Graduation ceremonies - King`s College London

King’s College London
Graduation ceremonies
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
A message from the Chairman
of the College Council
It gives me very great
pleasure to welcome you
to the King’s College London
graduation ceremonies in
June and July 2016.
These ceremonies are important occasions
in the life of King’s and especially
significant for all the students 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,
and during the nine-year period of my
Chairmanship of the College Council I have
very much enjoyed meeting those whose
lives and careers have been influenced
by their education and experiences at this
great university.
King’s alumni have been significant
contributors to the university’s £600 million
fundraising campaign, helping it to deliver
global impact. Philanthropic support has
funded new research to save young lives
at the Evelina London Children’s Hospital;
established the King’s Dickson Poon
School of Law as a worldwide leader in
transnational law; built a new Cancer
Centre at Guy’s Hospital; fast-tracked new
treatments for Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s,
motor neurone disease, depression and
schizophrenia at the new Maurice Wohl
Clinical Neuroscience Institute; created the
Cicely Saunders Institute for palliative care,
and supported the King’s Sierra Leone
Partnership in the Ebola crisis. Donations
also provide more than 300 of our most
promising students with scholarships and
bursaries each year.
Although we are here primarily to
celebrate with our graduates, we are also
very pleased to mark the presentation of
new fellows and honorary fellows of King’s
who were elected in the past year, whose
details can be found on pages 12 and 13.
I offer my congratulations to them and to
all our graduates, and extend to them a
warm welcome into the King’s community
and to what we hope will be a long and
rewarding association with the College.
The Duke of Wellington
Chairman of the College Council
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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King’s College London
Guy’s, King’s & St Thomas’ School of
Medical Education and Dental Institute
King’s College London
King’s is one of England’s oldest and most
prestigious university institutions: a multi-faculty
research-led university based in the heart of
London, ranked as one of the world’s top 20.
It offers an intellectually rigorous environment
supported by welcoming and caring traditions.
It has more than 27,600 students, of whom
some 10,500 are postgraduates, and some
6,800 members of staff.
King’s has played a major role in many of
the advances that have shaped modern life, such
as the discovery of the structure of DNA, and
it is now the largest centre for the education of
doctors, dentists and other healthcare
professionals in Europe and home to four Medical
Research Council centres. King’s location in the
heart of London and its strength in arts and
humanities, law and the social sciences make it
a major player in forging links between the arts,
culture and universities, and in the development
of public policy at national level. It has a very
broad range of subjects which are increasingly
interrelated, notably in fields such as health
policy, medical humanities and bioinformatics.
Twelve people from King’s and its associated
institutions have been awarded the Nobel Prize,
including Professor Peter Higgs, for his proposal
of the Higgs boson; Professor Michael Levitt, for
the development of multiscale models for complex
chemical systems; Archbishop Desmond Tutu for
his role in the anti-apartheid campaign in South
Africa; Professor Sir James Black OM (19242010) 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
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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King’s College London was founded in
1829, and when the University of London was
established in 1836 King’s became one of its two
founding colleges. In the course of its history,
King’s has grown and developed through many
mergers, which have brought institutions with
their own distinguished reputations and traditions
into the university. 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.
Reggie
The silver replica of the King’s mascot, Reggie the Lion,
which is used at university 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 King’s Halliburton
Professor of Physiology from 1923 to 1959.
Guy’s, King’s & St Thomas’
School of Medical Education and
Dental Institute
The 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
founded 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 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 6,000
students of whom nearly 1,700 are postgraduates,
while the Dental Institute has nearly 1,300
students, including more than 500 postgraduates.
King’s College London is part of King’s
Health Partners (KHP, the UK’s largest
Academic Health Sciences Centre), in
partnership with the leading NHS Foundation
Trusts of Guy’s and St Thomas’; King’s College
Hospital, and the South London and Maudsley.
The aim of the partnership is to create a centre
where world-class research, education and
clinical practice are brought together for the
benefit of patients, ensuring that the lessons from
research are used more swiftly, effectively and
systematically to improve healthcare services
for people with physical and mental health
care problems.
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. John Keats, the Romantic poet, qualified
as an apothecary or general practitioner at Guy’s
in 1816, the first year that a qualification was
available for this profession. 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 Palliative
Care Institute at King’s named after her, opened
in 2010.
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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A message from the President & Principal
I extend a very warm
welcome to you all to
the June and July 2016
graduation ceremonies.
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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This is a very special occasion for today’s
graduands and also for the family members
and friends who have helped 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
university community, which prides itself
above all else on the achievements of its
graduates.
Over the past 10 years King’s has
become one of the world’s leading
universities for both education and
research, with academic disciplines that
connect across different cultures, subject
areas, institutions and geographies, and a
location at the heart of London: a truly
international city.
We have recently consolidated our
position in the heart of the capital by
acquiring Bush House Buildings: four iconic
and recently refurbished buildings,
including the former headquarters of the
BBC World Service, adjacent to our historic
Strand Campus. These will provide a
modern and purpose-designed environment
for our growing community of students and
staff, reflecting King’s standing as a worldclass university.
Building upon this impressive legacy,
King’s is consolidating its position among
the very greatest of the world’s universities
for both education and research, and
becoming a London university second to
none. We are continuing to expand in scale
and scope while maintaining the highest
quality of education and research. We
are growing our Business School with a
distinctive vision: capitalising on greater
links both with other faculties of King’s and
with the business world. We are deepening
our teaching and research expertise in
cutting-edge science and technology for the
21st century. King’s Online is bringing a
King’s education to greater numbers of the
best students worldwide through distance
education. We are refining our focus on
research and innovation across all our
disciplines and reaching further across the
globe to attract the best academics, students
and educational partners.
This focus on strategic initiatives,
combined with our underlying institutional
goals, provides the backbone for a new
strategic vision, which we are currently
developing. King’s Futures will lead the
university through to 2029: the bicentenary
of King’s foundation.
I extend my warmest congratulations to
all our new graduates and am confident that
you will give King’s cause for great pride in
the years ahead. I am delighted to welcome
you into the King’s community of more
than 160,000 alumni living on all
continents and I send you my very best
wishes for your future and your continuing
links with King’s.
I hope you will enjoy the ceremony today.
Professor Edward Byrne AC
President & Principal
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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News in brief
Prince William’s wildlife plea
HRH The Duke of Cambridge made a
passionate plea to Chinese consumers to stop
buying illegal wildlife products in a key
speech at King’s in October 2015. Prince
William addressed an invited audience of
students and guests at the Maughan Library
for a special primetime Chinese TV show.
He used his speech, hours ahead of Chinese
president Xi Jinping’s UK state visit, to
highlight the illegal trade in products such as
ivory, horn and animal parts. ‘Consumers
are driving the demand for animal body
parts, for art, for trinkets, or for medicine.
Only we as consumers can put the wildlife
traffickers out of business,’ he said. ‘I am
absolutely convinced that China can
become a global leader in the protection of
wildlife. Your influence in the world means
you could change the face of conservation
in this century.’
Photograph 51 for charity
Michael Grandage Company and King’s
held a charity performance of Anna Ziegler’s
play Photograph 51 starring Nicole Kidman
as Dr Rosalind Franklin in November 2015.
Proceeds from the performance supported
the charitable work of the Cancer Centre
at Guy’s Hospital, as part of the World
questions|King’s answers campaign, and
contributed to Michael Grandage
Company’s education work through its
charity MGCfutures. It was at King’s that
Dr Franklin took the X-ray diffraction
picture, Photograph 51, which led to the
discovery of the structure of DNA, and
around which the play is based. During
rehearsals, the company visited the King’s
Archives where they were shown objects
crucial to the DNA discovery including the
Philips micro-camera used by Franklin and
Raymond Gosling; letters written by
Maurice Wilkins, Francis Crick and Jim
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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Watson, and the original slide of Photograph
51 itself.
Counting moles for cancer risk
Counting the number of moles on the right
arm is predictive of the total number of
moles on the whole body and could help
GPs to more easily identify people at the
highest risk of developing a melanoma (skin
cancer), King’s researchers have shown.
Data from nearly 3,600 female Caucasian
twins helped to show that the count of moles
on the right arm was most predictive of the
total number on the body. Women with
more than seven moles on their right arm
had nine times the risk of having more than
50 on their whole body and those with
more than 11 on their right arm were more
likely to have over 100 on their body in total,
meaning they were at a higher risk of
developing a melanoma.
Hollywood stars for
Shakespeare
King’s opened a star-studded celebration of
Shakespeare in Los Angeles on 23 April: the
400th anniversary of the playwright’s death.
As part of ‘Britweek’ and Shakespeare400,
King’s academic Dr John Lavagnino opened
a performance by actors including Michael
York, Joely Fisher, Harry Hamlin, Sir
Patrick Stewart, Stacy Keach and Jimmy
Akingbola. Shakespeare400 is a consortium
of leading cultural, creative and educational
institutions in and around London, creating
a season of events to celebrate four hundred
years of Shakespeare. Co-ordinated by the
London Shakespeare Centre and the
Cultural Institute at King’s, it includes
theatre, music, opera, dance, ballet,
educational events, and exhibitions
including a unique show in King’s Inigo
Rooms, in partnership with The National
Archives, which brought together nine
priceless Shakespeare documents, including
Shakespeare’s will, to explore key moments
in his career.
Brain stimulation and anorexia
Core symptoms of anorexia nervosa,
including the urge to restrict food intake
and feeling fat, are reduced after just
one session of a non-invasive brain
stimulation technique, according to King’s
research published in March 2016. The new
study is the first randomised control trial to
assess whether repetitive transcranial
stimulation (rTMS), already an approved
treatment for depression, is also effective in
reducing symptoms of anorexia. The
technique alters neural activity by delivering
magnetic pulses to specific regions of the
brain, which feels like a gentle tapping
sensation on the side of the head. In the
study, 49 people completed food exposure
and decision-making tasks, both before and
after a session of either real or placebo
rTMS. Given the promising findings from
the study, researchers are now assessing
whether rTMS has longer-lasting
therapeutic benefits in a world-first clinical
trial of rTMS treatment, involving 20 rTMS
sessions, in people with anorexia nervosa.
Henry VIII clauses proliferate
The proliferation of ‘Henry VIII clauses’
and the increased use of delegated legislation
represents a threat to parliamentary control
over the executive, warned Lord Judge,
former Lord Chief Justice, at a special event
hosted by The Dickson Poon School of Law
at King’s in April 2016. These clauses
provide ministers with the power to change
key primary legislation through delegated
legislation and take their name from a
misunderstanding of the provisions of the
Statute of Proclamations of 1539. In fact,
the House of Commons that year stood firm
PHOTO: JIM WINSLET
against a proposal that proclamations by
the King should have the same force in law
as a statute. ‘I venture to suggest that the
[Commons] would have been appalled at
the modern legislative habit of bestowing
what we call Henry VIII powers on any
old Secretary of State’, Lord Judge said,
explaining that of the 170,000 statutory
instruments that have been laid before
parliament in the last 65 years only one in
10,000 have been rejected by either the
House of Commons or the House of Lords.
None have been rejected in the Commons
since 1979. Honorary doctorates
Five honorary doctorates of King’s have
been awarded in the academic year 2015-16.
At a special ceremony in October 2015 the
Chairman of Council and the President &
Principal conferred honorary degrees upon
Professor Linda H Aiken, a global leader
in nursing and health services and policy
research; Dr Andrew Mackenzie FRS,
Chief Executive Officer of BHP Billiton,
and Professor Maria Fidela de Lima
Navarro, an academic dentist of
international distinction. Nobel Prize
winners Professor Roger Tsien and
Professor Stefan Hell received honorary
doctorates of King’s in November 2015
and April 2016 respectively, following
major lectures at King’s.
Vitamin C could protect
against cataracts
The first twin study to examine whether
genetic and environmental factors influence
the progression of cataracts with age has
shown that higher dietary intake of vitamin
C has a potentially preventative effect.
Cataract is a common condition in which
the lens of the eye becomes cloudy as a
result of oxidation over time, and cataract
surgery is the most common operation
performed in the UK, with more than
300,000 procedures carried out each year.
The study, led by King’s and published in
the journal Ophthalmology, looked at the
progression of cataracts in the eyes of 324
pairs of female twins from the Twins UK
registry over 10 years, by examining
photographs of the participants’ lenses and
measuring their intake of vitamin C through
a food questionnaire. The fluid in the eye
that bathes the lens is high in vitamin C,
which helps to stop the lens from oxidising
and protects it from becoming cloudy, and
it is thought that increased intake of vitamin
C increases the vitamin C available in the
eye fluid.
Nursing ranked first in UK
Nursing at King’s has been ranked first in
the UK in the 2016 QS World University
Rankings. These tables highlight the world’s
top universities across 42 popular subject
areas, and this is the first year that nursing
has been included in the subject list.
Institutions are assessed on academic
reputation, citations to publications and
employer reputation, with King’s Florence
Nightingale Faculty of Nursing &
Midwifery scoring 89.6 per cent overall,
with 99.9 per cent for academic reputation
and 87 per cent for citations per paper.
World’s most international
universities
PHOTO: TIM IRELAND
collaboration with the best international
partners is helping to find answers to global
questions in health, sustainability, culture
and identity, and defence and security, and
shows how the university’s connection and
engagement with the world’s emerging
powers and economies helps to make it a
thought-leader in numerous fields.
New Year’s Honours for King’s
King’s staff who were recognised in the 2016
New Year’s Honours list include Professor
Til Wykes, Vice-Dean of Psychology &
Systems Science and Professor of Clinical
Psychology & Rehabilitation, who was
awarded a damehood for services to clinical
psychology. Professor Wykes has been an
international leader in understanding and
advancing the rehabilitation and recovery
for people with severe mental illness.
Professor David Cowan, Professor of
Pharmaceutical Toxicology and Director of
the Drug Control Centre at King’s, led the
anti-doping project for the London 2012
Olympic and Paralympic Games, and
received an OBE for his services to antidoping science. Kim Wolff, Professor of
Addiction Science in the Institute of
Pharmaceutical Science, received a MBE
for public service to road safety. Professor
Wolff led the independent panel which
produced the Department for Transport
Expert Drug-Driving Report in 2013. At
least 12 King’s alumni also received honours
in this list.
King’s has been placed in the top 20 in the
Times Higher Education ‘Most International
Universities’ 2016 rankings. These take
account of each institution’s proportion of
international staff and international
students, and research papers published with
at least one co-author from another country.
The result is a testament to how King’s
cross-boundary, multi-disciplinary
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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Programme
Procession
MEMBERS OF ACADEMIC STAFF
NEW FELLOWS & HONORARY FELLOWS
2015-16
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.
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.
SENIOR OFFICERS
Director of Students & Education
Mrs Tessa Harrison BA PGDip FAUA
Director of Student Services
Mr Chris Shelley BA
COLLEGE LONDON
Professor Edward Byrne AC DSc MD FRACP FRCPE
FRCP FTSE
PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENTS’ UNION
CHAIRMAN OF THE COLLEGE COUNCIL
Ms Nadine Almanasfi BA
The Duke of Wellington MA OBE DL
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
The Reverend Canon Professor Richard
Burridge MA PhD FKC
DEANS OF FACULTY
Dental Institute
Professor Dianne Rekow DDS PhD
Life Sciences & Medicine
Professor Richard Trembath FRCP FMedSci
VICE-PRINCIPALS
Professor Sir Robert Lechler PhD FRCP FRCPath
FMedSci FKC
Mr Chris Mottershead BSc MSc
Dr Joanna Newman MBE BA MA PhD FRSA
Professor Karen O’Brien MA DPhil FRSA
Professor Evelyn Welch MBE BA PhD FRHS FRSA
MEMBERS OF THE COLLEGE COUNCIL
CHAIRMAN OF THE KING’S COLLEGE
LONDON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Professor Stephen Challacombe DSc FMedSci
FRCPath FKC
TEACHING AWARD WINNERS 2015-16
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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PRESIDENT & PRINCIPAL OF KING’S
Welcome
The Dean of Southwark Cathedral, The Very Reverend Andrew Nunn
Sub-Dean and Canon Pastor, Michael Rawson
Canon Precentor, Gilly Myers
The opening address
The President & Principal
Presentation of medallists
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.
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
The Director of Students & Education
introduces new Fellows and Honorary Fellows
of King’s College London.
The closing address
The Chairman of the College Council.
The company rises to sing the National Anthem
and remains standing until after the procession
has left.
God save our gracious Queen,
Long live our noble Queen,
God save the Queen!
Send her victorious,
Happy and glorious,
Long to reign over us;
God save the Queen!
Presentation of graduands
Presentation of Teaching Excellence
Award winners 2015-16
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.
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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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.
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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• 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.
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.
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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New Fellows
The following have been awarded a Fellowship
of King’s College London:
Professor George Benjamin CBE
George Benjamin is widely regarded as one
of the world’s greatest living composers.
He is a highly distinguished conductor and
pianist and has been Henry Purcell
Professor of Music at King’s since 2001.
Alex Beard CBE
Alex Beard is an alumnus of King’s and
Chief Executive of the Royal Opera House.
In his previous roles at Tate, including as
Deputy Director, he was instrumental in the
creation of Tate Modern and Tate St Ives.
He was appointed a CBE in 2012 for his
services to the arts.
Gus Christie
Gus Christie is widely respected in
the world of opera and the arts for his
enterprising and successful Executive
Chairmanship of Glyndebourne
Productions since 2000. He is a King’s
graduate in zoology.
Professor David Cooper
Professor David Cooper is a world leader
in the field of human transplantation and
one of the most distinguished medical
alumni of his generation. He is director
of the xenotransplantation research group
at the Thomas E Starzl Transplantation
Institute at the University of Pittsburgh
Medical Center, where he is a Professor
of Surgery.
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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His Excellency Ambassador
Gudmundur Eiriksson
The Rt Hon Professor
the Lord Kakkar
Gudmundur Eiriksson’s distinguished
diplomatic career has spanned four
decades and four continents, including
as Iceland’s Ambassador to India. He
is a highly respected alumnus of King’s
who is prominent in the fields of
international law and global legal
education as well as international relations.
The Rt Hon Professor the Lord Kakkar,
Ajay Kakkar, is Professor of Surgery at
UCL. He is a leader in academic health
science in the UK, and one of King’s most
distinguished medical alumni.
Rola Gordon
Rola Gordon is the Board lead for cancer
on the World questions | King’s answers
Campaign Board, and a generous personal
supporter of King’s cancer programmes.
She is a King’s alumna and is currently
undertaking her PhD at King’s.
Janice Hadlow
Janice Hadlow has had a distinguished
career as a television executive, as Controller
of BBC Four and then Controller of BBC
Two. A history graduate of King’s, she
has made many history programmes, and
has written a biography of George III and
his family.
The Very Reverend
Dr David Ison
Dr Ison became Dean of St Paul’s Cathedral
in 2012. He took his PhD at King’s and has
continuing strong links with the College,
including delivering the sermon at the 2015
Opening of Year Service.
Dr Ming-Wai Lau
Dr Ming-Wai Lau is a leading Hong Kong
businessman, philanthropist, scholar,
athlete and alumnus of King’s. In 2012 he
made an extraordinary gift to help create
the Lau China Institute, which has brought
King’s to the forefront in UK research and
teaching on contemporary China.
Professor Clare A Lees
Professor Clare Lees is an internationally
renowned scholar in the field of mediaeval
studies, where she is highly esteemed for her
innovative and creative approach to her
subject, both in research and teaching.
Professor Jim van Os
Professor Jim van Os is one of the most
distinguished academic psychiatrists in
Europe, renowned for revolutionizing the
understanding of schizophrenia. He is
Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry
and Neuropsychology at the Maastricht
University Medical Centre, Holland.
New Honorary Fellows
The following have been awarded an
Honorary Fellowship of King’s College
London:
Antony Beevor FRSL
Anastasios P Leventis CBE
Professor Heather Stevens CBE
Antony Beevor is one of Britain’s most
distinguished historians: the author of a
series of prize-winning books in thirty
different languages on the Second World
War and the Spanish Civil War which are
read and admired around the world. He is
a visiting professor at the University of Kent.
Anastasios Paul (Tasso) Leventis CBE is
a successful businessman. Since 2002 he
has been chairman of the A. G. Leventis
Foundation, a philanthropic foundation
which has generously supported a range
of programmes at King’s.
Professor Heather Stevens CBE is a
businesswoman and philanthropist who
helped to set up Admiral Insurance Ltd
in 1993. She is Chair of The Waterloo
Foundation, founded with her husband
David in 2007, which funds work related
to international development, the
environment and neurodevelopment.
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
13
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.
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
14
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 was 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.
King’s faculty colours
• Faculty of Arts & Humanities green
• Dental Institute fuchsia
• School of Global Affairs light blue
• 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 lilac
• Faculty of Social Science &
Public Policy gold
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
15
Class of 2016 – welcome to
your alumni community
As a graduate of King’s College London,
you are joining a diverse and vibrant
community of more than 160,000 former
students around the world. Congratulations!
You may have heard about the Alumni
Office ­– we’re here to help you as you embark
on your career or further study, and keep
you connected to King’s. We offer a variety
of events, opportunities and benefits to all
of our alumni. Make sure we have your
up-to-date contact details so that you can
take advantage of all of the opportunities
available to you.
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
world-wide alumni committees.
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 advice. Our biannual
Alumni Speaker event gives you the
opportunity to tune in online – from
wherever you are in the world – and listen
to some of our most interesting alumni share
their pearls of wisdom for success.
King’s Connect – your very
own mentoring platform
We look forward to seeing you soon!
Find an alumni mentor to support your
future development, or become a mentor
to King’s students. Just as your King’s
experience was shaped in part by the
generosity of alumni before you who were
part of the King’s Connect mentoring
programme, we hope you will consider
supporting King’s students in the future
by giving your time and becoming an
alumni mentor.
King’s Alumni Office
[email protected]
+44 (0) 20 7848 3053
www.alumni.kcl.ac.uk
facebook/kclalumni
twitter/kclalumni
Exclusive events – from
professional development to
webinars
The 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
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
16
Exclusive access to King’s
libraries and online journals
Sign up for an alumni library card and get
lifetime membership for all five of the campus
libraries. You can also register for exclusive
alumni access to online academic journals,
such as JSTOR.
Stay in touch
We invite you to stay in touch with us. You
can contact the Alumni Office on the details
below. Congratulations once again, and
welcome to the King’s alumni community.
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 personally 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 a fun 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 Council of
elected alumni organises a series of prestige
events; lectures, themed dinners and debates
drawing on the strengths of the cosmopolitan
community that is King’s.
Once again, on behalf of the whole alumni
community, congratulations!
Stephen Challacombe
(Dentistry, Guy’s, 1968)
Chairman, King’s College London
Alumni Association
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.
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.
For further information
Daily services/enquiries Conferences & seminars
Special services & events Cathedral tours Shop Refectory Cathedral Office 020 7367 6700
Conference Co-ordinator 020 7367 6722
Business Development Manager 020 7367 6704
Visitors’ Officer 020 7367 6734
Shop Manager 020 7367 6710
Refectory Manager 020 7407 5740
For up-to-date information and times and dates of services please visit our
website at www.southwarkcathedral.org.uk
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
17
At the time of going to print, the following students were expected to attend
the Southwark graduation ceremonies. The full graduate list will be available
on 19 August 2016 from www.kcl.ac.uk/graduation
Dental Institute
Doctoral Level Award
Surab Fadhil Baker Alsahaf
Maryam Anwar
Sophie Shaghayegh Bozorgi
Danya Faisal Hashem
Mark Stephen Hintze
Nadine Iona Khawaja
Anneliese Norris
Carlo Scala
Shirley Tang
Amrita Vijay
Longlong Wang
Postgraduate
Hala I M Albawwab
Ibtisam Almubarak
Anood Y J Kh J Alrajahi
Maryam M A A Alsaleh
Rupert Sloan Austin
Omar Bhutta
Louise Claire Brereton
Oliver James Burley
Cheryl Ka Wah Cheung
Liliya Lyudmilova Ekova
Peace Esegbuyota Emojevbe
Zaid Esmail
Eli Jasmine Garvik
Behnoosh Bianca Goodarzi
Maisalamah Binti Haji Taha
Shaza Hamid
Sian Rebecca Hayward
Osman Ali Mohamed Ibrahim
Anfal Ahmed Karimi
Chee Seong Kua
Yash Uday Kulkarni
Haya Jabr Kurmush
Maria Manola
Ammara Mubashar
Olga Naka
Esenaye Dorothy Riley
Jasdip Singh Sagoo
Fahd Omar Abdelaziz
Mahmoud Saleh
Amarinder Sanghi
Teertha Shetty
Guinevere Ellen Smith
Nazia Sultana
Xing Hui Charlotte Tan
Ruixiang Yee
Undergraduate
Jessica Mary Ah-Kye
Mirunaalini Alagarajah
Kia Alam
Aliya Alidina
Gabrielle Julie Allen
Maya Anuja Amlani
Glenda Osazeme Aruede
Jassanjot Kaur Aujla
Deepak Singh Aulak
Rhamatalah Olabunmi Desilva
Ayoade
Ismail Faris Ayub
Mohammed Bilal Azam
Mohammad Omar Azhar
Amandeep Kaur Bains
Kuljit Kaur Bhandal
Elizabeth Bhanderi
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
18
Charles Michael Edward
Brandon
Nicholas Charles Byfield
Priya Nina Champaneri
Yick Ming Chan
Muhammed Faheem Choudhry
Mary-Louise Norma Cowdy
Claire Louise Culverwell
Yusra Manaal Dar
Sabrina Aliya Datu
Rabia Dean
Claire Louise Ruth Doswell
Joe Scott Dowie
Rebecca Pauline Exley
Fojan Fattahi
Razma Fozol
Paul James Gaisford
Suzannah Maryvonne Garland
Kalyanie Gengeswaran
Gavin Goh
Andrew Francis Goodall
Alexandra Olivia Green
Faraz Hamid
Alice Harman
Hollie Skye Harris
Laura Elizabeth Heap
Celine Jane Jean Higton
Emma Elizabeth Hinsley
Jennifer Hon
Pavan Kaur Hunjan
Rima Sadhia Hussain
Samia Hussain
Kevin Tai Huynh
Amundeep Kaur Jandu
Sherbanu Janmohamed
Muney Singh Jauhal
Puja Surendra Jethwa
Olivia Ann Johnson King
Jackline Gloria Johnson-Idan
Theepthy Kantharuban
Iqra Khan
Mariyam Khan
Abulqasim Khoei
Hirra Zia Kirmani
Kim Si Ying Lai
Andrew Philip Lake
Kirstie Tian-Reine Lau
Nathalie Louise Lear
Sonia Yi Jie Lee
Stuart Chun Jun Lee
Sarah Surun Liu
Stefanie Anne Mailer
Jonathan Anthony Thomas
Malynn
Zahira Riyaz Mamdani
Karishma Manji
Suniti Marwaha
Rachel Sadie McCartney
Sophie Victoria McGery
Farima Yasmin Mehrabi
Jhanvi Jyotin Mehta
Naomi Irene Meier
Stephanie Mikhael
Claire Emily Sarah Mills
Amro Ahmed Abdelwahab
Mohamed
James Richard Morgan
Sophia Morris
Faisal Imran Moughal
Omar Khalid Shah Moussati
Tarun Singh Nagpal
Sarvnaz Nasiri
Monica Nayyar
Esther Feng Ying Ng
Vy-Thuy Nguyen
Anthony Omotola OlowoOfayoku
Tessmin Yi Jean Ooi
Sophie Lara Oster
Jessica Charlotte Parish
Emily Margaret Chisholm Pate
Ashish Patel
Ekta Tusharchandra Patel
Jaymin Himanshu Patel
Keshwi Bharat Patel
Mitul Patel
Nimit Jagdish Patel
Pooja Subhash Patel
Ria Bella Patel
Rishi Paresh Patel
Shreena Patel
Tushar Patel
Yoshan Patel
Salman Hassan Pirmohamed
Abida Rahimi
Luisa Anne Ramirez
Gurpreet Kaur Randhawa
Arjun Mohan Rattan
Hemal Pradip Raval
Kavita Ravi-Shankar
Zain Abbas Rehemtulla
Peter Riley
Rahul Anil Sadhwani
Safoora Safaei Keshtgar
Khulod Sedawi
Amarinder Singh Sehda
Surina Sehgal
Rajpal Singh Sehmi
Aparna Sekhar
Khush Kiren Shah
Pooja Shah
Rani Ujas Dhimant Shah
Sagar Shashi Shah
Iain William Shaw
Rachael Shalonita Shivam
Matthew James Smith
Amar Ross Kamal Sodha
Michael Andrew Souter
Subegh Singh Srao
Joseph John Stewart
Emma Robertson Still
Hannah Elizabeth Stott
Ammi Nidhi Suchak
Roxanne June Tabatabai
Seyed Ali Tarjomani
Daniel Albert Tate
Jessie Ellen Tebbutt
Bhuvana Thayalasamy
Swarupini Shobana Thayaparan
Kunal Tibrewal
Shahd Salim Twijiri
Mohammad Usman
Radhika Mavji Kanji Varsani
Vibishan Venukumar
Philip Joseph Walker
Jonathan Oliver Westall
Laura Anne Wyllie
Sarah Jane Young
Ahmad Jawdat Zeitouni
School of Medical
Education
Undergraduate
Akansha Agarwal
Kaladerhan Osemwengie
Agbontaen
Jonathan Philip Kwong Fat AhChuen
Naaz Ahmad
Faheem Ahmed
Sana Ajmi
Cassim Akhoon
Maame Akua Mansa Akobeng
Salma Amori Alawiye
Harry Michael Frederick
Alcock
Suad Alinur
Yusra Khalid Al-Janabi
Chidi Ikenna Julius Amadi
Luke Peter Anderson
Gwendolyn Katherine Andradi
Hibah Ansary
Oluwabukola Oluwatosin
Asaolu
Salem Yared Lydia Ashenafi
Leah Danielle Ashraf
Malaika Safiyya Atim
Sarah Aurakzai
Elizabeth Enitan Ayanbadejo
Uzma Ayub
Charles Badu-Boateng
Paul James Baggott
Rajiv Ram Bakhsh Bahri
James William Theodorus
Bailey
Kayzia Jordan Ballantyne
Adebowale Bamidele
Oliver James Hugh Barker
Fiona Elizabeth Jane Barley
Grzegorz Bartminski
Gautom Prasad Baruah
Mandeep Singh Basra
Johan Dhinesh Bastianpillai
Sophie Camilla Batterton
Sam Thomas Beardsmore-Rust
Harriet Sarah Bedell-Pearce
Harriet Lucy Bellenie
Laura Julie Beswick
Christopher Oluwafeyikemi
Borges-Da-Silva
Sally Elisabeth Bramley
Michaela Josephine Brett
Gabrielle Victoria Budd
Michiala Jaye Cafferkey
Laurence William Caines
Lorna Emily Campbell
Holly Purdie Carpenter
Duncan Edward Castle
Christabel Victoria Castro
Christopher Andrew Chaddock
Zoe Wing-Yan Chan
Qian Chen
Stephanie Cheng
Justin Tao Wen Chiam
Hui Men Selina Chin
Shaun Ashley Chin Fung Xian
Rute Mbachi Chanda Chisanga
James Jen Yao Chong
Jamil Ahmed Chowdhury
Joanne Marie Clark
Salvatore Cognetti
Peter Duncan Colledge
Allegra Genevieve Simonoff
Collins
Victoria Alice Comerford
Jerome Roy Condry
Emilie Jeannie Maria Cote
Hannah Elizabeth Crickmore
Emma Louise Criddle
Sophie Alexandra Crooks
Kiki Ann Cruse
Trino Pascual Cruz Cervera
Katie Dalby
Benjamin Patrick Dallyn
Safeena Daroge
Thomas David Davenport
Sarah Louise Davies
Claire Amelia Davis
Katherine Ann De Rome
Thomas George De’Ath
Ailbhe Doherty
Aled William Donaldson
Akash Doshi
Adam Dossaji
Isabella Mary Heneage
Drummond
Rashmi Sarah D’Souza
Harry Edward DucatHamersley
Alana Jade Durrant
Sarah Margaret Dyson
Freya Teleri Rose Edwards
Kate Hannah Eldridge
Thomas Geoffrey Ellice
Benjamin Harry Ellis
Ibraahim Elmi
Jack Michael Emmett
Ahmad Kanaan Entabi
Samuel Evbuomwan
Nikolaos Fanaras
Sarah Catherine Felinski
Thomas Fenner
Isabella Louise Cacilda
Fernandes
Francesco Fiorini
James Mark Fish
Angus Gray Fitchie
Conor William Flaherty
Laura Anne Foley
Thomas Roshan Fonseka
Rachel Elizabeth Foster
Elizabeth Victoria Freeman
Nicole Reighann Gayle
Elizabeth George
Abdul-Latif Ghuwel
Andrew Michael Giannelli
Lydia Catherine Gibson
David Thomas Gill
Sam Nishanth Gnanapragasam
Alison Gowland
Rosemary Elizabeth Grain
Helen Catherine Grant
Thomas Jeffrey Green
Nathan Michael Court Grundy
Jason Samuel Gupta
Sheena Gupta
Julie Hammond
Cara Michelle Hanley
Danica Shanee Hapuarachchi
Luke Kieffer Harding
James Alexander John Harper
Annabelle Rose Harris
Yahma Hassan
Benjamin John Havard
Jack Francis Haywood
Hannah Louise Headon
Elizabeth Grace Highton
Xin Nee Ho
Dorian Martin Hargreave
Hobday
Rebecca Hodnett
Chii Haw Hon
Leyli Laura Anabel HornaMinchola
Shih-Hwei Huang
Sophie Bethan Hughes
Danish Humayon
Robert Christopher Anthony
Hurwitz Bremner
Zakir Juneid Hussain
Laura Jayne Hynard
Jessica Ignatius
Haseeb Imtiaz
Alexander Daryush Isted
Mun Jung Jang
Lynn Hazel Januszewski
Parul Jha
Yuchen Jiang
Mufaddal Jivanjee
Sabrina Bano Jiwani
Benedict Jong
Doreen Kageha
Amanpreet Singh Kahlon
Ramya Kandiah
Karolina Kapeller
Adam Kara
Anthie Karavaggelis
Harini Ashanee Karunaratne
Randeep Singh Karwal
Natashja Trishka Kasianczuk
Hannah Noor Katifi
Oyindamola Kesinro
Beita Khadem
Attiya Usman Khan
Shanur Mohmood Khan
Zainab Ahmed Khan
Han Xern Khoo
Jason Adam Kilmartin
Comfort Adebusola Oluwakemi
King
Lina Adelaide Bastos Gomes
Pereira Porem Kingston
Abhinav Kishore
Robert Redvers Buller Kitson
Sebastian Robert Xiu-Butt
Kosasih
Sevgi Kozakli
Hagop Krikorian
Yukiko Kubota-Sjogren
Kathryn Anita Curtin Kumar
Alyshea Kurimbokus
Chui Yi Lai
Martyn Lakeland
Jose Lamorena Jnr
James Alexander Larkworthy
Kristo Fernando Lauriaga
Grace Christine Lavelli
Hannah Lawrence
Madeleine Emma Lawrence
Jieyun Yinwor Lee
Shaun Chi-Cheuk Lee
Shu Han Leong
Alison Liu
Gunnar Vatana Ljungqvist
George John Lockett
Greg Simon Logan
Daniel Loh
Xun Luo
Clare Ly
Poppy Peaches Mackay
Banuka Maheswaran
Dominic Charles Main
Carolyn Lois Major
Jaya Makker
Akanksha Mimi Malhotra
Sarah Jane Mallon
Henrietta Antonia Emily Mann
Mariama Amma Henewaa
Marfo
Amy Isobel Martin
Martha Sybilla Paris Martin
Amrit Kaur Matharu
Gamuchirai Chiwaraidzo
Mawoyo
Adam John Mayers
Ben James McAllister
Juli Anna McCulloch
Mark McFerran
Elizabeth Claire McNaught
Stuart Charles Knatt McPhail
Rachael Meredith
Kerry Michaels
Morteza Mirabdulhagh
Tahera Mirza
Umesh Vinod Mistry
Sukhleen Kaur Momi
Niloofar Monibi
Lucy Jayne Morris
Juliana Graciani Moura
Shawnee Ann Munro
Mahjabeen Fatima Mustafa
Rasneet Kaur Nagi
Vasanth Venkat Naidu
Anna Naito
Zainab Najim
Arjun Nanavati
Sandeep Krishan Nayar
Matthew James Naylor
Vivien Nebo
Clara Ka Yu Ngai
Prajeshan Nirmalan
Elisabeth Ailsa Nuttall
Joy Ifunanya Olajumoke
Obianyo-Onwuagha
Abena Samuella Naa Apea
Ofori-Sey
Pearl Nkiruka Chioma Ogakwu
Robert Anthony O’Loughlin
Ifeanyi Onwuka
Barbara Omo Osamwonyi
Cristina Amaya Osborne
Daniel-Clement Osei-Bordom
Alexandra Elizabeth Ostler
Joanna Rashmi O’Sullivan
Lydia Rose O’Sullivan
Stephanie Arama Boatemaa
Oware
Adebowale Kolade Christopher
Oyegoke
Mayowa Adetunji Oyesanya
Anmol Pandey
Emily Partridge
Asha Yogendra Patel
Dhruvesh Patel
Janki Hitendra Patel
Janki Yogendra Patel
Minil Patel
Nileema Pravin Patel
Asha Pavithran
Richard James Pearse
Emilia Rossenova Peleva
Nataliya Sergiyivna Piletska
Karen Michelle Pinto
Sharon Chun-Wai Poon
Ravi Poorun
Kate Isabel Potter
Yewen Qin
Nadhya Qureshi
Anika Tahsin Rahim
Rameez Rahman
Ameer Khalid Areef Rashed
Vinoth Ravi
Ramyadevi Ravindrane
Kit Fairfax Reynolds
Jayson Chad Roberts
Nicholas James Roberts
Rebecca Caroline Robey
Alexandra Elizabeth Robinson
Lianne Ruth Robinson
Sanjeev Singh Sahota
Miriam Elizabeth Samuel
Naomi Cherubina Samuel
Vidya Anna Samuel
Mandeep Singh Sandhu
Olivia Emily Emma Charlton
Scott
Benjamin Seaman
Rowan William Searle
Andrew Seggie
Breyoni Shamira Nevins
Selvadurai
Rajiv Kumar Sethi
Adeel Shaffiq
Thurkaa Shanmugalingam
Nimlan Shanmugathas
Sachin Sharma
Matthew Philip Sharp
Ravi Shaunak
Omar Sheikh
William Shepherd
Ibrahim Hasanyn Naim Sheriff
Gabriel Xavier Jackman
Sherliker
Susan Sherwali
Shailee Sheth
Jordan Michael Shoesmith
Sukhpal Singh Sidhu
David Simons
Ajayavelu Singaravelou
Jashandeep Singh
Kaushiki Singh
Priyanka Singh
Christine Delarni Sitaranjan
Johanna Gerarda Maria
Slothouber Galbreath
Nicola Mary Smallcombe
Vaishnavi Sornarajah
Elizabeth Laura Springate
Roelof Joe Stammeijer
Kyle Robert Scott Stephenson
Kathryn Eva Stirling
Thomas Alexander Stocks
Andrew John Sullivan
Abida Sultana
Sukrit Jushay Suresh
Puja Tanwani Gwlani
Sophie Taylor
Laurence Telesia
Daniel Harry Tewkesbury
Michael Steven Theaker
Pavlos Louis Theodorou
Subanhey Thiyagalingam
Joseph Vernon Thompson
Jessica Thuringer
Rachel Elizabeth Toner
Folashade Omotoyosi Elizabeth
Tongo
Alex Morgan Touzé
Rebecca Joanne Trenear
Trishan Vaikunthanathan
Nora van der Stelt
Ketan Vekaria
Abhinav Ramnarayan Vepa
Abbiramy Vivekananda
Christopher Charles Waight
Anuj Wali
Luqman Hussain Wali
Ieuan Gordon Walker
Mohammed Waqar
Margaret Aragon Ward
Lucy Marijke Webb
Katherine Linda Wiles
Theodore Andrew WillisonParry
Claire Lixian Wong
Felix Nicholas Robert Wood
Andrew Wright
Jermaine Wright
William Yau
Felicia Yeung
Mohammad Ahtsham Zafar
Serena Zaman
Imen Zoubir
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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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.
King’s College London
Southwark Cathedral, 30 June & 1 July 2016
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DESIGN
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Approved by
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July 2016