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04 October 2016 Vol. 18 Freshers’ Week Edition www.tcs.cam.ac.uk
Best ever year for Cambridge donations “Yours...Cambridge” sum reaches £743 million Armaghan Hallajian News Editor
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Building a home in the Calais Jungle
Learning from butterflies for the clothes of tomorrow
Dr Bill and Weslie Janeway to the Faculty of Economics. Borysiewicz has previously stressed the importance of philanthropy as the foundation of the University’s “academic autonomy”. Using an anonymous gift of £20 million, St. John’s College has been able to launch a “studentship” scheme that replaces the scrapped maintenance grant, gifting a non- repayable sum of £9,750 per annum to students whose household income is below £25,000. This year also saw a £35 million benefaction to Pembroke College from the estate of American inventor and Pembroke alumni Ray Dolby. It is the largest single donation in the University’s history. The college is to use the donation for the construction of new graduate accommodation. Pembroke Master Lord Chris Smith described the donation as an “extraordinary gift”, bringing Pembroke closer to achieving its “vision of an enlarged and enhanced college”. Dr Mohamed A. El-Erian, who donated $25 million to the campaign and also serves as its co-chair, has expressed his delight over the campaign’s success, emphasising the importance of the way in which “Cambridge transforms lives and improves the wellbeing of so many.” Last November, famous alumni, including Ian McKellen, Sir David Attenborough, and Stephen Hawking, gathered at King’s College Chapel to celebrate the launch of the £2 billion appeal. However, the campaign came under fire after it included David Starkey in a campaign video.
he University of Cambridge is celebrating its “most successful fundraising year ever”, raising over £210 million as part of its “Yours… Cambridge” fundraising project. The total raised by scheme now stands at £743 million since it was announced in August last year. The appeal aims to increase the University’s funds, allowing it to keep pace with the greater budgets available to American institutions and remain competitive on the global stage. The Vice Chancellor, Professor Sir Leszek Borysiewicz, who announced the figure in his final October address, reiterated the value of the “transformative research” facilitated by philanthropy throughout Cambridge. Borysiewicz also made clear that the campaign is especially important at a time of “unparalleled financial challenges”. Whilst the current Vice Chancellor appeared confident in the University’s ability to face what he called “formidable challenges” – namely the consequences of Brexit and the enactment of the Higher Education and Research Bill – adapting to these changes as well as reaching the £2 billion goal will be the task of his successor Professor Stephen Toope who will continue fundraising with events held both in Cambridge and around the world. This year’s total was bolstered by numerous generous donations, including a sum of $27 million from Editorial Comment page 13 →
Cambridge Student
Cambridge scientists key in finding HIV cure Joanna Taylor News Editor
A 44 year-old British man may have become the first person ever to be cured of HIV by a new treatment developed by five UK universities. The London-based social worker, who wished to remain anonymous, showed no traces of the virus after taking part in a 50 person clinical trial. The treatment, a two-stage “kick and kill” attack, was developed by researchers from Cambridge, Oxford, Imperial, UCL and King’s College, London and was paid for by the NHS. Mark Samuels, managing director of the NIHIR Office for Clinical Research Infrastructure, told The Sunday Times that the trial is “one of the first serious attempts at a full cure for HIV”, adding that “the progress has been remarkable”. HIV is usually treated using Antiretrovial therapies (Art), but the virus is able to hide out of the drug’s reach in the immune system’s T-cells, meaning full recovery is not possible. The new method of treatment entails a vaccination to aid the body in locating infected T-cells, followed by a course of the new drug Vorinostat, which awakens dormant T-cells. Those cells then produce HIV proteins to act as homing devices for the immune system. Professor Sarah Fidler, a consultant physician at Imperial, said that there is “good evidence” the drug will work. She added, however, that “we are still a long way from any actual therapy”. More than 100,000 people in Britain live with HIV, around 17% of whom do not know they are infected with the virus. Only one person, Timothy Brown, has ever been cured after receiving a stem cell transplant in 2008 from a person with natural immunity. The researchers plan to continue with medical tests over the next five years. Fidler advises that “we are not recommending stopping Art” but that Belongings are brought back into cloudy colleges, as the annual move-in “in the future, depending on the test marks the start of a new academic year. Image: Stevie Hertz results, we may explore this”.