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King’s College London Southwark Cathedral 5 & 6 July 2018 Graduation ceremonies

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Page 1: Graduation ceremonies - King's College London · Graduation ceremonies Southwark Cathedral, July 2018 2 King’s College London King’s College London is one of England’s oldest

King’s College London

Southwark Cathedral 5 & 6 July 2018

Graduation ceremonies

Page 2: Graduation ceremonies - King's College London · Graduation ceremonies Southwark Cathedral, July 2018 2 King’s College London King’s College London is one of England’s oldest
Page 3: Graduation ceremonies - King's College London · Graduation ceremonies Southwark Cathedral, July 2018 2 King’s College London King’s College London is one of England’s oldest

Graduation ceremonies Southwark Cathedral, July 2018

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A message from the Chairman of the College Council

On behalf of King’s College London it is my great pleasure to welcome you to this graduation ceremony and to extend a special welcome to those on whom we will be conferring degrees.

These ceremonies are important occasions in the life of King’s and especially significant for all the graduands celebrating their achievements with family and friends. I am delighted that there will be so many supporters here and I know that we are all immensely proud of all those who are graduating today.

King’s maintains strong and ever-growing links with its alumni at home and abroad. In the course of my travels, I look forward to meeting many more of those whose lives and careers have been influenced by their education and experiences at this great university.

I offer heartfelt congratulations to all our graduates and, on behalf of everyone at King’s, greatly look forward to maintaining an enduring and rewarding association in the future.

The Rt Hon the Lord Geidt gcb gcvo obe qso fkcChairman of the College Council

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King’s College LondonKing’s College London is one of England’s oldest and most prestigious universities, providing world-class teaching and cutting-edge research.

It offers an intellectually rigorous environment supported by welcoming and caring traditions. It has more than 31,000 students (of whom nearly 13,000 are postgraduates) from 150 countries worldwide, and 8,500 members of staff. King’s vision is to make the world a better place, building on its heritage of involvement in many of the advances that shape modern life, such as the discovery of the structure of DNA; research that led to the development of radio, radar, television and mobile phones, and key developments in medicine and healthcare including antiseptic surgery and palliative care.

King’s has a distinguished international reputation in the humanities, law, the sciences, psychiatry, medicine, dentistry, nursing, and the social sciences. King’s four Thames-side campuses in central London, and at Denmark Hill, place it at the centre of international conversations in policy, government, law, culture, religion, business and medicine.

Twelve people from King’s and its associated institutions have been awarded the Nobel Prize, including Professor Peter Higgs CH (for his proposal of the Higgs boson); Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu for his role in the anti-apartheid campaign in South Africa; Professor Sir James Black (1924-2010) for the development of life-saving drugs; and Professor Maurice Wilkins (1916-2004) for his work on the structure of DNA.

King’s College London was founded within the tradition of the Church of England by King George IV and the Duke of Wellington in 1829. When the University of London was established in 1836, King’s became one of its two founding colleges. In the course of its history it has grown and developed through many mergers, including those with Chelsea and Queen Elizabeth Colleges in 1985; with the Institute of Psychiatry in 1997,

and with the United Medical and Dental Schools of Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospitals in 1998. These mergers brought institutions with their own distinguished reputations and traditions into King’s. The Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience is closely associated with the South London and Maudsley NHS Trust which includes the famous Bethlem Hospital dating from the 13th century. The Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing, Midwifery & Palliative Care is directly descended from the world’s first professional school of nursing, founded by Florence Nightingale at St Thomas’ in 1860.

Since the 1990s King’s academics have been involved in the education of the UK Armed Services, and the Defence Studies Department is based in the Joint Services Command and Staff College in Shrivenham, Wiltshire.

While remaining part of the University of London, King’s has enjoyed financial and academic autonomy since 1994. Since 2008 it has awarded its own degrees.

King’s College LondonGuy’s, King’s & St Thomas’ School of Medical Education and Dental Institute

Reggie The silver replica of the King’s mascot, Reggie the Lion, which is used at ceremonial events such as degree ceremonies, was presented to King’s in 1959 ‘in appreciation of many happy years’ by Robert John Stewart McDowall (1892-1990) who was the King’s College London Halliburton Professor of Psychology from 1923 to 1959.

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Guy’s, King’s & St Thomas’ School of Medical Education and Dental InstituteThe GKT medical and dental schools were formed by the merger in 1998 of the United Medical and Dental Schools of Guy’s & St Thomas’ Hospitals and King’s College London.

St Thomas’ Hospital dates from the 12th century, and medicine has been formally taught there since the 16th century. Guy’s Hospital has offered medical education since the Hospital opened in the early 18th century, and dental education since Guy’s became the first general hospital in the country to establish a dental school, in 1888. The original King’s College School of Medicine was founded in 1831, and King’s College Hospital was established in 1840. The medical school separated from King’s College in 1910 at about the time that the hospital moved from central London to Denmark Hill, and then re-merged with the College in 1983.

The GKT School of Medical Education is now part of the Faculty of Life Sciences & Medicine at King’s, which has more than 6,100 students of whom some 1,800 are postgraduates, while the Dental Institute has nearly 1,300 students, including more than 500 postgraduates.

Alongside the NHS foundation trusts of Guy’s and St Thomas’; King’s College Hospital and South London and Maudsley, King’s College London is part of King’s Health Partners Academic Health Sciences Centre: a pioneering global collaboration where world-class research, education and clinical practice are brought together for the benefit of patients. The university is also a founder member of the Francis Crick Institute, a biomedical discovery institute bringing together six of the UK’s most successful scientific and academic organisations to understand the fundamental biology underlying health and disease and to translate discoveries into new ways to prevent, diagnose and treat major illnesses.

Many famous dental and medical practitioners have taught at Guy’s, King’s and St Thomas’. Newland Pedley, founder of the Guy’s Dental Institute, was the first dental surgeon to accompany British troops in a war zone, during the Boer War, while Sir William Kelsey Fry led the development of maxillofacial surgery in World War I. The Romantic poet John Keats qualified as an apothecary or general practitioner at Guy’s in 1816. Lord Lister, known as ‘the father of modern medicine’, pioneered antiseptic surgery at King’s later in the century. Thomas Addison, Richard Bright and Thomas Hodgkin, after whom Addison’s, Bright’s and Hodgkin’s diseases are named, worked at Guy’s. Winners of the Nobel Prize include Professor Charles Barkla, pioneer of X-ray spectroscopy; Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins, who made important discoveries about vitamins; Sir Charles Scott Sherrington, landmark researcher on the nervous system, and Dr Max Theiler who developed a vaccine for yellow fever. Dame Cicely Saunders, founder of the modern hospice movement, trained as a doctor at St Thomas’, and her work is continued through the Cicely Saunders Institute of Palliative Care, Policy & Rehabilitation at King’s, opened in 2010.

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A message from the President & Principal

These are very special occasions for our new graduates and also for the family members and friends who have helped and encouraged them on the exacting journey required to obtain a degree from one of the world’s great universities. It is also a notable day for the King’s community, which prides itself above all else on the achievements of its graduates.

King’s College London is a world-leader. Rated among the world’s top 25 universities, it is ranked sixth in the UK for the quality and quantity of its research activity and 11th in the world for its international performance and outlook. Building upon this impressive legacy, King’s has the opportunity to strengthen its position still further for both education and research, and to become a London university second to none. The King’s Strategic Vision 2029, published in 2017, demonstrates how King’s will move towards its 200th anniversary as a world-class university with a truly global perspective, dedicated to finding solutions to the world’s most pressing challenges and to developing its future leaders. King’s is proud to produce talented and insightful graduates, with strong analytical and thinking skills combined with wisdom, character and responsible mind-sets.

London is one of the world’s greatest cities, and King’s has recently strengthened its base here by acquiring four distinguished historic buildings in the Aldwych, including Bush House (the former headquarters of the BBC World Service). Our move into this high-quality and prestigious space represents a defining moment in our history by providing a home for the new King’s Business School, formally opened in November 2017 by the Governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, and enabling us to create a modern and integrated campus in the heart of London.

I extend my warmest congratulations to today’s new King’s graduates, and I am confident that you will give us cause for great pride in the years ahead. I am delighted to welcome you into the King’s community of more than 185,000 alumni, living on all continents, and I send you my very best wishes for your future and for your continuing links with King’s. I hope you will all enjoy the ceremony today.

Professor Edward Byrne acPresident & Principal

A very warm welcome to you all to King’s July 2018 degree ceremonies.

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News in brief

Julia Gillard chairs Women’s Leadership InstituteThe King’s Institute for Women’s Leadership, launched in April, is working to address the reasons why women face significant barriers to progress at every stage of their careers and continue to be under-represented in leadership positions. Chaired by Julia Gillard, the only woman to have served as Prime Minister of Australia, it will bring together rigorous research, practice and advocacy to better understand and address women’s under-representation: why they make up just 23 per cent of national parliamentarians, 26 per cent of news media leaders, 27 per cent of judges, 15 per cent of corporate board members, and nine per cent of senior IT leaders. ‘The Global Institute will help to create a world in which being a woman is not a barrier to becoming a leader in any field, nor a factor contributing to negative perceptions of an individual’s leadership,’ Julia Gillard commented.

Cycle and stay youngLess than half of over 65s do enough exercise to stay healthy, but new research proves that staying active keeps the ageing process at bay. Researchers at King’s and the University of Birmingham tested 125 amateur cyclists aged 55 to 79 (84 men and 41 women) and compared them with adults who did not take part in regular physical activity. The study showed that the cyclists did not increase their body fat or cholesterol levels with age; that there was no dramatic loss of muscle mass and strength; that the men’s testosterone levels remained high, and that the cyclists’ immune system also seemed to defy the typical ageing process, with the cyclists producing as many T cells as a young person.

5G technology for disaster zonesAcademics from King’s are at the forefront of cutting-edge research into 5G technology, and have shown how it could be used to control drones to provide aid in disaster scenarios. A fleet of drones was launched at King’s Strand Campus from the USA by Verizon, on a dedicated 5G network slice within BT’s network. The 5G network, hosted at King’s, is a prototype of Ericsson research. Drones controlled using 5G technology could be used to respond to disasters by delivering equipment, medicine, food, water and blood or for the rapid deployment of a temporary cellular network to areas that are difficult to reach.

Early Islamic professor King’s rich multicultural heritage has been recognised after a mosque founded by a nineteenth-century professor, Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner, was awarded grade I listed status earlier this year. The Shah Jahan Mosque, built in Woking in 1889, was Northern Europe’s first purpose-built mosque. Leitner was born in Budapest, Hungary in 1840 in a Jewish family, was brought up as a Protestant Christian and became a gifted linguist. He came to England to study at King’s and, at just 21, became Professor of Arabic with Mohammedan Law. He went on to become Principal of the Government College at Lahore, an expert on Kashmir and, in 1883, founder of the Oriental Institute in Woking – a centre for the study of the culture and history of India and the Islamic world, including the Shah Jahan Mosque. Leitner was an early advocate of what is now termed ‘multiculturalism’, many decades ahead of its time.

Tea and snacks erode teeth Sipping hot fruit teas and snacking on salt and vinegar crisps can lead to tooth erosion, King’s scientists have found. Drawing on a study at Guy’s Hospital that compared the diet of 300 people with severe erosive tooth wear and 300 people without, the study found that those who consume soft drinks, water with a slice of lemon or hot fruit-flavoured teas, between meals, are more than 11 times more likely to have moderate or severe tooth erosion, which affects more than 30 per cent of European adults. This figure was halved when drinks were consumed with meals. The study also found that sugar-free soft drinks are as erosive as sugar-sweetened ones, and that drinks are more likely to cause tooth erosion when served hot.

King’s Business School opensKing’s Business School, the university’s ninth and newest faculty, opened in 2017. The School’s vision is to set a new direction for business education and research, combining the agility of a start-up with the heritage of King’s, and to build the UK’s premier undergraduate business school in conjunction with top quality specialist master’s programmes. With an emphasis on relevance and diversity, the faculty fosters an entrepreneurial mind-set in students ready to embrace the opportunities and challenges facing business and society. The Business School is housed in the centre block of Bush House, the former headquarters of the BBC World Service. This location on Aldwych, mid-way between the governmental headquarters of Westminster, and the City of London, provides an ideal hub for King’s engagement with business, the City, start-ups and government.

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Sleeping longer leads to healthier dietSleeping for longer each night is a simple lifestyle intervention that could help reduce the intake of sugary foods and lead to a generally healthier diet, according to a study led by King’s Department of Nutritional Sciences. The randomised controlled trial looked at the feasibility of increasing sleep hours in adults who typically slept for less than the recommended adult minimum of seven hours. Twenty-one of the 42 participants undertook a 45-minute sleep consultation which aimed to extend their time in bed by up to 1.5 hours per night, with the other participants receiving no advice. Researchers found that extending sleep patterns resulted in a 10-gram reduction in the reported intake of the ‘free’ sugars that are added to foods by manufacturers or in cooking at home, as well as sugars in honey, syrups and fruit juice.

Avatar therapy for schizophreniaAn experimental therapy involving a face-to-face discussion between a person with schizophrenia and an avatar representing their auditory hallucination may help reduce symptoms when provided alongside usual treatment, according to a study led by the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience at King’s. It found that avatar therapy was more effective at reducing hallucinations at a 12-week follow-up, than a form of supportive counselling adapted specifically for the study. Some 60-70 per cent of people who have schizophrenia experience auditory hallucinations that are typically insulting and threatening. This study involved 150 patients who had had schizophrenia for approximately 20 years

and heard three or four voices on average. Patients worked with the therapist to create a computerised simulation (avatar) of the voice they most wanted to influence, and then spoke face-to-face with the avatar: practising standing up to it and taking control of the conversation. The avatar came to recognise the patient’s strengths and good qualities, and the patient’s greater control and power in the relationship.

First rights guide for new home buyersThe Centre for Construction Law at The Dickson Poon School of Law at King’s has partnered with The HomeOwners Alliance, Britain’s only consumer group for homeowners, to publish the first consumer rights guide for new home buyers. The new-build sector is fraught with issues: from complicated contracts and unfair leasehold agreements, to poor quality work and restrictive covenants, and many buyers do not know what their rights are. The 28-page guide, Buying a new home: your rights explained, is for the first buyers of an off-plan new home from a developer. It clearly explains the process of buying a new home; the rights of buyers; how to complain when things go wrong; how to resolve disputes with developers, and how to make a claim through the warranty.

Early finger bone rewrites historyAn 88,000-year-old finger bone belonging to an early modern human has been discovered in Saudi Arabia, placing Homo sapiens in the region nearly 30,000 years earlier than expected. The bone was found by a small team including King’s geographers who were looking for fossils on dried-up lakes, which they had mapped

using satellite imagery. The bone was found somewhat fortuitously when the team’s driver discovered hundreds of fossils lying on the surface. The team immediately suspected that the finger bone was human and knew it was old, as it was found with the remains of a giant cow that has long been extinct, but in order to confirm its age and that it was human, Isotope analysis was needed, together with a 3D scan of the bone and a comprehensive analysis comparing it with other finger bones from humans, primates and Neanderthals.

New genes for hair colour discoveredThe largest-ever genetic study on pigmentation, led by King’s and Erasmus MC University Medical Center Rotterdam, has discovered 124 genes that play a major role in determining human hair colour variation. The discovery shows the genetic complexity underpinning variations in human pigmentation, and could advance knowledge of conditions linked to pigmentation, such as skin, testicular, prostate and ovarian cancers and vitiligo. The new findings are also relevant for forensic sciences. Researchers analysed DNA data from almost 300,000 people of European descent, and identified 124 genes involved in the development of hair colour, of which more than 100 were not previously known to influence pigmentation. It found that women have significantly fairer hair than men, which reflects how important cultural practices and sexual preferences are in shaping our genes and biology.

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Programme

MEMBERS OF THE COLLEGE COUNCIL

CHAIRMAN OF THE KING’S COLLEGE

LONDON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

Emeritus Professor Chris Hamnett FKC

TEACHING AWARD WINNERS 2017-18

NEW FELLOWS & HONORARY FELLOWS

2017-18

PRESIDENT & PRINCIPAL

Professor Edward Byrne AC DSc MD FRACP FRCPE

FRCP FTSE

CHAIRMAN OF THE COLLEGE COUNCIL

The Rt Hon the Lord Geidt GCB GCVO OBE

QSO FKC

Procession

The organ will play and the company is requested to rise during the procession and to remain standing until the Chairman of Council is seated. The procession has 12 categories: in those with plural components the procession will comprise those able to be present and will not necessarily constitute full membership.

MEMBERS OF ACADEMIC STAFF

SENIOR OFFICERS

Director of Students & Education Tessa Harrison BA PGDip FAUA

PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENTS’ UNION

Momin Saqib

DEAN OF KING’S COLLEGE LONDON

The Reverend Canon Professor Richard Burridge MA PhD FKC

DEANS OF FACULTY

Dental Institute Professor Mike Curtis BDS MA PhD FDSRCS (Eng)

PGCAP PGDipAP NTF

Life Sciences & Medicine Professor Richard Trembath FRCP FMedSci

VICE PRESIDENTS & PRINCIPALS

Senior Vice President & Provost (Health)

Professor Sir Robert Lechler PhD FRCP FRCPath

FMedSci FKC

Senior Vice President & Provost (Arts & Sciences)

Professor Evelyn Welch MBE BA PhD FRHS FRSA FKC

Senior Vice President (Quality, Strategy & Innovation)

Chris Mottershead BSc MSc

Vice President & Vice-Principal (London)

Deborah Bull CBE

Vice President & Vice-Principal (Education)

Professor Nicola Phillips BA MSc PhD FAcSS

Vice President & Vice-Principal (International)

Professor ‘Funmi Olonisakin (Interim)

Vice President & Vice-Principal (Research)

Professor Reza Razavi Vice President & Vice-Principal (Service)

Professor Jonathan Grant PhD

Presentees and guests are reminded that, out of consideration to their fellow guests, the taking of photographs or videos during the ceremony is not permitted.

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Welcome Sub-Dean and Canon Pastor, Michael Rawson Canon Missioner, Jay Colwill Senior Chaplain, William Sharpe

The opening address The President & Principal

Presentation of medallists The Wellington Medal is awarded annually to the most outstanding undergraduate of their year, chosen by the university. The medal commemorates the role of the 1st Duke of Wellington in the foundation of King’s College London and is presented by the current Duke of Wellington HonDLitt, who was Chairman of King’s from 2007 to 2016.

Jelf Medals are awarded to undergraduate students nominated by the faculties of the university as having made a significant academic and social contribution to the King’s community. This endowment was established to commemorate the services to the university by the Reverend Richard Jelf, who was Principal of King’s from 1844 to 1868.

The GKT School of Medical Education Gold and Silver Medals recognise the most outstanding academic achievements by our medical students in their final examinations. The winner of the Gold Medal is also awarded the Haberdashers’ Prize. The Haberdashers’ Company has been connected with St Thomas’ since 1622 when a member, Roger Jeston, established a fund – The Jeston Charity – which is associated with the Hospital. The Haberdashers’ Prize marks the close links between the Company and the GKT School of Medical Education.

Presentation of graduands

Presentation of Teaching Excellence Award winners 2017-18 The Teaching Excellence Awards are awarded to members of academic staff of the university, in recognition of their outstanding contribution to the teaching and learning experience of the students, and nominated by the students themselves.

Response on behalf of the students

The duties of a doctor

Standards for dental professionals

Address by the Dean of Faculty

Presentation of Fellows & Honorary Fellows 2017-18

The closing address The Chairman of the College Council.

The company rises for the National Anthem and remains standing until after the procession has left.

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The duties of a doctor

Now that I am about to enter the noble profession of medicine, I solemnly commit myself to observing its highest standards and traditions to help patients trust doctors with their life and health.

In caring for patients and in the pursuit of scientific knowledge, I shall at all times act in ways which show respect for human life and dignity.

• I shall make the care of my patient my first concern and protect and promote the health of patients and the public.

• I shall provide a good standard of practice and care, keeping my professional knowledge and skills up to date and working within the limits of my competence.

• I shall work with colleagues in ways that best serve patients’ interests, treating patients as individuals, politely and considerately and respecting their dignity and right to confidentiality.

• I shall work in partnership with patients, listening to their concerns and preferences, giving information in a way they can understand, respecting their right to reach decisions with me about their care and supporting them to improve and maintain their health.

• I shall be honest and open and act with integrity, not putting patients at risk or discriminating unfairly against patients or colleagues and never abusing my patients’ trust in me or the public’s trust in the profession.

• I shall be personally accountable for my professional practice and always prepared to justify my decisions and actions.

• I shall carry out my professional duties, including teaching and research, with honesty and integrity.

• By an honourable life in the service of humanity, I shall bring credit to this university and to those who have taught me.

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Standards for dental professionals

Patients must be able to trust the dental profession. To justify that trust, we as a profession have a duty to maintain a good standard of practice and care.

Now that I am about to enter the profession of dentistry, I solemnly commit myself to observing the highest standards and traditions expected of all healthcare professionals.

• I shall make the care of the patient my first concern, and protect and promote the health of patients and the public.

• I shall always act, and work with colleagues, in ways that serve patients’ best interests.

• At all times, in carrying out my professional duties I shall be honest, open and act with integrity.

• I shall endeavour to maintain the highest standards of professionalism, clinical practice and patient care.

• I shall respect patients’ rights to reach decisions with me about their care, and support them to improve and maintain their health.

• I shall be personally accountable for my professional practice and always prepared to justify my decisions and actions.

• By an honourable life in the service of humanity, I shall bring credit to this university and to the profession.

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New Fellows & Honorary Fellows

Dame Geraldine AndrewsDame Geraldine Andrews, the Hon Mrs Justice Andrews, is the first woman graduate of King’s to be appointed a High Court Judge. She has been an active supporter of King’s law students for many years, and was a founding governor of the King’s College London Bar Society.

Professor Roderick BeatonProfessor Roderick Beaton is a pre-eminent scholar of modern Greek history, culture and literature, and Director of the Centre for Hellenic Studies, who has held the Koraes Chair of Modern Greek & Byzantine History, Language & Literature at King’s with great distinction for 30 years.

Professor Dinesh Bhugra cbeProfessor Dinesh Bhugra is one of the best-known psychiatrists in the world and has raised the profile of psychiatry and psychiatrists across medicine both nationally and internationally. He is Emeritus Professor of Mental Health & Cultural Diversity at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neurosciences at King’s.

Professor Prokar DasguptaProkar Dasgupta is Professor of Robotic Surgery & Urological Innovation at the MRC Centre for Transplantation at King’s College London and the Urology Centre at Guy’s Hospital and Chairman of the King’s-Vattikuti Institute of Robotic Surgery.

The Reverend Tim Ditchfield The Reverend Tim Ditchfield has made a very great contribution to the life of King’s since the mid 1990s, working at the forefront of the expansion of the Chaplaincy to provide pastoral resources and welcoming spaces to all members of the university, irrespective of belief or background.

Professor Paul EllisProfessor Paul Ellis has been an outstanding member of the King’s College London and King’s Health Partners community. As Professor of Cancer Medicine at King’s and Consultant Medical Oncologist at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, he has led the field of research into novel therapies in breast cancer management.

Matt FergusonMatt Ferguson has worked with academics and colleagues tirelessly over the past decade to raise more money for King’s than almost any other individual fundraiser in the UK. His work is widely regarded as distinguishing King’s as a centre of excellence in big gift philanthropy.

The Very Reverend Canon Professor Martyn PercyThe Very Reverend Canon Martyn Percy is the 45th Dean of Christ Church, Oxford. A theologian and a sociologist, he completed his doctorate at King’s in 1993 and has been a Visiting Professor of Theological Education here since 2004.

The following have been awarded a Fellowship of King’s College London:

The following have been awarded a Fellowship of King’s College London:

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New Fellows & Honorary Fellows

The following have been awarded an Honorary Fellowship of King’s College London:

The following have been awarded a Fellowship of King’s College London:

Professor Ajay ShahAjay Shah is the James Black Professor of Medicine and BHF Professor of Cardiology at King’s and is widely recognised as one of the world’s leading cardiovascular scientists and research leaders.

Professor Chris ShawChris Shaw is Professor of Neurology & Neurogenetics, and Head of the Department of Basic & Clinical Neuroscience at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience of King’s, and Director of the Maurice Wohl Clinical Neuroscience Institute.

Professor Til Wykes dbeDame Til Wykes is Professor of Clinical Psychology & Rehabilitation and Vice-Dean for Psychology & Systems Sciences at the King’s Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neurosciences. She is a practising clinical psychologist and an international leader in understanding and advancing the rehabilitation and recovery of people with severe mental illness.

Professor Carl M BenderCarl M Bender is a world-renowned mathematical physicist and Distinguished Professor of Physics at Washington University in St Louis, Missouri. He has had a close association with the Department of Physics at King’s over a number of years.

Yvonne Coghill cbeYvonne Coghill is Director of Workforce Race Equality Standard Implementation for NHS England. She has made a lasting impact in the acute, mental health and primary care sectors, and in service delivery and improvement; organisational change, and leadership development.

Councillor Jacqui Dyer mbeJacqui Dyer is a London Borough of Lambeth Councillor. Her advocacy for mental health and the concerns of the local Black and Minority Ethnic community reflect key aspects of King’s Strategic Vision 2029 and King’s Health Partners agenda, and make her an ideal ambassador for King’s.

Hussain ManawerHussain Manawer is a powerful campaigner for mental health, a poet whose work reaches world presidents, princesses, professors and prisoners. He uses his gifts and his own experience of mental illness to disseminate mental health education and combat stigma.

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Academic dress

Until 2008 King’s graduates wore the academic dress of the University of London which, like all academic dress, is based on mediaeval costume. Graduates of the University of London have been formally presented to the Chancellor of the University since 1849, and the first public presentation ceremony of the University was held in King’s Great Hall in 1850. From 1903 to 1992 this University ceremony was continued in the Royal Albert Hall, and King’s first held its own ceremony in 1989. In 1995, the University of London granted its constituent colleges the power to confer degrees on behalf of the University. In 2007, in line with the evolution of the University of London into a federation of colleges each awarding their own degrees, King’s successfully petitioned the Privy Council to be granted degree-awarding powers in its own right. These powers were first used in 2008.

One of the more noticeable impacts of securing its own degree-awarding powers was the need for King’s to design its own academic dress, and we are most grateful to Dame Vivienne Westwood for the major role she played in the design and also to Ede & Ravenscroft for their expertise in the production of the academic dress. The new gowns and hoods have colours which reflect King’s faculties and levels of degree, and a unique feature of the gowns is the King’s lion button on each shoulder.

The various officers of King’s wear their official robes, and members of the academic staff wear the academic dress of the university from which they graduated, which includes that of other universities in Britain and around the world.

Undergraduate, first degree and master’s level graduates wear a black gown, and a black hood attached to the gown on each shoulder with a King’s lion button. The hood is bound with the faculty colour, with the binding extending over the shoulders. For master’s level graduates the sleeve vents of the gown and the cape of the hood are also bound in the school colour.

Master of Philosophy (MPhil) graduates wear a black gown, and a black hood attached to the gown on each shoulder with a King’s lion button. The sleeve vents, cape and cowl are bound in blue with the binding extending over the shoulders.

Research degree (PhD/MD(Res)) graduates wear a dark red gown, and a dark red hood attached to the gown on each shoulder with a King’s lion button. The sleeve vents, cape and cowl are bound in blue with the binding extending over the shoulders.

Specialist doctors (EdD/DClinPsy/DHC/DrPS/DThMin) graduates wear a blue gown, and a blue hood attached to the gown on each shoulder with a King’s lion button. The sleeve vents, cape and cowl are bound in dark red with the binding extending over the shoulders.

Graduates who have completed the Associateship of King’s College also wear an epitoge, embroidered with the King’s lion ‘Reggie’, buttoned to the left shoulder. The AKC is King’s original qualification, first awarded in 1835. It provides an opportunity to think about fundamental questions of theology, philosophy and ethics in a contemporary context, alongside degree studies.

King’s faculty colours

• Faculty of Arts & Humanities green• King’s Business School teal• Dental Institute fuchsia• Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology &

Neuroscience deep red• Dickson Poon School of Law silver• Faculty of Life Sciences &

Medicine orange• School of Bioscience Education orange• GKT School of Medical

Education purple• Faculty of Natural & Mathematical

Sciences coral• Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing,

Midwifery & Palliative Care lilac• Faculty of Social Science &

Public Policy gold

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Class of 2018 – welcome to your alumni community

As a King’s College London graduate you are joining a diverse and vibrant community of over 200,000 former students based in 174 countries. Congratulations!As you embark on your career or further study, the Alumni Office is here to keep you connected to King’s. We offer a variety of events, opportunities and benefits that are exclusively available to you, as a King’s alumnus.

But here’s the thing, and it’s important, so please give us a chance to explain… As much as we would love to keep you up to date - via email or telephone - about the latest news from King’s, the fantastic benefits available and the exclusive events taking place around the world, we can’t! Well, not without your consent anyway. So don’t miss out. Update your contact details with us online, over the phone, via email, or better yet, come and see us at the alumni graduation stand today. The power is in your hands.

You can contact the Alumni Office on [email protected] or +44 (0)20 7848 3053 and, of course, you can visit the alumni website at www.alumni.kcl.ac.uk. For information on how we will use your details please see our privacy policy: alumni.kcl.ac.uk/privacy-statement

Global Networking opportunities We host networking events all over the world, so you can reconnect and meet new friends. Recently, we’ve held events in London, Hong Kong, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Beijing, Shanghai, New York, Washington DC, Boston, San Francisco and Brussels, to name a few. More events are being added all the time, organised both by the Alumni Office as well as our vibrant international alumni committees.

King’s Connect Mentoring ProgrammeMake Connections. Create Change. Begin your

Mentoring Journey. Are you looking for mentoring and career advice from professional King’s alumni? Then join the King’s Connect Mentoring Programme and begin your mentoring journey. The programme connects you with fellow King’s alumni and students across the world. By joining King’s Connect you gain access to the online mentoring platform, make connections with other members, develop your network, and receive professional advice, guidance and insights. You also receive quarterly newsletters and invites to exclusive mentoring events, giving you an opportunity to meet other members of the programme. alumni.kcl.ac.uk/mentoring

Exclusive events – from professional development to webinarsThe Alumni Office organises a variety of events, from practical sessions to webinars featuring prominent alumni speakers. Whether you want to learn how to get your dream job, negotiate a pay rise or find out how to travel the world with your career, our quarterly ‘How to… Series’ has been designed to offer expert practical advice. Our biannual Alumni Speaker event gives you the opportunity to tune in online and listen to some of our most interesting alumni share their pearls of wisdom for success.

Exclusive access to King’s libraries and online journalsSign up for an alumni library card and get lifetime membership for all five campus libraries. You can also register for exclusive alumni access to online academic journals, such as JSTOR.

King’s Alumni OfficeShare your graduation story using #ForeverKings

instagram/@kclalumni facebook/kclalumni

twitter/kclalumni

From the Chairman of the King’s College London Alumni Association (KCLA)

On behalf of our Alumni Association (KCLA), I would like to congratulate you today and welcome you to the King’s alumni community. I know this is a very proud day for you and your families as you leave King’s with your King’s degree, a qualification which gives you a great start on the next part of your life’s journey. Staying in touch with King’s will help you build on the benefits you have already gained as well as being an enjoyable and very fulfilling experience as you embark on your careers or further study.

The Alumni Association represents all alumni in the affairs of King’s and works very closely with the University’s Alumni Office to ensure that alumni stay in touch and get to experience all that is on offer for life after King’s. This includes cultural, sporting and academic activities that we would like alumni to continue to participate in. Our alumni Council organises a series of events; lectures, dinners and debates drawing on the strengths of the cosmopolitan community that is King’s.

The KCLA are keen to ensure that alumni stay involved with King’s after graduation and we encourage you to stay in touch.

Chris Hamnett FKC

(Professor of Geography 1995-2014)Chairman, King’s College London Alumni Association [email protected]

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The Cathedral & Collegiate Church of St Saviour & St Mary Overie, Southwark

In 606 a Convent was established on the south bank of the River Thames at the place from which the ferry used to cross over to the City of London. In 1106 an Augustinian Priory was established. From here they ministered to pilgrims and travellers, and to the sick and the needy of the area and the Word of God was faithfully preached and the sacraments celebrated. As part of their ministry, the Hospital of St Thomas was established (now located opposite the Houses of Parliament).

Following the Reformation, the Priory Church became a Parish Church. In many ways the building was sadly neglected but the gospel continued to be faithfully preached and the people of the parish cared for and taught. A parish school – now Cathedral School – was opened in 1704 following in the work already established in schools founded from the parish under a charter from Queen Elizabeth I.

The life, diversity and character of the area are revealed in the tombs and monuments within the church. Among them is that of John Gower (c. 1330-1408), poet and friend of Chaucer, whose Canterbury Tales begin in Southwark. Across the nave is a memorial to William Shakespeare, who spent much of his life

in Southwark, and above it, a stained glass window depicting scenes from his plays. Edmund Shakespeare, John Fletcher and Philip Massinger are all buried in the Cathedral. Lancelot Andrewes, who translated the first five books of the Bible into English, is buried by the High Altar. He is a founding father of the Church of England. In the grounds is buried Mahomet, Chief of the Mohegan Tribe from New England and a memorial to him can be found in the churchyard.

Today in old and new buildings, this Cathedral continues to serve the people of its parish and the people of the diocese, to be a centre of teaching, of worship, prayer and pilgrimage; a place of inclusive welcome for all people. This continues to be a place of major regeneration and change as Bankside has once again become a residential area, a playground for London and a place where the arts are celebrated, as well as a growing centre for political, financial and legal decision making. Southwark Cathedral is the constant factor in an ever changing and exciting community in which we continue to proclaim a gospel of radical engagement with God and the world.

For further information

Daily services/enquiries Cathedral Office 020 7367 6700Conferences & seminars Conference Co-ordinator 020 7367 6716Special services & events Development Director 020 7367 6704Cathedral tours Visitor & Tours Officer 020 7367 6734Shop Retail & Visitor Services Manager 020 7367 6710Refectory Refectory General Manager 020 7407 6728

For up-to-date information and times and dates of services please visit our website at www.southwarkcathedral.org.uk

We therefore welcome you to this holy place which is both ancient and modern. Together we continue to serve the people of this area – those who are passing through, crossing the river, making a new home, coming to work or simply here to enjoy themselves – and the people who live here, in much the same way as our forebears did and with all those who have gone before us we do it all from a place of praise and worship of Almighty God.

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At the time of going to print, the following students were expected to attend the Southwark graduation ceremonies.

Dental Institute

Doctoral Level AwardAnahid Ahmadi BirjandiGhada Hamad S AlkharboushSumaiah Essa H. AlrawiaiMariana BlagojevicLucy Emily BlandfordLemonia ChatzeliMuhd Firdaus Bin Che MusaMarcus Henry DawsonDaniel Henrique Doro PereiraAlice GervasoniAhoud Abdulaziz A JazzarEwa Monika KaniaAnna Maria Lopez MunozMohammad Saleh Uddin

MahmoodCristian ParisiRamya RanganathanKshemendra Gimhan Senarath-

YapaAbeer Mohamed Kamaleldin

Ahmed ShaalanKawin SipiyarukJonathan Winston TurnerLiu Yang

PostgraduateOmair AfzalValeriya AleksandrovaMohammed Anwar AlkandariNoof M-Noor A M Al-ObaidliJurate Andrikonyte-BrazaitieneHiba AsrarBashar Ismail AzizGurvinder Singh BhirthMaria Bernadette CatneyWilliam Nicholas DearSimon James FranksJulia GoundryAkshita Ankit GoyalRodrigo Jose Gutierrez

MadrigalYaser HamdounJohn Joseph HartiganMia HerningMark Gary JonesGhaida Haidar KamalJustyna KruczynskaOlubusola Ayodele LegunsenMahmoud Medhat NagaKwok-Kit NganSupriti ParaskarPamela Yvette PhillipsCaroline August ReedZeelaf SamiMarie SanfeyAnand SubramanianHadeea Dawood TaylorJoao Torres Monteiro AfonsoThaarani VijayakumarRana Hassan YoussefEvelien Margriet Zijp

UndergraduateSam AdariErin Mariell Tecson AguilarZeeshan AhmadImran Mahmood Akhtar

Raja Awais AliNishma ArdeshnaMelissa Jane BaardArjun Singh BabbraMohammed Aziz BajalanSukhdit Singh BansalMatthew Timothy BarkerYousuf BashirMatthew BellSonia BhandariCarly Marie BillingLaura BorrieJasdeep Singh BrarAaron Kieran BroughBenedict CahyadiShuchi ChaturvediYusuf Ahmed Khalid ChaudhriTazeem Anwar ChaudhryPamela Sze-Juen ChinElizabeth Amy Ruth CockertonElizabeth Mary CrakeCharlotte Lauren DevineKian Singh DhinsaNickil DhokiaReuben Joseph DonnellySukhpreet Singh DubbYsobel Sophie Helen DunstanElmi ElmiMaryann EnejeCatherine Mary EustaceSonal GandhiTanisha GillAditi GoelChirag Umesh GohilAnisha GuptaMatthew Lok HarveyDaniel Frederic HawkesAnnika Dia HindochaCavan Ho An WeiCharles Jordan HooperEmily HumphreysDiana Zina JawadPavandeep Kaur JhandZeinab Tahsin Abed-Ali JodaKarolyn Louisa JohnHannah Clare JonesSunmeet Singh KandhariSarita KangObaid Umar KhalidAarushi KhuranaAmeena KhurshidSaranya KonathalaRadhika Puja LadwaRachael LalJasmine Hiu Yee LokeRachel Tse-Ting LokeKrishantini M MahendranTripat Kaur MahajanSuganthan MahalingamBiranavi MaheswaranAlina Tara MalikSajida Riyaz MamdaniHemel Ashwin Amarshi

MandaliaAbbas Ali ManjiDevinder Singh ManuAlice Rose Louise Knower

MartinJack Craig McSweeneyRoxanne MehdizadehManish Kamlesh Mehta

Yihan MiaoJunade MirzaZujajah Aamir MirzaYusuf Mohamed-Ashraf

MiyanjiVignesh MohanMohammad MoinuddinNatasha Sehr NaeemDominique Jeanne NapierBenjamin Kai Wen NeoHeena Kiritkumar NirmalBuwanika Samantha OpathaAnisha PanchalKasim ParvaizAnish PatelAnkit PatelGinal Devina PatelNayan Atul PatelNikhil Shane PatelRoshni Raveena PatelSagar PatelSorabh Mukundbhai PatelVikash PatelPriya PattarVandana Divya-Jyothi PersadTuba PishgharavolShivani PopatAbdul Rahim QuraishiRia Anjali S RadiaNatasha Rekha RamgolamSherin Maryam RashadKush Dev RavalDhurrika RaveendranSimon Lloyd RobertsGeorge Frederick RollsClaire Victoria Selby BennettAnika Nayan ShahDarshni Mukesh ShahTulsi Bhupendra ShahSahil SharmaMohammad Fahad SheikhSalman Muhammad Azhar

SheikhKishan Manoj ShethFrancesca Ella SiodlakBalraj Singh SohalJanki SolankiGuy Eliron SternEmily Jane StrongAarthi SureshMohammad Usman TahirShir Lynn TanGao Jye TehRosalyn Elizabeth ThomasAttal Osman TokhiSaima UndreJames Kenneth Van HooijdonkKrishaan VekariaLara WatsonKatherine Rosemary WeatherlyAysha YounisAbeer Zaman

School of Medical Education

UndergraduateSara AbdelhamidLamis Rahzeb Abdullah

Prince Nana BoakyeAcheampong

Tamer AdemShafaq Iftikhar AdnanNeha AgarwalaArameh Shadi Aghababaie

KachouieJosephine Nana Ama AgyemanOsama AhmadAdnan Jamal AhmedRumsha Urfan AhmedSakib Munir Choudhry AhmedShirin Hasan AhmedReema Aishah AkhterMichelle Noor Akhunbay-

FudgeAbdinasir Yusuf AliManar Nasir Hussein

Al-MusabiMohammad AlwaheedyJames Bruce AnslowRebecca Bridget Emma AnsonAaron Karthic Anthony-PillaiKingsley AppiahIrem Nahide AricanSamantha Claire AshworthHaleema Hanif AyaShadman AzizNurul Bazilah BakiriAlfred John BalstonRonjon Malla Buzar BaruaMohammed Noor Ali BasharZora BashirNishani BaskaralingamTanveer Singh BawaHelen Louise BaxterThomas David William BaxterThomas Edward BeattieAbdulla Essam BedirDavid Christopher BermanZoya BillooRebekah Jane BinghamHabeeb Adebayo BishiAnna Trifonova BogdanovaChristine Rachel BojanicRhian Jean BoldElle Anastasia Borges MichelJames Steven BottomleyMonica BoughdadyChristiana Mary BoulesGemma Mary BowsherJennifer Mary BoyesNeslihan BozMarianne BradleyBradley Brookner-HayesCatherine Eugenia BrownJack Edward BuckleyMark Richard BuggCameron George BullockJoshua BurnsJoscelin Peter ButtersClementina Maria Fausta

Benedetta CalabriaEllice Isobel Caldwell-DunnAilis Kerrie CarmodyEdward John CarnochanEdita CarolanSukhdeep Kaur ChahalAlastair Joachim ChambersDharini S ChandrasegaranPannapat Amy Chanyarungrojn

Titus Jonathan HolbecheChester

Rui-Ernn Natassia ChinOlivia Elochukwu ChinagoromJackie ChiuAhamodur Rahman ChoudhuryPiyal Aminul Islam ChowdhurySheikh Naheed ChowdhuryShu Wan ChuaPhilippa Marian CleryNicholas CliffordAlice Jennifer CoadyMegan Elizabeth Nigella

CollinsSinead Liliane Margaret ConlonHenrietta Lucy CookMark William CoulsonHarry Jeffery CoultonSashika Louise CoxheadBethany Jade CrockerDaniel Joshua CurleyArees DamaniLouis Gabriel DarbyHannah Kathryn DarlingBenjamin Omar DaveyRhodri Wyn DaviesFrancesca DavisBruno David Pascal De

BlaquiereSashya Achini De SilvaSimon Philip DeaconBiswajit DebSahil Sekhon DeepakArjun DesaiGayatri Manohar DeshpandeGanan DevanathanSwaraj DewediSandeep Kaur DhaliwalNaila DhallaSaira DhanjiVignesh DhileepanSanaa Almas DhillonSimon Jacob DiasCatherine Alba Diaz TimminsMax Cuma DincAli Inan DoganShruti DoraiWeihong DuHenry DunneSophie Émer DupréMatthew Henry EcclesAmy Elizabeth EdwardsAzelle Fatima EgbeMohamed Zarroug ElhassanAbrar Eltahir Hamad ElnielElena Krystyna FearnRamon David Benedicto

FernandesCatrin Grace FernyhoughCallum Andrew FindlayRochelle Mica FindleyRachel Louise FrancisMichael Robert FreebornMark Emad GabrawiFreya Katherine GamlenFrancesca GarciaBenjamin John Eliott GarsideMariša GaspariniDavid Joshua GeeRachel Mary George

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Alexander William LloydGerard

Hussain Iqbal GillaniOmolola Patricia Olufunmilayo

GiwaPairavi GnanananthanGunalan GnanaseelanMilad GolsharifiLucia GomezHannah Raouf Gorgui-NaguibJonathan Eurie-Charles GreenKarla Roxanne GriffithUmar Farooq HakimMichael Stuart Phillip HallMariha HamidMohammed Abdullah Mugni

HamidMelissa Joy HartleyJessica Felicity HashemianKadean Kimeisha HawesJennifer Louise HawleyRandeep Singh Sandhu HeerHenrietta Isabel Fisher HelliwellAlexandra Rosemarie Annabelle

HodgeJosephine Esther HoggeFrancesca Alice Amelia HoldenSabir Mahfuz HossainDawid HubertAlice Jane HullyShehzeen HusainLabib HussainShah HussainShoaib Fahad HussainAnna Louise HutchinsBasma IkramMahum Saba ImranSimeon Hugh Sebastian

InnocentSamiha Abbas IsmailNicholas Edwin JacksonNihull Nilesh Hirji Jakharia-

ShahStuart Edward JamesIman Faruq JasaniManeesha JayawardenaShirley Emma JeffersonPriyanka JeganathanJenifa JeyakumarKalpana JeyasingamDevapriyan Ebenezer JohnsonWren Erin JonesFelix Alexander JozsaBonita KabirJayantan Kailaya-VasanMarina George Wadie KamilAdisha KapilaPolly Charlotte KaplanRebecca KassamPeter Mark KellyJad KesserwaniAnna Maria Matilda KesslerAli Turab KhanAyesha Rehan KhanKhuram KhanJian Shen KiamJack Henry Gordon KingdonRyan Cheng Hye KoaySimran Singh KoonerSanjeev Yogesh KotechaHafsah Kumbay

Basir KunduziNidhin LajiAmrish Pranav LakhaniJosephine Deanna LambJuliet Sia LaminaCharlotte Louise Jean LangstonTara Diane LatimerKatherine Kar Wan LeungRachel Helen LeverRobyn Louise LewisHelen Hau Ling LiAngela Yunting LiaoKyla LiefJack Lilly D’CruzDavid Anthony ListerJunfeng LiuSky Shuk Wai LiuClaire Michelle LloydSophia Halina LomatschinskyAmaris Yi Qing LooGeorgina Margaretha LoweElizabeth Clare MabeyCatherine Louise MacFarlaneEleanor Lucy MackThakshayene MahenthranAdil MahmoodSandeep Singh MakanZaibun-Nisa MalikAhmad Iussef MangalBethia Lily MansonHoosai ManyarHaider ManzarHanna Media MaroofYao Hui MauMeadhbh Róisín Aingeal

Mc VeighKevin McEwanAisling Maire McGeoughSarah Rosemary McGonagleGerard Patrick McHaleElizabeth Rose McLeanLuke Ryan McNickleAlexandra Dorothy Ellen

McWhirterLucy Alexandra MealeyJoshua Robert James MellYasmin Soumalee MilnerAnkit MishraThana’a Jaganate Mohajer

ThakerFathin Nabilah Binti Mohamad

ZulkafliHaseeb MoizJonathan Edward Gar-Wai MokTanya Ebrahim Hassan

MoledinaMichael Christopher Bentley

MorganJoshua David MortonPaula Diane MortonJessica Solitaire MulhollandEmma Elizabeth MullenDanielle Grace MurrayHeena Sajeed MusaSophie May MustoeBernadette Sharika MuthiahMoosa NadheemOvia NagulendramPraveenkumar Kutty

Thangavelu Natarajan

Mohamed Nabeel MohamedNoor Nedham

Jonathan James Neville Michael Geoffrey Richard

NewmanJulian Chi Yeung NgaiHanna Hoai-An NguyenDelphine Mugeni NkulizaLuiza Nobre Braga GuimaraesSinead Catherine Laura

O’DwyerSoo Kyung OhOluwadamilola OlaolorunThomas Geoffrey OrtonOlamide Oritsetemisan

OshunniyiKerementi Othieno-P’OtonyaOlivia Mary Eithne PadfieldAthina PagiatakiAayushi Ankur PandyaGrigory PankinAmy Jane ParekhMeera Neelesh PatelNikheel Pravin Amin PatelTrisha Nayankumar PatelJerome Adam PennieDuranka Sakuntha PereraAlec Andrew PhillipsJennifer Sarah PhillipsHannah Elizabeth PhilpottHarriet Carol Ann PittawayHolly Amanda PoulsonRebecca Louise PoundAkhilesh Chandrashekhar

PradhanPujon PurkayasthaWilliam Christian QuelchYasmin Jovita RahimAbdul RahyeadAsif RajahPriyankan RajeswaranThurkka RajeswaranDenisha RamjasSinthuri Anita RaveendranThurkka RaveendranathanJuanita Vasanthi RavindranSri Bharath RavishankarBenjamin ReindersSally Joanna RobesonJoseph Andrew RoscampCarmel Michaela RosinLaura Anne RossEmma Marie RoutledgeAniis RymansaibGazi Ahmed SadnanHarkiran Kaur SagooManpreet Kaur SagooAbbas Hussain SardarLewis Robert SaundersJoseph John SearsonChristopher Jun Wei SeetIsabel Judith Dawnay SellersGeorgina Ilamathy SelvarajahTeona SerafimovaTaimur ShafiAnant Sanjiv ShahMehul ShahPooja Vinod ShahShivani ShahEkta SharmaKeelan Lloyd Shaw

Harjas Singh ShinmarAyala Hanna ShiraziZohaib Ahmed SiddiquiJoseph Keen SimpsonAnousha SingalAjmal SinghAmelia Lucy SmithEleanor Halstead SmithAmelie SpangenbergKishanth SritheranWilliam James StaggJennifer StevensStephanie Grace StoneMazeda SultanaAlexander James SunderlandHyder Tahir Mohamed Sheikh

TahirFalguni Priyavadan TailorJessica Louise TanNina Vijay TannaNisha TannaJordan Leigh TaylorJonathan Luke TempleSakira ThangavelAshvath ThedchanamoorthyKatharine Clare ThomasFlorence Bethany ThompsonTessa Isabel Amelia ThompsonRebekah TonerRebecca Rose TowningLisa Marie TranDaniel Robin Jack TurkLeyla Mary Zeynep TurkogluDeniz UstunerGayathri VakkalankaBenjamin Joseph VargheseAnusiya VaseekaranSharmila VasudevanAsya Veloso CostaDivya Kumari VermaVikramman VignarajaAmrit Rakesh VisvanathanChintan Anil VoraPanayiota Caroline VourouMegan Elizabeth WalkerNeil WarwickWilliam Grant Charles WaughSophie Joanne WellerAmelia Holvey Harris WhiteDuncan Graeme WhiteArdito Nurdanto WidjonoClaudia WildeAlice Faith WilkinsonJohn Joseph WilkinsonSioned Rebeca WilliamsXinyi WongNatasha Alexis Ericksen WoodCharlotte Loveday WreyMohini YagnikEda Munise YardimciSara Kay YermianYee Wei YiuNiran YoganayagamMichael YoussefAntoinette YoxallSum Yu Pansy YueMohammad Samir Hasan

ZamanJulian Giuseppe ZeollaNai Yan ZhangFarris Ziyada

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As Chancellor of the University of London, I am delighted to send my good wishes

to all those being presented at today’s Ceremony, and my congratulations on your

achievements.

The time that you have spent at the University, both in study and leisure, will have

given you much of the knowledge and many of the skills that you will need for your

future life and career. I hope that you have enjoyed all aspects of your University

experience and that the strong and lasting friendships you have made will bring

great pleasure in the years to come.

In addition, I send my good wishes to all those who have encouraged and

supported you during your studies, confident that they too will enjoy this

special day.

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DESIGN

Susen Vural Design

www.susenvural.com

Approved by

[email protected]

July 2018

PRINT

Tradewinds London

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