Comment 038.2 October 1989

Page 1

Oct. 89

King's College London newsletter

EE APPOI TS EWPRI CIPAL On Tuesday 10 October Downing Street announced that Her Majesty the Queen was pleased to appoint Profes or J D E Beynon as Principal of King' College London, in succession to Profes or S R Sutherland. Professor Beynon will take up the appointment formally on 1 September 1990, when Professor Sutherland leaves to become Vice-Chancellor of the Univer ityof London. Profes or Beynon is currently Senior Pro Vice-Chancellor at the Univer ity of Surrey, a po t he has held ince 1987, having previously been Pro Vice-Chancellor since 1983. He has been a Profe or of Electrical Engineering at Surrey ince 1979 and was Head of Department betwecn 1979-83. John Beynon was born in 1939. A pupil ofPontywaun Grammar School, Risca, Gwent, he tudied Phy ic at University College, Swansea and then took an MSc in Electronics at Southampton University. In 1962 he joined the then Radio and Space Re earch Station, Slough, as a Scientific Officer. In 1964 he returned to Southampton University as Lecturer in Electronics, being later promoted to Senior Lecturer then to Reader. In 1977 he was appointed to the Chair of Electronics in the Department of Physics, Electronics and Electrical Engineering at UWIST Cardj[[ before moving to Surrey in 1979. He is married, with twin sons at univer ity and a daughter who has graduated and is currently in Australia. In the months before he officially takes up the Principalship Professor Beynon wiB be getting to know King's through a series of informal visits and discu sion . Further details and a profile of the new Principal will feature in future editions. In the meantime the College extends a warm welcome to Professor Beynon and greatly looks forward to the future.

OPPORT

ITY

OCK!

The Principal, Professor Stewart Sutherland, in his customary annual speech to tafÂŁ, welcomed everyone back after the summer break to what he believed would be a lively year. The underlying theme running through the address was one of creating opportunities and using them to the best advantage - a feature which had been much in evidence in College life over the past year. The Principal talked of how King's has continued to build on

its trengths over the la t five years, creating and developing a wide range of academic opportunities. The figures for the number of academic posts filled over the last year reflect this, with 51 posts being filled: 10 Chairs and 41 Lectureships. Success has occurred, he suggested, because of the College as a whole making sacrifices and withstanding difficulties, thus making it possible for money saved through the use of stringent

policies, to be reinvested. An equilibrium had now been established, a remarkable feat for a restructured College, probably unparalleled anywhere else in the University of London. There had also been a number of internal promotions: 2 titular Chairs, 11 Readerships and 5 Senior Lectureships - another sign of the quality of the College and of staff taking the

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