
Today, as part of UK-India Year of Culture 2017, the 探花直播 of Cambridge launches a year-long celebration of its ties with India, which stretch back 150 years.
Today, as part of UK-India Year of Culture 2017, the 探花直播 of Cambridge launches a year-long celebration of its ties with India, which stretch back 150 years.
探花直播announcement coincides with a visit to India by Professor Sir Leszek Borysiewicz,听Vice-Chancellor听of the 探花直播 of Cambridge. Professor Borysiewicz will address alumni and donors in New Delhi at an event to celebrate the fundraising campaign for the 探花直播 and its colleges. He will also reconfirm the 探花直播鈥檚 commitment to attracting the brightest and best students from India.
鈥淚 am extremely proud of Cambridge鈥檚 long-standing and deep-rooted relationship with India,鈥 says Professor Borysiewicz. 鈥淢any of India鈥檚 leading figures 鈥 academics, scientists, industrialists and politicians 鈥 have enjoyed a Cambridge education. Together we have achieved great things, and I know that by continuing to work together we will rise to even greater heights.鈥
Speaking at the event, the Vice Chancellor will announce that the 探花直播 is renewing its commitment to attracting talented Indian students to study at Cambridge. From this year, admissions staff will be coming to India to visits schools and meet students face-to-face in Mumbai, Bangalore and Delhi. In autumn, a team of academics will visit India to conduct admissions interviews, so that applicants need not travel to the UK for that part of our application process.
鈥淲e believe that diversity 鈥 of nationality, of background, and of opinion is one of Cambridge鈥檚 greatest strengths,鈥 he adds. 鈥淲e are a 探花直播 that is open to the world and must remain so.鈥
探花直播centrepiece of Cambridge鈥檚 2017 celebrations will be , a programme of exhibitions, events, digital engagement and installations organised by the 探花直播 of Cambridge Museums and Botanic Garden. Rooted in the museum collections, the programme will explore themes of identity and connectivity for diverse audiences in the UK and India.
A series of profiles 鈥 This Cambridge-Indian Life 鈥 will look at the people at the heart of the relationship between Cambridge and India: Indian scholars and students who study at Cambridge, Cambridge researchers working in collaborations based in India, and notable Indian alumni from the 探花直播.
Throughout the year, the 探花直播 will highlight key research collaborations that sit at the heart of Cambridge鈥檚 relationship with India. Cambridge leads three major joint UK-India centres: in cancer research, anti-microbial resistant tuberculosis, and crop science. It has 85 collaborative research partnerships across India in fields from the arts and humanities to entrepreneurship to the sciences and technology.
鈥 探花直播world today faces critical challenges 鈥 in the fields of education, energy, food security, health, and politics - to name but a few,鈥 says Professor Borysiewicz. 鈥淭hese challenges are serious, complex and urgent. My deeply held conviction is that Cambridge has a responsibility to address these challenges. We know we cannot solve any of these problems in isolation and are working with partners in India to find local solutions to global issues.鈥
Notable Indian alumni from the 探花直播 of Cambridge include:
- Sir Dorabji Tata (Gonville and Caius College 1877):听 played a key role in the development of the Tata Group, especially in the steel and power sectors
- Prince Ranjitsinhji (Trinity College 1888): considered one of the greatest cricketers of all time and played for Sussex and England. In India, he did much to improve conditions in his home state of Nawanagar
- Three Indian prime ministers studied at Cambridge: Jawaharlal Nehru (Trinity College 1907), India's first prime minister; Rajiv Gandhi (Trinity College 1961); Dr Manmohan Singh (St John's College 1955)
- Srinivasa Ramanujan (Trinity College 1913): largely self-taught mathematics genius. He was the second Indian to be elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society
- Harivansh Rai Bachchan (St Catharine's College 1955): Hindi poet best known for his lyric poem Madhushala
- Jayant Narlikar (Fitzwilliam House and King's College 1957): co-developed the conformal gravity theory, commonly known as Hoyle鈥揘arlikar theory, which synthesizes Einstein's Theory of Relativity and Mach's Principle
- Amartya Sen (Trinity College 1957, 1998): Nobel prize-winning economist. His reputation is based on studies of famine, human development theory and welfare economics. He plays a key role in the debate on globalisation
- Camellia Panjabi (Newnham College 1961): marketing director of Taj Hotels and co-director of Masala World, which own businesses that include the Bombay Brasserie, London
- Zia Mody (Selwyn 1976): Indian legal consultant, considered an authority on corporate merger and acquisition law
- Karan, Lord Bilimoria (Sidney Sussex College 1985): founder of Cobra Beer and founding chairman of the Indo British Partnership Network
- Prathiba Singh (Hughes Hall 1991): leading intellectual property lawyer
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