Skip to main contentCambridge University Reporter

No 6557

Wednesday 24 July 2019

Vol cxlix No 39

pp. 836–880

Notices

Calendar (p. 837)

1 October, Tuesday. Michaelmas Term begins. Congregation of the Regent House at 9.30 a.m.: Vice-Chancellor's address and the election and admission of the Proctors.

8 October, Tuesday. Full Term begins. Discussion in the Senate-House at 2 p.m. (see below).

This is the last ordinary issue of the Reporter for the 2018–19 academic year. The first ordinary issue of the 2019–20 academic year will be published on 25 September 2019.

Discussion on Tuesday, 8 October 2019 (p. 837)

The Vice-Chancellor invites those qualified under the regulations for Discussions (Statutes and Ordinances, p. 105) to attend a Discussion in the Senate-House on Tuesday, 8 October 2019 at 2 p.m., for the discussion of:

1. Topic of concern: The University response to the climate crisis beyond divestment (Reporter, 6552, 2018–19, p. 694).

2. Second-stage Report of the Council, dated 12 June 2019, on the construction of a new Heart and Lung Research Institute on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus (Reporter, 6555, 2018–19, p. 806).

Further information on Discussions, including details on format and attendance, is provided at https://www.governance.cam.ac.uk/governance/decision-making/discussions/.

Election of a member of the Council's Finance Committee in class (b) (p. 837)

19 July 2019

The Head of the Registrary's Office has received the following nomination for the Council's Finance Committee, for election in class (b) by the Representatives of the Colleges:

Dr Richard Anthony, JE, nominated by Ms L. M. Thompson, LC, and Dr M. R. Wormald, PEM

No other candidates having been nominated, Dr Anthony, currently a co-opted member of the Finance Committee in class (f), is duly elected to serve as a member of the Finance Committee in class (b) with immediate effect until 31 December 2020.

Notice of benefactions (p. 837)

22 July 2019

The Vice-Chancellor gives notice that he has accepted with gratitude the following benefactions, of which both the capital and the income may be used:

a benefaction of £10m from Viswanathan (Eashwar) Krishnan and Tzo Tze Ang, payable over up to ten years, £7,500,000 of which will be used to support a research facility focussed on the early detection of cancer within a new cancer research hospital, and for priority research areas in cancer, and £2,500,000 of which will be used to support Ph.D. studentships and postdoctoral researchers at Trinity College;

a benefaction of £8m from The Hatton Trust to support the Foundation for Genomics and Population Health (the PHG Foundation) for a period of fourteen years;

a benefaction of £4.5m from Gianna Angelopoulos to support the Gianna Angelopoulos Programme for Science, Technology and Innovation within the Department of Physics for five years; the Programme will focus on the advancement of research in the fields of computational multiphysics and energy materials and related science and technology areas;

• a further benefaction of £2.6m from the LEGO Foundation, payable over five years, to support the Centre for Research on Play in Education, Development and Learning (PEDAL) (see Reporter, 6390, 2014–15, p. 615);

a benefaction of £2.5m from Huawei, payable over five years, to support Ph.D. students studying computer science and information engineering in the Department of Computer Science and Technology and the Department of Engineering, to be named the Huawei Studentships;

benefactions totalling £1.3m from Baillie Gifford & Co, of which £700,000, payable over five years, will be used to support a Programme on Responsible AI within the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence, and £600,000, payable over five years, will be used to support M.Phil. students in Arts and Humanities;

• a benefaction of £1,124,054 from Goldman Sachs Gives (UK) to support the Gnodde Goldman Sachs Translational Neuroscience Group of the Dementia Research Institute within the Department of Clinical Neurosciences, for a period of five years;

a benefaction of £1m from Newton Investment Management Ltd to support the Centre for Endowment Asset Management within Cambridge Judge Business School for a period of ten years;

a benefaction of £750,000 from a donor who wishes to remain anonymous, payable in two instalments, to support a University Lectureship in Palliative Care for ten years;

a benefaction of £682,000 from Sir Harvey McGrath to support the Centre for Social Innovation, including funding for two Harvey McGrath Scholarships, in Cambridge Judge Business School for a period of one year;

benefactions totalling £625,000 from The Pouroulis Foundation, of which £400,000, payable over four years, will be used to support a three-year doctoral studentship and a one-year postdoctoral fellowship on a 'Cyprus in the Eastern Mediterranean' research project, and £225,000, payable over three years, will be used to support a part-time Fellow in African Quaternary Archaeology and Hominin Palaeoecology over the same period, both in the Department of Archaeology;

• a benefaction of 5,000,000 Chinese Yuan (CNY) from Wuershan to support teaching and research in the Department of Social Anthropology, including the Mongolian and Inner Asia Studies Unit;

• a benefaction of £500,000 from the Solenum Foundation, payable over five years, to support the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk (CSER), an interdisciplinary research centre in the Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (CRASSH);

philanthropic grants totalling US$547,145 from The Kavli Foundation, payable over four years; a grant of $208,198 is to support the Kavli Institute of Cosmology's outreach programme including the funding of a Kavli Outreach Officer, and a grant of $338,947 is to support the Institute's Gravitational Waves programme by funding a Kavli Senior Fellowship in Gravitational Waves and two Kavli Summer Schools in Gravitational Waves over the same period. The University has agreed to provide contribution funding totalling £233,164 over the same period;

a further benefaction of £420,000, payable over four years, from the Reuben Foundation, to further support the work of the Cambridge Bursary Scheme in awarding additional bursaries to at least 40 undergraduates, to be known as Reuben Bursaries, and to be awarded over the same period (see Reporter, 6515, 2017– 18, p. 815);

a benefaction of £385,000 from the Goldsmiths' Company Charity, payable over two years, to support the Goldsmiths' Company Charity Legacy Research Programme on Precious Metals for the Jewellery Industry;

a further benefaction of US$464,792 from the Dr Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Medical Research Foundation to support collaborative research across the Wellcome-MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, and Department of Paediatrics, of which $317,280 is to support research by Professor Robin Franklin on the effect of ageing on remyelination potential and $147,512 is to support research by Professor David Rowitch on understanding cellular diversity and age-related repair efficiency in Multiple Sclerosis (see Reporter, 6515, 2017–18, p. 815);

• a benefaction of £360,000 from Sappi Europe SA, payable over three years, to support a fixed-term senior postdoctoral research fellowship within the Prince of Wales Global Fellowship Programme in the Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL), to be named the Sappi Senior Fellowship;

further benefactions totalling £336,682 from the A. G. Leventis Foundation in support of the following projects: to the Cambridge Conservation Initiative for a Programme Manager to develop the CCI Natural Capital Hub (£126,682 payable over two years); and to the Department of Archaeology, to fund a postdoctoral research fellowship in African Archaeology (£210,000 payable over three years);

• a benefaction of £330,000 from Unilever to support a fixed-term postdoctoral research fellowship within the Prince of Wales Global Fellowship Programme in the Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL), to be named the Unilever Research Fellowship;

a benefaction of £328,500 from Fetch.AI to support a research programme on the economics of blockchain technology for a period of three years, by funding a postdoctoral researcher, an annual conference, and a series of fora and dinners focused on the programme's key research themes;

a benefaction of up to £320,000 from Merky Foundation Limited to support four University scholarships, two beginning in 2018 and two beginning in 2019, to encourage black students to apply to the University in order to address the under-representation of black undergraduate students, to be named the Stormzy Scholarships;

• a benefaction of £300,000, from Paul and Michelle Gilding Pty Ltd, payable over three years, to support a fixed-term junior postdoctoral research fellowship within the Prince of Wales Global Fellowship Programme in the Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL), to be named the Gilding Research Fellowship;

• a benefaction of £300,000 from Cambridge in America, following a donation from Royalty Pharma, payable over three years, to support the Cambridge Academy of Therapeutic Sciences (CATS), which was established in 2017 with the aim of establishing a world-leading platform for collaboration between academia and industry in the development of therapeutics;

a philanthropic grant of £267,607 from the National Heritage Memorial Fund towards the purchase of a marble bust of Queen Victoria by Sir Alfred Gilbert, to be added to the Fitzwilliam Museum's collection;

a further benefaction of up to £258,750 from the Wolfson Foundation to fund three doctoral students for three years as part of the seventh cohort of Wolfson Postgraduate Scholars in the Humanities. The University and the Cambridge Trust have also agreed to contribute funding of £86,250 to enable a fourth scholarship to be offered (see Reporter, 6493, 2017–18, p. 354);

• a benefaction of £250,000 from a donor who wishes to remain anonymous, payable in five instalments, to support the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk (CSER), an interdisciplinary research centre in the Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (CRASSH);

a bequest of £250,000 from the estate of a benefactor who wished to remain anonymous, to contribute to The Regius Professor of Physic Medical Leaders Fund to support medical students in the University;

a further benefaction of £250,000 from ARM to support continuing research in the area of rigorous architecture specification in the Department of Computer Science and Technology (see Reporter, 6493, 2017–18, p. 354);

a benefaction of £250,000 from DeepMind Technologies to support the work of Dr Robert N. M. Watson and Professor Peter Sewell, which it is currently intended will be used to support their programme of research known as RESET (Rigorous Engineering for Secure and Trustworthy Systems) within the Department of Computer Science and Technology;

a benefaction of £250,000 from the Killinchy Hong Kong Settlement for the purpose of supporting the following at the Department of Engineering: (i) the Department's Outreach Coordinator and team; and (ii) the Dyson Centre for Engineering Design, including honorarium payments for postgraduate student supervisors training undergraduate students;

• a benefaction of £250,000 from the Milner Foundation, payable over three years, to support the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk (CSER), an interdisciplinary research centre in the Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (CRASSH);

a benefaction of £211,100 from the H. B. Allen Charitable Trust to support the research of Professor Manohar Bance, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, aiming to localise the sites of damage in different types of hearing loss, and to potentially diagnose previously unknown subtypes of deafness;

a further benefaction of £200,000 from Winton Philanthropies to support the Isaac Newton Institute for the Mathematical Sciences;

a benefaction of US$200,000 from Cambridge in America, following a bequest from Jerome Rowitch, to support development of child health research in the Department of Paediatrics;

an unrestricted grant of US$200,000 from Cambridge in America, following a donation from the Berkeley Existential Risk Initiative, to support the work of the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk;

a benefaction of £150,000 from Mr Jim and Mrs Alys Garman, payable over three years, to contribute support to extend the Insight and Insight+ widening participation programmes within the city of Cambridge;

a benefaction of £148,000 from Mr Alex Callander, payable over two years, to support one M.Phil. studentship and one Ph.D. studentship in Cambridge Judge Business School;

• a benefaction of £143,985.41, the David J. Hall Legacy (via the Fitzwilliam Museum Development Trust) to support acquisition funds within the Fitzwilliam Museum's Department of Manuscripts and Printed Books (MSSPB), as requested by David J. Hall, to be known as the 'David Hall Purchase Fund for MSSPB';

a benefaction of £141,320 from the Canada-UK Foundation to support the Canada-UK Postdoctoral Fellowship Programme in the Office of Postdoctoral Affairs;

a further benefaction of US$170,000 from Microsoft Corporation to support the work of the Microsoft Cloud Computing Research Centre, which is a collaboration between the University's Department of Computer Science and Technology and the Cloud Legal Project at Queen Mary University of London (see Reporter, 6493, 2017–18, p. 354);

a benefaction of US$140,000 from Huawei, which will be used to support research in the Department of Computer Science and Technology, as follows: $90,000 to support Dr Robert N. M. Watson and Professor Simon Moore to further their research on designing micro-architectural solutions for CPU security and for validating the security of those designs; and $50,000 to support Dr Sergei Skorobogatov to research countermeasures for mitigating hardware vulnerabilities in mobile processors;

a benefaction of US$165,371 from Cambridge in America, following a donation from the Deborah Loeb Brice Foundation, to support Art Conservation Studentships in the Hamilton Kerr Institute;

a donation of 75,689 ITV shares (the sale of which has raised £119,039) from Dame Janet Wolfson de Botton to the University Library for the purpose of supporting the following acquisition: Vincent de Beauvais, Miroir hystorial, two volumes, Paris, 1531, from the Library of Michel de Montaigne;

a further benefaction of up to £118,852 from Perennial – Gardeners' Royal Benevolent Society, payable over five years, to support a Trainee Horticultural Technician Programme (one traineeship per year) at the Botanic Garden over the same period (see Reporter, 6353, 2013–14, p. 645);

a benefaction of Swedish Krona 1,350,000 from the Axel and Margaret Ax:son Johnson Foundation for Public Benefit to support the Engelsberg Programme for Applied History, Grand Strategy and Geopolitics in the Department of Politics and International Studies, by promoting research and supporting events in the area of Applied History under the direction of the Forum on Geopolitics, led by Professor Brendan Simms;

a benefaction of £114,700 from the Bosch Research Foundation to support a Ph.D. studentship in the Department of Computer Science and Technology;

a benefaction of £100,000 from the Aldama Foundation to the Fitzwilliam Museum to support the acquisition of Nicolas Largillière's portrait of Charles-Jean-Pierre de Barentin, Comte de Montchal;

a benefaction of £100,000 from Mr Mark Hanson to support a programme of sports services for high performance scholar athletes at the University;

a further benefaction from Ms Claire Barnes to the Department of Zoology, including support for a start-up fund for the incoming Claire Barnes Lecturer in Marine Biology; support for a Wynne-Simmons Studentship in Marine Biology; support for the Claire Barnes Studentship in the Biology and Ecology of Asia; and support for the Claire Barnes Studentship in Marine Biology under the supervision of the Claire Barnes Lecturer in Marine Biology (see Reporter, 6515, 2017–18, p. 815).

The Vice-Chancellor also gives notice that he has accepted with gratitude the following benefactions as endowment:

a further benefaction of up to £5m from the Kavli Foundation as endowment funding, to be matched on a one-to-one basis by 1 December 2026, to support the Kavli Institute for Cosmology and to be added to the capital of the Kavli Institute Fund (Statutes and Ordinances, p. 876), of which matching funding has so far been contributed from Mr Gavin Boyle (£500,000) alongside £3.11m in underlying support from the University of Cambridge;

a legacy of £596,188 under the will of Dr Mary Brenda Hesse to the University of Cambridge, which will be added to the Vice-Chancellor's Endowment Fund (Statutes and Ordinances, p. 1000).

The Vice-Chancellor also gives notice that he has accepted with gratitude a donation from Mr David Cramond to the University Library consisting of eighty letters between William Kemp and correspondents including Charles Darwin and Robert Chambers, dating from 1840 to 1861.

Unregulated fees (p. 840)

22 July 2019

Changes in the fee approval process for unregulated fees

The Council has agreed that, from 2019–20, the Planning and Resources Committee will be the approval body for unregulated fees, therefore Council approval and the publication of a Grace for the majority of routine fee-setting will no longer be required. The decisions on unregulated fees by the Planning and Resources Committee will be reported to the Council through its minutes and through the publication of fees. The approval process will remain rigorous but to a shorter timetable.

The University Composition Fees charged to Home and EU undergraduate students will continue to be subject to approval by Grace and accompanied by an analysis of the costs of an undergraduate education, in accordance with Regulation 12 of the regulations for University Composition Fees (Statutes and Ordinances, p. 151). Additional approval may also be sought for structural changes to fees, such as the introduction of a new band, or a change to the fee agreements between the University and the Colleges.

Unregulated fees for 2020–21

The approved unregulated fees for 2020–21 are available at: https://www.prao.admin.cam.ac.uk/fees/fee-schedules

Board of Scrutiny: Appointments made by the Council (p. 840)

22 July 2019

As there were two unfilled vacancies on the Board following a recent election (Reporter, 6551, 2018–19, p. 667), the Council was asked whether it wished to make appointments to the Board or to ask the Vice-Chancellor to arrange a further election, in accordance with Regulation 3 of the regulations for the election of members of the Board (Statutes and Ordinances, p. 114). Given that an election would have delayed appointments until the Lent Term 2020,1 it decided to ask the Senior and Junior Proctors, both members of the Board of Scrutiny, to nominate two candidates for appointment. The Council, on the nomination of the Senior and Junior Proctors, has made the following appointments in the classes shown, to serve from 1 October 2019 for four years:

Class (c)(i) (a person who has been a member of the Regent House for not more than ten years on 1 October 2019):

Ms Saba Ala'i

Class (c)(ii) (a member of the Regent House):

Dr David James Butterfield, Q

Footnotes

  • 1In accordance with Regulation 3 of the regulations for the election of members of the Council, which regulations also apply to the Board of Scrutiny (Statutes and Ordinances, p. 112).


First-stage Report of the Council on the construction of the National Centre for Propulsion and Power: Notice in response to Discussion remarks (p. 840)

22 July 2019

The Council has received the remarks made at the Discussion on 2 July 2019 on the above Report (Reporter, 2018–19; 6551, p. 684; 6555, p. 809).

Mr Llavero Pasquina raised a number of concerns about the links between the external organisations contributing to the cost of the National Centre for Propulsion and Power and the arms industry, and questioned the real objectives of this project. The external organisations involved are the Aerospace Technology Institute, Rolls-Royce, Mitsubishi and Siemens. The Aerospace Technology Institute was set up by government to help the UK realise the opportunity available of capturing a valuable share of the growing global civil aviation market. Its remit does not allow funding on military projects. The Whittle Laboratory has long-standing research relationships with these organisations. The Council is satisfied that continuing to engage with them, and others, to address the challenge of decarbonising the world's propulsion and power sectors is exactly what the University should be doing. The proposed new Centre will make a significant contribution to this by adding to the University's research capability in this area. As explained by the Director of the Whittle Laboratory in his remarks at the same Discussion, this is the objective of this project. The Council also notes Professor Miller's comments that the Laboratory is not undertaking military research.

Dr Cowley questioned whether the University should be going ahead with this project in view of the relatively limited unrestricted liquid resources available for capital projects over the next five years. The National Centre for Propulsion and Power is one of a limited number of priority capital projects which has been earmarked by the Planning and Resources Committee (PRC) to be part-funded from the available unrestricted funds. The call on these funds for this project is likely to be around £18.5m (subject to the ongoing fundraising campaign to raise £10m) of the total estimated cost of £44m for the project. The Council endorses the emphasis the Planning and Resources Committee has placed on the importance of maximising the external funding for this project so as to reduce as far as possible the call on the Capital Fund. The Council notes that the current Report is the first stage in the process for approving this project. A second Report to the Regent House will follow should PRC recommend, and Council approve, proceeding with construction. As is routinely done, the Second-Stage Report will fully explain to the Regent House how the project is expected to be funded.

Dr Cowley also questioned why the project could not be phased with the accommodation for the National Centre being built initially and the offices and other accommodation to follow as a second phase once additional funding has been secured. Building the project in two phases would be significantly more expensive overall, more disruptive and more protracted than building it in a single phase. The location of the Whittle Laboratory is one of the most prominent on the West Cambridge site. Pre-application discussions with the Local Planning Authority (LPA) have indicated that the LPA would not support a modest shell building to house the National Centre in isolation without the linked 'gateway' building for the offices and ancillary accommodation. The only way to test this definitively would be to submit a planning application for the National Centre as a first phase. This would require a significant re-design to the current scheme and refusal of planning permission would be fatal to the entire project. Innovate UK and the Aerospace Technology Institute regard the current plan for delivery as slow, and only just acceptable in terms of delivering the research capability to the UK. Any further delay would put the project at significant risk and would be damaging to Cambridge's reputation with the Aerospace Technology Institute. The Council is not persuaded that phasing this project is the most appropriate course of action for the (short-term) cost reduction benefit which this might achieve.

The Council is submitting a Grace (Grace 3, p. 863) for the approval of the recommendations of this Report.

Joint Report of the Council and the General Board on the governance of matters for postgraduate and graduate students: Notice in response to Discussion remarks (p. 841)

22 July 2019

The Council has considered the remarks made at the Discussion on 9 July 2019 on the above Report (Reporter, 2018–19; 6553, p. 726; 6556, p. 830). The Council has consulted with the General Board in the preparation of this response.

The Council acknowledges the careful work that the Board of Graduate Studies does, in particular in handling individual cases, but also notes the concerns raised both at the Discussion and during the consultation about overlap between the Board's work and new procedures for student examination and progress appeals.

Dr Cowley and Dr Padman both comment on the role of the Office of Student Conduct, Complaints and Appeals (OSCCA) and suggest that its function is to minimise risk to the University. The revisions made to the procedures over the last 15 years, since the introduction of the Office of the Independent Adjudicator as the external ombudsman, and more recently in the last three years since the introduction of OSCCA, have been to ensure that the University's procedures in relation to complaints and appeals are more transparent and accessible to students. That these measures are working to raise the profile of the procedures, increase engagement and provide more equitable outcomes has been evidenced by the growing numbers of complaints and appeals that have been received and the more consistent remedies that have been applied. The Council is grateful to the small panel of academic decision-makers who volunteer a significant period of time to considering student complaints and appeals and putting in place appropriate and proportionate remedies where necessary.

Mr Collinson suggests that the term 'graduate student' should be retained and applied to all post-undergraduate students. The Council is of the view that the proposed change in nomenclature is appropriate and reflects terminology used widely in the UK HE sector. It also avoids confusion between the status of undergraduates who have graduated from the University and students who are continuing with their studies after graduation from this or another university. Documents and websites commonly used will need to be reviewed and references updated, but the expectation is that this work will be undertaken as part of the regular review and update of material.

The Council agrees with Dr Padman that there is a need for change in the governance arrangements for postgraduate students. However, it does not agree that pushing back the implementation date of changes to Michaelmas Term 2020 would be helpful, particularly as the Report's proposals provide a new, more integrated body which will assume the main responsibilities of the Board of Graduate Studies, including a review of the matters that Dr Padman and others consider to require further thought, and cover transitional arrangements from Michaelmas Term 2019. Given the importance of the proposed changes both for students and academic governance in the University, the Council and the General Board continue to support the central proposals of the Report but have agreed to make the following changes put forward by Dr Padman and supported by others:

(a)to place the Postgraduate Committee formally under the General Board, but still providing its minutes to the General Board's Education Committee to ensure that issues relating to postgraduate students continue to be considered by that Committee; and

(b)to commit to bringing forward a Report to the Regent House on the proposals arising from the review to be conducted by the Postgraduate Committee.

Amendments would therefore be made to the Postgraduate Committee's terms of reference to reflect the change to the reporting line, by replacing references to the Education Committee with references to the General Board. The General Board has also agreed to amend the membership of the Postgraduate Committee in class (d), as suggested by Dr Cowley, which now reads as follows:

(d)three members of the Regent House who have a broad subject balance and who have an interest in research student matters;

The Council is submitting a Grace (Grace 4, p. 863) for the approval of the recommendations of the Report, as amended by this Notice.

23 July 2019

Stephen Toope, Vice-Chancellor

Nicholas Gay

Richard Penty

Sam Ainsworth

David Greenaway

Michael Proctor

Alessandro Ceccarelli

Jennifer Hirst

Andrew Sanchez

R. Charles

Christopher Kelly

Jason Scott-Warren

Sharon Flood

Jeremy Morris

Sara Weller

Anthony Freeling

Edward Parker Humphreys

Jocelyn Wyburd

23 July 2019

Stephen Toope, Vice-Chancellor

A. L. Greer

Graham Virgo

Philip Allmendinger

Ali Hyde

Chris Young

Alessandro Ceccarelli

Patrick Maxwell

John Dennis

Richard Rex

Abigail Fowden

Helen Thompson

Annual Reports (p. 842)

The following Annual Reports have been received by the Council and/or the General Board and are available as indicated:

Estate Management, 2017–18

https://www.em.admin.cam.ac.uk/what-we-do/annual-report-and-facts-figures

Fitzwilliam Museum and Hamilton Kerr Institute, 2017–18

https://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/aboutus/mission (click the relevant link on the right-hand side)

Institute of Continuing Education, 2017–18

http://www.ice.cam.ac.uk/annual-report

Kettle's Yard, 2017–18

https://www.kettlesyard.co.uk/about/ (click the relevant link on the left-hand-side)

University Library, 2017–18

http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/about-library/library-management/annual-reports-library

University Sports Committee, 2017–18

https://www.sport.cam.ac.uk/files/annual_report_2018_v4.pdf

University Combination Room closures (p. 842)

The University Combination Room will be closed as follows:

Monday, 12 August 2019 until 9 a.m. on Tuesday, 27 August 2019 (for annual maintenance); and

Thursday, 26 September 2019 (for a private event).

Retrospectivity concerning the LL.M. Degree (p. 842)