October 19th, 2011
They met, they fell in love and then they graduated.
The University of Nottingham has played a special part in many hundreds of students’ lives by bringing them together as couples during their time here.
And at a special event in September, around 25 couples came back to where it all began to celebrate an inaugural alumni event called From Nottingham With Love…
(Cue theme tune from Franco Zefferelli’s Romeo and Juliet… )
Pat and Dick Bond from Devon met at the University ‘hop’ in Christmas 1954. They were never an item but were photographed together outside the Great Hall.
Karnival director Dick graduated in Economics in 1956 and Pat, a hockey player and athletics star, a year later with a Maths degree. Both went their separate ways and lost touch
Dick went on to do National Service in the Royal Army Pay Corps and later got a job with IBM.
Pat married, moved to Birmingham, had three children, adopted another and returned to full-time work in adult education, later working overseas.
Half a century later and with lives lived to the full, Pat and Dick both found themselves single.
Dick, now retired, traced Pat through Friends Reunited and the couple met up again, taking two trips abroad before deciding to get married.
In August 2010, the couple returned to Nottingham, where it had all begun, for a registry office wedding and a trip back to the Great Hall at the University for a ‘repeat photo’.
And last month, the Bonds came back to the Helmsley Restaurant at the University Staff Club to celebrate their University love with other couples.
Pat said: “It was an extremely enjoyable weekend. Although we didn’t find any exact contemporaries, we discovered so many fascinating couples to talk to. It was a joy to be part of it.”
The guests enjoyed a walk round the University parks and gardens and heard a presentation on the subject of the love lives of the romantic period novelists from Professor Lynda Pratt of the School of English Studies. Afterwards they were treated to tea and cupcakes while they all enjoyed chatting.
Tags: alumni, From Nottingham With Love...
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October 19th, 2011
An exclusive exhibition of the works of LS Lowry is being held to celebrate 130 years of excellence at The University of Nottingham.
In a major coup for the University and the city, the three-month exhibition will include some rarely seen pieces from public and private collections.
Organised in association with London’s Crane Kalman Gallery, the free exhibition will run at the Djanogly Art Gallery, at Lakeside Arts Centre, from 16 November 2011 to 5 February 2012.
Neil Walker, exhibition curator, said: “I hope that people who might come to the exhibition with a preconceived idea of Lowry based solely on his industrial subjects will leave with a much fuller appreciation of the breadth and complexity of his life’s work.”
Laurence Stephen Lowry (1887-1976) was more than just a painter of densely populated industrial towns, as this exhibition shows. It focuses on the period between the 1920s and mid-1950s and emphasises the metaphorical and semi-autobiographical nature of Lowry’s work.
“In the 1930s, personal crisis brought about by the strain of caring for his invalid mother,” said Neil, “and the artist’s growing sense of isolation, produced a kind of artistic derailment resulting in an extraordinary body of paintings whose subject matter chimes with the national zeitgeist of pre-war angst: his views of empty industrial wastelands, derelict buildings and a disturbing series of staring portrait heads will all come as a revelation to those who only know Lowry as the poet of the Lancashire mills.”
After the outbreak of the Second World War, Lowry served as a volunteer fire-watcher in Manchester, becoming an official war artist in 1943.
And in 1953, he was appointed the official artist at the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.
Lowry later travelled the UK — and the exhibition includes his landscapes of the Lake District, Yorkshire and Derbyshire, as well as a remarkable series of sea paintings — all painted using the trademark five-colour palette of his earlier works.
Lowry famously sketched on whatever paper was at hand, smudging and rubbing at his pencil lines to add depth. This exhibition features a collection of his drawings, ranging from the most cursory of sketches on the back of an envelope to fully realised studies for later paintings.
His posthumous exhibition at the Royal Academy in 1976 attracted record numbers of visitors, and his work still creates great interest at auction.
The exhibition includes a large loan of important works from the collection of The Lowry, Salford. It is generously supported by Sir Harry and Lady Djanogly and The Lowry Estate.
Professor David Greenaway, Vice-Chancellor of The University of Nottingham, said: ‘‘We are delighted that the University is hosting this nationally important exhibition. It is an exciting opportunity to see a collection of Lowry’s work in the region, and I am sure it will prove to be a stimulating exhibition for everyone attending.”
Guided tours of the exhibition will be given on various dates. There will also be a screening of Looking for Lowry, featuring Ian McKellen, and a study day, with lectures from four leading experts.
Tags: Djanogly, Lowry, Sir Harry and Lady Djanogly
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October 19th, 2011
On Monday 17 October 2011 the University launched its biggest ever fundraising campaign — and it wants you to be involved.
Impact: The Nottingham Campaign will raise £150m to support the University’s vision to change lives, tackle global issues and shape the future. Through this fundraising Campaign we will establish an even more diverse student body, provide a richer student experience, transform research programmes and make an even greater contribution to the global communities we serve.
Across the world, universities have only been able to flourish due to the visionary actions of philanthropists over hundreds of years. Such investment has allowed independence of thought and action by scholars and students to tackle society’s most pressing issues.
Two influential Nottingham alumni have agreed to co-chair the Campaign — the award-winning journalist, Jeff Randall, Sky News presenter and editor-at-large for The Daily Telegraph, and businessman and philanthropist David Ross, co-founder of The Carphone Warehouse and founder of the David Ross Foundation.
Our work has already begun. A total of £50m has already been raised through generous donations both large and small.
The Vice-Chancellor of The University of Nottingham, Professor David Greenaway, has just completed the Campaign’s hugely successful sponsored cycle ride, Life Cycle. This saw an 11-strong team of staff from our campuses in the UK, China and Malaysia cycle from John O’Groats to Land’s End. The team raised over £211,000 for the University’s Sue Ryder Care Centre for Palliative and End of Life Care, and the money is still coming in.
Professor Greenaway said: “Life Cycle was just the warm-up to the launch of our Campaign to raise £150m. We are proud of what we achieved, but there is a lot more work to do.”
Five Campaign themes will be rolled out across a week-long launch: The Nottingham Experience, Health and Well-being, Nurturing Talent, Ingenuity and Sustainable Futures.
A series of previews took place from Monday 3 October to Friday 7 October, to allow staff and students to find out more about the five themes and how they could get involved in the launch week events.
Further updates will be available on the portals, or email: Impactcampaign@nottingham.ac.uk
Tags: Impact: The Nottingham Campaign
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September 2nd, 2011
The University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus is to co-host the first ever Crops for the Future Research Centre (CFFRC) in partnership with the Government of Malaysia.
The centre, specifically designed to evaluate underused crops from all parts of the world, will be at the heart of an international effort to seek out which crops have the potential to be grown for human sustenance or on a commercial basis for food, pharmaceuticals or biomaterials in the climates of the future.
With 18,000 indigenous species in its region and funding of nearly $40m from the Malaysian Government, CFFRC has been given the mandate to carry out research on a whole range of underused crops.
Professor Sayed Azam-Ali, who will become the first Chief Executive Officer of CFFRC, said: “In poor and impoverished regions of the world there are plants that have survived despite research and despite science. This is our chance to find out what those plants would be like as crops for the future — in climates of the future.
“With focused scientific efforts applied to unconventional crops we can do things that will make them more valuable, more useful and more popular. This is the first time that any national government has actually said ‘we will give you the infrastructure and support to do it’ and that is a massive vote of confidence by the Government of Malaysia.”
The human race relies on fewer and fewer plants to feed more and more people — for example, wheat, rice and maize alone provide over 60 per cent of the global diet. Meanwhile, potential sources of food are going unnoticed and some plants are disappearing altogether. Scientists believe that many of these species could be of major agricultural significance or be developed as niche products.
Although natural biodiversity is now of huge international concern and its importance has been recognised by governments across the globe, agricultural biodiversity — the plants we grow — has attracted less interest.
Professor Azam-Ali said: “The risks are significant. We now rely on just three or four plants to feed much of the planet. As bio-scientists we urgently need to find and improve more plants to increase the bread basket, to complement the crops we already have and to be resilient to our changing climates.”
Professor Azam-Ali will lead the research centre as part of the global Crops for the Future organisation, an international alliance hosted in Malaysia by Bioversity International and The University of Nottingham. He will head a team of staff and researchers including experts in biotechnology, breeding and seed systems, ecophysiology, agronomy and post production, processing, markets and trade.
The main architectural feature of CFFRC will be three iconic domes in which new ‘living laboratories’ will be surrounded by a botanical garden of alternative plants which can be studied in the field and under more controlled conditions in laboratories and polytunnels.
The buildings will be constructed using environmentally efficient technologies and materials. It is planned that the carbon-neutral, energy-efficient buildings will use new green technologies to conserve energy, capture rainwater and utilise biomaterials from alternative crops.
CFFRC will also act as a visitor centre for schools, students and the public so they can learn about indigenous plants.
In addition to state-of-the-art research facilities, CFFRC will have access to 50 hectares of oil palm plantation alongside the existing campus to develop field research on underused crops. With the support of the Malaysia Government and the oil palm sector, CFFRC has the opportunity to look at ways of diversifying the oil palm industry — the biggest agricultural product in South East Asia.
Professor Azam-Ali said: “As well as its research activities, Crops for the Future wants to work with the true stakeholders; the people who have grown, farmed and protected these plants for centuries without any support from governments or from public or private sponsors.
“We need to work with these communities as genuine partners so their knowledge can be linked with scientific evidence collected in laboratories and experiments through universities such as Nottingham and with centres such as Bioversity International. Much of the information on these plants is vernacular — it isn’t written down it is just passed down from generation to generation and we need to include this evidence with more conventional sources.
“This research could have enormous significance but at this stage we can’t say that tomorrow we will know how to solve the world’s food problems by suddenly bringing a few more crops into the equation. What we really have to start thinking about how we can integrate knowledge on underutilised plants for food, fuel, medicines and materials.”
The Crops for the Future Research Centre was officially launched by the Prime Minister of Malaysia, Dato’ Sri Mohd Najib Tun Abdul Razak, on 27 June 2011, at the opening ceremony of the Second International Symposium on Underutilised Plant Species entitled ‘Crops for the Future — Beyond Food Security’ at the Royale Chulan Hotel, Kuala Lumpur.
The launch featured many distinguished speakers, including Professor M S Swaminathan, Chairman of the M S Swaminathan Research Foundation and described by the United Nations Environment Programme as ‘the father of economic ecology’. His talk was entitled: Green Revolution in Underutilised Crops: Pathway to Sustainable Food Security in an Era of Climate Change.
Discussions on the design and construction of the CFFRC facilities are already underway with leading architects and consultants.
While construction of the purpose-built research centre may be completed over the next 18 months, CFFRC activities will start almost immediately using facilities already available at The University of Nottingham campuses in Malaysia and the UK.
Visit: http://youtu.be/ZsZ8ZAwaMPM
Tags: biodiversity, biomaterials, climate change, Crops for the Future Research Centre (CFFRC), Dato’ Sri Mohd Najib Tun Abdul Razak, Food Security, M S Swaminathan Research Foundation, pharmaceuticals, Professor M S Swaminathan, Professor Sayed Azam-Ali, Second International Symposium on Underutilised Plant Species, The University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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September 2nd, 2011
“You may ask what the University has ever done for us . . . and I’ll say ‘everything’. “
The words of University of Nottingham alumnus Edgar Wallner (Pharmacy 1958), a former President and CEO of Orthofix International and Life Benefactor of The National Theatre.
Mr Wallner, who has enjoyed a long and distinguished career in the healthcare industry and is a major donor to the University, was one of a number of graduates to receive awards at the 5th University of Nottingham Alumni Laureate Awards dinner held at the East Midlands Conference Centre.
“This University really started my business career,” he said. “I became an entrepreneur here. My father loaned me £50 with which I bought gowns from departing students. I stored them with the hall porter at Hugh Stewart over the summer for a fiver and when the new students came back I sold them on to them. That year
I made £150 profit – a small fortune in the 1950s. I am very grateful indeed to this University – it set me on my way.”
Mr Wallner was one of two Lifetime Achievement Award winners, the other being the Chief Executive of Nottingham City Council, Jane Todd (Social Administration 1973), whose father Norman graduated from the University with a degree in Pharmacy in 1942.
She said: “This award is very special to me. The University has been one of the enduring threads through my life. My father came to the University as a scholarship boy and met my mother here so I really can say that if it weren’t for the University I probably wouldn’t be here at all!
“When I was a student here the tutor Bill Silburn was an inspiration. I got Social Policy the way he did it and that’s been the bedrock all the way through my career. Since then the University has been such an important influence on the city. The prosperity of the city is largely due to the University and the University is a tremendous friend to us.”
Lady Anna Curzon, a violinist (Music, 2009)provided a musical interlude during the evening The compere was Sky News presenter and Editor at Large of the Daily Telegraph Jeff Randall (Economics 1979) who told an audience of more than 200 people: “From day one of my arrival at the University I fell in love with this place, I got it immediately and my affection remains as strong today as it was then. Apart from my family, no living body has had a more profound or positive impact on my life than The University of Nottingham.
“For me, the most remarkable people tonight were the student winners of the Vice-Chancellor’s Award, students who bothered to do great things while they were here. During those awards I told my daughter, who’s just finishing her studies here, that it was a minor triumph if I simply got out of bed in the morning. The students today work hard, they play hard, they have a vision, they have ambition and my goodness, they’re going to go out there and get on with it and I doff my cap to them.”
The Vice-Chancellor’s Achievement Awards for Exceptional Achievement (students):
Sam Follett (Physics and Astronomy), the youngest member of the General Synod of the Church of England
Sophie Horsley (Business School), an outstanding member of the University’s Student Telephone Fundraising Team, contacting alumni staff and friends
Heba Khafagy (Electrical and Electronic Engineering) who is soon to represent England in the Karate World Championships
Jerry Kuo (Architecture and the Built Environment), promoter of environmental sustainability awareness across the campus
Jess Sylvester (Biochemistry) Olympic swimmer
Matt Wicks (Economics), a Special Constable with Nottinghamshire Police
The alumni award winners were:
Recent Graduate Awards:
David Florence (Mathematical Physics 2005) – Olympic slalom canoeist
Sandra Lawton (MSc Advanced Nursing Practice 2003) – Nurse Consultant Dermatology at the Queen’s Medical Centre
Dr Hezron Mc’Obewa (Medicine 2003) – Executive Director, Ogra Foundation, Kenya
Alistair Murray (MPharm Hons Pharmacy 2002) – Senior Partner and co-founder of Green Light Pharmacy
Special Excellence Awards:
Air Chief Marshal Sir Simon Bryant KCB CBE (Geography 1977) – Currently Commander-in-Chief, Air Command.
Professor Sue Lyons OBE (Production Engineering and Production Management 1975) – former MD Defence (Europe) at Rolls Royce.
Graham Fitkin (Music 1984) – British composer, pianist and conductor
Caroline van den Brul MBE (Chemistry 1975) – BBC producer and executive director
Lifetime Achievement Awards:
Edgar Wallner (Pharmacy 1958) – entrepreneur
Jane Todd (Social Administration 1973) Chief Executive of Nottingham City Council
Tags: Edgar Wallner, Jeff Randall, University of Nottingham Alumni Laureate Awards, VC Awards
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September 2nd, 2011
Date: Sunday 25 September
Time: 3pm
Venue: Djanogly Theatre, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: £6
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September 2nd, 2011
Date: Tuesday 27 to Friday 30 September and Sunday 2 October
Time: 10.30am & 1.30pm weekdays, and 1.30pm & 3.30pm Sunday
Venue: Djanogly Theatre, Lakeside Arts Centre
Admission: £7
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September 2nd, 2011
Date: Tuesday 4 October
Time: 8pm
Venue: Djanogly Theatre, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: £15, £12 concessions, £9 restricted view
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September 2nd, 2011
Date: Wednesday 21 September
Time: 8pm
Venue: Djanogly Theatre, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: £15, £12 concessions, £9 restricted view
Posted in Music, What's On | Comments Off on The Old Dance School