesday Drop-in Coffee Mornings

(10.30 am) at the Golden Beam (Wetherspoons), Otley Road,  Headingley  LS6 1BL

8th October

12th November

10th December

Bus stop nearby. take Numbers 1, 27, 8 or 6

Tuesdays at Golden Beam

Tuesday 29th October 

Centenary Afternoon Tea at 1pm,

Weetwood Hall Hotel (Jacobean Suite) LS16 5PS

 

Thursday 28th November

A Talk by Robert Sladdin,

former Director of Estates, University of Leeds

 

Monday 16th December

Christmas Lunch 

Details:

Centenary Afternoon Tea: 

Bookings for the Tea have now closed, and I am delighted to say that we are fully booked.  As you are aware, we are restricted on numbers, and so I have now established a ‘Reserve’ list for those members who wish to attend but whose bookings came too late to be included.  I have acknowedged all the confirmed bookings.  In addition, I have advised each additional person if they are on the waiting list and also their position of the list.  We have six weeks to go before the event and I have no doubt that within that time there will be some changes.  Therefore if you have booked and your booking has been acknowledged, and you subsequently discover that you are unable to attend after all, PLEASE could you let me know as soon as possible so that I can offer your place to another member.

 

I am looking forward to seeing you all at the Tea and I feel certain that we will have a most enjoyable, and memorable, celebration of our 100th Anniversary.

With best wishes, Carole

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Talk: Thursday 28th November

This will be held at the usual time of 1.30pm for 2.00 at the Headlingley Golf Club. Refreshments will be served followed by a talk by Robert Sladdin, the former Director of Estates at the University.  The talk is entitled:

  ‘Reflections on the Development of the University of Leeds – from Gothic Revival to Brutalism’

The campus of the University of Leeds contains a number of listed buildings from tombstones in the former Woodhouse Cemetery (now called St George's Field) through Gothic revival buildings such as the Great Hall to the Brutalist Roger Stevens building below:

Robert will take us through the many developments at the University through over 100 years, many of which we have ourselves witnessed as students or members of staff.  The talk promises to be a most interesting follow-up to the Centenary celebrations at the end of October.

Further information will be sent out at the end of October so watch for the details from Carole in your inbox.

 

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Annual Christmas Lunch 

This will take place on Monday 16th December at 12 noon for 12.30 at the Headingley 

Golf Club. Details and booking forms will be sent out at the end of October/beginning of November.

 

 

Garden Group Report September 2024

This month we spent some time on flower identification, based on photographs taken in my garden.  This was both entertaining and useful, and perhaps inspired some future planting. We then moved on to refreshments and further conversation, and made plans for our Harlow Car Gardens meeting.  See below.

 

Garden Group Harlow Car 2024 GG Harlow 2024GG Harlow Car Heather , Audrey

A second Garden Group?

I’m now into my 20th year as Garden Group Co-ordinator and have very much enjoyed being part of such an interested and friendly group of ladies, both active gardeners and the armchair variety.  The membership has been restricted by accommodation at my home which is where meetings usually take place.  Most of the current members have taken the 20 year journey with me, so along the way it’s only been possible to welcome the occasional new member.  I haven’t found it easy to turn down a request to join, and so think that it could be time to find out if someone else would like to set up a second garden/ing related group. 

Members of the existing group have now reached the stage at which many do limited gardening/have a gardener but are still interested in horticulture.  As the years have passed we have embraced matters beyond our domestic gardens to include global issues affecting plant life of all kinds.  Outings take place less often these days, but powerpoint compensates!  Our basic format for meetings has always been a talk, often with photos, interrupted and/or followed by discussion.  I have often been asked what we talk about in Garden Group.  The topics seem endless, although there is some agreement that I could go back to the beginning and start again. Memories flagging and a new take on forgotten subjects?  

The picture below was taken on one of our outings.

( I take the view that any new group should be organised according to the convenor’s interests and those of her members.  It may be that someone would want to establish a group of more active gardeners wishing to share knowledge about practical home gardening.) 

Heather Harrison

 

Any person interested in becoming the co-ordinator of a second Garden Group should  discuss this with Carole Tabbron or a Committee Member.  It is not necessary to actually wield a spade! 

 

Stroll around Roundhay Park – Tuesday September 17th 

Thirteen members of the ULLC met at Tropical World Café, with perfect weather for a stroll.  After coffee and a chance to catch up we set off together.  Members were free to walk at their own pace or to sit and enjoy the colours of Canal Gardens, which at present are stunning. The highlights were the Wooden Sculptures beautifully crafted by Shane Green, a local artist. The two adjacent to Canal Gardens have replaced the carved Totem Pole which was funded by a bequest from Mary Hill, a local resident and park lover. The Totem Pole became unsafe and was removed.

 

After crossing into the main park, we passed the Mansion House with stunning views of the parkland, the cricket pitch, Hill 60 and Waterloo Lake. As we walked round the Upper Lake we saw two further sculptures, but did not venture from the lake to see the other six, which make up the official Sculpture Trail. Perhaps a future walk?

Art Roundhay supported by The Garden Room at Roundhay and Friends of Roundhay Park provided an interesting diversion in The Mansion Conservatory. Discussions took place about which art styles we preferred, and we enjoyed the chance to see the work of local artists exploring different mediums, textures and colours. The theme was nature and landscape inspired by the beauty of Roundhay Park, the Yorkshire coastline and Yorkshire landmarks.

At the Specialist Gardens we were interested to see the new Yorkshire Air Ambulance Reflection & Remembrance Garden, a place for those affected by the work of YAA to remember and reflect on their experiences, or in memory of loved ones. The central installation is a yellow metal pergola which reflects the blades and colours of YAA. It was designed for the Harrogate Spring Flower Show 2024 by Kate Smithson.

As we enjoyed a light lunch back at Tropical World Café, we discussed the history of Roundhay Park. This is well documented and although the park is managed by Leeds City Council, by the decree of Charles Thackray and the Nicholson family, Roundhay Park belongs to the people of Leeds.

 

Cath Potts.

 

 

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Website:

The Club website has been updated with information for 24/25.  Thank you, Joanne.

 

 

Club Subscription;

A reminder that the subscription (£10 for 24/25) was due from September 1st.  Membership will be deemed to have lapsed if the subscription is not paid by 31st December 2024 (unless an Honorary/Life Member, of course!).

 

By cheque: payable to The University of Leeds Ladies’ Club and to be sent to Mrs Margaret Bradbury, Membership Secretary,

Please let Margaret Bradbury know if you have paid online. Refer to your email newsletter for bank details and for her address.