The University of Cambridge is justly proud of its links with India. Many eminent Indians spent their student years at Cambridge, studying in some of the most famous libraries and laboratories in the world, and played cricket at Fenners. Some came from families with a long tradition of sending their children to study in Britain; others gained scholarships to enable them to study at a top university.
(Media-Newswire.com) - A continuing relationship of excellence
1. SUMMARY
The University of Cambridge is justly proud of its links with India. Many eminent Indians spent their student years at Cambridge, studying in some of the most famous libraries and laboratories in the world, and played cricket at Fenners. Some came from families with a long tradition of sending their children to study in Britain; others gained scholarships to enable them to study at a top university.
Cambridge’s alumni have included some of the world’s most famous politicians. Among them is Dr Manmohan Singh, who will today receive an honorary doctorate from the University of Cambridge. It was at Cambridge ( St John’s, 1955-57 ) that Dr Singh studied economics as an undergraduate, gaining a First Class Honours degree, the only First in his year in economics. ( See Sir Mark Tully’s interview with Dr Singh from Cam magazine for details of his time in Cambridge. )
The connections between Cambridge and India continue to develop and strengthen. These links take many forms. There is a flow of knowledge at every level, from undergraduate upwards, within every sphere of teaching and learning. A number of exciting new initiatives to build dynamic relationships between Cambridge and India are under way, laying the foundations for generations to come.
2. GENERAL BACKGROUND
Historic links between Britain and India
Britain’s long relationship with India, and the large number of Indian students who have studied at the University of Cambridge throughout the past 100 years, underlie the University’s continuing engagement with the sub-continent. Over the decades that relationship has changed, shifting with global political and economic developments.
European contact with India through trade is centuries old, extending back to the 1500s. It was not until the mid-19th century, however, that British entrepreneurs and collectors began to take a serious academic interest in Indian culture, languages and history. After this slow start, Cambridge emerged at the forefront of academic appreciation for the cultural riches of India.
Indian collections at Cambridge’s University Library
In the 1870s two brothers, William Wright and Dr Daniel Wright, laid the foundations for one of the world’s greatest collections of Sanskrit manuscripts. William Wright was the Sir Thomas Adams Professor of Arabic at Cambridge and his brother Daniel was a medical officer serving in Kathmandu. At William’s request, Daniel began purchasing original manuscripts from Nepalese and Indian collections which he gave to the University Library. Later, Cecil Bendall, Professor of Sanskrit, developed the Library’s collection still further. It contains the oldest dated illustrated Sanskrit manuscript, known as the Perfection of Wisdom ( 997 AD ).
In early 1990s, after a public appeal to save it as an entity, the collection of the Royal Commonwealth Society was transferred to the University Library. The RCS collection is an extensive and wide-ranging archive of books, papers, diaries and artefacts, and represents a unique resource for students and academics studying aspects of the British empire.
The development of these collections, in addition to those made by individual Cambridge Colleges, Museums and Faculties, did much to spur academic research into the culture, history and languages of India, forging bridges between different cultures.
3. INDIA AS STUDIED AT CAMBRIDGE TODAY
South Asian topics studied across the University
Many faculties cover South Asian topics at both undergraduate and graduate level. Such courses are taught by academics whose research is centred on the sub-continent. Papers in Indian subjects are offered in archaeology, anthropology, economics and politics, literature, geography, history and divinity, and in courses run by the Judge Business School.
At any one time, there are around 90 graduate students doing research on a South Asian subject; a similar number take a South Asia component in a taught Masters’ course. The Judge Business School is set to increase its focus on South Asia.
The Centre of South Asian Studies
The Centre of South Asian Studies is an interdisciplinary research resource used by undergraduate and graduate students across the University.
The Centre is an important resource for the study of the region, and collaborates with a broad range of academics, mostly historians and social scientists. It holds one of the largest collections in Europe of material printed in India, a large and unique archive collection, and has recently digitised its extensive film archive.
In addition, the Centre is in the process of developing a new South Asian MPhil course to extend its reach throughout the University, and to develop its outreach work within the UK and South and South East Asia.
In April 2006 the Centre lost its director through the death of Dr Raj Chandavarkar, renowned historian of modern history and specialist in Mumbai’s history. His loss is deeply felt. The current Acting Director is Dr Gordon Johnson, a historian whose research interests include the history of India since the late eighteenth century, and editor of Modern Asian Studies, a quarterly journal published by Cambridge University Press.
The Centre is an important source of study material for Indian undergraduates, and has supported many students who have gone on to take important roles in Indian universities and businesses.
4. LINKS WITH INDIA THROUGH ACADEMIC BUSINESS
Two of the University’s academic businesses – Cambridge University Press and Cambridge Assessment – have increasingly strong links with India through their activities in publishing and assessment.
• Cambridge University Press ( CUP ) has been supplying books to India since the 1970s. It recently established Cambridge University Press Pvt Ltd ( CUPIPL ) which employs around 100 staff across seven different locations – New Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Chennai and Pune. CUPIPL publishes the Indian Affairs Journal, the quarterly of the Association of Indian Diplomats, and from 2007 it will publish academic monographs in India under the CUP imprint.
• Cambridge Assessment. The Cambridge International Examinations ( CIE ) Operations in India. In the last year, the number of educational institutions that have registered with CIE has almost doubled, taking the total in India to nearly 170. The number of subject entries has grown by over 60 per cent for each of the past three years.
5. CURRENT STUDENTS FROM INDIA
Around 170 students from India ( 70 undergraduate and 100 postgraduate ) are currently studying at the University of Cambridge.
Many Indian students currently studying at Cambridge are supported by a range of scholarship and bursary schemes set up to help bright undergraduates and postgraduates from overseas to study at the University. ( Since its establishment in 1982, the Cambridge Commonwealth Trust has enabled 6,600 students from 51 countries to study at Cambridge. )
In 2005, the Trust made awards to 55 new students from India ( 15 undergraduate and 40 postgraduate ). It also offers Rajiv Gandhi Travelling Scholarships to students wishing to visit India for study purposes: in 2005 it made nine such travel awards.
Around six of the outstanding graduate students from outside the UK studying on Gates Cambridge Scholarship programme are from India, and others are from the world-wide Indian diaspora. This scheme, initiated in 2000, is contributing to Cambridge’s dynamic network of international alumni.
6. EMINENT INDIAN ACADEMICS AND SCIENTISTS
Indian academics and scientists contributing to Cambridge today
Many Indian academics currently contribute to Cambridge as a world-class centre for teaching and learning. Some work within the University for short periods, as visiting scholars and researchers, before returning to India or moving on to other centres of learning; others remain in Cambridge for much of their careers.
In the early days, many of the best-known Indian academics working in Cambridge made their names in science ( particularly maths and physics ) and engineering. They were followed by others who forged reputations in fields such as medicine, economics and business. Today, Indian academics are making valuable contributions right across the academic spectrum.
Business and management
Since the establishment of the Judge Business School ( JBS ) in the early 1990s, Indian academics have made a significant contribution to its development, in tune with the ascendancy of Indian entrepreneurs in the wider world.
Professor Shailendra Vyakarnam is the Director of the Centre for Entrepreneurial Learning at the JBS and a Fellow of Darwin College. His research interests include: entrepreneurship and growth; how entrepreneurial teams form and develop; how firms grow through their “glass ceilings”; and why and how “supergrowth” firms develop their strategies and implement action. ( See section 7 for details of new Cambridge-India links being established by the Centre for Entrepreneurial Learning. )
Among those working at the Judge are a number of people of Indian ethnicity, nationality or with strong links in South Asia. They include: Dr Robin Chatterjee, University Lecturer in Accounting, Dr Chander Velu University Lecturer in Marketing, Dr Gishan Dissanaike, Director of MPhil in Finance and Financial Research Programmes, and Dr Paul Kattuman, Director of the Doctoral Programme.
Many leading Asian business people have been educated at Cambridge. Among them is Dr Kartar Lalvani, founder of Vitabiotics, who studied at Sidney Sussex College. He was voted “Asian of the Year” in the 2003 list of Who’s Who of Asians in Britain. Vitabiotics has cornered the major share of the vitamin supplements market in Britain and was given the Queen's Award for Enterprise in International Trade.
Science and Engineering
India has a long tradition of producing excellent mathematicians, scientists and engineers. The current generation is no exception. Currently there are 14 undergraduates and 25 graduate students from India studying in the Cambridge Department of Engineering. A number of senior and up-and-coming members of the Department have an Indian background.
Professor Gehan Amaratunga is head of the Electronics, Power and Energy Conversion Research Group within the Electrical Engineering Division.
Professor Harry Bhadeshia is Professor of Physical Metallurgy. His research centres on phase changes in iron and its alloys.
Dr PC Dhanasekaran is a member of the Energy, Fluid Mechanics Group and Turbomachinery Division.
Dr Gopal Madabhushi was awarded a Nehru Fellowship and an Overseas Research Studentship award to pursue his doctoral studies at Cambridge University. His current research interests include earthquake engineering and soil dynamics.
Dr N Swaminathan is a Lecturer in Cambridge University Engineering Department. He is in the Energy Group in the Acoustics, Fluid Mechanics, Turbomachinery and Thermodynamics Division.
Medical science
Professor Krishna Chatterjee is Professor of Endocrinology at the University of Cambridge and Head of the Division of Endocrinology in the School of Clinical Medicine, and also principal investigator at the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research ( CIMR ). He is Director of the Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Facility, a joint venture between the Wellcome Trust, Addenbrooke’s NHS Trust and the University of Cambridge. He is known for his work on nuclear hormone receptors and thyroid disease.
Professor David Menon is Professor of Anaesthesia at the University of Cambridge and Head of the Division of Anaesthesia in the Department of Medicine in the School of Clinical Medicine. He is known for his work on acute brain injury and physiological imaging.
Professor Ashok Venkitaraman is Ursula Zoellner Professor of Cancer Research at the University of Cambridge, based in the Department of Oncology in the School of Clinical Medicine, and Honorary Deputy Director of the MRC Cancer Cell Unit in the Hutchison/MRC Research Centre. His work focuses on chromosomal instability and cancer, with emphasis on opportunities for translating molecular insights into clinical practice.
Humanities and Economics
Sir Partha Dasgupta is Frank Ramsey Professor of Economics and Fellow of St John’s College. His work focuses on the economics of poverty and nutrition, environmental economics, economic measurement and the economics of knowledge.
Dr Shailaja Fennell is a Lecturer and Assistant Director of Development Studies, assigned to the Department of Land Economy. She is also a Fellow of Jesus College, where she is Admissions Tutor. Her research interests include technology choice in agriculture, household dynamics, kinship and ethnicity. She is currently involved in a study of the educational lives of the poor in South Asia and Africa.
Dr Kaveri Gill is Smuts Research Fellow at the Centre of South Asian Studies. Her work has included the political economy of informal waste recovery and plastic recycling, and the geographies of worker empowerment in the new economy ( including the call centre industry in India ).
Dr Sudeshna Guha is a Lecturer in South Asian history in the Faculty of Oriental Studies and a Research Associate in the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.
Dr Sriya Iyer is a researcher in the Economics Department whose work focuses on the interactions between religion and economic circumstances as they influence education and labour markets in South Asia.
Dr Kriti Kapila is a postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Social Anthropology. Her research interests include: the politics of recognition; legal anthropology; law and social theory; multiculturalism; anthropology of the state; historical anthropology; and pastoralism ( South Asia ).
Dr Perveez Mody-Spencer is a researcher in the Department of Social Anthropology and a Fellow of King’s College. Her work is on love and marriage in India, through an anthropological and economic focus.
Dr Anil Seal is an eminent historian of India. A Fellow of Trinity College, Dr Seal administers the Commonwealth and Overseas Trusts.
Professor Ajit Singh is an Indian economist, who graduated from Punjab University and obtained his PhD at the University of California, Berkeley. He has been teaching economics at Cambridge University since 1965. He is currently Professor of Economics at the University, Senior Fellow at Queens' College, Cambridge, and a project leader at the Centre for Business Research at the Judge Business School. He has been a senior economic adviser to the governments of Mexico and Tanzania and a consultant to various UN developmental organisations, including the World Bank, the ILO, UNCTAD and UNIDO.
7. CURRENT AND FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS
Cambridge-Hyderabad MBA Technology Entrepreneurship Exchange
The Centre for Entrepreneurial Learning at the Judge Business School and the Wadwani Centre for Entrepreneurship at the Indian School of Business in Hyderabad are due to sign a student exchange programme to help develop managers for the future. The main purpose of the programme is to foster technology entrepreneurship while promoting cooperation between the two institutions.
It is planned that students from the ISB will visit Cambridge, participate in lectures at the Judge Business School, and undertake a mini-consulting project for Microsoft Research. Students will make a presentation to senior colleagues at Microsoft and the Judge Business School. In parallel, JBS students will go to ISB to attend their lectures and carry out a similar project for Microsoft Research in India. A project presentation will be made to senior Microsoft colleagues and the faculty of ISB.
In addition, the Centre for Entrepreneurial Learning is forging a link with the Confederation of Indian Industries with the aim of creating five places for aspiring Indian entrepreneurs on Centre’s established Summer School programme.
UK-India Round Table
Professor Dame Sandra Dawson, Director of the Judge Business School until 2006 and Master of Sidney Sussex College, has been appointed by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office to the UK-India Round Table. She will attend the group’s ninth meeting, to be held in Goa next March.
The UK-India Round Table brings together specialists from India and the UK from many different backgrounds. Their role is to discuss issues affecting the relationship between the two nations. After each meeting the co-Chairmen submit recommendations to their respective Governments. The Round Table has debated the importance of IT and bio-technology and put forward proposals for collaboration in research in these areas. Culture, tourism, air services, biodiversity, cultural and educational exchanges and legal services are among other issues that have been discussed.
High level University of Cambridge visit to India
Early in 2008 the Vice-Chancellor of the University, Professor Alison Richard, will be visiting India as part of a continuing programme of dialogue between Cambridge and India.
Young British researchers to visit India in November 2006
Professor Mark Welland, Head of the Nanoscale Science Laboratory in the Department of Engineering, has been invited by the FCO and British Council in Mumbai to lead a group of 30 young UK researchers to India.
Jawaharlal Nehru Chair in economics, business and management
In recent decades the notion that business and management are relevant fields for academic study at Cambridge has led to an upsurge of interest in India as a thriving industrial and entrepreneurial nation on a global stage. Last year Prime Ministers Tony Blair and Dr Manmohan Singh recognised the significance of this area by announcing the endowment by the Indian Government of a University of Cambridge chair in Indian economics, business and management, to be named in honour of Jawaharlal Nehru. This new chair is expected to be established in 2007.
8. FAMOUS INDIAN ALUMNI: THE PAST CENTURY
Cambridge depends on brilliant minds, and its relationship with India has been shaped, and continues to be shaped, by the contribution of exceptional individuals. Eminent academics from India span all faculties of the University, though the best-known names are associated with mathematics, politics, economics and cricket.
Indian alumni of Trinity College alone include ( in chronological order ): the cricketer Prince Ranjitsinhji ( 1872-1933 ), a star batsman who played for Sussex and England, and a reforming maharaja; mathematician Srinivasa Mananujam ( 1887-1920 ), who made significant contributions to the theory of numbers; India’s Prime Ministers, Jawaharlal Nehru ( 1889-1964 ) and Rajiv Gandi ( 1944-1989 ); and Amartya Sen ( born 1933 ), foremost economist, Nobel Prize winner and former Master of Trinity.
Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose ( 1858-1937 )
Jagadish Bose came to study at Christ’s College, Cambridge, after illness prevented him qualifying in medicine in London. Back in India at Presidency College, Kolkata, he began doing original scientific work in microwaves. In 1895, two years before Marconi, he demonstrated wireless communication using radio waves, and he invented many of the microwave components we are familiar with today. He then turned his attention to response phenomena in plants. He was knighted in 1917 and elected a Fellow of the Royal Society, London.
KS Ranjititsinhji ( 1872-1933 )
A cricketing phenomenon, KS Ranjititsinhji studied at Trinity College and played for England, and is regarded as one of the greatest batsman of all time, playing elegant strokes off the back foot. He is said to have scored three centuries on the same day on Parker’s Piece in Cambridge. In his career he scored almost 25,000 first-class runs.
Srinivasa Aaiyangar Ramunujan ( 1887-1920 )
The highly celebrated Indian mathematician, Ramunujan came from a poor family and was largely self-taught, relying on friends for textbooks. His notebooks are famous as “Ramunujan’s Frayed Notebooks”. His genius came to the attention of GH Hardy, a Cambridge mathematician, who invited him to Britain. Between 1914 and 1917 he published 21 papers, some in collaboration with Hardy. His achievements include the Hardy-Ramunujan-Littlewood circle method in number theory and Roger-Ramunujan’s identities in partitions of numbers. He was the second Indian to be elected to be a Fellow of the Royal Society, and the first Indian to be made a Fellow of Trinity College.
Ramunujan had an intimate relationship with numbers. When he was ill in hospital he was visited by Hardy, who remarked that he had taken a taxi with the number 1729, an unexceptional number. Ramunujan responded instantly that this number was indeed remarkable: it is the smallest integer that can be represented in two ways as the sum of two cubes.
Jawaharlal Nehru ( 1889-1964 )
The great nationalist leader and India’s first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, was sent to England at the age of 16 to be educated at Harrow School and Trinity College, Cambridge. At Cambridge he assumed the guise of a fashionable young Englishman, playing tennis, rowing and developing a taste for gambling. When he became profligate with his money, his father forced him to move from comfortable rooms in town to more humble lodgings in Whewell’s Court, which he described as “probably the rottenest rooms in the whole college”.
Not particularly distinguished as a scholar, Nehru was extremely shy. As a member of the Cambridge debating team, he was fined on a number of occasions for not speaking in debates for an entire term.
On graduating from Cambridge, Nehru returned to India where he rose to become the political leader of the Indian National Congress Party in its struggle for independence from Britain. After independence he served as India’s first Prime Minister from 1947 to 1964.
Harivanshrai Bachchan ( 1907-2003 )
Harivanshrai Bachchan, the distinguished Hindi poet, came to Cambridge in 1952 to study for a PhD in English Literature ( focusing on WB Yeats and Occultism ) at St Catharine's College. He is said to have drafted his thesis in full three times in pencil and to have written 400 poems while studying in Cambridge.
He is best known for his early lyric poem Madhushala, which has been translated into English and many regional Indian languages including Bengali, Marathi and Malayalam. He translated Shakespeare's Macbeth and Othello, Omar Khayyam's Rubaiyat, the Bhagavad Gita and WB Yeats into Hindi.
Bachchan is the father of Bollywood film superstar, Amitabh Bachchan, and the grandfather of the Bollywood icon Abhishek Bachchan. In 2007, St Catherine’s College will celebrate the centenary of Harivanshrai Bachchan’s birth, in collaboration with his family.
Homi Jehangir Bhabha ( 1909-1966 )
Homi Bhabha came to Cambridge to study mechanical engineering at Gonville and Caius College, becoming fascinated by mathematics and theoretical physics. After gaining a PhD, he collaborated with a German physicist to solve the riddle of cosmic rays, validating Einstein’s theory of relativity.
In India, Bhabha was instrumental in setting up the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research in Mumbai, serving as its director for more than 20 years. He played a key role in a number of organisations and was President of the first United Nations Conference on the Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy, held in 1955.
Subramaniam Chandrasekhar ( 1910-1995 )
On the sea voyage to England to study as a research student at Cambridge, Subramaniam Chandrasekhar developed the theory of white dwarf stars, showing that a star of mass 1.45 times greater than the sun could not become a white dwarf. This limit is known as the Chandrasekhar limit. Soon afterwards he was awarded the Prize Fellowship at Trinity College.
Chandrasekhar left Cambridge to join the University of Chicago, and was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1983. During his career he guided more than 50 students to their PhDs, including some who became Nobel Prize winners, and his research explored nearly all branches of theoretical physics.
Dr Vikram Sarabhai ( 1919-1971 )
Considered the father of the Indian space programme, Vikram Sarabhai studied physics at St John’s College. He conducted experiments investigating cosmic rays in the Himalayas and was awarded a PhD by Cambridge in 1947.
GN Ramachandran ( 1922-2001 )
After gaining a PhD in physics, GN Ramachandran came to Cambridge to join the Cavendish Laboratory, where he obtained a second PhD. Returning to India he began work on determining the structure of the protein collagen.
With colleagues he made a series of advances and developed methods of examining and assessing the structure of biomolecules. The Ramachandran map is an indispensable tool in the study of molecule structures today. His continuing work in the area of x-ray crystallography and x-ray intensity statistics, and his establishment of the Molecular Biophysics Unit at IISc, led to his election as a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1977.
Rajiv Vratna Gandhi ( 1944-1991 )
A member of India’s most famous political family, Rajiv Vratna Gandhi studied at Imperial College, London, and Trinity College, Cambridge. It was during his time at Cambridge that he met an Italian student, Sonia Maino, who became his wife. He was Prime Minister of India for five years in the 1980s and was assassinated in 1991.
Rahul Gandhi, their son, studied at Trinity College in the mid-1990s, and was awarded an M Phil in Development Studies. In 2004 he was elected to the Indian Parliament for the Congress Party.
Professor Amartya Sen ( born 1933 )
A world-famous economist, Amartya Sen built his reputation on work in the areas of famine, human development theory, welfare economics, the underlying mechanisms of poverty, and political liberalism. He was educated in India, before coming to Trinity College, Cambridge, to study for a degree followed by a PhD.
Sen's seminal papers in the 1960s and 1970s helped develop the theory of social choice. In 1981 he published Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation, in which he demonstrated that famine occurs not only from a lack of food, but from inequalities built into food distribution. His interest in famine stemmed from personal experience. As a boy, he witnessed the Bengal famine in which three million people perished. His “capabilities” approach focuses on positive freedoms, rather than on the “negative freedom” approach.
Sen has played, and continues to play, a key role in the debate about globalisation. He has given lectures to senior executives of the World Bank but has shown his commitment to reform from below by becoming honorary president of Oxfam. Among his many contributions to development economics, Sen has produced pioneering studies of gender inequality.
From 1988 to 2004 he was Master of Trinity College at Cambridge University, becoming the first Asian academic to head an Oxbridge college. He is currently the Lamont University Professor at Harvard University.
9. STATEMENT FROM DR KATE PRETTY, PRO-VICE-CHANCELLOR FOR INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Statement by Dr Kate Pretty, Pro-Vice-Chancellor for International Relations, on the conferment of the honorary degree of Doctor of Law on Dr Manmohan Singh, Prime Minister of India on Wednesday 11 October 2006.
“From time to time the University of Cambridge likes to honour its most distinguished former students, often at a joint ceremony in the Summer or, as in the Prime Minister’s case, when a formal visit can be arranged. We are delighted that the Chancellor, his Royal Highness The Prince Philip can join us on this occasion.
“The Prime Minister’s visit is timely. There is great interest in increased academic links with India, as we heard from our own Prime Minister when he visited India last year. Moreover the Vice-Chancellor, Professor Alison Richard, intends to visit India herself early in 2008. Today’s event celebrates the special relationship between India and the University.”
10. STATEMENT ON THE TEACHING OF SOUTH ASIAN STUDIES
Dr Gordon Johnson, Director of the Centre for South Asian Studies at the University of Cambridge, said, on 10 October 2006:
“South Asian Studies are thriving at the University of Cambridge and an agreed plan for their expansion is underway. Although students continue to study specialist papers with a South Asian content in History, Geography, Economics, Social and Political Sciences, Social Anthropology, Divinity and Archaeology, Sanskrit and Hindi will no longer be offered to undergraduates within the Oriental Studies Tripos.
“Cambridge will continue Hindi for graduate students through the Centre of South Asian Studies and the University’s Language Centre and Sanskrit will be available at the graduate and research levels.
“The number of graduate students doing research on a South Asian subject remains high, at between 80 and 90 at any one time. A similar number take a South Asia component in a taught master’s course. South Asian studies are also to be included in the Judge Business School.
“South Asian studies are also set to expand significantly in the near future at Cambridge, with the filling of two lectureships in modern South Asian history. The Centre of South Asian Studies, is developing a new MPhil course, to extend its reach within the University and to develop further its outreach work within the UK, south and south-east Asia.”
For more information, contact:
Tim Holt, Office of Communications, University of Cambridge Tel: 01223 332300, tim.holt@admin.cam.ac.uk
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