The Cambridge 800th Anniversary Campaign Report 2010–2011
CONTENTS Campaign Board 02 From the Co-Chairmen 03 From the Vice-Chancellor 04 From the Chairman of the Colleges’ Committee
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Financial Performance 06 The Guild of Cambridge Benefactors 10 The Vice-Chancellor’s Circle 11 Contacts 12
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CAMPAIGN BOARD MEMBERS ARE COMMITTED ALUMNI AND FRIENDS WHO HAVE MADE LEADERSHIP GIFTS TO THE CAMBRIDGE 800TH ANNIVERSARY CAMPAIGN, AND WHO PROVIDE ADVICE AND COUNSEL ABOUT THE STRATEGY FOR THE CAMPAIGN.
CAMPAIGN CHAIRMEN Dr William H Janeway (Pembroke, 1965) Sir David Walker (Queens’, 1958)
CAMPAIGN BOARD MEMBERS – AS OF DECEMBER 2011 Charles N Corfield (St John’s, 1978) Dr Christopher Dobson (Selwyn, 1957) The Hon Stephen Evans-Freke (Trinity, 1970) David Harding (St Catharine’s, 1979) Gurnee F Hart (Jesus, 1994) Dr Hermann Hauser (King’s, 1973) Harvey McGrath (St Catharine’s, 1971) Scott Mead (Emmanuel, 1979) Dr Robert Sansom (Emmanuel, 1978) Dr Rosalind Smith (New Hall, 1981) Guy Whittaker (Christ’s, 1974) James Wilson (Trinity, 1971) Morris Zukerman (King’s, 1966)
The late Eric Walters (Selwyn, 1962) also served as a valued member of the Campaign Board until his untimely death in November 2010.
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FROM THE CO-CHAIRMEN: COMPLETING THE CAMPAIGN The announcement in June 2010 that the 800th Anniversary Campaign had reached its original £1 billion target, two years ahead of schedule, has not dampened the commitment and enthusiasm of our alumni and friends from around the world to continue to support the Campaign. As this report shows, 2010–11 has been a record year with £135 million raised, bringing the ten year Campaign total to a remarkable £1.17 billion. We are immensely grateful to all our donors for their gifts. They have demonstrated, over and over again, their belief in the value of our world-class teaching, research and scholarship. Whilst the aggregate total raised captures the headline, it is the sustained and growing flow of gifts that is the real value of the Campaign and that must be continued if Cambridge’s excellence is to be maintained. In November 2011, the Vice-Chancellor declared that the 800th Campaign was complete, but that he is committed to building on its success and leadership by launching a successor Campaign, probably in 2012–13. It has been an enormous privilege to chair the 800th Campaign and to work with our colleagues on the Campaign Board to help embed the importance of philanthropy across the collegiate University and amongst our alumni. Whilst our work on this Campaign is done, we will be working closely with the Vice-Chancellor to prepare for the next Campaign which will need to be even more audacious if Cambridge’s ambitions are to be realised. This year we have, as usual, much cause to thank the Campaign Board, the Campaign Council, the US Major Gifts Committee, the Hong Kong Fundraising Committee and the College Development Boards for their continuing contributions to the Campaign. Their work, individually and collaboratively, has made this Campaign a success and we hope that they will continue to play an active role in the preparations for a new Campaign.
DR WILLIAM H JANEWAY
SIR DAVID WALKER
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FROM THE VICE-CHANCELLOR: LEADERSHIP AND PHILANTHROPY 2010–11 was a challenging year for UK universities. There were difficult decisions for Cambridge as we grappled, not only with the proposal of higher fees, but also with the impact of significant reductions in government capital funding and tightening of research budgets. Against this background, the importance of sustained philanthropic investment across the collegiate University became ever more visible and the record results for 2010–11 help to give me and my colleagues confidence that our mission to sustain Cambridge’s leadership is achievable, even when faced with exceptional political and economic uncertainties. The support that we receive from alumni and friends matters to us more than ever because much of it provides financial assurance over the longer term and it both allows and encourages the new thinking and creativity that is the hallmark of Cambridge. In that context, I want particularly to thank Campaign Board member, David Harding, for his magnificent and imaginative gift made during this final year of the 800th Campaign. David’s gift will fund a path-breaking ten-year programme in the Physics of Sustainability based in the Cavendish Laboratory. This programme, to be led by Sir Richard Friend FRS, epitomises the innovative research that Cambridge must be able to support if its world leadership is to be maintained. The value of research programmes such as these is not simply the transformative impact that they have on our world; they also underpin our approach to education, particularly through the supervision system. To be taught at close quarters by those whose research, whether in the Arts, Humanities or Sciences, is at the cutting edge of knowledge and scholarship, is a priceless gift. We can only maintain that intensive approach if we have the resources to fill the gap between the true costs of education and the income we receive from government and fees. The fact that the 800th Campaign has added significantly to our endowments is key to maintaining our supervision and research-led approach to educating tomorrow’s leaders. Following close consultation with our Campaign Board, the Colleges and the University Council, we announced in November that the 800th Campaign had been completed at the end of the 2010–11 financial year. When we launched, publically, in September 2005, we set two ambitious goals: to raise at least £1 billion; and to demonstrate leadership in philanthropy in the higher education sector. The 800th Campaign has succeeded beyond those goals and that success encourages us to find new ways of sustaining this hugely positive philanthropic momentum. Given this achievement and with Cambridge’s 800th year behind us, this is the time to revisit our fundraising approach and targets to provide continuing support for our strategic priorities over the coming years. The success of the 800th Campaign is due to the efforts of many individuals inside and outside Cambridge. I am very grateful to all of them. But, in this final 800th Campaign annual report, I want to pay particular tribute to our Co-Chairmen, Sir David Walker and Dr Bill Janeway. Their personal support and their leadership has been extraordinary and I am delighted that they are continuing to work with me and my colleagues as we prepare for the next Campaign.
PROFESSOR SIR LESZEK BORYSIEWICZ
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FROM THE CHAIRMAN OF THE COLLEGES’ COMMITTEE: COLLEGIATE COMMUNITIES The Colleges play a central role in defining Cambridge’s unique identity. However, the collegiate system does not and should not stand still even whilst its fundamental values of a self-governing interdisciplinary community of junior and senior members remain constant. The generosity of donors at all levels to the Colleges has made possible the investments in student support, fellowships and facilities that keep the Colleges relevant and vibrant magnets for the most promising students from around the world. The 800th Campaign has helped to renew and reinforce the historic tradition of philanthropy on which the collegiate system is built. The Colleges’ Committee has enthusiastically endorsed the Vice-Chancellor’s proposal to prepare for a new Campaign in 2012–13 and is committed to maintaining the partnership between College Development offices and the University that has underpinned the 800th Campaign. The need for continued alumni support has never been greater. Not only do Colleges have to find significant income each year to fill the gap between fees and costs, but the endowments on which much of that income is dependent are under pressure from continuing volatility in equity markets and low interest rates worldwide. In addition, higher fees must be accompanied by more generous financial support for students in need. At the same time, the Colleges must support all aspects of the student experience, from libraries and IT infrastructure to non-academic opportunities in sport, drama, music, and travel. Gifts to Colleges are helping to achieve those goals. 2010–11 saw a welcome recovery in giving, with funds raised reaching £63 million. Participation rates, a key measure of sustainability, reached record highs in a number of Colleges and an average of 11.5% across the collegiate University. This is a tremendous achievement and we are enormously grateful to our donors, our development teams and our armies of student callers who have made this possible. But, of course, these numbers also reveal the scale of the future opportunity. We will fashion new ways to make the case to alumni that their financial support is essential if the benefits they enjoyed are to be offered to future generations.
PROFESSOR ROBERT LETHBRIDGE, MASTER OF FITZWILLIAM COLLEGE
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ON 31 JULY 2011, THE CAMBRIDGE 800TH ANNIVERSARY CAMPAIGN WAS COMPLETED HAVING RAISED A GRAND TOTAL OF £1.17 BILLION. IN THE FINANCIAL YEAR 2010–2011, THE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITY COLLECTIVELY RAISED £135 MILLION.
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE In 2010–11 the University and the Colleges raised £135 million including gifts made to Cambridge in America. £72 million was raised for the benefit of the University and £63 million for the Colleges. This total was a considerable increase on the amount raised in the previous year (£98 million). Whilst the aggregate was boosted by a very generous £20 million benefaction from The David Harding Foundation (for a new programme in the Physics of Sustainability) the total, without this gift, would still be 17% higher than the previous year. In November 2011, the Vice-Chancellor, Sir Leszek Borysiewicz, announced that 2010–11 would be considered the final year of the current 800th Anniversary Campaign. Having exceeded the original milestone target of £1 billion in June 2010, and given the significant changes over the past 12 months in the economic and political environment in which Cambridge operates, it is appropriate to refresh our overall fundraising focus to meet these new challenges. The Vice-Chancellor also announced that sustained philanthropic income would continue to be essential in maintaining Cambridge’s global leadership in teaching, scholarship, and research, and that he would be working intensively with colleagues across the collegiate University, and with alumni and donors, to prepare for the launch of an even more ambitious Campaign. Counting towards the current 800th Anniversary Campaign began in 2001–02. At the end of 2010–11, the final Campaign total stood at £1.17 billion, of which £649 million had been raised by the University and £523 million by the Colleges. 66% of this total has been raised since the public launch of the Campaign in September 2005. When this total is translated into US$ (at the average exchange rate in each year) the total exceeds US$2 billion. This places the Cambridge Campaign amongst the top rank of philanthropic fundraising worldwide. The Colleges and the University also continue actively to encourage alumni and friends of the University to consider making provision for future support in their wills. In the past year, over £60 million of new lifetime legacy pledges with a known value have been notified, bringing the value of known lifetime legacy pledges to £390 million at the end of 2010–11. Although such pledges are not counted towards the Cambridge 800th Anniversary Campaign total, they will be an enormously important source of benefactions in future years. Meeting the goals of the Campaign Funds received during 2010–11 have supported all four major goals of the Campaign as well as generating invaluable unrestricted income (primarily for the benefit of the Colleges). It should be noted that under the arrangements for providing much-needed financial support to students, a proportion of unrestricted gifts will also be directed to this end.
FUNDS RAISED DURING THE CAMPAIGN FOR THE UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGES BY GOAL
Students 14% Other / Unrestricted 19% Collections and Architectural Heritage 17% Staff 30% Discovery 20%
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Sources of donations In 2010–11, gifts from living alumni saw a marked rise and totalled £68 million, accounting for just over half of all funds raised for the University and Colleges combined. Legacies received (primarily from alumni or relatives of alumni) accounted for a further 8% of gifts. Cambridge’s excellence in research and in teaching has also continued to attract philanthropy from individuals, foundations and corporations from across the world. FUNDS RAISED DURING THE CAMPAIGN FOR THE UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGES BY SOURCE OF DONATION Corporations 10% Alumni 34% Trusts and Foundations 27% Other Individuals 13% Legacies 16%
Destination of donations In 2010–11, the large gift to Physics meant that the School of Physical Sciences received 38% of the total funds raised by the University. However, taking the ten years of the Campaign as a whole, donations have been more evenly spread amongst the science-based Schools. Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, in contrast, have received smaller (though still substantial) proportions of the total funds raised. Their proportion rises when gifts for capital projects are excluded (given the relative capital intensity of the science and technology departments and faculties). The Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences are also supported, indirectly, through gifts to ‘other institutions’, which are dominated by the gifts to the Fitzwilliam Museum and the University Library. FUNDS RAISED DURING THE CAMPAIGN FOR THE UNIVERSITY BY DESTINATION OF DONATION Arts and Humanities 7% Humanities and Social Sciences 5% Other Institutions 20% Physical Sciences 19% Clinical Medicine 16% Technology 9% Biological Sciences 24%
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Supporting the endowment At the launch of the 800th Campaign in 2005, the then Vice-Chancellor, Professor Dame Alison Richard, made it clear that strengthening the endowment of both the University and the Colleges was a key subsidiary objective of the 800th Campaign. This goal has been achieved for both Colleges, and for the University. In the University’s case, 37% of the total £649 million raised during the Campaign has been added to the University’s endowment. For the Colleges, 50% of the £523 million raised was for their endowment. Financial modelling has demonstrated that without these new endowment gifts, the permanent capital held in University Trust Funds would have been 35% lower at 31 July 2011. It is primarily through endowment that the Colleges and the University can continue to cover the £9,000 annual shortfall per student on undergraduate education after taking account of fees and government grants. Endowment also provides the resources to secure the very best academics for Cambridge, whether they be Junior Research Fellows at the beginning of an outstanding academic career, or internationally recognised leaders taking up a prestigious endowed Professorship. FUNDS RAISED DURING THE CAMPAIGN FOR THE UNIVERSITY BY PURPOSE
Current Use 28% Construction 35% Endowment 37%
Year by year fundraising performance The Cambridge 800th Anniversary Campaign is built on three key flows of benefactions: significant and rising general participation through annual or regular giving programmes; a sustained flow of substantial major gifts; and periodically, gifts of an exceptional size. The chart opposite shows the Campaign’s annual performance from the first two streams but excludes benefactions of exceptional size that cannot be hoped for in every year. Although economic prospects in many parts of the world remain uncertain, the recovery in donations to the University continued strongly into 2010–11. In addition, giving to the Colleges also recovered from the low of the previous year, reflecting the Colleges’ commitment to sustaining their investment in fundraising over the long term.
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The Colleges continue to invest successfully in annual fund and regular giving programmes, with annual average participation rates reaching 11.5%, a further increase on previous records. A number of Colleges with well-established funds and telephone calling campaigns are reaching annual participation levels of over 20%. It is also notable that over the period of the Campaign, over 54,000 alumni have contributed at least once to a College, and over 8,000 at least once to the University. Translated into participation rates, this means that around 25% of alumni have made at least one gift to the College of their choice; in some Colleges, this proportion rises to over 40%. UNDERLYING FUNDRAISING PERFORMANCE YEAR BY YEAR COMPARISON OF NEW FUNDS RAISED DURING THE CAMPAIGN
University
1. 2. 3. 4.
Colleges
Excludes the £57 million Herchel Smith legacy provided to the University and Emmanuel College. Excludes the £82 million Gatsby Foundation pledge for the Sainsbury Laboratory. Excludes £96 million of pledges outstanding at the beginning of the "quiet period" in 2001–02. Excludes the £30 million pledge from Dr Rosalind Smith and Steven Edwards to endow Murray Edwards College.
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IN RECOGNITION OF THE MUNIFICENCE OF MAJOR BENEFACTORS TO THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE AND ITS COLLEGES, THE CAMBRIDGE FOUNDATION ESTABLISHED THE GUILD OF CAMBRIDGE BENEFACTORS IN 1998. LISTED BELOW, BY THE YEAR IN WHICH THEY QUALIFIED, ARE THOSE MEMBERS WHO HAVE BEEN WELCOMED TO THE GUILD AS A RESULT OF THEIR GENEROUS DONATIONS. NAMES ARE RECORDED AS THEY APPEAR ON THE GUILD’S PLAQUES OUTSIDE THE VICE–CHANCELLOR’S OFFICE.
THE GUILD OF CAMBRIDGE BENEFACTORS 1998–1999 BAT Industries Peter and Paula Beckwith BP plc* Glaxo Wellcome (now GlaxoSmithKline plc) Guinness (now Diageo plc) Sir Paul Judge and Lady Judge Dr and Mrs D M McDonald The Märit and Hans Rausing Charitable Foundation SmithKline Beecham (now GlaxoSmithKline plc) The Wolfson Foundation*
Merck Sharp and Dohme Ltd Dr Herchel Smith* Dr Rosalind Smith* Marie Vergottis
1999–2000 CN Corfield* Dr Dennis Gillings The Monument Trust Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahayan Charitable and Humanitarian Foundation Dr Raymond Sackler KBE and Mrs Beverly Sackler Dr Robert Sansom Sinyi Cultural Foundation The Wellcome Trust* Garfield Weston Foundation
2004–2005 Mr Dennis Avery and Mrs Sally Tsui Wong-Avery* Bristol-Myers Squibb Company Dr Rosalie Canney Eliza and Canning Fok The Health Foundation Harvey McGrath The John and Lucille van Geest Foundation* Woco Foundation Dr F A Zoëllner
2000–2001 Tadao Aoi Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Susan Howatch Hutchison Whampoa and Sir Ka-shing Li* Baroness Thatcher and The Margaret Thatcher Foundation Dr Gordon and Mrs Betty Moore Unilever plc
2005–2006 Dr Catherine Cooke Dr Christopher and Mrs Ann Dobson* Marks & Spencer Group plc Dr Sigrid Rausing HM Sultan Qaboos bin Said, Sultan of Oman Dr John C Taylor* Catherine Thomas Professor John Todd Hazel Trapnell Sir David Walker
2001–2002 The Cripps Foundation Nancy, Dowager Countess of Enniskillen The Gatsby Charitable Foundation* Hitachi Ltd Dr Alan Howard* Dr Seng Tee Lee Hamish Maxwell Douglas Myers N M Rothschild and Sons Schlumberger Dr Scholl Foundation Freydoun Soudavar and family Dr John Sperling Fred van Eck The Westminster Foundation Frank Peter Wilson 2002–2003 HH Dr Sheikh Sultan bin Mohammed Al Qasimi Peter Baldwin and Lisbet Rausing* Robert Beldam Mr and Mrs Gaylord Donnelley Dr and Mrs M C Faulkes Sir Paul Getty KBE William and Weslie Janeway*
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2003–2004 The Andrew W Mellon Foundation Yousef Abdul Latif Jameel* Dr Mark Kaplanoff Paul Mellon KBE Gianni and Joan Montezemolo Rolls-Royce Group plc The Schiff Foundation Norman Waddleton
2006–2007 HRH Prince Bandar bin Sultan Abdulaziz Al-Saud Rita Cavonius Professor and Mrs Louis Cha Dr Chit Chan Gunn Dr Yusuf Hamied Susan and David Hibbitt Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences Sir David K P Li and Lady Penny Li Dame Stephanie Shirley James and Jane Wilson The Winton Charitable Foundation* 2007–2008 Brian Buckley Cancer Research UK* Leslie W. K. Chung The Cultural and Arts Management Trust The Gillespie Family Trust Kyoko Gledhill, in memory of David Gledhill
The Government of India The Hauser-Raspe Foundation* The Hong Kong Cambridge Medical School Liaison Charity Dr Ramon Jenkins Professor Y W Loke* Dr William M W Mong John Osborn Walter and Rosemary Scott Winston Churchill Foundation of the United States 2008–09 Alwaleed Bin Talal Foundation* Dr Denys Armstrong The Cadbury family The Coexist Foundation Countess de Brye Sir Evelyn de Rothschild Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation Steven Edwards* Richard Frischmann Professor Philip Grierson* James Hudleston The Kavli Foundation Dr Donald Kellaway The Kirby Laing Foundation Mark Pigott Dr Leonard Polonsky Dr Alan Reece* Graham Rushton Walters Kundert Charitable Trust Guy Whittaker 2009–10 Veronica Crichton Jim Dickinson Professor Carl Djerassi Bruce & Elizabeth Dunlevie Genzyme Corporation* Farida Hamied The A.G. Leventis Foundation The MAVA Fondation Professor Roger Needham & Professor Karen Spärck Jones The David & Elaine Potter Foundation Tata Steel Toshiba Corporation Lucia Windsor Lord Wolfson of Sunningdale 2010–11 Robin Boyle Cambridge Australia Scholarships Ltd (formerly Cambridge Australia Trust) Thomas & Grace Chan Michael J J Cowan The Evelyn Trust Dmitry Firtash Dr David James Graham Keniston-Cooper and family L. Hoyt & Anne Watson
* Indicates those who have received The Chancellor’s 800th Anniversary Medal for Outstanding Philanthropy.
THE VICE-CHANCELLOR’S CIRCLE WAS CREATED IN 2007 AS PART OF THE CAMBRIDGE 800TH ANNIVERSARY CAMPAIGN. IT PROVIDES THE UNIVERSITY AND THE COLLEGES WITH AN OPPORTUNITY TO RECOGNISE AND THANK THOSE DONORS WHO HAVE PROVIDED SIGNIFICANT SUPPORT FOR KEY PROJECTS AND PROGRAMMES THAT UNDERPIN EXCELLENCE AT CAMBRIDGE.
THE VICE-CHANCELLOR’S CIRCLE Chris Adams H. H. Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohammed Al-Ahmed Al-Sabah Prime Minister of the State of Kuwait The Alborada Trust Anglian Water Group George N Appell Annie C M Arnold AstraZeneca plc Vladimijr Attard Christopher and Shirley Bailey Baker & McKenzie Dr Margaret Barton Christopher Bartram Judy and David Beech Edward and Sally Benthall Bharti Foundation Dr Stephen Blyth Graham Boeckh Foundation Peter Boizot The Bonita Trust Isabelle Bouhon Dr Margaret Branthwaite David and Terrie Brittain Muriel Brittain Dr Philip and Mrs Patricia Brown BT Group plc Sir Adrian Cadbury Tim Cadbury James Campbell Dr Simon and Mrs Jill Campbell Terry Cann Philip Carne Richard Chiu Meileen Choo Citigroup Foundation Michael and Susan Clasper Clifford Chance LLP Anthony Connell C S Craig Family Foundation Crausaz Wordsworth Joanna Dannatt Frances Drake The Drapers’ Company Alison Duke East Asian History of Science Foundation Hong Kong Stefan Edlis & Gael Neeson Foundation Dr Mohamed A El-Erian
The Hon Stephen Evans-Freke and Mrs Valerie Evans-Freke The Esmée Fairbairn Foundation The Allan and Nesta Ferguson Charitable Trust Derek Finlay Ford Foundation Jessica and Peter Frankopan Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer Professor Ronald Girdler John and Ann Haines Gurnee F Hart Cecil Hawkins Michael and Morven Heller Dr Tzu Leung and Mrs Stella Ho F Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd Sarah Holt The Horse Trust Reg Howard Dr Joyce Hutchinson (née Baker) Mary V Insall Johnson Matthey plc Ann Johnston Dr Sidney Kenderdine Richard King KPMG LLP Eashwar Viswanathan Krishnan and Tzo Tze Krishnan-Ang Nat le Roux Lini Lipton Anne Lonsdale Dr Michael Lynch Bevil Mabey Man Group plc The Manoukian Charitable Foundation Ina Boeglin Marica D G Marshall of Cambridge Trust Professor Sir Laurence Martin Marguerite McAvity Price Kevin and Donna McDonald Scott Mead Dr Jonathan Milner and Mrs Rosy Gounaris-Milner Sir Mark and Lady Moody-Stuart The Ruth Eleanor Mott Charitable Trust Mulberry Trust Frances and Augustus Newman Foundation Stavros Niarchos Foundation
Nihon University Neil Ostrer Kevin Overstall Prabir Kumar Pal Dr Robert Paul Pfizer Ltd Philecology Foundation Revd Dr John Polkinghorne QUALCOMM Charles Rawlinson Michael and Sarah Jane Richards Alan C Root Nicholas and Lora Sallnow-Smith Professor Sir Nicholas Shackleton Joan Simms John and Elizabeth Ann Stancliffe The Sutton Trust Keith Sykes Robert Tattersall UCB The Underwood Trust Rumi Verjee Martin Wade Stuart Webb William and Helen West Dr Anthony Wild Dr Tony Wilkinson Maria Willetts Richard Williams Nicholas Wills WPP plc WYNG Foundation Tsunehiko Yamazaki Emeritus Professor Peter A Young
The Chancellor’s 800th Anniversary Medal for Outstanding Philanthropy is a prestigious, limited-edition medal commissioned by the University of Cambridge to mark the 800th Anniversary Campaign. It is awarded to members of the Guild of Cambridge Benefactors who have made exceptional gifts to the University and the Colleges during the Campaign. Recipients are marked with * on the Guild of Benefactors list opposite.
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CONTACTS
For more information please contact your College or: University of Cambridge Development Office 1 Quayside Bridge Street Cambridge, CB5 8AB UK Tel: +44 (0)1223 332288 Fax: +44 (0)1223 764476 Email: enquiries@foundation.cam.ac.uk Web: www.alumni.cam.ac.uk/campaign Cambridge in America 292 Madison Avenue 8th Floor New York, NY 10017 USA Tel: +1 212 984 0960 Fax: +1 212 984 0970 Email: mail@cantab.org Web: www.cantab.org
Photography: p03 Nigel Luckhurst; p04 University of Cambridge; p05 Alison Carter.
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www.alumni.cam.ac.uk/campaign