Uwc 360 issue 5 revised web version

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ALUMNI E-NEWSLETTER | ISSUE 5/JUNE 2013

Contact the Alumni Relations Office: Amanda Philander-Hietala, Contact the Alumni Alumni Relations Relations Manager Office: Tel: +27 21 959 2143 | Fax: 021 959 9791 | Email: alumni@uwc.ac.za | www.uwc.ac.za/alumni http://twitter.com/UWCAlumni http://twitter.com/UWConline | http://www.facebook.com/uwcalumni

LEAD from where

YOU ARE

Pharmacy takes the Lead This issue focuses on dealing with leadership challenges within the Pharmacy sector. The latest instalment of the ‘Lead From Where You Are’ leadership dialogue series, presented by UWC’s Alumni Association, focused on how pharmacists could improve the value of health care by adapting to the changes occurring within modern medicine.

UWC project improves access to medicines UWC's School of Pharmacy and the School of Public Health are collaborating with seven institutions from Africa, Europe and South Asia in a research project focused on improving access to affordable, effective and safe medicines. Accessing Medicines in Africa and South Asia (AMASA), is a European Union-funded project that includes three study countries - South Africa, India and Uganda. It commenced in May 2010 and ends in Dr Kim Ward, AMASA project October 2013. According to Dr Kim coordinator and researcher Ward, AMASA project coordinator and researcher, due to the growing burden of infectious diseases and chronic non-communicable diseases, continuous access to essential

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medicine has become a key priority for governments, nongovernmental organisations, activist organisations and citizens across the world. “To identify and interrogate the underlying causes of upstream and downstream bottlenecks in the pharmaceutical systems of the three countries, we conducted fieldwork at national and sub-national levels.” Key informant interviews with regulators, Department of Health officials, medicine producers, supply chain managers, middleand lower-level health managers, prescribers, dispensers and community health workers were triangulated, where possible, with patient surveys and facility observations. Ward says the key findings for South Africa will form the basis of country-specific and cross-country publications to be submitted to journals within the next few months. The first three papers focus on issues that should be addressed to ensure that the National Health Insurance (NHI) and the proposed new health products regulatory authority promote equitable access to medicine. Apart from publications, the dissemination of research findings this year will take the form of conference presentations, workshops with key stakeholders, newsletters and the drafting of policy briefs. “On behalf of the AMASA team from UWC, led by Prof David Sanders, I would like to thank the research participants, some of whom are School of Pharmacy alumni, for the time availed to be interviewed for this research,” Ward says. For more information on dissemination activities, please contact Dr Kim Ward at kward@uwc.ac.za or telephone 021 959 3440. URL: www.amasa-project.eu


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UWC capped 3 136 students, including 37 doctoral and 238 master's graduates during the past graduation season.

A family of pharmacists

Editorial Welcome to the fifth edition of Three-Sixt-e, the second issue for 2013. We have another jam-packed edition in store for you. UWC continues to enhance the intellectual, social and economic life of our country. This edition proudly acknowledges the development of South Africa's first hydrogen fuel cell golf cart by UWC’s HySA Systems Integration & Technology Validation Competence Centre and Melex Electrovehicles.

Ahmed Halday and three of his children studied pharmacy at UWC.

After Ahmed Halday obtained his pharmacy degree at UWC in 1979 (he graduated with a BSc in 1976) he went on to manage Medi-Kem, a successful and popular pharmacy. Three of his children - Shanaaz, Abdul Hamid and Miriam - followed suit and also studied pharmacy at UWC. All work in the family business with their mother, who is described as a pharmacist without a degree. Mrs Halday has been the backbone of the business for thirty years, dealing with all administrative matters. Miriam, who graduated at UWC in 2003, says her father inculcated a culture of assisting other people in them. Also, her father was often praised and was wellrespected in his community. The exemplary figure Ahmed presented inspired his children to follow his career path. Despite lucrative opportunities to work in the UK and in the USA, Ahmed has served the Sunnyside area of Athlone, where he grew up, professionally since 1982. During apartheid, his pharmacy was used to hide students during protests, and was the first

stop for Govan Mbeki, father of former President Thabo Mbeki, after he was released from prison. At UWC he was popular too, and names the late Professor Jakes Gerwel, who was the leader of the Student Representative Council, among his role models. His popularity put his children on the spot. “Most lecturers knew him and we were constantly hassled and picked on a lot,” Abdul Hamid recalls. Ahmed Halday notes that the road to success was not easy. His lecturers in his undergraduate years at UWC were “Broederbonders” who were architects of apartheid. He remembers one lecturer coming to class with a gun in his hand, and another telling students to open windows, even in winter, 'because they stink'. “He would say 'you are not humans, you must still be humans'.” To prove such people wrong and to improve conditions for his family, Mr Halday worked at night and studied during the day until he could open his pharmacy business.

The Campus Lifestyle Store Want to show you're Proudly UWC? We stock a wide range of UWC Alumni memorabilia. Contact the Campus Lifestyle Store for details, at campuslifestyle@uwc.ac.za or telephone +27 21 959 9341/2.

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The spotlight falls on the School of Pharmacy, with the newsletter featuring several alumni who have established successful careers in the sector, as well as alumni from other departments and faculties. The theme in the latest instalment of the ‘Lead from where you are’ discussion series, which took place earlier in May, also focused on Pharmacy with the highly enlightening discussion entitled Pharmacists Adapting to Change. We also catch up with UWC alumnus Jerry Laka, assistant coach to the national women’s football team Banyana Banyana, who shares with us his experiences of coaching UWC football. The campus was graced with a performance by local performing artist and UWC alumnus, Chad Saaiman, at the finale of the Alumni T-shirt Competition which was hosted by the Alumni Relations Office in March. The competition inspired students to create a T-shirt design showcasing the 'proudly Udubs' experience. The winning designs will be featured on the Alumni Winter and Summer range T-shirts. Well done to second-year biotechnology student Khuboni Mdlambuzi for producing the winning design. Thank you so much for your terrific contribution. Patricia Lawrence Pro Vice-Chancellor Department for Institutional Advancement


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The School of Pharmacy (SoP) is a national leader in prioritising Service Learning and is pioneering collaborative efforts with healthcare service delivery providers in the Cape Town metropole.

Matsoso in the hot seat Malebona Precious Matsoso

UWC scientists have developed South Africa's first hydrogen fuelled golf cart.

Golf cart innovators invite alumni aboard The HySA Systems Integration & Technology Validation Competence Centre (HySA Systems) has called on alumni to support its hydrogen fuel cell (HFC) golf cart project.

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(CHP), says it would be “valuable” for HySA if the University's alumni community could become part of the supply chain to supply components for the HFC golf cart and various other exciting HySA projects (visit www.hysasystems.org for more information).

HySA Systems is one of three national Competence Centres that were initiated by the Department of Science and Technology's National Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies (HFCT) Flagship Project, also known as Hydrogen South Africa or HySA. The vehicle is being used by HySA Systems to investigate the viability of hydrogen in transport applications in South Africa.

The initiative has generated a great deal of interest among collaborators and graduates. He stressed the importance of introducing locallyproduced components.

Early results are encouraging. The range of the golf cart is nearly doubled by the use of the hydrogen fuel cell. The vehicle is virtually silent in operation and can reach a speed of up to 50 km/h.

Pasupathi noted that the initiative has generated a lot of interest among their collaborators and graduates. He stressed the importance of introducing locally-produced components.

Professor Bruno G. Pollet, director of HySA Systems at UWC, explains: “The only emission from this golf cart is water. And the hydrogen fuel source can be produced by using renewable technologies such as solar or wind energy. The entire process, from production to driving, is purely green.”

Pasupathi said it was exciting for the team who worked on the project to show South Africa's capability, and promised that more such initiatives were on the cards. “This is just the first step. We want to build on this and pave the way for local manufacturing and job creation.”

Dr Sivakumar Pasupathi, the programme manager responsible for the key programme on combined heat and power

The golf cart was developed by HySA Systems at UWC in conjunction with Melex Electrovehicles.

As the Director-General of the South African National Department of Health and vice-chairperson of the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) executive board, UWC alumna Malebona Precious Matsoso has the world at her feet. Her positions come with huge responsibilities. “In health, we touch people from birth to grave,” Matsoso explains. “Health touches the individuals, it touches families, it touches the community, it touches everybody.” “In my position as one of the four vicechairpersons of WHO’s Executive Board, a position I was elected into at the World Health Assembly in Geneva in May, I will be flying the South African flag high. I am a resource but also a servant for my country.” Matsoso obtained a degree in pharmacy from UWC, a postgraduate diploma in health management from the University of Cape Town, and a master’s in law from the University of Dundee in the UK. She has served as the Director in Public Health Innovation and Intellectual Property (PHI) in the office of the DirectorGeneral of the World Health Organisation. It was while in this position that Matsoso was exposed to innovative ways in which other countries were addressing their health challenges. “Some countries were doing so well with fewer resources There were some valuable lessons to take home.” Matsoso cited South Africa’s decision to be one of the 93 countries worldwide to commit to implementing National Health Insurance as a “great achievement for the entire country.” She attributed the seeds of her success to UWC. While she was in her third year of study at the then University of the North (now the University of Limpopo), studies were completely disrupted and Matsoso and her classmates couldn’t find a place at another university in the north of the country. "We had no home and one had given up on continuing to study. But UWC gave us an opportunity that became a turning point in my life.”


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Research in the School of Pharmacy (SoP) spans the entire pharmaceutical value chain from drug design, pharmacological characterisation of traditional plant medicines, drug delivery to the supply chain and pharmaceutical care.

UWC alumna makes history

Hendrik proves perseverance pays “There were some heavy arguments but luckily no one got hurt.” The memorable incident was nothing compared to Hendrik's real struggle to complete his studies. His family's two-bedroom council flat in Elsies River was home to as many as twelve relatives and was in an area claimed by rival gangs. Gang-related shooting often broke out at night, the only time Swartz could study. As if that wasn't stressful enough, he often had to contend with excessively loud music played by some of his neighbours.

Dr Gloria Tshukudu

Dr Gloria Tshukudu is the first black female plastic surgeon in South Africa but being the first means nothing to her in comparison to the value of the work. “We don't just improve the look but we also improve the psychological well-being of people, be it reconstructive or cosmetic,” explains Tshukudu, who was born in Mabopane in Pretoria. Her practice is not only about cosmetic improvements such as breast enlargement and liposuction, but is more likely to involve correcting congenital defects such as cleft lips and palates, body defects in HIV-positive patients and assisting breast cancer patients who have had their breasts removed. Complications occur now and then, and some patients are not always happy with the results. But achieving aesthetically pleasing results gives her satisfaction. After graduating with a BSc from UWC in 1991, she completed her MBChB degree at Medunsa and worked as a medical officer in various departments of general surgery in the public sector. She was drawn to plastic surgery and qualified in 2012. Tshukudu became sensitized to what was happening around the country while at UWC. “The spirit of working together and helping each other was strong. We had squatters in the hostel because not everyone had the privilege of getting a room. The spirit of Ubuntu is needed when you deal with patients, so when you allowed someone to stay with you in a single room and share your meals you learned tolerance, understanding and compassion, which are some of the important tools needed in medicine.”

Hendrik Swartz faced some difficult choices during times of protest on campus. “These conditions made studying difficult, and I often had to study through the night at other people's homes or in the University study hall - it was safer that way, as I had no transport to go home when it was late.”

Hendrik Swartz beat the odds to succeed.

Like many UWC alumni, Hendrik Swartz faced some difficult choices during times of protest on campus. While studying at the University of the Western Cape in the 1990s, he attended a pharmacy class during a student protest, thinking that it was too well-hidden to be disrupted by protesters. To his surprise, they were found and a stand-off ensued as protesters tried to force their way into the class. “That was a worrying moment, as we were only approximately 30 students facing masses of angry protesters,” Swartz recalled.

Upcoming

EVENTS

His dream of escaping the poverty, drugs and violence of Elsies River made Swartz persevere … But his dream of escaping the poverty, drugs and violence of Elsies River made Swartz persevere and graduate with a pharmacy degree in 1998, and rise through the ranks in the health sector to become the hospital manager at Life Queenstown Private Hospital. Hendrik has a word of advice for struggling students. “Do not focus on the issues in life that you cannot change. Rather focus on the opportunities to adapt, implement and survive.”

The September 2013 Graduation ceremony will take place from 18 September to 20 September. The Johannesburg Golf Day will take place on 23 July 2013 at the Randpark Golf Club. Times to be announced.

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Four of the players from UWC's Ladies' Football Club are members of the national squad, Banyana Banyana.

Women's football is Laka's focus

Graduate on top of the world Professor Cudore Snell epitomises the aspirations of many UWC students and alumni. After graduating at UWC with a BA in social work and psychology in 1973, Snell studied at a number of other institutions and is now dean and a professor at the School of Social Work at Howard University in the US. He visited his alma mater in March with a group of students, faculty, alumni and the Interim President of Roxbury Community College in Boston, Massachussetts. Born in Wellington in the Boland, Snell says he always aspired to higher education. He says many at the University hold him in high esteem and suggested he shouldn't have left, but the apartheid regime forced his move abroad in August 1979. “Back then people just wanted to get away from South Africa.” While at UWC, Snell recalls that lecturers were Afrikaners who kept the boundaries. “We knew our place and were reminded about it sometimes.” Although UWC was meant for students of colour only, under the 1959 Extension of University Education Act, not many were able to study at tertiary level. Classes were small, Snell remembers, and students knew one another by name. “It was a really supportive, caring and fun environment. If I had to choose a university, I would go to UWC. I would return to UWC in a heartbeat.” He found the campus quite different to when he was a student. “I did not recognize the campus in general and was impressed by the Life Sciences building,” he says.

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Jerry Laka encouraging a Banyana Banyana star.

With a degree in law, an honours degree in sports management and immense coaching and administration experience, Jerry Laka could easily hold a senior position in one of the country's top professional clubs. Instead, he chose to be a sports administrator responsible for football at UWC because he believes he is able to touch the lives of many more people than he would in a club. “At the university we build the character of students who then go back to the community to develop others,” Laka explains. “We mould and build future leaders.” Laka, who graduated with honours in sport and recreational management at UWC in 2010, was recently appointed as the head coach of the University Sports South Africa Women’s National Football Team that will take part in the 27th World Student Games (aka Summer Universiade), to be held in Kazan, Russia in July. Although Laka is responsible for both men’s and women's football development at UWC, he has a soft spot for coaching women.

“Men's football is already developed and there is a lot of focus on them, but women need much more help,” he reasons. “Also, when you develop women they will take that home and influence children. As it is said, 'if you educate a woman, you educate a nation'.” But coaching women is no child's play, warns the man who is also an assistant coach of the national women's football team, Banyana Banyana. “Yhoo! It's so difficult, people take it for granted,” he says. “You start a person from scratch... You have to adjust and understand. And you need to be careful and handle them with care. You must make them love the sport.” Laka differs with those who regard female soccer players as tomboys. “I always tell them that they can maintain their femininity and still play football. They can be the ladies they are and play the best football.” His wish is for football and education to go hand-in-hand. Laka is working to set up a much-needed academy on football and education, to nurture talent.

Announcement Respected UWC scholar, Prof Peter Eagles, retires in August as Professor of Pharmaceutical Chemistry at the University's School of Pharmacy (SoP). Eagles, who is also a UWC alumnus (BPharm, BSc Hons and MSc, as well as a PhD from UCT), has decades of experience as a pharmacist, pharmacy educator and administrator, and served as the Head of SoP for nine years. He has served, and continues to serve, in various national and international bodies, including the expert committee on traditional medicines at the World Health Organisation and as Chairperson of the South African Medicines Control Council.


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UWC’s Professor Shirley Walters was the first female professor in the field of adult education in the country, and the first person to start research into gender equity at UWC. Her research led to the establishment of the University’s Gender Equity Unit (GEU), which celebrates its 20th anniversary this year.

Graduate seeks cure for cancer Dr William Motswainyana

Dr William Motswainyana found the worldwide increase in the incidence of cancer so “painful” that he dedicated himself to finding a solution.

Prof Nadine Butler responds to a question from the audience, while fellow panelists Prof Peter Eagles (left) and Praneet Valodia (right) listen attentively at the Lead From Where You Are event.

Enhancing health care value The UWC Alumni Association's 'Lead From Where You Are' event in May, entitled Pharmacists Adapting to Change, provided insightful commentary on how pharmacists could deliver value in health care, tap into the strengths of the new generation of graduates and respond to the latest developments in the regulations and control of herbal and other medicines. The event was hosted by the Alumni Relations Office in the Department for Institutional Advancement. In his welcome address, Professor Michael DaviesColeman, Dean of the Faculty of Natural Sciences, told alumni: “You are a bridge of activity to give the school feedback on trends and changes in the field that should guide and enable us to ensure that our graduates are relevant, capable and connected.” Praneet Valodia, Executive Manager (Innovation and Development) for the Independent Clinical Oncology Network (ICON), spoke of a need for pharmacists to enhance value through improved operations. He said there were many ways to measure value, such as comparing health interventions to their outcomes. Valodia said there were opportunities for pharmacists in the government's National Health Insurance (NHI), and questioned pharmacists' readiness to meet NHI requirements: “Are pharmacists starting

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to prepare to align themselves with NHI?” Valodia, a UWC alumnus, called on pharmacists to retrain themselves in certain areas to align with the new skills required of the profession, change their business models and work together to be on top of their game. Professor Nadine Butler felt that the current generation of students has forced lecturers to re-evaluate the way they teach, that this generation of students is different and cannot be expected to be like the older generation, and that its strengths, such as quick information retrieval and multitasking, should be exploited for the benefit of the profession. In his presentation, Complementary Medicines: Practical implications of regulation and control of herbal and other medicines, Professor Peter Eagles spoke about the importance of regulating non-allopathic medicines and some of the reasons for the slow pace in achieving this in South Africa. He reminded pharmacists selling these products to ask themselves whether these medicines were effective, safe and of good quality. Professor Sarel Malan, SoP Director, updated alumni about the School's successes and the challenges presented by its rapid growth in recent years. He called on them to join the School in achieving its goals. “We can't reach our goals without the assistance and collaboration of our alumni," he said.

“This rapid increase in the cancer burden represents a major concern and challenge for public health systems worldwide, so I decided to see if I could assist with the development of new drugs,” explained Botswanaborn Motswainyana, who graduated with a PhD in chemistry in March. In Motswainyana's study, titled Ferrocenylimine, imino-quinolyl and imino-phosphine palladium(II) and platinum(II) complexes: their synthesis, characterization and cytotoxic effects, he imagined, designed and prepared 29 novel compounds which showed great potential to inhibit tumour cells. The compounds are structurally similar to the established antineoplastic agent, cisplatin, which has been reportedly plagued by drug resistance and side effects. The new complexes exhibited growth inhibitory activities that were even better than cisplatin. Now the project is to be taken to the next level, which includes in vivo testing and/or clinical trials. “I'm definitely sure that this is a breakthrough,” Motswainyana says. “I'm so excited about the results. I never imagined this project would get to this level.” Motswainyana, who also obtained his masters in chemistry (cum laude) at UWC, has won a number of accolades, including the Sasol Postgraduate Medal of the South African Chemical Institute in 2011, a bursary from the Royal Society of Chemistry to attend Summer School at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland in June 2012, and a bursary to visit KU-Leuven in Belgium in September 2012, to learn the basics of X-ray crystallography.


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UWC alumna Professor Rachel Jafta has been appointed as the chairperson of the board of Media24.

Meet the Members

ON THE BOOKSHELVES

of the Alumni Association

Meet the Members of the Alumni Association

New book explores language Language, Society and Communication UWC’s Department of Linguistics has released a new textbook aimed at undergraduate linguistics, language and communication students.

Bongani Gora (BSc, 1998) When Bongani Gora proposed the establishment of a night school in Crossroads, he wanted to make money to survive as a student at UWC. “I wanted to be financially independent but this required that I look for a job, fulltime or day time,” says Gora, now a Policy and Research Consultant in the Gauteng Department of Sport, Arts, Culture and Recreation. The school principal welcomed his idea, and the night school turned out to be such a valuable asset to the community that it still exists, almost two decades later. Gora, who obtained his BSc degree from UWC in 1998, was a member of the Azanian Student Movement (AZASM) and served on the Students’ Representative Council for about three years until he realised that his SRC work was negatively affecting his studies. Grahamstown-born Gora speaks highly of UWC. “I joined an institution that was popularly called ‘an intellectual home of the left’. It was a measured choice, a correct and a wise choice.” The visit to UWC by James Watson and Francis Crick, who received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their 1953 determination of the structure of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), was the highlight of Gora’s time at the University. “We came face to face with the scientists that unravelled the molecular structure of DNA (the double helix) thereby enabling scientists to map the entire human genome amongst other things and revolutionise knowledge of genetics.”

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A pilot edition is being trialled at the University this year and will be revised for publication next year. Language, Society and Communication introduces established and new linguistic concepts and theories, and links these to contemporary issues in society and the media, including new social media. The focus on southern Africa is explained in the preface: 'Not only do we live in a region that has an immensely rich and complex linguistic inheritance, but the developments of the past few decades, including the technological developments associated with globalisation and the increased mobility of people and information across borders, have added to the emergence of new and hybrid forms of language and communication.' The book, which was entirely written by current and past staff, academic associates and students of the department, examines how language is intricately bound up with issues of power, status and identity. It scrutinises the tension between the diverse nature of everyday language practices on the one hand, and the societal pressures on managing and containing this diversity on the other. It also demonstrates the relevance of linguistic study to real world problems within a South African context.

Melvin Watkins (BCom, 1990) For Melvin Watkins, UWC not only prepared him well for the corporate world but also made a very important personal contribution. “One of the high moments I had at UWC was when I met my girlfriend for the first time, now my wife,” Watkins recalls. Since he graduated in 1990 with a bachelor of commerce in finance, Watkins has worked in the banking, manufacturing, telecommunications, mining, retailing and information technology sectors, and is now the Chief Executive Officer of the New Generation Group, a management consulting and technology services company. “Besides the degree I obtained at UWC, the education I gained in term of academia, social skills and politics preparing me for the challenges in the corporate world and is serving me well in my business. After almost 23 years in the corporate world, I can truly attest to the fact that my time at UWC was worth it.” Things were tough for students back then. Watkins remembers the “exciting but terrifying” times when class boycotts were the order of the day. Those calls were always followed by marches to the university gate with ‘Free Mandela’ posters that got them into trouble with security forces. There were weird moments, too. One of them was when he saw three naked men running from tree to tree towards the men’s hostel. “This was really hilarious,” comments Watkins. It was later established that they were robbed of all their clothing and wallets on the train.


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The School of Pharmacy (SoP) is the first in the country to offer an online Masters in Regulatory Sciences degree.

Saaiman rocks UWC

Celebrity Corner

Local singing sensation and UWC alumnus Chad Saaiman delivered a highly entertaining performance at the Alumni T-shirt competition finale hosted at UWC Student Centre on 26 March 2013.

Correction An article published in the previous edition of this newsletter incorrectly stated that, Mr Wiseman Gabavana had graduated with a BA degree in English from UWC. It should have read BAdmin degree. The Three-Sixt-e team sincerely apologises and regrets this error.

UWC alumnus Chad Saaiman entertaining the crowd at his alma mater.

Talented singer, songwriter, recording artist and model Chad Saaiman wowed the crowd at a packed Student Centre during the alumni fashion show in March, organised by the Alumni Relations Office in the Department for Institutional Advancement. The event featured the judging of the Alumni T-shirt Competition 2013, which challenged UWC students to create a design or illustration that communicated being 'proudly Udubs'. The aim, according to Samantha Castle of the alumni office, was to create awareness among students of what being an alumnus means. After a tense assessment by a panel of judges, second-year biotechnology student Khuboni Mdlambuzi was announced as the winner and walked away with a brand new iPod Shuffle. The winning designs will be printed on the UWC Alumni T-shirts for this year's summer and winter ranges. At the show, rising models strutted their stuff – to the huge applause of the crowd

Find us…

Winning designs for the 2013 Alumni T-shirt Competition modelled by UWC students.

– to showcase the alumni clothing range, which can be purchased at the University's Campus Lifestyle Store. The event gave students a rare chance to be entertained by one of the University's most popular graduates. Saaiman, who obtained his BA in English Literature and Communications, has performed in many countries as well as at most of the premier events on the South African circuit.

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Get your free UWC Alumni T-shirt and much more for only R150 per annum (or R50 for the first two years after graduation)! To join, download and complete the Alumni Membership form at www.uwc.ac.za/alumni Contact us at email: alumni@uwc.ac.za or tel: 021 959 2143 if you have any questions.

STAY CONNECTED! Your alma mater wants to keep you updated with the latest UWC news, events and information. Update your contact details at www.uwc.ac.za/ alumni or send an email with your details to alumni@uwc.ac.za. Contact us at email: alumni@uwc.ac.za or call us at tel: 021 959 2143.


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